Tumulus
{{Short description|Mound of earth and stones raised over graves}}
{{Other uses|Tumulus (disambiguation)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
File:Bin Tepe, large tumulus.jpg at Bin Tepe in Lydia, modern Turkey, built c. 560 BC.{{cite journal |title=The Tomb of Atyattes |journal=Publications de l'Institut Français d'Études Anatoliennes |date=1993 |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=1–12 |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/anatv_1013-9559_1993_act_3_1_886 |language=fr-FR|last1=Ratte |first1=Philippe }} It is one of the largest tumuli ever built,{{cite book |last1=Taylor |first1=Richard P. |title=Death and the Afterlife: A Cultural Encyclopedia |date=2000 |publisher=ABC-CLIO |isbn=978-0874369397 |page=381 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BMqBAAAAMAAJ }} with a diameter of 360 meters and a height of 61 meters.{{cite book |last1=Fergusson |first1=James |title=Rubinde Stone Monuments |pages=31–32 |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Rude_Stone_Monuments.djvu/58 }}]]
File:Gamla uppsala.jpg of Gamla Uppsala in Sweden from the 5th and 6th centuries. Originally, the site had 2,000 to 3,000 tumuli, but due to quarrying and agriculture only 250 remain.]]
File:German military cemetery Normandy 1.jpg]]
File:Sulm valley tumulus.jpg–era tumuli in the Sulm valley necropolis]]
File:Kasta tumulus - view from Amphipolis.jpg Amphipolis]]
A tumulus ({{plural form}}: tumuli) is a mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves. Tumuli are also known as barrows, burial mounds, mounds, howes, or in Siberia and Central Asia as kurgans, and may be found throughout much of the world. A cairn, which is a mound of stones built for various purposes, may also originally have been a tumulus.
Tumuli are often categorised according to their external apparent shape. In this respect, a long barrow is a long tumulus, usually constructed on top of several burials, such as passage graves. A round barrow is a round tumulus, also commonly constructed on top of burials. The internal structure and architecture of both long and round barrows have a broad range; the categorization only refers to the external apparent shape.
The method of {{linktext|inhumation}} may involve a dolmen, a cist, a mortuary enclosure, a mortuary house, or a chamber tomb. Examples of barrows include Duggleby Howe and Maeshowe.
Etymology
The word tumulus is Latin for 'mound' or 'small hill', which is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *teuh2- with extended zero grade *tum-, 'to bulge, swell' also found in tomb, tumor, tumescent, thumb, thigh, and thousand.Calvert Watkins, American Heritage Dictionary of Indo-European Roots, 2000, p. 92.
Its synonym "howe" is derived from {{langx|non|haugr}}.{{cite web |title=how {{!}} howe |url=https://www.oed.com/dictionary/how_n2?tab=factsheet |website=OED |access-date=1 January 2025}}
Burial accounts
The funeral of Patroclus is described in book 23 of Homer's Iliad. Patroclus is burned on a pyre, and his bones are collected into a golden urn in two layers of fat. The barrow is built on the location of the pyre. Achilles then sponsors funeral games, consisting of a chariot race, boxing, wrestling, running, a duel between two champions to the first blood, discus throwing, archery and spear throwing.
Beowulf's body in the Anglo-Saxon poem Beowulf is taken to Hronesness, where it is burned on a funeral pyre. During cremation, the Geats lament the death of their lord, a widow's lament being mentioned in particular, singing dirges as they circumambulate the barrow.
Afterwards, a mound is built on top of a hill, overlooking the sea, and filled with treasure. A band of twelve of the best warriors ride around the barrow, singing dirges in praise of their lord.
Parallels have also been drawn to the account of Attila's burial in Jordanes' Getica.Frederick Klaeber, Attila's and Beowulf's funeral, PMLA (1927); Martin Puhvel, The Ride around Beowulf's Barrow, Folklore (1983). Jordanes tells that as Attila's body was lying in state, the best horsemen of the Huns circled it, as in circus games.
An Old Irish Life of Columcille reports that every funeral procession "halted at a mound called Eala, whereupon the corpse was laid, and the mourners marched thrice solemnly round the spot."
Types
Archaeologists often classify tumuli according to their location, form, and date of construction (see also mound). Some British types are listed below:
- Bank barrow
- Bell barrow
- Bowl barrow
- D-shaped barrow – round barrow with a purposely flat edge at one side often defined by stone slabs.
- Disc barrow
- Fancy barrow – generic term for any Bronze Age barrows more elaborate than a simple hemispherical shape.
- Long barrow
- Oval barrow – a Neolithic long barrow consisting of an elliptical, rather than rectangular or trapezoidal mound.
- Platform barrow – The least common of the recognised types of round barrow, consisting of a flat, wide circular mound that may be surrounded by a ditch. They occur widely across southern England with a marked concentration in East and West Sussex.
- Pond barrow – a barrow consisting of a shallow circular depression, surrounded by a bank running around the rim of the depression, from the Bronze Age.
- Ring barrow – a bank that encircles a number of burials.
- Round barrow – a circular feature created by the Bronze Age peoples of Britain and also the later Romans, Vikings, and Saxons. Divided into subclasses such as saucer and bell barrow – the Six Hills are a rare Roman example.
- Saucer barrow – a circular Bronze Age barrow that features a low, wide mound surrounded by a ditch that may have an external bank.
- Square barrow – burial site, usually of Iron Age date, consisting of a small, square, ditched enclosure surrounding a central burial, which may also have been covered by a mound.
Modern practices
File:Soulton Long Barrow, autumn 2018.jpg, an example of the modern barrows ]]
There is a contemporary revival in barrow building in the UK.{{Cite news|last=Kennedy|first=Maev|date=26 October 2016|title=Burial mounds make a comeback in 21st-century Britain|language=en-GB|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2016/oct/26/burial-mounds-comeback-21st-century-britain|access-date=20 May 2020|issn=0261-3077}} In 2015 the first long barrow in thousands of years, the Long Barrow at All Cannings, inspired by those built in the Neolithic era, was built on land just outside the village of All Cannings.{{cite web|title=Stonehenge steward builds his own burial chamber|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/11227351/Stonehenge-steward-builds-his-own-burial-chamber.html|website=Telegraph.co.uk|access-date=19 August 2017|last=Middleton|first=Christopher|date=13 November 2014|url-access=limited}} The barrow was designed to have a large number of private niches within the stone and earth structure to receive cremation urns.
