Tregiffian Burial Chamber

Tregiffian Burial Chamber

Coordinates: 50°03′43″N 5°35′17″W / 50.062°N 5.588°W / 50.062; -5.588

Tregiffian Burial Chamber

The Tregiffian Burial Chamber is a Neolithic or early Bronze age chambered tomb. An entrance passage, lined with stone slabs, leads into a central chamber. It is located near Lamorna in west Cornwall, United Kingdom. It is a rare form of a passage grave, known as an Entrance grave. This type of site is also typical in the neighbouring Isles of Scilly.

Contents

Location

Tregiffian is in southwest Cornwall in the District of Penwith south of Penzance between St Buryan and Lamorna. It lies close to The Merry Maidens stone circle. The site is managed by the Cornwall Heritage Trust on behalf of English Heritage.[1]

Construction

The large stone grave, half of which was covered by a road in 1846, was, unlike Cornish quoits, for the most part covered with soil, with only the entrance exposed. From the edge of the site a passage, covered by four 3 m long stones, led to the 4-meter deep grave chamber. In front of the chamber, a cross-lying ornate stone, with cup-and-ring markings, formed a barrier. The original stone is in Truro, in the Royal Cornwall Museum, the local stone is a replica. Inside the tomb there was the chamber grave, which consisted of upright stones and a cover slab. Tregiffian probably formed a holy place with the Merry Maidens and other sites.

Excavations

In 1871 William Copeland Borlase carried out the first excavations on the grave. He first discovered the stone edge of the cover and found flints, bones and ashes. During deeper excavations Borlase discovered pits with bone remains, which suggested cremation.[2] In 1932 Hencken noted for the first time that it was probably a variant of a Megalithic grave and placed this grave type temporally between the dolmen and the cist type.[3] Newer research recognized passage tombs as a variant of the dolmen type, notable particularly by the entrance to the interior.[4] Urns were discovered in comprehensive excavations in the years 1968 and 1972, and the contents were dated to roughly 1900 BC. The occurrence of these two forms of burial is typical of an Entrance grave and suggests its use as a community grave for a long period of time.

References

  1. ^ Sites Managed and Cared for by Cornwall Heritage Trust for English Heritage
  2. ^ William Copeland Borlase: Naenia Cornubiae, Longmans 1872
  3. ^ Hugh O'Neill Hencken: The Archaeology of Cornwall and Scilly, Metheun 1932
  4. ^ Glyn Edmund Daniel: The Megalith Builders of Western Europe, Harmondsworth, Penguin 1963

External links


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