Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T04:07:55.876Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The territory of ritual: cross-ridge boundaries and the prehistoric landscape of the Cleveland Hills, northeast England

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 May 2015

B. E. Vyner*
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of York, Micklegate House, Micklegate, York YO1 1JZ, England

Abstract

On the North Yorkshire Moors, in northeast England, is a series of linear boundaries which are characteristically placed across upland spurs and promontories. Survey and excavation suggest that these boundaries operated in conjunction with natural features to define areas of the prehistoric landscape which may have been concerned with ritual during the final Neolithic and Early Bronze Age.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Barrett, J.C. 1989. Time and tradition: the rituals of everyday life, in Nordstrom, H.A. & Knape, A. (ed.), Bronze Age studies: 113–26. Stockholm: Statens Historiska Museum.Google Scholar
Barrett, J.C. Bradley, R. & Green, M. 1991. Landscapes, monuments and society: the prehistory of Cranborne Chase. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R. 1989. Deaths and entrances: a contextual analysis of megalithic art, Current Anthropology 30: 6875.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1991a. Turning the world — rock carvings and the archaeology of death, in Sharples, N. & Sheridan, A. (ed.), Vessels for the ancestors: 168–76. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1991b. Monuments and places, in Garwood, P. Jennings, D. Skeates, R. & Toms, J. (ed.), Sacred and profane: 135–40. Oxford: University Committee for Archaeology. Monograph 32.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. 1992. The excavation of an oval barrow beside the Abingdon causewayed enclosure, Oxfordshire, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 58: 127–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burl, A. 1991. The Devil’s Arrows, Boroughbridge, North Yorkshire, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 63: 124.Google Scholar
Cosgrove, D. & Daniels, S. (ed.) 1988. The iconography of landscape: essays on the symbolic representation, design and use of past environments. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Crawford, G.M. 1980. Bronze Age burial mounds in Cleveland. Middlesbrough: Cleveland County Council.Google Scholar
Davies, D. 1988. The evocative symbolism of trees, in Cosgrove, & Daniels, (1988): 3241.Google Scholar
Elgee, F. 1930. Early man in northeast Yorkshire. Gloucester: John Bellows.Google Scholar
Elgee, H. & Elgee, F. 1949. An early Bronze Age burial in a boat-shaped wooden coffin from northeast Yorkshire, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 15: 87106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harding, A.F. 1981. Excavations in the prehistoric ritual complex near Milfield, Northumberland, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 47: 87136.Google Scholar
Harding, A.F. & Ostoja-Zagorski, J. In press. Prehistoric and early medieval activity on Danby Rigg, North Yorkshire.Google Scholar
Hayes, R.H. 1967. The chambered cairn and adjacent monuments on Great Ayton Moor, northeast Yorkshire. Scarborough: Scarborough and District Archaeological Society. Research report 7.Google Scholar
Hornsby, W. & Laverick, J.D. 1920. British barrows round Boulby, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 25: 4852.Google Scholar
Hornsby, W. & Stanton, R. 1917. British barrows near Brotton, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 24: 263–8.Google Scholar
Mcdonnell, J. (ed.) 1963. A history of Helmsley, Rievaulx and district. York: Stonegate Press.Google Scholar
Manby, T.G. 1980. Bronze Age settlement in eastern Yorkshire, in Barrett, J. & Bradley, R. (ed.), The British Later Bronze Age: 307–70. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. British series 83.Google Scholar
Miket, R. 1981. Pit alignments in the Milfield Basin, and the excavation of Ewart 1, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 47: 137–46.Google Scholar
Simmons, I.G. Atherden, M. Cundill, P.R. Innes, J.B. & Jones, R.L. 1982. Prehistoric environments, in Spratt (1982): 3399.Google Scholar
Spratt, D.A. 1981. Prehistoric boundaries on the North Yorkshire Moors, in Barker, G. (ed.), Prehistoric communities in northern England: 87103. Sheffield: University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Spratt, D.A. 1982. (Ed.). Prehistoric and Roman archaeology of northeast Yorkshire. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. British series 104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spratt, D.A. 1989. Linear earthworks of the tabular hills, northeast Yorkshire. Sheffield: University of Sheffield: University of Sheffield.Google Scholar
Spratt, D.A. 1993. Prehistoric and Roman archaeology of northeast Yorkshire. 2nd edition. London: Council for British Archaeology. Research report 87.Google Scholar
Spratt, D.A. & Harrison, B.J.D. 1989. The North York Moors: landscape heritage. Newton Abbot: David & Charles.Google Scholar
Still, L. & Vyner, B.E. 1986. Air photographic evidence for later prehistoric settlement in the Tees Valley, Durham Archaeological Journal 2: 1123.Google Scholar
Thomas, J. 1991. Rethinking the Neolithic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Vyner, B.E. 1984. The excavation of a Neolithic cairn at Street House, Loftus, Cleveland, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 50: 151–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vyner, B.E. 1988. The Street House Wossit: the excavation of a late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age palisaded ritual monument at Street House, Loftus, Cleveland, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 54: 173202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vyner, B.E. 1991. Bronze Age activity on the Eston Hills, Cleveland, Yorkshire Archaeological Journal 63: 2549.Google Scholar
Young, G.A. 1817. A history of Whitby. Whitby: Clark & Medd.Google Scholar