This was followed by new barrows at:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silbury_Hill
- The Willow Row Barrow at St Neots.{{cite web|title=First burial barrow in thousands of years is completed at Hail Weston|url=http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/local-news/first-burial-barrow-thousands-years-12062456|last=Makey|first=Julian|date=23 October 2016|website=Cambridge-news.co.uk|access-date=19 August 2017}}
- The Soulton Long Barrow at Soulton in Shropshire.{{Cite news|last=Wainwright|first=Oliver|date=18 March 2019|title=Tomb with a view: why burial mounds are a better way to go|language=en-GB|work=The Guardian|url=https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2019/mar/18/tomb-with-a-view-return-of-burial-mound-sacred-stones-long-barrow|access-date=20 May 2020|issn=0261-3077}}{{Cite web|title= Countryfile, Shropshire|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m00049qw|website=BBC One|language=en-GB|access-date=20 May 2020}}{{Cite web|title=Congregation: An exhibition of secular and sacred architecture |url=http://architecturediary.org/london/events/12886|website=London Architecture Diary|language=en|access-date=20 May 2020|url-status=dead|archive-date=28 February 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200228164101/http://architecturediary.org/london/events/12886}}{{Cite web|title=In praise of new sacred buildings|last=Heathcote|first=Edwin|url=https://www.ft.com/content/6f1d42c0-5c73-11ea-8033-fa40a0d65a98 |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20221210/https://www.ft.com/content/6f1d42c0-5c73-11ea-8033-fa40a0d65a98 |archive-date=10 December 2022 |url-status=live|website=Financial Times|date=2 March 2020|access-date=20 May 2020|url-access=subscription}}{{Cite web|title=Faith buildings extend inclusivity in changing times|url=https://www.ribaj.com/culture/architecture-foundation-congregation-grand-junction-faith-buildings|last=Buxton|first=Pamela|website=www.ribaj.com|date=27 February 2020 |language=en|access-date=20 May 2020}}
- Higher Ground Meadow in Dorset{{Cite web|title='A beautiful place for loved ones to rest': New round barrow to be built at Higher Ground Meadow near Beaminster|url=https://www.bridportnews.co.uk/news/15504547.a-beautiful-place-for-loved-ones-to-rest-new-round-barrow-to-be-built-at-higher-ground-meadow-near-beaminster/|website=Bridport and Lyme Regis News|language=en|last=Jones|first=Ivor|date=2 September 2017|access-date=27 April 2018}}
- Mid-England Barrow, Oxfordshire.{{Cite web|title=Mid-England Barrow – are you looking to store cremation ashes/urns, an alternative to natural burial and funeral venue|url=https://www.mid-englandbarrow.co.uk/|website=Mid-England Barrow – are you looking to store cremation ashes/urns, an alternative to natural burial and funeral venue|language=en-US|access-date=20 May 2020}}
Plans have also been announced for a barrow in Milton Keynes{{Cite web|title='Stone-Age Style' long barrow for people to leave ashes in planned for Milton Keynes|url=https://www.mkfm.com/news/local-news/long-barrow-plan-for-non-religious-people-to-leave-the-ashes-of-their-loved-ones-in-milton-keynes/|website=MKFM|language=en|access-date=20 May 2020|date=18 May 2020|last=Tooley|first=David}} and in Powys.{{Cite web|title=20/0249/FUL {{!}} Construction of a neolithic style passage tomb and covering mound {{!}} Neolithic Barn Pantmawr Llanidloes Powys|url=https://pa.powys.gov.uk/online-applications/applicationDetails.do?keyVal=Q5JA39MP00S00&activeTab=summary|website=pa.powys.gov.uk|access-date=20 May 2020}}
Sites
=Australia=
Burial mounds are one of several funerary forms practiced by Indigenous Australians.{{cite journal |last1=F. Oxenham |first1=Marc |last2=Knight |first2=Tom |last3=Westaway |first3=Michael |title=Identification of Australian Aboriginal Mortuary Remains |journal=Forensic Approaches to Death, Disaster and Abuse |date=2008 |pages=43–45 |url=https://research-repository.griffith.edu.au/handle/10072/61729 |publisher=Australian Academic Press |isbn=978-1-875378-90-6 |ref=Oxenham2008|language=English}} Burial mounds were once practiced by some Aboriginals across Australia, the most eloborate burial mounds are recorded in New South Wales, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia. Most notable burials in New South Wales and Western Australia were studied and excavated by John Oxley (1820), Atkinson (1853), Pearce (1897), and Davidson (1949) and were termed Aboriginal tumulus.
Early records indicate the burial mounds as neat and rounded in form. However, dimensions and precise form could vary widely based on rank of the individuals, smallest mounds being 2 to 3 m in diameter and 2 m in height to largest mounds described as an earthen oblong mound resembling ‘a large hillock some 100 feet long, and 50 in height’. Some special or high-standing individuals mound were semi-circular, while most were round. Traditionally, the preparation of the burial site, the carving of trees facing the mound and internment was done by initiated men. Occasionally, long raised mourning seats were constructed along one side of the burial mound.{{cite journal |last1=Spry |first1=Caroline |last2=Armstrong |first2=Brian |last3=Ingram (Wiradjuri Elder) |first3=Neil |last4=Williams (Wiradjuri Elder) |first4=Alice |last5=Williams (Wiradjuri Knowledge Holder) |first5=James |last6=Ingram (Wiradjuri Traditional Custodian) |first6=Greg |last7=Sutherland (Wiradjuri and Kamilaroi Traditional Custodian) |first7=Ian ‘Doug’ |last8=Ngullubul Men’s Corporation |first8=Yarrawula |last9=Hines |first9=Michelle |last10=Potts |first10=Tracey |last11=Conyers |first11=Lawrence |title=Investigating Wiradjuri marara (carved trees or dendroglyphs) and dhabuganha (burials) in the Central Tablelands, southeastern Australia |journal=Australian Archaeology |date=2 September 2023 |volume=89 |issue=3 |pages=209–226 |doi=10.1080/03122417.2023.2219378 |ref=Spry2023|doi-access=free }} Many of these mounds today have undergone much change in appearance due to erosion, weathering, wildfires, agriculture, land development and deliberate destruction.
Bodies were buried either in a seated-position or in a crouched fetal-position, they were wrapped in layers of pelt-cloaks. Grave goods often included weapons, stone axes, ochre, white clay, stone flakes, bonepoints, necklaces, gridles, headbands and items of ceremonial clothing.
An early published account of John Oxley's excavation describes a high-standing Aboriginal man's burial mound and associated carved trees; these carvings on the trees were made around the mound, facing the burial.
