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Tumulus

Tumulus: Encyclopedia - Tumulus

A tumulus (plural tumuli or tumuluses) is a mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves. Tumuli are also known as barrows, burial mounds or kurgans and can be found throughout much of the world. A tumulus composed largely or entirely of stones is usually referred to as a cairn. The method of inhumation may involve a cist, a mortuary enclosure, a mortuary house or a chamber tomb. Examples of barrows include Duggleby Howe and Maeshowe. Tumulus - Sites.

Including:
Tumulus, Tumulus - Britain, Tumulus - Israel, Tumulus - Japan, Tumulus - List of notable barrow diggers, Tumulus - Scandinavia, Tumulus - Sites, Tumulus - The Czech Republic, Tumulus - Types of barrows, Tumulus - U.S.A., Tumulus - Ukraine Russia and Central Asia

Tumulus: Encyclopedia - Tumulus



Tumulus

A tumulus (plural tumuli or tumuluses) is a mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves. Tumuli are also known as barrows, burial mounds or kurgans and can be found throughout much of the world. A tumulus composed largely or entirely of stones is usually referred to as a cairn.

The method of inhumation may involve a cist, a mortuary enclosure, a mortuary house or a chamber tomb. Examples of barrows include Duggleby Howe and Maeshowe.

Tumulus - Sites

Tumulus - Scandinavia

Burial mounds were in use until the 11th century in Scandinavia. In their undamaged state they appear as small, man-made hillocks, though many examples have been damaged by ploughing or deliberately damaged so that little visible evidence remains.

By burning the deceased, he was moved to Valhalla by the consuming force of the fire. The fire could reach temperatures of 1500 °C. The remains were covered with cobblestones and then a layer of gravel and sand and finally a thin layer of turf.

Thus he (Odin) established by law that all dead men should be burned, and their belongings laid with them upon the pile, and the ashes be cast into the sea or buried in the earth. Thus, said he, every one will come to Valhalla with the riches he had with him upon the pile; and he would also enjoy whatever he himself had buried in the earth. For men of consequence a mound should be raised to their memory, and for all other warriors who had been distinguished for manhood a standing stone; which custom remained long after Odin's time. [...] It was their faith that the higher the smoke arose in the air, the higher he would be raised whose pile it was; and the richer he would be, the more property that was consumed with him. (Ynglinga saga)

As the old Scandinavians worshiped their ancestors, the mounds were also places of worship.

Of note is King Björn's barrow in Håga (Old Norse name: Haug) near Uppsala. This location has a very strong connection with Björn at Haugi. First, the Nordic Bronze Age barrow gave its name to the location Håga ("the barrow"), which became part of the cognomen of the king, at Haugi ("at the barrow"), and interestingly, the mound was later named after the king.

Tumulus - Ukraine Russia and Central Asia

Main article: Kurgan.

The word kurgan is of Turkicn origin borrowed from Russian language. In the north, there are royal kurgans of Varangian chieftains, such as the Black Grave in Chernihiv (excavated in the 19th century), Oleg's Grave in Staraya Ladoga, and vast, intricate Rurik's Hill near Rurikovo gorodische. [1] Other important kurgans are found in South Russia and are associated with much more ancient steppe peoples, notably the Scythians (e.g., Pazyryk) and Proto-Indo-Europeans (e.g., Ipatovo) The steppe cultures found in South Russia naturally continue into Central Asia, in particular Kazakhstan.

Tumulus - Britain

In Britain, early references to tumuli were made by William Camden, John Aubrey, and William Stukeley. During the 19th century in England the excavation of tumuli was a popular pastime amongst the educated and wealthy middle classes who became known as "barrow-diggers". This leisure activity played a key role in laying the foundations for the scientific study of the past in England.

