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Bowl barrow 600m west of Honey Hill Farm is a Neolithic or Bronze Age funerary monument located in Cambridgeshire. The site consists of a characteristic bowl-shaped earthwork, a common burial form in prehistoric Britain dating from the Neolithic period through to the Bronze Age. Such barrows served as communal or individual burial places and represent significant archaeological evidence of ritual practice and settlement patterns in ancient Cambridgeshire. The monument remains largely as an earthwork feature and is recorded as a scheduled ancient monument under the Historic England list entry 1011718.
Bowl barrow 600m west of Honey Hill Farm is a scheduled monument protected by Historic England under reference 1011718. View the official record →
Bowl barrow 600m west of Honey Hill Farm is a Neolithic or Bronze Age funerary monument located in Cambridgeshire. It is designated a Scheduled Ancient Monument by Historic England (NHLE) under reference 1011718.
Bowl barrow 600m west of Honey Hill Farm 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 1011718.
Several scheduled monuments lie within 10 km, including Bowl barrow 580m east of Mount Pleasant Bridge (0.4 km), Bowl barrow 250m south of Honey Farm (0.4 km), Romano-British settlement near Honeybridge (1.2 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 600m west of Honey Hill Farm