File:Aboriginal carved trees, photographed by Henry King (ca.1889 and 1894).jpg
{{blockquote|"The form of the whole was semi-circular. Three rows of seats occupied one half, the grave and an outer row of seats the other; the seats formed segments of circles of fifty, forty-five, and forty feet each, and were formed by the soil being trenched up from between them. The centre part of the grave was about five feet high, and about nine long, forming an oblong pointed cone. On removing the soil from one end of the tumulus, and about two feet beneath the solid surface of the ground, we came to three or four layers of wood, lying across the grave, serving as an arch to bear the weight of the earthy cone or tomb above. On removing one end of those layers, sheet after sheet of dry bark was taken out, then dry grass and leaves in a perfect state of preservation, the wet or damp having apparently never penetrated even to the first covering of wood … the body deposited about four feet deep in an oval grave, four feet long and from eighteen inches to two feet wide. The feet were bent quite up to the head, the arms having been placed between the thighs. The face was downwards, the body being placed east and west, the head to the east. It had been very carefully wrapped in a great number of opossum [sic] skins, the head bound round with the net usually worn by the natives, and also the girdle: it appeared after being enclosed in those skins to have been placed in a larger net, and then deposited in the manner before mentioned … to the west and north of the grave were two cypress-trees distant between fifty and sixty feet; the sides towards the tomb were barked, and curious characters deeply cut upon them, in a manner which, considering the tools they possess, must have been a work of great labour and time."}}
Traditionally, a sheet of bark was removed from trees and the bare surface was carved to face the burial mound. In some cases, up to five trees were carved around the mound for high standing individuals. It has been suggested that the carvings were associated with the culture heroes admired by man in life and were thought to provide a pathway for his spirit to return to the sky world. According to Alfred William Howitt these carved trees served both as transit points to allow cultural heroes to ascend to, and descend from, the firmament as well as a means for the deceased to return to the sky world.{{cite magazine| title = The Carved Trees of New South Wales| last = McCarthy | first = Frederick D.| author-link = Fred McCarthy (archaeologist)| magazine = Australian Museum Magazine| date = 1 June 1940 | pages = 161–166}}
Some mounds do not contain burials, these mounds are associated with settlement debris. In Northern Territory and in several regions both forms are known.{{cite journal |last1=Brockwell |first1=Sally |title=Earth Mounds In Northern Australia: A Review |journal=Australian Archaeology |date=December 2006 |volume=63 |issue=1 |pages=47–56 |doi=10.1080/03122417.2006.11681837|hdl=1885/21244 |hdl-access=free }} Recently, several mounds in Queensland were investigated with ground-penetrating radar. These mounds were previously associated with settlement debris. Radar study revealed some mounds contained mortuary remains, while other mounds were built over places where ceremonial fires had taken place. Further research is proposed to understand nature of burial mounds in this part of Australia.{{cite web |last1=Fenton |first1=Bruce |title=Ancient mound builder culture of northern Australia revealed, with many mounds containing human remains {{!}} The Vintage News |url=https://www.thevintagenews.com/2018/02/14/mound-builder-revealed/ |website=thevintagenews |language=en |date=14 February 2018}} Archaeologist Mary-Jean Sutton said, "They could be 6,000 years old. They could be tens of thousands of years old. We believe potentially 5,000 to 6,000 years old, but they could be much, much older and potentially also younger, and we need to carry out more research to date them."
=Africa=
==Horn of Africa==
Salweyn in Northern Somalia contains a very large field of cairns, which stretches for a distance of around 8 km.{{cite book|author=Somali Studies International Association|editor1=Charles L. Geshekter|editor2=Hussein M. Adam|editor2-link=Hussein Mohamed Adam|title=The Proceedings of the First International Congress of Somali Studies|date=1992|publisher=Scholars Press|isbn=0-89130-658-7|pages=39–40|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mM8tAQAAIAAJ|access-date=13 October 2014}} An excavation of one of these tumuli by Georges Révoil in 1881 uncovered a tomb, beside which were artefacts pointing to an ancient, advanced civilization. The interred objects included pottery shards from Samos, some well-crafted enamels, and a mask of Ancient Greek design.{{cite book|title=Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of London|date=1881|publisher=Royal Geographical Society of London|page=571|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lL40AQAAIAAJ|access-date=18 October 2014}}
==The Sahel==
Preceded by assumed earlier sites in the Eastern Sahara, tumuli with megalithic monuments developed as early as 4700 BC in the Saharan region of Niger.{{cite book |last1=Hassan |first1=Fekri |title=Droughts, Food and Culture |chapter=Palaeoclimate, Food And Culture Change In Africa: An Overview |chapter-url=https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/0-306-47547-2_2 |year=2002 |pages=11–26 |publisher=Springer |doi=10.1007/0-306-47547-2_2 |isbn=0-306-46755-0}} Fekri Hassan (2002) indicates that the megalithic monuments in the Saharan region of Niger and the Eastern Sahara may have served as antecedents for the mastabas and pyramids of ancient Egypt.
The prehistoric tradition of monarchic tumuli-building is shared by both the West African Sahel and the Middle Nile regions.{{cite journal |last1=Faraji |first1=Salim |title=Rediscovering the Links between the Earthen Pyramids of West Africa and Ancient Nubia: Restoring William Leo Hansberry's Vision of Ancient Kush and Sudanic Africa |journal=Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections |date=September 2022 |volume=35 |pages=49–67 |isbn=9780964995864 |url=https://www.academia.edu/99787064 |oclc=1343909954}} Ancient Egyptian pyramids of the early dynastic period and Meroitic Kush pyramids are recognized by Faraji (2022) as part of and derived from an earlier architectural "Sudanic-Sahelian" tradition of monarchic tumuli, which are characterized as "earthen pyramids" or "proto-pyramids." Faraji (2022) characterized Nobadia as the "last pharaonic culture of the Nile Valley" and described mound tumuli as being "the first architectural symbol of the sovereign's return and reunification with the primordial mound upon his death." Faraji (2022) indicates that there may have been a cultural expectation of "postmortem resurrection" associated with tumuli in the funerary traditions of the West African Sahel (e.g., northern Ghana, northern Nigeria, Mali) and Nile Valley (e.g., Ballana, Qustul, Kerma, Kush). Based on artifacts found in the tumuli from West Africa and Nubia, there may have been "a highly developed corporate ritual in which the family members of the deceased brought various items as offerings and tribute to the ancestors" buried in the tumuli and the tumuli may have "served as immense shrines of spiritual power for the populace to ritualize and remember their connection to the ancestral lineage as consecrated in the royal tomb."
