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Exciting news: Though these two long barrows are not part of the hillfort, it was the only place on TMA that they are near to...


"The remains of two large 6000-year-old halls, each buried within a prehistoric burial mound, have been discovered by archaeologists from The University of Manchester and Herefordshire Council -- in a UK first.

The sensational finds on Dorstone Hill, near Peterchurch in Herefordshire, were thought to be constructed between 4000 and 3600 BC.

Some of the burnt wood discovered at the site shows the character of the building's structure above ground level- in another UK first.

The buildings, probably used by entire communities, are of unknown size, but may have been of similar length to the Neolithic long barrows beneath which they were found -- 70metres and 30m long.

They were, say the team, deliberately burnt down after they were constructed and their remains incorporated into the two burial mounds.

However- much detail has been preserved in the larger barrow: structural timbers in carbonized form, postholes showing the positions of uprights, and the burnt remains of stakes forming internal partitions.

Most importantly, the core of each mound is composed of intensely burnt clay, representing the daub from the walls of the buildings.

The buildings were likely to have been long structures with aisles, framed by upright posts, and with internal partitions.

The smaller barrow contains a 7m by 2.5m mortuary chamber, with huge sockets which would have held upright tree trunks at each end.

These massive posts bracketed a linear 'trough' lined with planks, which would have held the remains of the dead.

Professor of archaeology from The University of Manchester Julian Thomas and Dr Keith Ray Herefordshire Council's County Archaeologist, co-directed the excavation.

Professor Thomas said: "This find is of huge significance to our understanding of prehistoric life- so we're absolutely delighted.

"It makes a link between the house and a tomb more forcefully than any other investigation that has been ever carried out.

"These early Neolithic halls are already extremely rare, but to find them within a long barrow is the discovery of a lifetime."

He added: "The mound tells us quite a bit about the people who built it: they sought to memorialize the idea of their community represented by the dwelling.

"And by turning it into part of the landscape, it becomes a permanent reminder for generations to come.

"Just think of how the burning of the hall could have been seen for miles around, in the large expanse of what is now the border country between England and Wales."

Archaeologists have long speculated that a close relationship existed between houses and tombs in Neolithic Europe, and that 'houses of the dead' amounted to representations of the 'houses of the living'.

In addition to the two long mounds, the site has provided evidence for a series of later burials and other deliberate deposits, including a cremation burial and a pit containing a flint axe and a finely-flaked flint knife.

The objects have close affinities with artefacts found in eastern Yorkshire in the Late Neolithic (c. 2600 BC).

Dr Ray said: "These subsequent finds show that 1000 years after the hall burial mounds were made, the site is still important to later generations living 200 miles away -- a vast distance in Neolithic terms.

"The axe and knife may not have been traded, but placed there as part of a ceremony or an ancestral pilgrimage from what is now East Yorkshire.

"So we witness an interconnected community linking Herefordshire and East Yorkshire by marriage and by descent 5000 years ago."

He added: "In the British context, the Dorstone find is unique and unprecedented.

"We were hoping our work with The University of Manchester would help us to give us a clearer picture of the origins of these long barrows- but we were surprised how clearly the story came through.

"It's very exciting for us: for 15 years I have been arguing that Herefordshire has something important to say on the national picture of our Neolithic heritage."

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/07/130729231437.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Latest+Science+News%29

Fascinating stuff Moss. Be interested to know which long barrows - Cross Lodge is very close to Dorstone Hill and there are others not far away (obviously Arthur's Stone being the most famous in the vicinity).

This is a fantastic find - it is curious that the 'halls' were burned down before the long barrows were constructed. We touched on this in the thread 'Neolithic Settlement' when an extract from Barry Cunliffe's book Britain Begins was quoted (by meself) to suggest they may have be burned down in a hostile attack. Tiompan said in the old ways of Romany gypsies the head person's caravan was always burned when they died.

Here is the extract referred to:

Perhaps the most striking characteristic of the early phase of settlement is the appearance of large rectangular timber-built houses or halls as they may more appropriately be called. They have been found across Britain from White Horse Stone and Yarnton near Oxford to a number of finely preserved structures in eastern Scotland. A comparable example has been excavated at Llandegai near Bangor in north Wales, while at least forty-six rectangular houses have so far been identified in Ireland. Although there is some variation in size and structural detail, all are imposing structures representing the concerted effort of the community working together to identify, cut, haul, and erect timbers. Many of the larger buildings show a marked similarity in plan, size, and internal layout, having partitioning dividing the large enclosed space into discrete areas for different functions. Clearly we are dealing with a tradition of building.
The halls represented the desire of the social group to make a mark on the landscape – to create a ‘place’. Their very existence is symbolic of the community’s willingness and ability to work together. Thus they represent group cohesion, but how did they actually function? They could have housed extended families, the larger examples being capable of sheltering between twenty and twenty-five households, but they could equally well have been communal buildings used for assemblies or reserved for the performance of specific rites. Nor is it impossible that they were multifunctional. That three of the large Scottish halls, Claish, Crathes, and Balbridie, were all burnt down hints at the possibility of a ritual end, the burning representing a deliberate act of closure. If the halls had been the residences of the elite, then the death of a prominent member may have been the occasion. If they were communal structures, termination by fire might have been associated with the idea of social renewal. We can speculate, but are unlikely to ever know.

Nice picture of flint find:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/hfdscouncil/sets/72157634854177881/

The burning aspect is interesting. One the one hand it's obviously the easiest way to level a timber building, but one theory regarding the 'meaning' of the vitrification of stone forts is ritual de-commissioning.

Same thing here, perhaps?

Some photos of the dig over on the portal:

http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?x=332740&y=242130

It looks like it's right on the hilltop, near the little fort, so even the long barrows mentioned are presumably new discoveries, let alone the structures underneath.