Source/Archive record SCH8354 - Once a Sacred and Secluded Place: Early Bronze Age Monuments at Church Lawton, near Alsager, Cheshire

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Type Article in Journal
Title Once a Sacred and Secluded Place: Early Bronze Age Monuments at Church Lawton, near Alsager, Cheshire
Author/Originator
Journal
Date/Year 2014

Abstract/Summary

Two round barrows were excavated in the early 1980s at Church Lawton near to the eastern edge of the Cheshire and Staffordshire Plain. One of the barrows was defined by a ring of nine glacial boulders and it is possible that these monoliths initially formed a free-standing stone circle. The remains constitute a rare example of the use of stone to enhance a Bronze Age barrow in the lowlands of central western England. Beneath the mound demarcated by the boulders were the burnt remains of a small, roughly rectangular turf stack associated with fragments of clay daub and pieces of timber. No direct evidence of burial was found within the monument. A radiocarbon date suggests that the structural sequence began sometime in the late 3rd–early 2nd millennium cal BC. The other barrow was principally a two-phased construction and contained urned and un-urned cremation burials. A battle-axe was placed next to one of the burials. Radiocarbon dates obtained from the cremations and associated deposits indicate that individuals were being interred from the late 3rd or early 2nd millennium cal BC, with the practice continuing until the middle of the 2nd millennium. The barrows formed part of a cemetery, consisting of three known mounds.

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Description

Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society, 80,2014, pp 237-277 doi:10.1017/ppr.2014.12

Location

Cheshire Historic Environment Record Digital Archive

Referenced Monuments (2)

  • Burial Mound (Church Lawton North) (Monument)
  • Burial Mound and peristalith/stone circle (Church Lawton South) (Monument)

Referenced Events (1)

  • Excavation of Bronze Age Barrows at Church Lawton 1981

Record last edited

Nov 18 2024 2:21PM