Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T07:01:34.908Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Bronze Age Urn Cemetery at Kimpton, Hampshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Maxwell Dacre
Affiliation:
13 Foxcotte Close, Andover
Ann Ellison
Affiliation:
Wessex Archaeological Committee

Abstract

Summary. An extensive urn cemetery associated with a complex flint platform, excavated by Max Dacre between 1966 and 1970, included burials of late Neolithic, Early Bronze Age, Middle Bronze Age (‘Deverel-Rimbury’) and Late Bronze Age date. The cemetery developed organically from a late Neolithic/Early Bronze Age focus which had evolved around one or more large sarsen stones.

The pottery sequence is of particular interest. The chronological precedence of all the barrel urn types of Central Wessex has been demonstrated for the first time and the Deverel-Rimbury phases contain pottery which relates both to the local Wessex sequence and to the Lower Thames Valley assemblages. The later Deverel-Rimbury phases also include vessels of the post-Deverel-Rimbury tradition and the final burials were interred in Late Bronze Age jars.

Analysis of the associated cremations gives some indication of the age and sex structure of each phase of burials, although identification proved difficult owing to the post-incineration process of pulverization to which the remains had been subjected in all phases. The existence of a range of age groups and both sexes in each phase serves to confirm the hypothesis that modular units within such later Bronze Age cemeteries represented the burial places of individual small social groups.

The urn cemetery developed gradually over a period of 1500 years (from c. 2100 to 600 BC).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1981