The "Classical Sudanese" monarchic tumuli-building tradition, which lasted in Sudan (e.g., Kerma, Makuria, Meroe, Napata, Nobadia) until the early period of the 6th century CE as well as in West Africa and Central Africa until the 14th century CE, notably preceded the spread of Islam into the West African and Sahelian regions of Africa. According to al-Bakrī, "the construction of tumuli and the accompanying rituals was a religious endeavor that emanated from the other elements" that he described, such as "sorcerers, sacred groves, idols, offerings to the dead, and the "tombs of their kings."" Faraji (2022) indicated that the early dynastic period of ancient Egypt, Kerma of Kush, and the Nobadian culture of Ballana were similar to al-Bakrī's descriptions of the Mande tumuli practices of ancient Ghana. In the Inland Niger Delta, 11th century CE and 15th century CE tumuli at El Oualedji and Koï Gourrey contained various bones (e.g., human, horse), human items (e.g., beads, bracelets, rings), and animal items (e.g., bells, harnesses, plaques).{{cite journal |last1=Faraji |first1=Salim |date=September 2022 |title=Rediscovering the Links between the Earthen Pyramids of West Africa and Ancient Nubia: Restoring William Leo Hansberry's Vision of Ancient Kush and Sudanic Africa |url=https://www.academia.edu/99787064 |journal=Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections |volume=35 |pages=49–67 |isbn=9780964995864 |oclc=1343909954}} Cultural similarities were also found with a Malinke king of Gambia, who along with his senior queen, human subjects within his kingdom, and his weapons, were buried in his home under a large mound the size of the house, as described by V. Fernandes. Levtzion also acknowledged the cultural similarities between the monarchic tumuli-building traditions and practices (e.g., monumental Senegambian megaliths) of West Africa, such as Senegambia, Inland Niger Delta, and Mali, and the Nile Valley; these monarchic tumuli-building practices span the Sudanian savanna as manifestations of a trans-Sahelian common culture and heritage. From the 5th millennium BCE to the 14th century CE, earthen and stone tumuli were developed between Senegambia and Chad. Among 10,000 burial mounds in Senegambia, 3,000 megalithic burial mounds in Senegambia were constructed between 200 BCE and 100 CE, and 7,000 earthen burial mounds in Senegal were constructed in the 2nd millennium CE. Between 1st century CE and 15th century CE, megalithic monuments without tumuli were constructed. Megalithic and earthen Senegambian tumuli, which may have been constructed by the Wolof people (Serer people) or Sosse people (Mande peoples). Sudanese tumuli (e.g., Kerma, C-Group), which date to the mid-3rd millennium BCE, share cultural similarities with Senegambian tumuli. Between the 6th century CE and 14th century CE, stone tumuli circles, which at a single site usually encircle a burial site of half-meter that is covered by a burial mound, were constructed in Komaland; the precursors for this 3rd millennium BCE tumuli style of Komaland, Ghana and Senegambia are regarded by Faraji (2022) to be Kerma Kush and the A-Group culture of ancient Nubia. While the stele-circled burial mounds of C-Group culture of Nubia are regarded as precursors for the megalithic burial mounds of Senegambia, Kerma tumuli are regarded as precursors for the stone tumuli circles of Komaland. The tumuli of Durbi Takusheyi, which have been dated between the 13th century CE and the 16th century CE, may have connection to tumuli from Ballana and Makuria. Tumuli have also been found at Kissi, in Burkina Faso, and at Daima, in Nigeria.
In Niger, there are two monumental tumuli – a cairn burial (5695 BP – 5101 BP) at Adrar Bous, and a tumulus covered with gravel (6229 BP – 4933 BP) at Iwelen, in the Aïr Mountains.{{cite book |last1=Garcea |first1=Elena A. A. |title=Gobero The No-return Frontier : Archaeology and Landscape at the Saharo-Sahelian Borderland |date=2013 |publisher=Africa Magna Verlag |page=258 |isbn=9783937248349 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fUy8gejsmSIC&q=%22Tumuli%22}} Tenerians did not construct the two monumental tumuli at Adrar Bous and Iwelen. Rather, Tenerians constructed cattle tumuli at a time before the two monumental tumuli were constructed.
The Tichitt Tradition of eastern Mauritania dates from 2200 BC{{cite book |last1=McDougall |first1=E. Ann |title=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History |chapter=Saharan Peoples and Societies |chapter-url=https://oxfordre.com/africanhistory/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.001.0001/acrefore-9780190277734-e-285 |year=2019 |doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780190277734.013.285 |isbn=978-0-19-027773-4 }}{{cite journal |last1=Holl |first1=Augustin F.C. |title=Coping with uncertainty: Neolithic life in the Dhar Tichitt-Walata, Mauritania, (ca. 4000–2300 BP) |url=https://comptes-rendus.academie-sciences.fr/geoscience/item/10.1016/j.crte.2009.04.005.pdf |journal=Comptes Rendus Geoscience |year=2009 |volume=341 |issue=8–9 |pages=703–712 |doi=10.1016/j.crte.2009.04.005 |bibcode=2009CRGeo.341..703H }} to 200 BC.{{cite book |last1=MacDonald |first1=K. |last2=Vernet |first2=R. |title=Early domesticated pearl millet in Dhar Nema (Mauritania): evidence of crop processing waste as ceramic temper |date=2007 |publisher=Barkhuis |location=Netherlands |pages=71–76 |isbn=9789077922309 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gTnffH-elc0C&dq=%22Tichitt%22+%22metallurgy%22&pg=PA71}}{{cite journal |last1=Kay |first1=Andrea U. |title=Diversification, Intensification and Specialization: Changing Land Use in Western Africa from 1800 BC to AD 1500 |journal=Journal of World Prehistory |year=2019 |volume=32 |issue=2 |pages=179–228 |doi=10.1007/s10963-019-09131-2 |s2cid=134223231 |doi-access=free |hdl=10230/44475 |hdl-access=free }} Within the settled areas of Tichitt Culture (e.g., Dhar Tichitt, Dhar Tagant, Dhar Walata), with stone walls, which vary in scale from (e.g., 2 hectares, 80 hectares), there were walled agricultural land used for livestock or gardening as well as land with granaries and tumuli. Based on the hundreds of tumuli present in Dhar Tichitt, compared to a dozen tumuli present in Dhar Walata, it is likely that Dhar Tichitt was the primary center of religion for the people of Tichitt culture.{{cite journal |last1=Monroe |first1=J. Cameron |title="Elephants for Want of Towns": Archaeological Perspectives on West African Cities and Their Hinterlands |url=https://www.academia.edu/35127116 |journal=Journal of Archaeological Research |year=2017 |volume=26 |issue=4 |page=387 |doi=10.1007/s10814-017-9114-2 |s2cid=254609731 }}
At Wanar, Senegal, megalithic monolith-circles and tumuli (1300/1100 BC – 1400/1500 AD) were constructed by West Africans who had a complex hierarchical society.{{cite web |last1=Holl |first1=Augustin F. C. |title=Megaliths and Cultural Landscape: Archaeology of the Petit Bao Bolon Drainage |url=https://www.academia.edu/36474475 |website=Academia }} In the mid-region of the Senegal River Valley, the Serer people may have created tumuli (before 13th century AD), shell middens (7th century AD – 13th century AD) in the central-west region, and shell middens (200 BC – Present) in the southern region.{{cite web |last1=Sall |first1=Moustapha |title=Academic Research In West Africa: The Case Of Senegal |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316739653 |website=Academia |publisher=Field Manual for African Archaeology}} The funerary tumuli-building tradition of West Africa was widespread and a regular practice amid 1st millennium AD.{{cite web |last1=Coutros |first1=Peter R. |title=The Malian Lakes Region redefined:archaeological survey of the Gorbi Valley |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/130FA79106C62F9C5B1FAAC9C8E6AAAE/S0003598X17000308a.pdf/div-class-title-the-malian-lakes-region-redefined-archaeological-survey-of-the-gorbi-valley-div.pdf |website=Cambridge University Press |publisher=Antiquity Publications}} More than ten thousand large funerary tumuli exist in Senegal.
