Images

Image of Maiden Castle Long Barrow by thesweetcheat

The ploughed-out long barrow can barely be seen – there is a slight rise in the slope of the field, centre of the picture. The hillfort rises beyond.

Image credit: A. Brookes (31.12.2011)
Image of Maiden Castle Long Barrow by thesweetcheat

The long barrow is barely more than a light soil mark, so reduced has it been.

Image credit: A. Brookes (31.12.2011)
Image of Maiden Castle Long Barrow by formicaant

The dark line to the left of the photo is all that can now be seen of the long barrow.

Image credit: Mike Rowland 08/02/2008.

Articles

Maiden Castle Long Barrow

I have now managed to take a picture of this barely visible site. It is north of the hillfort in a barrow cemetery of mixed types. The long barrow is very denuded by ploughing and can only be seen in certain light conditions. Grinsell thought it “a doubtful long barrow” English Heritage have done a geophysical survey and found ditches and a bank consistent with a long barrow.

Miscellaneous

Maiden Castle Long Barrow
Long Barrow

Details of long barrow on Pastscape

A long barrow extant as an earthwork and located immediately northwest of Maiden Castle (SY 68 NE 7 and associated records), on the northeast-facing slope of a ridge, overlooking the Frome valley. The barrow is listed by Grinsell as Winterborne Monkton 1 and by RCHME as Winterborne Monkton 3. There is no record of any excavation having been undertaken. Orientated north northwest – south southeast, in 1980 the Ordnance Survey recorded it as a mound 27 metres by 9 metres and surviving to a maximum height of 0.5 metres on the downhill side, with no visible traces of ditches. In 1955, an Ordnance Survey field investigator had described the mound then as being 36 metres long and 18 metres wide, with a ditch 5 metres wide and 0.4 metres deep on the north side. The ditch on the south side was not visible. The higher, broader end was to the southeast where it measured up to 1.7 metres high. Plough damage was already well-advanced, and the mound appeared to have a “heavy chalk content throughout...and at the eastern end there is a sizeable heap of large flint nodules as though a cairn had been disturbed.Among the flints are small pieces of “alien” sandstone conglomerate and fragments of calcined bone”. Air photographs taken in the 1930s appear to show a narrow mound with unusually tapered ends, though this may have been a product of ploughing and other agricultural activity. Scheduled.

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