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  2. Earthworks (archaeology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthworks_(archaeology)

    They are an important part of the motte-and-bailey castle, a castle design during early Norman times in which the castle is built on the motte, and surrounded by a ditch and a bailey, which is an enclosure with a stone wall. [14] A round barrow is a mound that is in a rounded shape that was used during Neolithic times as a burial mound. [15]

  3. Bell barrow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_barrow

    The ditch is typically the source of the material used to create the mound and is therefore described as a "quarry-ditch". A burial pit beneath the mound usually contains human remains, sometimes cremated, sometimes simply interred. Grave goods such as daggers or pottery vessels are commonly found within the burial pit also.

  4. List of tumps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tumps

    The Welsh words twmp and Twmpath may be related. Although some may appear similar to glacial drumlins, for the most part they are man-made, e.g. remains from mineral extraction, burial mounds (tumuli and especially bowl barrows) or motte-and-bailey castle mounds. The following geographical features in the UK are referred to using the word:

  5. How the Burial Ground of My Enslaved African Ancestors ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/burial-ground-enslaved-african...

    It was one thing to hear about what the burial ground looked like, but it was another thing to actually be there, to see it with my own eyes, to walk through the resting place of the people whose ...

  6. Anglo-Saxon burial mounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Saxon_burial_mounds

    The second step in the process involved a grave cut then being made into the ground with enough space for an inhumation burial. Some of the most prestigious barrows contained burial chambers with richly-furnished wooden rooms buried within the mound. In others, the corpse had simply been interred and had had a mass of stones and earth raised on ...

  7. Glossary of archaeology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_archaeology

    A type of Neolithic earthwork that has a ring-shaped bank and ditch, with the ditch inside the bank. hillfort A type of earthwork used as a fortified refuge or defended settlement. homology homolog Similarity in style or form owing to a common origin, as opposed to an analog; see also homology (biology). [18] [19]

  8. Burial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burial

    Religious rules may prescribe a specific zone, e.g. some Christian traditions hold that Christians must be buried in consecrated ground, usually a cemetery; [45] an earlier practice, burial in or very near the church (hence the word churchyard), was generally abandoned with individual exceptions as a high posthumous honour; also many existing ...

  9. Bryn Celli Ddu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryn_Celli_Ddu

    Bryn Celli Ddu kerbstones and henge ditch. Outside the tomb, a ring of kerbstones shows the original extent of the mound, and they also follow the line of the ditch of the earlier henge monument. Three of the stones, visible within the cairn mound, are thought to be from the stone circle of that time. [2]