At the Inner Niger Delta, in the Mali Lakes Region, there are two monumental tumuli constructed in the time period of the Trans-Saharan trade for the Sahelian kingdoms of West Africa.{{cite web |last1=Marot |first1=Laurence Garenne |last2=Mille |first2=Benoît |title=Copper-based metal in the Inland Niger delta: metal and technology at the time of the Empire of Mali |url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/340772351 |website=ResearchGate |publisher=Archetype Publications}} The El Oualadji monumental tumulus, which dates between 1030 AD and 1220 AD and has two human remains buried with horse remains and various items (e.g., horse harnesses, horse trappings with plaques and bells, bracelets, rings, beads, iron items), may have been, as highlighted by al-Bakri, the royal burial site of a king from the Ghana Empire. The Koï Gourrey monumental tumulus, which may date prior to 1326 AD and has over twenty human remains that were buried with various items (e.g., iron accessories, an abundant amount of copper bracelets, anklets and beads, an abundant amount of broken, but whole pottery, another set of distinct, intact, glazed pottery, a wooden-beaded bone necklace, a bird figurine, a lizard figurine, a crocodile figurine), and is situated within the Mali Empire.
=Asia=
==Central Asia==
{{Main|Kurgan}}
The word kurgan is of Turkic origin, and derives from Proto-Turkic *Kur- ("to erect (a building), to establish"). In Ukraine and Russia, there are royal kurgans of Varangian chieftains, such as the Black Grave in Ukrainian Chernihiv (excavated in the 19th century), Oleg's Grave in Russian Staraya Ladoga, and vast, intricate Rurik's Hill near Russian Novgorod. Other important kurgans are found in Ukraine and South Russia and are associated with much more ancient steppe peoples, notably the Scythians (e.g., Chortomlyk, Pazyryk) and early Indo-Europeans (e.g., Ipatovo kurgan) The steppe cultures found in Ukraine and South Russia naturally continue into Central Asia, in particular Kazakhstan.
It is constructed over a grave, often characterized by containing a single human body along with grave vessels, weapons and horses. Originally in use on the Pontic–Caspian steppe, kurgans spread into much of Central Asia and Eastern, Southeast, Western and Northern Europe during the 3rd millennium BC.{{cite web |url=https://www.dictionary.com/browse/kurgan |title=Kurgan |author=Random House Unabridged Dictionary |author-link=Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary |year=2019 |website=Dictionary.com |publisher=Random House }}
The earliest kurgans date to the 4th millennium BC in the Caucasus,{{Cite book|last=Kipfer |first=Barbara Ann |author-link=Barbara Ann Kipfer |year=2000 |title=Encyclopedic Dictionary of Archaeology |location=New York |publisher=Kluwer Academic/Plenum |isbn=0-306-46158-7 |page=291}} and researchers associate these with the Indo-Europeans.{{Cite book|editor1-last=Mallory |editor1-first=James P. |editor1-link=J. P. Mallory |editor2-last=Adams |editor2-first=Douglas Q. |editor2-link=Douglas Q. Adams |title=Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture |year=1997 |publisher=Fitzroy Dearborn |isbn=1-884964-98-2 |page=339}} Kurgans were built in the Eneolithic, Bronze, Iron, Antiquity and Middle Ages, with ancient traditions still active in Southern Siberia and Central Asia.
==Near East==
===Turkey===
File:Gordion82.JPG" in Gordion, dated 740 BC.]]
On the Anatolian peninsula, there are several sites where one can find the biggest specimens of these artificial mounds throughout the world. Three of these sites are especially important. Bin Tepe (and other Lydian mounds of the Aegean inland), Phrygian mounds in Gordium (Central Anatolia), and the famous Commagene tumulus on Mount Nemrut (Southeastern Anatolia).
This is the most important of the enumerated sites with the number of specimens it has and with the dimensions of certain among them. It is in the Aegean inland of Turkey. The site is called "Bintepeler" or "Bin Tepe" (a thousand mounds in Turkish) and it is in the northwest of Salihli district of Manisa province. The site is very close to the southern shoreline of Lake Marmara (Lake Gyges or Gygaea). Bin Tepeler is a Lydian necropolis that dates back to 7th and 6th centuries BC. These mounds are called "the pyramids of Anatolia", as a giant specimen among them is 355 metres in diameter, 1115 metres in perimeter and 69 metres high. According to Herodotus, this giant tumulus belongs to the famous Lydian King Alyattes who ruled between 619 and 560 BC. There is also another mound belonging to King Gyges. The Gyges mound was excavated but the burial chamber has not been found yet. On this site, there are 75 tumuli dating back to Lydian period that belong to the nobility. A large number of smaller artificial mounds can also be observed on the site. There are other Lydian tumuli sites around Eşme district of Uşak province. Certain mounds on these sites had been plundered by raiders in the late 1960s, and the Lydian treasures found in their burial chambers were smuggled to the United States, which later returned them to Turkish authorities after negotiations. These artifacts are now exhibited in the Archaeological Museum of Uşak.
Gordium (Gordion) was the capital of the ancient kingdom of Phrygia. Its ruins are in the immediate vicinity of Polatlı, near the Turkish capital Ankara. At this site, approximately 80–90 tumuli date back to the Phrygian, Persian and Hellenistic periods. Around 35 tumuli have been excavated so far, ranging in date from the 8th century BC to the 3rd or 2nd century BC. The biggest tumulus at the site is believed to have covered the burial of the famous Phrygian King Midas or that of his father. This mound, called Tumulus MM (for "Midas Mound"), was excavated in 1957 by a team from the University of Pennsylvania Museum, led by Rodney Young and his graduate students. Among the many fine bronze artifacts recovered from the wooden burial chamber were 170 bronze vessels, including numerous "omphalos bowls", and more than 180 bronze "Phrygian fibulae" (ancient safety pins). The wooden furniture found in the tomb is especially noteworthy, as wood seldom survives from archaeological contexts: the collection included nine tables, one of them elaborately carved and inlaid, and two ceremonial serving stands inlaid with religious symbols and geometric patterns. Important bronze and wooden artifacts were also found in other tumulus burials at the site.