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

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Abercromby, J., 1912. A Study of the Bronze Age Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland. (2 vols.) Oxford.Google Scholar
Andrews, S., 1906. ‘Dummer’, Proc. Hants. F.C. and Archaeol. Soc., 5, 5362.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C., 1973. ‘Four Bronze Age Cremation Cemeteries from Middlesex’, Trans. London and M'sex Arch. Soc., 24, 111–34.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C., 1975. ‘The later pottery’, in Bradley, R. J. and Ellison, A. B., Rams Hill, B.A.R. 19. Oxford.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C., 1979. ‘Later Bronze Age Pottery in Southern Britain’, Current Archaeology, 67, 230–1.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C., 1980. ‘The pottery of the later Bronze Age in lowland England’, PPS, 46, 297319.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C., and Bradley, R. J., 1980. ‘Later Bronze Age settlement in South Wessex and Cranborne Chase’, in Barrett, and Bradley, 1980, 181208.Google Scholar
Barrett, J. C. and Bradley, R. J., 1980a. (Eds). Settlement and Society in the British Later Bronze Age. B.A.R. 83. Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berry, A. C. and Berry, R. J., 1967. ‘Epigenetic Variations in the Human Skull’, J. Anatomy, 101, 361–79.Google Scholar
Bradley, R. J., 1981. ‘Various styles of urn: cemeteries and settlement in southern England c. 1400–1000 bc’ in Chapman, R., Kinnes, I. and Randsborg, K. (Eds.), The Archaeology of Death. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Burgess, C. B., 1980. The Age of Stonehenge. London.Google Scholar
Calkin, J. B., 1964. ‘The Bournemouth Area in the Middle and Late Bronze Age, with the “Deverel Rimbury” problem reconsidered’, Arch. J., 119, 165.Google Scholar
Case, H., 1977. ‘The Beaker Culture in Britain and Ireland’, in Mercer, R. (Ed.), Beakers in Britain and Europe. B.A.R., Supp. Series 26. Oxford.Google Scholar
Christie, P. M., 1967. ‘A Barrow-cemetery in the Second Millennium B.C. in Wiltshire, England’, PPS, 33, 336–66.Google Scholar
Clark, J. G. D., 1934. ‘Derivative forms of the Petit Tranchet’, Arch. J., 91, 3158.Google Scholar
Clarke, D. L., 1970. Beaker Pottery of Great Britain and Ireland. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Clay, R. C. C., 1927A. ‘A Late Bronze Age Urn-field at Pokesdown, Hants’, Ant. J., 7, 465–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clay, R. C. C., 1927B. ‘The Woodminton Group of Barrows, Bowerchalke’, Wilts Archaeol. Mag., 43, 313–24.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B. W., 1970. ‘A Bronze Age settlement at Chalton, Hants.’, Ant. J., 50, 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cunliffe, B. and Phillipson, D. W., 1968. ‘Excavations at Eldon's Seat, Encombe, Dorset, England’, PPS, 34, 191237.Google Scholar
Cunnington, M. E., 1923. The Early Iron Age Inhabited Site at All Cannings Cross Farm, Wilts. Devizes.Google Scholar
Davies, S. M., 1981. ‘Excavations at Old Down Farm, Andover. Part II: Prehistoric and Roman’, Proc. Hants F.C. and Archaeol. Soc., 37, 81163.Google Scholar
Downer, G. C., 1975. Dental Morphology. Bristol.Google Scholar
Ellison, A. B., 1975. Pottery and Settlements of the later Bronze Age in southern England. Unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ellison, A. B., 1980. ‘Deverel-Rimbury urn cemeteries: the evidence for social organisation’, in Barrett, and Bradley, 1980a, 115126.Google Scholar
Engleheart, G. H., 1922. ‘On Roman Buildings and other Antiquities in NW Hants.’, Proc. Hants. F.C. and Archaeol. Soc., 9, 214–8.Google Scholar
Gejvall, N. G., 1955. ‘The Cremations at Vallhager’, in Stenberger, M. (Ed.), Vallhager. A Migration-period Settlement on Gotland. Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Gejvall, N. G., 1969. ‘Cremations’, in Brothwell, D. and Higgs, E. S. (Eds.), Science in Archaeology. London (2nd edn.).Google Scholar
Gingell, C., 1980. ‘The Marlborough Downs in the Bronze Age: the first results of current research’ in Barrett, and Bradley, , 1980a, 209–22.Google Scholar
Green, H. S., 1980. The Flint Arrowheads of the British Isles. B.A.R. 75. Oxford.Google Scholar
Grinsell, L. V., 1940. ‘Hampshire Barrows’, Proc. Hants. F.C. and Archaeol. Soc., 14, 940.Google Scholar
Grinsell, L. V., 1959. Dorset Barrows. Dorchester.Google Scholar
Guido, M., 1978. The Glass Beads of the Prehistoric and Roman Periods in Britain and Ireland. Soc. Antiq. Research Reports, 35. London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hawkes, C. F. C., 1939. ‘The Excavations at Quarley Hill, 1938’, Proc. Hants F.C. and Archaeol. Soc., 14(2), 136–94.Google Scholar
Hawkes, S. C., 1969. ‘Finds from two Middle Bronze Age pits at Winnall, Winchester, Hampshire; Proc. Hants F. C. and Archaeol. Soc., 26, 518.Google Scholar
Lewis, E. and Walker, G., 1976. ‘A Middle Bronze Age settlement site at Westbury, West Meon, Hampshire’, Proc. Hants. F.C. and Archaeol. Soc., 33, 3343.Google Scholar
Lisowski, F. F., 1956. ‘The Cremations from Barclodiad Y Gawres’, in Powell, T. G. E. and Daniel, G. E., Barclodiad Y Gawres.Google Scholar
Musty, J. and Stone, J. F. S., 1956. ‘An Early Bronze Age Barrow and Late Bronze Age Urnfield on Heale Hill, Middle Woodford’, Wilts Archaeol. Mag., 56, 253–61.Google Scholar
Piggott, C. M., 1938. ‘A Middle Bronze Age Barrow and Deverel-Rimbury Urnfield, at Latch Farm, Christchurch, Hampshire’, PPS, 4, 169–87.Google Scholar
Piggott, S., 1948. ‘The Excavations at Cairnpapple Hill, West Lothian’, Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland, 82, 68123.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piggott, S., 1962. The West Kennett Long Barrow: Excavations 1955–56. London.Google Scholar
Piggott, S., 1973. Victoria County History, Wiltshire. Volume I, pt. 2.Google Scholar
Preston, J. P. and Hawkes, C. F. C.Three Late Bronze Age barrows on the Cloven Way’, Ant. J., 13, 414–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rahtz, P., 1970. ‘Excavations on Knighton Hill, Broad Chalke, 1959’, Wilts Archaeol Mag, 65, 7488.Google Scholar
Rowlands, M. J., 1980. ‘Kinship alliance and exchange in the European Bronze Age’ in Barrett, and Bradley, 1980a, 1556.Google Scholar
Royal Commission on Historical Monuments, 1979. Inventory of Long Barrows in Hampshire. London.Google Scholar
Shrubsole, O. A., 1907. ‘On a tumulus containing urns of the Bronze Age, near Sunningdale, Berks. and on a burial place of the Bronze Age at Sulham, Berks.’, Proc. Soc. Ant., 21, 303–14.Google Scholar
Smith, I. F., 1965. Windmill Hill and Avebury: Excavations by Alexander Keiller, 1925–1939. Oxford.Google Scholar
Smith, K. 1977. ‘The excavation of Winklebury camp, Basingstoke, Hamphshire’, PPS, 43, 31130.Google Scholar
Stone, J. F. S., 1933. ‘A Middle Bronze Age urnfield on Easton Down, Winterslow’, Wilts Archaeol. Mag., 48, 218–24.Google Scholar
Stone, J. F. S., 1936. ‘An Enclosure on Boscombe Down East’, Wilts Archaeol. Mag., 47, 466–89.Google Scholar
Stone, J. F. S., 1941. ‘The Deverel-Rimbury Settlement on Thorny Down, Winterbourne Gunner, S. Wilts.’, PPS, 7, 114–33.Google Scholar
Van Vark, G. N. 1974. ‘The Investigation of Human Cremated Skeletal Material by Multivariate Statistical Methods. I Methodolgy’, Ossa, 1, 6393.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1969. ‘A Review of Henge Monuments in the Light of Recent Research’, PPS, 35, 112–33.Google Scholar
Wainwright, G. J., 1979. Mount Pleasant, Dorset: Excavations 1970–1971. Soc. Antiq. Research Reports, 37. London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wainwright, G. J. and Longworth, I. H., 1971. Durrington Walls: Excavations 1966–1968. Soc. Antiq. Research Reports, 29. London.Google Scholar
Warne, C., 1866. The Celtic Tumuli of Dorset. London.Google Scholar
Wells, C., 1960. ‘A Study in Cremation’, Antiquity, 34, 2937.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, D. A., forthcoming. The Bronze Age Cremation Cemeteries at Simons Ground, Dorset. Proc. Dorset Nat. Hist. Archaeol. Soc., monograph series.Google Scholar