Images

Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by A R Cane

The stunning initial view as you come from the footbridge (from the churchyard). These tumuli are colossal! Almost as if the Romans said, “Hey folks, we’ll show you how it should be done”.

Image credit: A R Cane
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by A R Cane

The highest barrow at about 15m with it’s convenient wooden staircase.

Image credit: A R Cane
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by A R Cane

The view down on the lower barrows which are barely discernible, possibly due to centuries of ploughing.

Image credit: A R Cane
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by A R Cane

A pit in the top of the highest barrow seems to be a legacy of the top down excavation/plundering of the 1830s.

Image credit: A R Cane
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by A R Cane

The most Northerly of the large barrows is just behind the footbridge over the disused railway line. It’s badly overgrown, neglected and in need of attention, but sadly it’s on private land.

Image credit: A R Cane
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

The barrows are so big they leave parts of the environs in perpetual shade!

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by moss

Second only to Silbury in being the largest mounds in this country, but unlike Silbury these Romano-British tumuli had treasure inside and a light left burning when they were finally closed up, perhaps to light the way to the underworld.

Image credit: Old Photo circa 1900
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

The heavily overgrown southern barrow from a windy central.......

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

The southern remaining barrow is seriously overgrown... but still massive.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

Central barrow from the summit of the northern-most.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

These barrows are so mind blowingly big they fair well block out the sun.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

Some idea of the sheer scale of the central barrow can be ascertained by looking down the access staircase. Probably not a good idea to fall down, however.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

The northern barrow from the summit of the largest central monument of the remaining trio.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by GLADMAN

Nature helps define the central barrow’s gradient. Thanks.

Image credit: Robert Gladstone
Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by Rhiannon

From Francis Grose’s ‘Supplement to the Antiquities of England and Wales’ (1777). They look very exotic don’t they, a bit like pineapples. The caption says ‘The Bartlow Hills, raised over the Slain after the Victory obtained here by Canute King of Denmark, over King Edmund Ironside, in the Year 1016’.

Image of Bartlow Hills (Round Barrow(s)) by moss

Incredibly ‘Silbury’ like, these three remaining barrows are also made of chalk

Articles

Bartlow Hills

Without any fieldnotes or a map these monsters took a bit of finding. I eventually parked at the south end of the village and walked back along a footpath through woods before branching off to the right deeper into the woods where the ‘hills’ suddenly appear in front of you. Wht are they not known better? possibly because there are very few other sites in the area?
Visiting in early April there is very little greenery around, though more than in Cornwall at the moment. Even so there is no view from the top of the tallest mound because of the trees all around, which is a shame.
I would love to know more about the excavations here, how they were carried out and where the story of the light being left burning inside came from.

Bartlow Hills

Extract taken from a paper read to the (archaeology) society April 5th 1832

“At the north end of the parish of Ashdon, in Essex, are certain artificial mounds. They consist of a line of four greater barrows, and a line of three smaller barrows, at the distance of between 70 and 80 feet in front of the others.
“The situation of these mounds is remarkable. They stand on a general acclivity in face of Bartlow church, the country gradually rising around them like an extended amphitheatre.
“Between the hills and the church is a hollow to the north, down which runs a little brook that divides the parishes of Ashdon and Bartlow, forming the boundary of the counties of Essex and Cambridgeshire.
“Though the hills do not belong to the parish of Bartlow, which is in Cambridgeshire, nor to the hamlet of Bartlow which is in Essex, still, from the received interpretation of the Saxon word Low, a barrow, it is clear that they give their name to the place, a proof of their antiquity”.


Should they be on TMA these early Romano-British mounds, unique of course, and large. But in truth they have to be seen just to say ‘wow’.

Second visit and we always start from the church, past the Three Hills pub/hotel, turn right at the cross roads and the church will be on your right. Stand and admire the round towered church, note the two paths that run through the church yard, one will lead you to christianity, the other to a pagan past.

The remaining three mounds are surrounded by tall trees, an ecosystem has evolved in this large glade the chalk mounds are covered in long grass and wild flowers, this is what enchants the place. Butterflies dance at your feet, there is a surfeit of these dark brown creatures, damselflies and dragonflies from the nearby stream, bees buzz busily round the plants.