Mount Nemrut is 86 km in the east of Adıyaman province of Turkey. It is very close to Kahta district of the same province. The mountain has, at its peak, 3050 metres of height above sea level. A tumulus that dates to the 1st century BC is at the peak of the mountain. This artificial mound has 150 metres in diameter and a height of 50 metres, which was originally 55 metres. It belongs to the Commagene King Antiochus I Theos of Commagene who ruled between 69 and 40 BC. This tumulus is made of broken stone pieces, which renders excavation attempts almost impossible. The tumulus is surrounded by ceremonial terraces in the east, west, and north. The east and west terraces have tremendous statues (reaching 8 to 10 meters in height) and bas reliefs of gods and goddesses from the Commagene pantheon where divine figures used to embody the Persian and Roman perceptions together.
===Bahrain===
{{Main article|Dilmun Burial Mounds|Dilmun}}
File:Burial Mounds in Bahrain 1918.jpg in Bahrain.]]
The Dilmun Burial Mounds comprising necropolis areas on the main island of Bahrain dating back to the Dilmun civilization and the Umm al-Nar culture.{{cite web|url=https://en.unesco.org/news/seven-cultural-sites-inscribed-unescos-world-heritage-list|title=Seven cultural sites inscribed on UNESCO's World Heritage List|website=UNESCO|date=6 July 2019}}
Each of the tumuli is composed of a central stone chamber that is enclosed by a low ring-wall and covered by earth and gravel. The
size of the mounds varies, but the majority of them measure 15 by 30 ft (4.5 by 9 m) in diameter and are 3–6 ft (1–2 m) high. The smaller mounds usually contain only one chamber. The chambers are usually rectangular with one or two alcoves at the northeast end. Occasionally there are additional pairs of alcoves along the middle of the larger chambers.
Although the chambers usually contained one burial each, some contain several people and the secondary chambers often contain none. The deceased were generally laid with their heads in the alcove end of the chamber and lying on their right sides. The bodies were accompanied by few items. There were a few pieces of pottery and occasionally shell or stone stamp seals, baskets sealed with asphalt, ivory objects, stone jars, and copper weapons. The skeletons are representative of both sexes with a life expectancy of approximately 40 years. Babies were generally buried at and outside the ring-wall. The average number of children per family was 1.6 persons.Crawford, 2016, [https://books.google.com/books?id=To2oDQAAQBAJ&dq=Dilmun+Burial+Mounds&pg=PT98 Dilmun Temple At Saar].
===Palestine-Israel===
A tumulus forms the center of the ancient megalithic structure of Rujm el-Hiri in the Golan Heights. Rujm in Arabic can mean tumulus, cairn or stone heap. Near the western city limits of modern Jerusalem, 19 tumuli have been documented (Amiran, 1958). Though first noticed in the 1870s by early surveyors, the first one to be formally documented was Tumulus #2 in 1923 by William Foxwell Albright, and the most recent one (Tumulus #4) was excavated by Gabriel Barkay in 1983. These tumuli are sometimes associated with the Judean kings who ruled Jerusalem, but no such connection has yet been substantiated, nor have any inscriptions naming any specific Judean king been excavated from a tumulus. More than half of these ancient Israelite structures have now been threatened or obliterated by modern construction projects, including Tumulus #4, which was excavated hastily in a salvage operation. The most noteworthy finds from this dig were two LMLK seal impressions and two other handles with associated concentric circle incisions, all of which suggests this tumulus belonged to either King Hezekiah{{sfn|Barkay|2003|p=68}} or his son Manasseh.{{sfn|Grena|2004|p=326}}
==South Asia==
{{multiple image|perrow = 2|total_width=280
| image1 = Megalithic burial mound, India.jpg
| image2 = Jawargi Megalith 1873.jpg
| footer = Types of Megalithic mound burials with chambers, India.
}}
===India===
Round mound burials are associated with megalithic burials in India.{{cite journal |last1=M. Menon |first1=Srikumar |title=The 'Round Mound' and its Structural Requirements: A Possible Scenario for the Evolution of the Form of the Stupa |journal=National Institute of Advanced Studies |date=16 September 2016 |url=http://eprints.nias.res.in/1225/1/2016-SrikumarMenon-JMSA.pdf |access-date=16 September 2016}} Most megalithic mounds with chambers found today have been disturbed over centuries and their original form was badly disturbed. Examination of other lesser disturbed monuments shows that the chamber was surrounded by a packing of earth, chipped rubble blocks and covered on the outside with inclined stone slabs whose top ends rested on the periphery of the capstone creating a mound.{{cite journal |last1=M. Menon |first1=Srikumar |title=The 'Round Mound' and its Structural Requirements: A Possible Scenario for the Evolution of the Form of the Stupa |journal=National Institute of Advanced Studies |date=16 September 2016 |url=http://eprints.nias.res.in/1225/1/2016-SrikumarMenon-JMSA.pdf |access-date=16 September 2016}} These pre-historic megalithic mound burials with chambers likely influenced later devolvement of mound burials called "Stupa" mounds, Similarities of the stupa with early megalithic mounds are noted with structural and functional features of the stupa (including its general mound shape and the practice of surrounding stupas with a stone, relic chamber, or wooden railing) with both pre-Mauryan era cairns and pre-historic megalithic "round mound" burials with chambers found in India, which likely represents a "proto-stupa".{{cite journal |last1=M. Menon |first1=Srikumar |title=The "Round Mound" and its Structural Requirements: A Possible Scenario for the Evolution of the Form of the Stupa |journal=National Institute of Advanced Studies |date=16 September 2016 |url=http://eprints.nias.res.in/1225/1/2016-SrikumarMenon-JMSA.pdf |access-date=16 September 2016}}
In Dholavira, an archeological site associated with Indus Valley Civilization, there are several large and high "hemispherical monuments" mounds with brick masonry found with burial chambers inside. Among them, Tumulus-1 and Tumulus-2 mounds were excavated. They consist of a deep and wide rock-cut chamber, surrounded on the ground by a massive circular mud-brick structure made in two tiers, and filled in and topped with random earth to form a domical shape.{{cite journal |last1=Singh Bisht |first1=Ravindra |title=How the Harappans Honoured Death at Dholavira – Chapter VI. Hemispherical monument or tumulus |journal=Archaeological Survey of India |pages=271–284 |url=https://www.academia.edu/10187944 |access-date=21 March 2011}} There is also evidence of plastering on the exterior of Tumulus-1 mound, bearing a 10-
mm thick plaster of pinkish-white clay over brick masonry. The offering in Tumulus-1 consisted of one full necklace of steatite stringed in a copper wire with hooks for interlocking, solid gold bangle with incurved ends, ageta and gold beads, along with a considerable assemblage of pottery.
