A DESCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF THE OPENING OF
A SEPULCHRAL TUMULUS NEAR
FERRYBRIDGE
FROM THE HISTORY AND ANTIQUITIES OF KNOTTINGLEY
by C. FORREST, 1871
Formed of
our parent earth they resist the storms of ages, while the stone built
castles and fortresses of successive generations crumble to dust and
disappear. Nature seems to have taken them under her especial
protection and annually she clothes them with a shield of fresh verdure,
preserving their smooth and rounded outlines perfect as when first formed
by the hands of the ancients, whose ancestors sleep beneath them, and if
undisturbed would endure for ages yet to come.
This Tumulus,
which is situated in Roundhill Field, on the left of the road leading from
Ferrybridge to Castleford was first opened on March 28th, 1863. For
the sake of ascertaining its structure, a trench was dug on the side not
previously disturbed, to within a few feet of the centre, but without
result, except ascertaining that the material gradually changed from sandy
gravel to large stones as the middle was approached, and that it had been
raised upon a natural swell of the strata, thus offering a dry situation;
a condition about which the ancients appear to have been solicitous in
choosing the sites of their sepulchral mounds. They then began to
dig at the top, and immediately under the sod lay two human skeletons, one
upon the other, with no more than six or eight inches of soil upon
them. Near them lay portions of two antlers of the red deer, the
uppermost skeleton was that of a tall adult male, the teeth nearly entire
and in fine preservation, the other was of shorter but stouter
proportions, the feet of both were gone, probably by the diggers in 1811,
who it is conjectured had previously discovered these remains, and covered
them up, with the few inches of soil, under which we found them; they had
evidently not been removed, all the bones present being in their natural
position, the whole of the bones and horns were much crushed and broken by
the superincumbent earth which must once have covered them.
With them were
found several detached pieces, of what appeared to have been the tusk of
some animal, probably the wild boar, and fragments of half-baked pottery
which on comparison were found to be portions of two urns of the early
British type, such as are usually found in gravehills, attributed to that
period, the smaller one (of which the principal portions were recovered)
was of the size and much of the shape of an ordinary breakfast cup, three
inches high, scored all over with vertical indentations as if by a piece
of flint. The other was much larger, more elegant in shape, on which
considerable taste was displayed in the ornamentation, composed of
parallel lines, chevrons, zigzags and punctures, in which a dextrous use
of the twisted thong was evident; this was ten inches high.
About eighteen
inches to the left of these, and a few inches deeper, lay the skeleton of
another person, who had evidently lived to a great age, the teeth being
worn nearly to the roots, tho' showing no signs of decay. All the
three lay east and west as in the present mode of Christian
sepulture. No other human or animal remains were found, nothing
metallic, or any implements, no appearances of cremation, no ashes,
neither did the urns appear to have contained any, no stones to indicate
that a cist had enclosed them, they had been buried in the soil, which
here only differed from that surrounding it, in its somewhat darker colour.
Digging
downward, immediately under the skeletons first discovered, a large rough
slab was reached at the depth of four feet from the surface. Its
removal disclosed a stone cist or grave, of which it had formed the cover,
composed of four rough stones set on edge, and paved with smaller pieces
at the bottom ; width at the head 2 feet, at the feet 1 foot 5 inches
internal dimensions. It was entirely filled with small gravel, in
which was interred the skeleton of an adult male, apparently of large
stature, the thigh bones measuring in length 19 and 3/4 inches, the leg 16
inches. The knees were bent up in the manner in which such
interments are usually found, and the face toward the south. The
skull was accidentally broken, but well developed, and indicating the age
about forty. The teeth were all present, and in beautiful
preservation, the enamel white and bright as in the living subject.
In front of the breast was an urn, laid on its side, of very coarse make,
imperfectly baked, and so fragile, that on the most careful attempt to
remove it, the urn crumbled into fragments, the whole was however
collected, and sufficed to give a correct idea of its size, shape and
ornamentation. It contained nothing but small gravel, like that in
which it was laid. Near it was a small chipping of flint with a
cutting edge, 2 an 1/2 by 1 and 1/4 inches, this was the only article
having any resemblance to a tool or implement hitherto met with.
The cist being
filled with gravel, I suppose to be an unusual circumstance. It could
not have penetrated through any fissures in its sides, neither was the
cist likely to have been opened subsequently, as nothing appeared to have
been disturbed.
Proceeding
downward, it was seen that this cist was built upon and its sides
supported by large rough stones inclined towards it ; the surrounding
gravel was mixed with fragments of human bones, small pieces of urns, and
occasionally bits of charcoal, and in a cavity a piece of wood was found
but so decayed that its original shape or purpose could not be
ascertained. Among the bones was a portion of a skull, showing a
fracture from which the subject had recovered.
At about the
depth of seven feet, and a little to the east was a flat stone laid
horizontally, length 4 and 1/2 feet, width 3 feet, under this was a layer
of dark earth two or three inches thick, totally different from that
surrounding it, inodorous, and in which was no perceptible trace of animal
remains, but exhibiting hollow casts of something resembling stone fruit
about 1 inch long by 1/2 inch wide. Near this was found a thin stone of a
round or oval shape about 6 inches broad, apparently chipped to shape and
having a rough cutting edge ; its use can only be conjectured.
