Monument record MDO6343 - Bowl barrow, one of the Oakley Down Group, Wimborne St Giles
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Summary
A round barrow of a type known as a bowl barrow. This monument was reported in 1975 as being approximately twelve metres in diameter, and around half a metre high. The mound was dug into by the antiquarian William Cunnington, who found a central cremation in an up-turned collared urn. More recent excavations on the edge of the mound revealed post holes, which the excavators interpreted as a support for a cremation pyre. They also found a pit nearby, which contained large quantities of cremated bone and ash; this pit was outside and earlier than the ditch around the barrow.
Map
Type and Period (2)
Full Description
A bowl barrow, part of the Oakley Down barrow group (SU 01 NW 19). It was described by RCHME as a mound 40 feet in diameter and 1.5 feet high. It was excavated by Cunnington and Hoare in the early 19th century (Hoare's barrow 23). According to Hoare, "No. 23 being a low and broad barrow, we found some difficulty in ascertaining its centre, and we failed in our first attempts upon it; but a second trial, and a larger excavation, led us to an interment of burned bones deposited within an inverted urn of very coarse unbaked pottery". The barrow was re-excavated in 1968, following recognition of the damage caused by ploughing. The mound was shown to be surrounded by a very irregular ditch. It varied between 4 and 8 feet in width and between 4 feet and 2.5 feet in depth. There were suggestions of more than one phase of digging, and the northern side was noticeably straight and narrow, as though a causeway of a formerly penannular ditch had been removed. The primary burial pit was located just off centre beneath the mound, and contained potsherds (Collared Urn), charcoal, bone tweezers and cremated bone along with one of Cunnington's lead plaques (dated 1804). A post hole was found in the northern sector of the barrow, containing charcoal, burned clay and some fragments of cremated bone in its fill. Immediately opposite it but outside the barrow ditch was a pit containing large quantities of cremated bone and ash. The pit appeared to be cut by the northern barrow ditch, suggesting the latter was later. A subrectangular feature had been cut across the ditch on the southern side at an unknown date. A group of four stakeholes were found within the ditch to the southeast, arranged in a rectangle, associated with charcoal, burnt bone and pottery lying on the primary ditch fill. Several hundred flints were found during the excavation, and Roman and Saxon potsherds were present in the ploughsoil.
Primary cremation in coarse inverted urn. <1>
Sources/Archives (5)
- <1>XY SDO132 Monograph: Grinsell, L V. 1959. Dorset Barrows. 145. [Mapped feature: #343588 ]
- <2> SDO70 Serial: Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society. 1971. Proceedings of the Dorset Natural History and Archaeological Society for 1970. 92. 159-167. White, DA and R Reed. The Excavation of a Bowl Barrow at Oakley Down, Dorset, 1968..
- <3> SDO129 Monograph: Royal Commission on Historical Monuments (England). 1975. An Inventory of Historical Monuments in the County of Dorset, Volume V (East). 101-102.
- <4> SDO18077 Monograph: Colt Hoare, Sir Richard. 1975. The ancient history of Wiltshire. 242.
- <5> SDO14739 Digital archive: National Record of the Historic Environment. 1312147.
Finds (4)
Related Monuments/Buildings (0)
Related Events/Activities (2)
Location
Grid reference | SU 0159 1704 (point) |
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Map sheet | SU01NW |
Civil Parish | Wimborne St Giles; Dorset |
Unitary Authority | Dorset |
Protected Status/Designation
Other Statuses/References
- Legacy UID: Dorset Sites and Monuments Record: 3 026 095
- Legacy UID: National Monuments Record: SU 01 NW 146
- Legacy UID: National Record of the Historic Environment: 1312147
- Royal Commission Inventory Reference: Oakley Down Group
- Royal Commission Inventory Reference: Wimborne St Giles 95
Record last edited
Oct 3 2022 1:49PM