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Location | Lyneham, Oxfordshire |
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Coordinates | 51°53′14″N 1°34′09″W / 51.88721°N 1.56914°W |
Type | Long barrow |
History | |
Periods | Neolithic |
Lyneham Longbarrow ( grid reference SP297210) is a long barrow near Lyneham, Oxfordshire. It is beside the A361 road, between Shipton-under-Wychwood and Chipping Norton. Just nine metres from the barrow mound stands a 1.8 metre tall standing stone.
Lyneham barrow stands on a ridge overlooking valleys to the northwest and southeast. [1] The long barrow mound is 52 metres long, 19 metres wide and stands up to 1.75 metres high. [1] Next to it is a weathered sandstone megalith 1.8 metres in height above ground level, 2.0 metres in width and 0.5 metres thick. [1] The stone may have been part of a facade of standing stones. [1]
The barrow was excavated in 1894. The excavations located two chambers on the southeast side of the mound and at least one of these contained bone fragments, pottery and charcoal. [1] Also found were two Anglo-Saxon burials which had been cut into the top of the existing mound. [1]
![]() | |
Location | Lyneham, Oxfordshire |
---|---|
Coordinates | 51°53′14″N 1°34′09″W / 51.88721°N 1.56914°W |
Type | Long barrow |
History | |
Periods | Neolithic |
Lyneham Longbarrow ( grid reference SP297210) is a long barrow near Lyneham, Oxfordshire. It is beside the A361 road, between Shipton-under-Wychwood and Chipping Norton. Just nine metres from the barrow mound stands a 1.8 metre tall standing stone.
Lyneham barrow stands on a ridge overlooking valleys to the northwest and southeast. [1] The long barrow mound is 52 metres long, 19 metres wide and stands up to 1.75 metres high. [1] Next to it is a weathered sandstone megalith 1.8 metres in height above ground level, 2.0 metres in width and 0.5 metres thick. [1] The stone may have been part of a facade of standing stones. [1]
The barrow was excavated in 1894. The excavations located two chambers on the southeast side of the mound and at least one of these contained bone fragments, pottery and charcoal. [1] Also found were two Anglo-Saxon burials which had been cut into the top of the existing mound. [1]