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Bowl barrow 240m south of Trinity House is a Neolithic or Early Bronze Age funerary monument located in Hampshire, England. The site consists of a circular earthwork mound characteristic of bowl barrow form, a prevalent burial tradition across southern Britain during the third and second millennia before the present. Bowl barrows of this type typically contained inhumation or cremation burials, often accompanied by grave goods that provide insight into contemporary material culture and social practices. The monument survives as an upstanding earthwork and remains an important record of prehistoric ritual and settlement patterns in the Hampshire landscape.
Bowl barrow 240m south of Trinity House is a scheduled monument protected by Historic England under reference 1012639. View the official record →
Bowl barrow 240m south of Trinity House is a Neolithic or Early Bronze Age funerary monument located in Hampshire, England. It is designated a Scheduled Ancient Monument by Historic England (NHLE) under reference 1012639.
Bowl barrow 240m south of Trinity House is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, legally protected by Historic England (NHLE) — the body responsible for designating and safeguarding heritage sites in England. The official designation reference is 1012639.
Several scheduled monuments lie within 10 km, including Bowl barrow 600m east of Upper Lanham Farm (2.8 km), Roman villa N of Bighton Wood (3.3 km), Godsfield Chapel (4.9 km).
Aubrey generates in-depth historical research for any address in Britain — drawing on scheduled monument data, Domesday records, Roman heritage, PAS finds and medieval history to reveal the complete story of a landscape.
Research the area around Bowl barrow 240m south of Trinity House