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Latitude: 51.2599 / 51°15'35"N
Longitude: -1.7147 / 1°42'52"W
OS Eastings: 420003.016066
OS Northings: 151231.240924
OS Grid: SU200512
Mapcode National: GBR 4Z0.Z64
Mapcode Global: VHC2G.7LCJ
Entry Name: Two of a dispersed group of round barrows on Weather Hill
Scheduled Date: 29 July 1965
Last Amended: 22 May 1990
Source: Historic England
Source ID: 1010143
English Heritage Legacy ID: 10055
County: Wiltshire
Civil Parish: Everleigh
Traditional County: Wiltshire
Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): Wiltshire
Church of England Parish: Fittleton All Saints
Church of England Diocese: Salisbury
A saucer barrow with a smaller bowl barrow to the south-west.
1 - A bowl barrow with traces of a ditch and an overall diameter c.22m.
(SU19985123)
2 - A disc barrow with an overall diameter of 33m (mound 9m diameter, berm
4.5m wide, ditch 4m wide, bank 3.5m wide). The tump is large in relationship
to the whole. (SU20025123)
MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
Source: Historic England
The most complete and extensive survival of chalk downland archaeological
remains in central southern England occurs on Salisbury Plain, particularly in
those areas lying within the Salisbury Plain Training Area. These remains
represent one of the few extant archaeological "landscapes" in Britain and are
considered to be of special significance because they differ in character from
those in other areas with comparable levels of preservation. Individual sites
on Salisbury Plain are seen as being additionally important because the
evidence of their direct association with each other survives so well. Some
470 round barrows, funerary monuments dating to the Late Neolithic and Early
Bronze Age, are known to have existed in the Salisbury Plain Training Area,
many grouped together as cemeteries. The total includes some 70 barrows of
rare types. Such is the quality of the survival of the archaeological
landscape, over 300 of these barrows have been identified as nationally
important.
Source: Historic England
Other
Trust for Wessex Archaeology, (1987)
Wiltshire Library & Museum Service, (1987)
Source: Historic England
Other nearby scheduled monuments