Tumulus - Israel

Near the western city limits of modern Jerusalem in Israel, 19 tumuli have been documented (Amiran, 1958). Though first noticed in the 1870s by early surveyors, the first one to be formally documented was Tumulus #2 in 1923 by William Foxwell Albright, and the most recent one (Tumulus #4) was excavated by Gabriel Barkay in 1983. Since 21 kings reigned in Jerusalem during the Israelite monarchy from David to Zedekiah (who was conquered and humiliated by the Chaldean king, Nebuchadnezzar), it is not unreasonable to suspect that these mounds were the locations of ceremonies to mourn/honor them after they had already received proper burial in the royal tombs (probably located in the heart of the city where they could be continuously guarded). See 2 Chronicles 16:14, 21:19 (which states that King Jehoram was not given this honor), 32:33, the book of Jeremiah 34:5 (a conditional promise for Zedekiah that he did not earn), and Biblical archaeology. Gabriel Barkay popularized this theory after studying tumuli near Salamis in Cyprus. More than half of these ancient Israeli structures have now been threatened or obliterated by modern construction projects, including Tumulus #4, which was excavated hastily in a salvage operation. The most noteworthy finds from this dig were two LMLK seal impressions and two other handles with associated Concentric Circle incisions, all of which suggests this tumulus belonged to either King Hezekiah (Barkay, 2003, p. 68) or his son Manasseh (Grena, 2004, p. 326).

Tumulus - Japan

In Japan, powerful leaders built tumuli known as kofun. The Kofun period of Japanese history takes its name from these burial mounds. The largest is over 400 meters in length. In addition to other shapes, kofun include a keyhole shape.

Tumulus - U.S.A.

Mound building was a central feature of the public architecture of many Native American cultures from Chile to Minnesota. Thousands of mounds in the USA have been destroyed as a result of farming, pot-hunting, amateur and professional archaeology, road-building and construction. Surviving mounds are still found in river valleys, especially along the Mississippi, Tennessee and Ohio Rivers. Mounds were used for burial, to support residential and religious structures, to represent a shared cosmology, and to unite and demarcate community. Common forms include conical mounds, ridge-top mounds, platform mounds, and animal effigy mounds, but there are many variations. Mound building in the USA is believed to date back to at least 1200 BCE in the Southeast (see Poverty Point), and recent research shows that it may predate that as well. The Adena and Mississippian cultures are principally known for their mounds. The largest mound site north of Mexico is Cahokia, a vast World Heritage Site located just east of St. Louis, Missouri. The most visually impressive mound site (due to the area being free of trees) is in Moundville, Alabama.

Tumulus - The Czech Republic

During the early Middle Ages, Slavic tribesmen inhabiting Czech lands used to bury their dead under barrows. This practice has been widespread in southern and eastern Bohemia and some neighboring regions, like Upper_Austria and Lusatia, which at that time have been also populated with Slavic people. However, there are no known Slavic barrows in central part of the country (around Prague), neither they are found in Moravia. This has led some of the archaeologists to speculations about at least three distinct waves of Slavic settlers, which have colonized Czech lands separately from each other, each wave bringing its customs with it (including burial rituals).

At places where barrows have been constructed, they are usually found in groups (10 to 100 together), often forming several clearly distinct lines going from the west to the east. Only a few of them have been studied scientifically so far; in them, both burials by fire (with burnt ashes) and unburnt skeletons have been found, even on the same site. It seems that builders of the barrows have at some time switched from burials by fire to burying of unburnt corpses; however, the reason for such change is unknown. The barrows date too much back to history (700 AD to 800 AD) to contain any Christian influences - it is almost certain that all people buried in them were pagans.

As Czech barrows usually served for burials of poor villagers, only a few objects are found in them except for cheap pottery. Only one Slavic barrow is known to have contained gold.

Most of the Czech burial barrows have been damaged or destroyed by intense agriculture in the densely populated region. Those which remain are usually located in forests, especially at hilltops in remote places. Therefore there is no general knowledge about burial barrows in the Czech population.

