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Bowl barrow on Huggate Pasture, 350m north east of Pasture Dale Plantation

A Scheduled Monument in Huggate, East Riding of Yorkshire

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.9874 / 53°59'14"N

Longitude: -0.6847 / 0°41'4"W

OS Eastings: 486343.204619

OS Northings: 455390.329662

OS Grid: SE863553

Mapcode National: GBR RQNB.KD

Mapcode Global: WHGDF.G16K

Entry Name: Bowl barrow on Huggate Pasture, 350m north east of Pasture Dale Plantation

Scheduled Date: 17 December 1929

Last Amended: 11 March 1996

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1013868

English Heritage Legacy ID: 26556

County: East Riding of Yorkshire

Civil Parish: Huggate

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): East Riding of Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Huggate St Mary

Church of England Diocese: York

Details

The monument includes a Bronze Age bowl barrow on Huggate Pasture, 350m north
east of Pasture Dale Plantation, in an area known as West Field. The monument
is one of three barrows lying close together, which form part of a much larger
group of bowl barrows dispersed across Huggate and Warter Wolds and Huggate
Pasture. Although altered over the years by agricultural activity which has
resulted in the virtual disappearance of the mound at ground level, the site
of the barrow can be observed as a low rise in the ground 0.1m in height and
is further defined as a circular concentration 18m in diameter of chalk and
flints in the ploughsoil. It will be surrounded by a ditch up to 3m wide
which, although infilled by ploughing and no longer visible at ground level,
will survive as a buried feature.
The three barrows were originally part of a larger cemetery of 19 bowl barrows
identified by J R Mortimer in the 1880s, running approximately north-south
from the vicinity of Huggate Pasture down to Warter Wold. This group lies to
the west of another group of 20 similar barrows identified by Mortimer, lying
dispersed across Huggate Wold. These barrows lie close to the ancient trackway
running on the western side of the Wolds, part of which survives today and is
known as the Wolds Way.
This group of three barrows also lies within a complex of linear bank and
ditch systems, and should be viewed in the context of the wider ancient
landscape, where very extensive systems of banks, dykes and hollow ways
link large tracts of the countryside in this region of the Yorkshire Wolds.
The monument was partly excavated by J R Mortimer in August 1882, when the
barrow mound was already found to be much reduced by ploughing activity.
Towards the centre of the mound, Mortimer found an adult skeleton lying flexed
upon its right side within a shallow grave apparently scooped through the thin
surface soil into the chalk bedrock beneath. It lay with the left arm bent
across the body and the right arm doubled with the hand over the face. Three
worked flints were found within the body of the mound, but there were no
other finds with the burial.

MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
It includes a 2 metre boundary around the archaeological features,
considered to be essential for the monument's support and preservation.

Source: Historic England

Reasons for Scheduling

Bowl barrows, the most numerous form of round barrow, are funerary monuments
dating from the Late Neolithic period to the Late Bronze Age, with most
examples belonging to the period 2400-1500 BC. They were constructed as
earthen or rubble mounds, sometimes ditched, which covered single or multiple
burials. They occur either in isolation or grouped as cemeteries and often
acted as a focus for burials in later periods. Often superficially similar,
although differing widely in size, they exhibit regional variations in form
and a diversity of burial practices. There are over 10,000 surviving bowl
barrows recorded nationally (many more have already been destroyed), occurring
across most of lowland Britain. Often occupying prominent locations, they are
a major historic element in the modern landscape and their considerable
variation of form and longevity as a monument type provide important
information on the diversity of beliefs and social organisations amongst early
prehistoric communities. They are particularly representative of their period
and a substantial proportion of surviving examples are considered worthy of
protection.

The monument is one of a group of barrows dispersed from Huggate Pasture south
down to Warter Wold, which in turn is related to other barrows close by on
Huggate Wold. The location of the barrows close to an ancient greenway, and to
the very extensive systems of dykes and hollow ways dating back to the Bronze
Age, offers important insights into ancient land use and territorial divisions
for social, ritual and agricultural purposes in this area of the Yorkshire
Wolds.
Despite part excavation by J R Mortimer in 1882, an earlier, unrecorded
excavation, and the effects of ploughing over many years, the barrow still
survives as a buried feature visible from aerial photographs, with
below-ground remains including the infilled ditch, further burial pits and
archaeological information relating to its construction.

Source: Historic England

Sources

Books and journals
Mortimer, J R , Forty Years Researches in British and Saxon Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire, (1905)

Source: Historic England

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