Four of a group of round barrows on Milston-Bulford Down
List Entry Summary
This monument is scheduled under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 as amended as it appears to the Secretary of State to be of national importance. This entry is a copy, the original is held by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.
Name: Four of a group of round barrows on Milston-Bulford Down
List entry Number: 1009538
Location
The monument may lie within the boundary of more than one authority.
County:
District: Wiltshire
District Type: Unitary Authority
Parish: Bulford
National Park: Not applicable to this List entry.
Grade: Not applicable to this List entry.
Date first scheduled: 27-Jan-1965
Date of most recent amendment: 06-Feb-1990
Legacy System Information
The contents of this record have been generated from a legacy data system.
Legacy System: RSM
UID: 10172
Asset Groupings
This list entry does not comprise part of an Asset Grouping. Asset Groupings are not part of the official record but are added later for information.
List entry Description
Summary of Monument
Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.
Reasons for Designation
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.
History
Legacy Record - This information may be included in the List Entry Details.
Details
The constraint area includes a large disc barrow with two confluent bowl
barrows and a small single bowl barrow to the south.
1 - A bowl barrow 17m diameter. It is confluent with an adjacent barrow, and
has an indistinct profile around base due to military vehicles. (SU20014530)
2 - A bowl barrow 17m diameter. It is confluent with an adjacent barrow.
(SU200004531)
3 - A small bowl barrow 10m diameter. (SU20014532)
4 - A large disc barrow with an overall diameter of 50m (mound, berm, ditch
and outer bank). The tump is to the north-east of the centre. This barrow is
hard to distinguish but very well preserved. (SU20024535)
MAP EXTRACT
The site of the monument is shown on the attached map extract.
Selected Sources
Other
Trust for Wessex Archaeology, (1987)
Wiltshire Library & Museum Service, (1987)
National Grid Reference: SU 20020 45357
Map
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This copy shows the entry on 19-Apr-2018 at 06:28:21.
End of official listing