Another type of mound burial is Maidam in Assam, India. The Ahom kingdom in medieval Assam built octagonal-shaped tumuli called Maidams for their kings and high officials. The kings were buried in a hillock at Charaideo in Sibsagar district of Assam, whereas other Maidams are found scattered more widely.{{cite web| last = ASI| title = Group of Maidams, Charaideo| publisher = Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India| url = http://asi.nic.in/asi_monu_tktd_assam_maidams.asp| year = 2007| accessdate = 2007-11-30| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090410124830/http://asi.nic.in/asi_monu_tktd_assam_maidams.asp| archive-date = 2009-04-10| url-status = dead}}
===Pakistan===
The damb was a type of mound, or small stone structure, found in Balochistan, including the coastal areas of Makran.
==East Asia==
===China===
===Japan===
File:NintokuTomb Aerial photograph 2007.jpg
File:Hashihaka-kofun zenkei.JPG, Sakurai, Nara, 3rd century AD]]
In Japan, powerful leaders built tumuli, known as kofun. The Kofun period of Japanese history takes its name from these burial mounds.{{Cite web|url=http://sitereports.nabunken.go.jp/17038|title=赤城山南麓の古墳|last=前橋市教育委員会|date=29 February 2016|website=Comprehensive Database of Archaeological Site Reports in Japan|access-date=2 September 2016}} The largest is Daisen-ryo Kofun, or more commonly Nintoku-ryo Kofun, with a length of 840 metres. In addition to other shapes, kofun includes a keyhole shape, typically seen in Daisen Kofun. Foreign museums possess some grave goods.
===Korea===
{{see also | Cheonmachong |l1=Cheonmachong, the Heavenly Horse Tomb}}
File:Burial-Mounds-at-GyeongJu.jpg
The first burial mounds in Korea were dolmens, which contained material from cultures of the 1st millennium AD, such as bronze-ware, pottery, and other symbols of the society elite. The most famous tumuli in Korea, dating around 300 AD, are those left behind by the Korean Baekje, Goguryeo (Kogyuro/Koguryo), Silla and Gaya states and are clustered around ancient capital cities in modern-day Pyongyang, Ji'an, Jilin, Seoul and Gyeongju. The Goguryeo tombs, shaped like pyramids, are famous for the well-preserved wall murals like the ones at Anak Tomb No. 3, which depict the culture and artistry of the people. The base of the tomb of King Gwanggaeto is 85 meters on each side, half of the size of the Great Pyramids.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sANORB_MSRUC&q=korean+tombs&pg=PA213|title=The Archaeology of Korea|last=Nelson|first=Sarah M.|date=1993|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0521407830}} Goguryeo Silla tombs are most noted for the fabulous offerings that have been excavated such as delicate golden crowns and glassware and beads that probably made their way to Korea via the Silk Road.
=Europe=
==Southeast Europe==
===Albania===
Tumuli are one of the most prominent types of prehistoric monuments spread throughout northern and southern Albania. Some well-known local tumuli are:
===Bosnia and Herzegovina===
More than 50 burial mounds were found in Kupres. Man from Kupres – the skeleton found in one of the tumuli is believed to be more than 3000 years old and it is kept in Gorica museum in Livno. Glasinac has many tumuli. During the Bronze and Iron Age it was a place of strong Glasinac culture, who buried their dead in tumulus.
===Bulgaria===
{{Main|Valley of the Thracian Rulers|Thracians}}
File:Alexandrovo Burial mound.JPG]]
File:The Thracian tomb Goliama Kosmatka, Bulgaria 01.jpg]]
File:VarnaMemorial.jpg dedicated to Władysław III of Poland, dug into an ancient Thracian tumulus]]
On the territory of Bulgaria there are over 60,000 ancient Thracian mounds, of which only about 1,000 have been studied. There are also Roman and Thraco-Roman burial tombs. Those tumuli over ancient tombs, temples and sanctuaries are found throughout the whole territory of Bulgaria. Some of the world's most significant and famous being the Kazanlak and Sveshtari tombs, UNESCO World Heritage sites. Located near the ancient Thracian capital cities of Seuthopolis (of the Odrysian kingdom) and Daosdava or Helis (of the Getae), perhaps they represented royal burials. Other notable tumuli are the Thracian tomb of Aleksandrovo, Thracian tomb Golyama Arsenalka, Thracian tomb Shushmanets, Thracian tomb Griffins, Thracian tomb Helvetia, Thracian tomb Ostrusha, Tomb of Seuthes III and the other tombs around Starosel, others contained offerings such as the Panagyurishte and Rogozen treasures. Some of the sites are located in the Valley of the Thracian Rulers. The mound of the Tomb of Seuthes III "Golyama Kosmatka" is among the largest mounds in Thrace, with a maximum height of 23 m. and a diameter of 130 m.
===Croatia===
There are thousands of tumuli throughout all Croatia, built of stone (Croatian: gomila, gromila) in the karst areas (by the Adriatic Sea) or made of earth (Croatian: humak) in the inland plains and hills. Most of these prehistoric structures were built in the 2nd and 1st millennium BC, from the middle Bronze Age to the end of the Iron Age, by the Illyrians or their direct ancestors in the same place; the Liburnian inhumation of dead under tumuli was certainly inherited from the earlier times, as early as the Copper Age. Smaller tumuli were used as the burial mounds, while bigger (some up to 7 metres high with 60 metres long base) were the cenotaphs (empty tombs) and ritual places.{{cite web |url=http://www.udruga-kameleon.hr/tekst/1134/ |title=Tumulusi u Hrvatskoj – veličanstvene prapovijesne "piramide" |author=Goran Majetić |date=9 July 2008 |publisher=udruga-kameleon.ht |access-date=8 October 2010 |language=hr |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100513203027/http://www.udruga-kameleon.hr/tekst/1134/ |archive-date=13 May 2010 }}
===Greece===
{{Main|Vergina}}
Some of the world's most prominent Tumuli, the Macedonian tombs and a cist-grave at Vergina include the tomb of Philip II (359–336 BC), father of Alexander the Great (336–323 BC), as well as the tomb of Alexander IV (323–309 BC), son of Alexander the Great. A very large tumulus has been discovered in Amphipolis. Known as the Kasta Tomb, the tomb's occupant is presently unknown. Also numerous Mycenaean Greek Tombs are in all essence Tumuli, notably Agamemnon's site in Mycenae, and other sites in Tiryns, near Olympia and Pylos, and mostly in the Peloponnese peninsula near Mycenaean sites and Bronze Age settlements. Moreover, in Central Greece there are numerous Tumuli, some excavated, others not. A notable one is in Marathon, serving as a burial for the ones who fell during battle.
As of October 2014 there are ongoing excavations at the Kasta Tomb in Amphipolis, Macedonia, Greece with the tumulus having a perimeter of 497 meters. The tomb within is assessed to be an ancient Macedonian burial monument of the last quarter of the 4th century BC.