The best Slavic barrow sites can be found near to Vitín, a small village close to České Budějovice. There are two groups of barrows close to Vitín, each containing about 80 barrows ordered in lines. Some of the barrows are as much as 2 meters high.

There are also some prehistoric burial barrows in Czechia, built by unknown people. Unlike Slavic barrows, they can be found all across the country, though they are scarce. Distinguishing them from Slavic ones is not an easy task for the unskilled eye.

Tumulus - Types of barrows

Archaeologists often classify tumuli according to their location, form, and date of construction. Some British types are listed below:

  • Bank barrow
  • Bell barrow
  • Bowl barrow
  • D-shaped barrow A round barrow with a purposefully flat edge at one side often defined by stone slabs
  • Fancy barrow A generic term for any Bronze Age barrows more elaborate than a simple hemispherical shape.
  • Long barrow
  • Oval barrow A type of Neolithic long barrow consisting of an elliptical, rather than rectangular or trapezoidal mound.
  • Platform barrow The least common of the recognised types of round barrow, consisting of a flat, wide circular mound, which may be surrounded by a ditch. They occur widely across southern England with a marked concentration in East and West Sussex.
  • Pond barrow a barrow consisting of a shallow circular depression, surrounded by a bank running around the rim of the depression. Bronze age
  • Ring barrow a bank which encircles a number of burials.
  • Round barrow a circular feature created by the Bronze Age peoples of Britain and also the later Romans, Vikings and Saxons. Divided into sub classes such as saucer and bell barrow. The Six Hills are a rare Roman example.
  • Saucer barrow circular Bronze Age barrow featuring a low, wide mound surrounded by a ditch which may be accompanied by an external bank.
  • Square barrow A burial site, usually of Iron Age date, consisting of a small, square, ditched enclosure surrounding a central burial, which may also have been covered by a mound

Tumulus - List of notable barrow diggers

  • Thomas Bateman
  • Sir Richard Colt Hoare
  • William Cunnington
  • Rev. Bryan Faussett
  • Canon William Greenwell
  • Llewellyn Jewitt
  • Rev. W. C. Lukis
  • John Robert Mortimer
  • Augustus Pitt Rivers
  • John Thurman
  • Charles Warne

Other related archives

11th century, 19th century, 2 Chronicles, Adena, Archaeologists, Augustus Pitt Rivers, BCE, Bank barrow, Bell barrow, Biblical archaeology, Björn at Haugi, Bohemia, Bowl barrow, Britain, Bronze Age, Bronze age, Cahokia, Central Asia, Chaldean, Chernihiv, Christian, Cyprus, David, Duggleby Howe, England, Hezekiah, Ipatovo, Iron Age, Israel, Israelite, Japan, Jehoram, Jerusalem, John Aubrey, John Robert Mortimer, Kazakhstan, Kofun, Kurgan, LMLK seal, Long barrow, Lusatia, Maeshowe, Manasseh, Mexico, Middle Ages, Mississippi, Mississippian, Moravia, Moundville, Alabama, Native American, Nebuchadnezzar, Neolithic, Nordic Bronze Age, Odin, Old Norse, Oleg, Oval barrow, Pazyryk, Poverty Point, Prague, Proto-Indo-Europeans, Richard Colt Hoare, Romans, Round barrow, Rurik, Rurikovo gorodische, Russian language, Saxons, Scythians, Six Hills, Slavic, Staraya Ladoga, Sussex, Thomas Bateman, Turkicn, Upper_Austria, Uppsala, Valhalla, Varangian, Vikings, Vitín, William Camden, William Cunnington, William Foxwell Albright, William Greenwell, William Stukeley, World Heritage Site, Ynglinga saga, Zedekiah, agriculture, architecture, book of Jeremiah, cairn, chamber tomb, cist, cosmology, earth, effigy, grave, kurgan, kurgans, mortuary enclosure, mortuary house, pagans, pastime, platform mounds, ploughing, prehistoric, steppe, stones, world, České Budějovice



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Tumulus", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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