The three mounds so steeply sided protect the plants, Silbury comes easily to mind with the largest mound, at 45 foot high, though the Bartlow mound misses the mark it still comes second, you can read the history here.....

sheshen-eceni.co.uk/bartlow_info.htm

I suspect winter would be the best time to visit, shorn of the natural vegetation, but summer has the added highlight of a vibrant ecosystem on these mounds.

Bartlow Hills

This is the largest barrow in Britain and very few people know of it. This Romano-British site at Bartlow is on the Essex/Cambridgeshire border at TL 586453. Originally the largest group in Europe when there were seven enormous barrows here. Then the now disused railway came through and flattened four of them! The largest survivor is 45 feet high and the highest in Britain. The wooden staicase gives access to the top without causing erosion. You can then look down on the other two giants. Many suberb artefacts have been recovered and are now in Colchester Museum (Bartlow was formerly in Essex).

Access is via a footpath, but it is not well marked. Bartlow is a small crossroads hamlet with few houses. Look for the “Three Hills” pub and the path is beyond the entrance to the big house next door. It seems incredible that this magnifent and enormous site is so little valued locally. The largest barrrow is second only in size to Silbury Hill (excluding mottes and castle mounds) and if Bartlow were in Wilts rather than Cambs there would be hundreds of visitors every day. Go there and be amazed!

Folklore

Bartlow Hills
Round Barrow(s)

Mildenhall: treasure chest said to have been concealed by Oliver Cromwell in the barrows known as the Three Hills, or in pits near them. Proc. Suffolk Inst. Arch. 4 (1864), 289.

Collected onto p31 of
Barrow Treasure, in Fact, Tradition, and Legislation
L. V. Grinsell
Folklore, Vol. 78, No. 1. (Spring, 1967), pp. 1-38.

Folklore

Bartlow Hills
Round Barrow(s)

There seem to be various traditions relating to skipping in Easter week, from various places around the country. In Cambridgeshire, Good Friday seems to have been the day singled out. “An eighty year old woman of Linton recalled in the 1930s that in her youth the villagers of Linton and Hadstock used to skip on Good Friday to Bartlow Hills to join in the fun of the fair held there.”

p107 in ‘Cambridgeshire Customs and Folklore’ by Enid Porter (1969).

Folklore

Bartlow Hills
Round Barrow(s)

In 1016 King Edmund Ironside fought and lost to the Danish invader Cnut at a place called Assundun. This was traditionally taken to be Ashdon, just south of Bartlow Hills .

In the parish of ASHDON, sparated from Bartlow, in Cambridgeshire, only by a small rivulet, are four large contiguous Barrows, called the BARTLOW HILLS, from their situation being not very distant from Bartlow Chuch. These are vulgarly regarded as the tumuli raised over the slain in the battle fought between Edmund Ironside, and the Danish King, Canute, in the year 1016; but as this tradition is not supported by any historical authority, it cannot be considered as deserving of credit.

(p380 of ‘The Beauties of England and Wales, Or, Delineations, Topographical, Historical, and Descriptive’ by John Britton and others, 1801. It’s online at Google Books.)

Cnut rather kindly built Ashdon church over the graves of the English, and created Bartlow Hills as the resting place for his own fallen warriors.

It’s true and if you want further proof, Camden reports in his ‘Britannia’ of 1610 that:

“Dane-wort which with bloud-red berries, commeth up heere plenteously, they still call by no other name than Danes-bloud, of the number of Danes that there were slaine, verily beleeving that it blometh from their bloud.”

The tradition is rather like the one we have of poppies growing on the WW1 battlefields. Danewort is thought to be dwarf elder (Sambucus ebulus).

(Actually the battle is now thought to have been in Ashingdon, some way away. And of course, the barrows aren’t Danish. They’re generally referred to as (shh) Roman – you can’t deny the wealth of Roman artefacts discovered there! but to be fair they were probably rich native people who were buried in the traditional British style through their own choice).

(info from ‘Albion’ by Jennifer Westwood, p103)

Sites within 20km of Bartlow Hills