- Ringlemere barrow
The Ringlemere barrow is an
archaeological site near Sandwich in the English county ofKent most famous as being the find site of the Ringlemere gold cup.As the find was reported by the
metal detector ist finder, thus enabling the site to be properly excavated, this work has revealed a previously unsuspected funerary complex of Early Bronze Age date (approximately 2300 BC) had stood at the site. It is thought that the cup was not a grave good however but avotive offering placed at the centre of the barrow independent of any inhumation in approximately 1700 - 1500BC. No contemporary burials have in fact been found at the site although laterIron Age ones have since been found along with a Saxon cemetery.Excavation work has continued at the site, funded by
English Heritage , theBBC , theBritish Museum and theKent Archaeological Society . This work has indicated that the now ploughed-away barrow was as high as 5m and had a diameter of more than 40m. The flat-bottomed ditch that surrounded it was 5-6m wide and 1.35m deep. Considerable evidence of much earlierNeolithic activity has now been found on the site including by far the largest assemblage of grooved ware in the county. Current theories now focus on the site having been significant long before and after the barrow being built and that the ditch may have been that of an olderhenge or, more likely,hengiform monument .External links
* [http://www.canterburytrust.co.uk/hilights/ringle01.htm The excavation at the find site]
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