Normanton Down and Bush Barrow forum 2 room
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Any one heard of this barrow group?
Where is it?

Can it be deleted from the database.

I'm not defending it as I don't know anything about it, but could it be because it's the type of barrow Riotgibbon was trying to illustrate, because Stukely and Colt Hoare called (saucer barrows? or disc barrows?) 'Druid Barrows'. and there are certainly some of those at Normanton Down.

Hi Rhiannon

My purpose is only to get the facts correct. Reading some of the other posts from Riotgibbon, I feel his entry was simply a mistake.

L.V. Grinsell, the God father of field archaeology and the man responsible for collecting information on the Stonehenge barrow groups, made reference

to this subject as follows......

THE STONEHENGE BARROW GROUPS 1979 - ISBN 0 9502338 8 9
The Normington group (page 31)

"Barrow 3 Disc-barrow (Hoare No.160), among the finest known. In small circular pit, a cremation with many beads of amber, shale and glass (?).
(There is evidence that this barrow has been used during this century for the insertion of token deposits of the burnt bones of deceased members of a sect of modern Druids. Grinsell, 1978)"

Reference is made to the book: Druids and Stonehenge; the Story of a Myth, 1978 Grinsell, L.V., a copy of which I have yet to read.

The barrow referred to is directly opposite Bush Barrow, on the opposite side of the track, grid ref SU11554131. It has a SMR No.SU14SW849 and is

included with Bush Barrow, as Scheduled Monument No.SM10317. Further information can be found at
http://history.wiltshire.gov.uk/smr/getsmr.php?id=12824

Why this barrow was singled out for such ritual, which Druid sect was responsible or when, remains a modern mystery.