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  2. Coffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffin

    Continental Europe at one time favoured the rectangular coffin or casket, although variations exist in size and shape. The rectangular form, and also the trapezoidal form, is still regularly used in Germany, Austria, Hungary and other parts of Eastern and Central Europe, with the lid sometimes made to slope gently from the head down towards the ...

  3. Coffin Stone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coffin_Stone

    The Coffin Stone is in Great Tottington Farm, [1] which is now used as a vineyard. [2] As of 2005, the site was not signposted, but could be reached via a stile along the Pilgrims' Way. [3] The Coffin Stone is situated about 400 metres (1,300 ft) north-west of Little Kit's Coty House. [3] It is also a short distance north of the Tottington ...

  4. Treetrunk coffin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treetrunk_coffin

    A treetrunk coffin is a coffin hollowed out of a single massive log. Such coffins have been used for burials since prehistoric times over a wide geographic range, including in Europe, Africa, Asia and Australia.

  5. Continental Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continental_Europe

    Continental Europe or mainland Europe is the contiguous mainland of Europe, excluding its surrounding islands. [1] It can also be referred to ambiguously as the European continent, [2] [3] – which can conversely mean the whole of Europe – and, by some, simply as the Continent. [4] When Eurasia is regarded as a single continent, Europe is ...

  6. Jacket's Field Long Barrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacket's_Field_Long_Barrow

    Archaeologists have established that the monument was built by a pastoralist community shortly after the introduction of agriculture to Britain from continental Europe. Although representing part of an architectural tradition of long-barrow building that was widespread across Neolithic Europe, Jacket's Field Long Barrow belongs to a localised ...

  7. Anglo-Saxon burial mounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_burial_mounds

    By the sixth century CE, when the practice of building burial mounds is first adopted by the Anglo-Saxons, it was also being practiced by other Germanic-speaking peoples on continental Europe. In the German region of Thuringia , several important chamber burial barrows have been excavated, including at a cemetery in Trossingen which dates to c ...

  8. Burial in Anglo-Saxon England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial_in_Anglo-Saxon_England

    During the Anglo-Saxon migration, which began in the fifth century CE, Germanic-speaking tribes from continental northern Europe, such as the Angles, Jutes and Saxons, arrived in Britain, where their own culture—with its accompanying language and pagan religion—became dominant across much of eastern Britain. Those Romano-British peoples ...

  9. War of the Fourth Coalition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_of_the_Fourth_Coalition

    The formation of the Confederation was the final nail in the coffin of the moribund Holy Roman Empire and subsequently its last Habsburg emperor, Francis II, formally abolished the empire. Napoleon consolidated the various smaller states of the former Holy Roman Empire which had allied with France into larger electorates, duchies and kingdoms ...