At the depth of
nine feet, the native rock was reached in which was a cavity about ten
inches deep, but as far as could be ascertained containing nothing but
gravel mixed with bones like the surrounding part.
From
observations then made, I came to this conclusion, that the mound had been
used for interments anterior to the formation of the cist, on which
occasion, its upper part was levelled to make a convenient platform for it
; when the bones of former interments were disturbed and scattered about
with as little respect for the dead as would a modern gravedigger ; in
making room for a new occupant.
The fact of the
three skeletons first noticed being interred after the Christian mode, is
presumptive evidence that they were Saxons. It is well ascertained
that this people had their coming here, frequently buried their dead in
British tumuli, even after they had embraced Christianity, which
occasioned an edict to be published in the year 987, prohibiting this
practice, and providing that no Saxon should be buried in the tumuli of
the Pagans, but only in the Cemeteries of the Churches, neither do urns
nor antlers (which are undoubtedly British) militate against this
supposition, when it is considered that they were all fragmentary, and as
the skeletons with which they were, had evidently been disturbed though
not removed, it is very probable that these fragments had been taken from
that part of the mound removed in 1811, and thrown among these bones in
the random manner in which we found them.
From all these
circumstances, this barrow appears to have had a very early and prolonged
existence as a place of sepulture. The cavity in the rock was
probably the grave of the first interment. The fragments of bones
under and around the cist show that interment had taken place before its
formation. The absence of any evidence of cremation either in the
cist or elsewhere, shows that these interments were prior to the
introduction of that ceremony from the nations with whom the Britons
afterwards had intercourse. The absence of any weapon or other
instrument save the single chipping of flint, and the roughly fashioned
stone and the rudely found urn of clay, all go to prove that this was one
of the very earliest of British Barrows. And if my hypothesis as to
Saxon burial be admissible it will bring its sepulchral history down to
the Christian era.
At the upper end
of the field are some earth-works of considerable depth, but as the whole
is under cultivation, their form and purpose can scarcely now be
determined.
Since the
above was in type, a final investigation of this tumulus has been made by
the Revd. Canon Greenwell, Lord Houghton and other gentlemen attending ;
and the mound is now swept away from its ancient standing, and ere long,
corn will wave over the place of the Briton's grave.
The result of
this last 'scientific examination' shows that the former 'mere riflings'
have not robbed it of all its sepulchral treasure.
On this
occasion, the digging commenced on the east side, where a deposit of burnt
bones was found upon a flat stone just above the surface, and ten feet
from the outside. Six feet to the north of this was another similar
deposit laid upon the natural surface. Five feet south of the centre,
was an unburnt body, doubled up and on its right side, with its head to
the south. Immediately beneath, and in close contact with it, was a
burnt body, apparently deposited at the same time. These interments
in opposite customs present very interesting features in British
sepulchral usage, as if the practice of cremation though at one period
generally adopted, was not universal, but influenced by the wish of the
deceased, or the inclination of surviving friends. With these
remains were found an urn, of beautiful type, 4 and 1/2 in. high,
ornamented outside with twenty-seven thong markings, it would be
impossible to decide to which of the bodies this belonged, such urns are
found with both modes of burial.
These
deposits of burnt bodies were all found on the south east side of the
tumulus and consequently none were met with during the partial examination
in 1863 ; but as the diggers in 1811 commenced at that point, they must
have found and removed several such.
As the work
proceeded, the large flat stone covering the deposit of dark earth, was
again met with ; and southward of this was another similar deposit also
covered by a stone. In this earth was found a small seed pod or
fruit, with striated markings, about nine lines in length, and black as
the soil in which it was found ; its size and shape suggest the idea, that
such fruit might have been the occasion of the hollow cists observed in
the first discovered deposit. Close to these deposits was one of
very dark sand, inclined to dark red or chocolate colour in some parts,
this had evidently been subjected to the action of fire.
The tumulus
was so far removed, as to reveal the nature of the surface on which it had
been built, which proved to be a natural outcrop of the limestone rock,
and upon it these dark deposits were found. Their origin and
purpose, offer an interesting subject of enquiry to the
Archeologist. Their situation on the edge of the projecting rock is
suggestive of their sacrificial character, or their connection with some
of the druidical rites of the ancient Britons. The burnt sand may
mark the site of the place where the act of cremation had been performed.
The next
object of interest was the rock grave, the edge of which had been reached
in 1863, but reluctantly abandoned. This was found, and proved to be
a large circular one, nearly six feet ion diameter, and two feet six
inches deep. At the west end was a rudely formed cist, filled with
gravel like the first one, in which was found a body, bent up in the usual
manner, lying on its right side, and with its head to the south
west. At its feet was a drinking cup laid on its side, height seven
inches, profusely ornamented with thong markings, consisting of three sets
of horizontal lines filled up between with vertical lines, below these,
and between two more horizontal lines, was a line of zigzags, the lower
triangles of which were filled up with horizontal markings. The same
pattern occupied the upper and lower halves of the vase. In the
hollow of the knees was found a bronzed pin much oxydized, about one and
1/2 in. long, this might have been used to fasten some portion of the
dress in which the person had been buried. It was the only piece of
metal found in the tumulus, with the exception of that found in 1811,
which is now supposed to have belonged to an Anglo-Saxon, buried with
sword, spear, shield &c.
C. Forrest,
History of Knottingley 1871