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Accident or design? Chambers, cairns and funerary practices in Neolithic western Europe

Scarre, Chris

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Authors

Chris Scarre



Contributors

Luc Laporte
Editor

Chris Scarre chris.scarre@durham.ac.uk
Editor

Abstract

The classic image of the Neolithic chambered tomb is of a stone-built – often megalithic – burial chamber covered by a mound or cairn. Many such chambers appear today in a denuded condition, usually as a consequence of natural or human destruction. Controversy has raged since the 19th century as to whether some megalithic chambers may never have had a covering mound, and evidence from sites from Scandinavia to Spain indicates that this may occasionally have been the case. Even where remains of a mound or cairn are present, however, the chamber was often the first structure to have been built, and would for a period have been free standing. At some sites, the deposition of human bodies began at this stage. It is not impossible that the addition of a covering mound was in some cases an act of closure, marking the cessation of burial activity.

Citation

Scarre, C. (2015). Accident or design? Chambers, cairns and funerary practices in Neolithic western Europe. In L. Laporte, & C. Scarre (Eds.), The megalithic architectures of Europe (69-78). Oxbow Books

Acceptance Date Nov 3, 2014
Publication Date Jan 1, 2015
Deposit Date Oct 29, 2015
Publicly Available Date Mar 29, 2024
Pages 69-78
Book Title The megalithic architectures of Europe.
Chapter Number 7
Publisher URL http://www.oxbowbooks.com/oxbow/the-megalithic-architectures-of-europe.html

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