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Early Bronze Age Burial pots

Contributed by Northumberland National Park

Early Bronze Age Burial pots

These Bronze Age food vessels were found during an excavation of two early Bronze Age burial cairns at Turf Knowe in the Breamish Valley of Northumberland National Park (copies shown). One of them contained the cremated remains of an infant who apparently died from meningitis four thousand years ago. The Cheviot Hills abound with burial cairns from this era and hillforts from the Iron Age; illustrating a long-held need for a community to mark its territory in places which were safe from winter floods and able to be seen. The early burial cairns may have been a way of establishing the ancestral rights to surrounding land. The burial of cremated remains suggests a ritual process, while the reverent laying to rest of a tiny child that died in tragic circumstances forges strong emotional links with our own time. The pots can be seen in an exhibition at the National Park Visitor Centre, Ingram.

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  • 1 comment
  • 1. At 23:55 on 14 September 2011, Pottedhistory wrote:

    I love the originals of these pots and have been privileged to handle them when I made these replicas. I am flattered that the National Park have chosen to post them here. These replicas are now in the possession of the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall having been presented to them by the Northumberland National Park

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Location

Breamish Valley Northumberland

Culture
Period

circa 2,200 BC

Theme
Size
Colour
Material

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