===Hungary===
There are over 40,000 tumuli in the Great Hungarian Plain, the highest is Gödény-halom near the settlement of Békésszentandrás, in Békés county.{{cite web|url=http://www.bekesszentandras.hu/turizmus_seta.htm# |title=Picture of "Gödény-halom" |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081211193854/http://www.bekesszentandras.hu/turizmus_seta.htm |archive-date=11 December 2008 }}
Sírhalom origins and forms are diverse: tells, graves, border barrows, watcher barrows.{{cite web |url=http://www.nimfea.hu/kiadvanyaink/puszta/kisscs%20-%20kunhalom%20-%2099.pdf |title=A Kunhalmok Védelmé és Megmentésük Lehetőségei |trans-title=The Possibilities of Protecting and Rescuing Mounds |language=hu |website=www.nimfea.hu |author=A. Puszta |year=1999|pages=240–287}}
===Serbia===
{{Main|List of tumuli in Serbia}}
- Mrčajevci, several prehistoric tumuli
- Bukovac, Illyrian tumuli and necropolis
- Five prehistoric tumuli in the Morava valley.
- Gromile, Serbian tumuli in Ravna Gora.{{cite web |url=http://www.kosovo.net/crucified/cr_heritage.html |title=Crucified Heritage |author=Prof. dr Ljubisa Folic |publisher=kosovo.net |access-date=8 October 2010}}
- Kinđa
==Western and Central Europe==
===Austria===
File:Großmugl - Hügelgrab (1).JPG in Austria]]
- Burgstallkogel (Sulm valley)
- Großmugl (Lower Austria)
- Pillichsdorf (Lower Austria)
- Niederhollabrunn (Lower Austria)
- Gaisruck{{Cite web|url=http://www.hausleiten.gv.at/system/web/zusatzseite.aspx?detailonr=217257675|title=Pettendorf > Kulturdenkmäler|last=BEd|first=Herbert Kalser |website=Hausleiten|language=de-AT|access-date=15 July 2018}} (in Niederösterreich)
- Langenlebarn{{Cite news|url=https://bda.gv.at/de/publikationen/details/die-hallstattzeitlichen-huegelgraeber-von-langenlebarn-niederoesterreich-foemat-a-12/|title=Die hallstattzeitlichen Hügelgräber von Langenlebarn, Niederösterreich (FÖMat A 12)|access-date=15 July 2018|language=de}} (in Niederösterreich)
- Deutsch-Altenburg{{Cite web|url=http://www.bildarchivaustria.at/Pages/ImageDetail.aspx?p_iBildID=4507940|title=Österreichische Nationalbibliothek – Deutsch Altenburg|website=www.bildarchivaustria.at|access-date=15 July 2018}} (in Niederösterreich)
- Bernhardsthal{{Cite web|url=http://museumbernhardsthal.at/images/pdf/Szameit.pdf|title=Zu den frühmittelalterlichen Funden aus dem Tumulus I von Bernhardsthal, Niederösterreich|trans-title=On the early medieval finds from Tumulus I at Bernhardsthal, Lower Austria|website=museumbernhardsthal.at|year=1993|id=ArchA77/1993|last=Szameit|first=Erik|language=de-AT|url-status=dead|archive-date=11 August 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160811191817/http://museumbernhardsthal.at/images/pdf/Szameit.pdf}} (Lower Austria)
- Siegendorf (Burgenland)
- Schandorf{{Cite web|url=http://schandorf.at/kultur/die-huegelgraeber|title=Die Hügelgräber – Schandorf|website=schandorf.at|language=de-AT|access-date=15 July 2018}} (Burgenland)
- Kleinklein{{Cite web|url=http://www.grossklein.gv.at/gemeinde/geschichte/die-fuerstengraeber-von-kleinklein|title=Marktgemeinde Großklein: Die Fürstengräber von Kleinklein|last=Koerbler|website=www.grossklein.gv.at|language=de|access-date=15 July 2018}} (Styria)
- Niederfellabrunn (Lower Austria))
- Oberhofen am Irrsee (Upper Austria)
- Obermallebarn (Lower Austria)
- Unterzögersdorf (Lower Austria)
===Belgium===
- Two Tumuli of Ambresin (Liège Province)
- Tumulus of Avernas in Hannut (Liège): height: 8 m; circumference: 100 m
- Tumulus of the "champ de la Tombe" in Braives (Liège), 1st century AD Roman tomb.
- Tumulus of Court-Saint-Étienne (Walloon Brabant), around 3,000 BC.
- Two tumuli of Gingelom
- Three tumuli of Gingelom
- Tumulus of Glimes in Incourt (Walloon Brabant), Gallo-Roman period: height: 11 m; diameter: 50 m
- Tumulus of Hottomont in Ramillies (Walloon Brabant), tomb of {{Who|Roman general Otto|date=February 2017}}: height: 11.5 m; diameter: 50 m
- Tumulus of Oleye (Liek) (Liège)List of Dutch exonyms for places in Belgium
- Tumulus of Pepin of Landen in Landen (Flemish Brabant)
- Tumuli of the Sonian Forest (Brussels), 1st millennium BC.
- Three Tumuli of Grimde in Tienen (Flemish Brabant), 1st century BC Gallo-Roman tombs.{{Cite web|url=http://wikimapia.org/#lat=50.7994424&lon=4.9584174&z=18&l=0&m=b|title=Wikimapia – Let's describe the whole world!|website=wikimapia.org}}
- Tumulus of Koninksem (Paardsweidestraat, Tongeren)
- Tumulus of Koninksem (Romeinse Kassei, Tongeren)
- Tumulus of Herstappe or Herstappeltombe, Herstappe
- Tumulus of Beukenberg, Tongeren
- Tumulus of Trou de Billemont in Antoing (Hainaut Province), 6th and 7th-century Merovingian tombs.
- Tumulus of Walhain (Walloon Brabant)
- Two Tumuli of Waremme (Liège)
- Tumuli of Wéris (Belgian Luxembourg), 4th and 3rd millennium BC.
===United Kingdom===
{{See also|Anglo-Saxon burial mounds}}
File:Sutton Hoo burial ground 4.jpg, Suffolk]]
In the United Kingdom, barrows of a wide range of types were in widespread use for burying the dead from the late Neolithic until the end of the Bronze Age, 2900–800 BC. Square barrows were occasionally used in the Iron Age (800 BC–43 AD) in the east of England. The traditional round barrow experienced a brief resurgence following the Anglo-Saxon conquests, with the introduction of northern Germanic burial practices from continental Europe. These later barrows were often built near older Bronze Age barrows. They included a few instances of ship burial. Barrow burial fell out of use during the 7th century as a result of the spread of Christianity.
Early scholarly investigation of tumuli and theorising as to their origins was undertaken from the 17th century by antiquaries, notably John Aubrey, and William Stukeley. During the 19th century in England the excavation of tumuli was a popular pastime amongst the educated and wealthy upper classes, who became known as "barrow-diggers". This leisure activity played a key role in laying the foundations for the scientific study of the past in Britain but also resulted in untold damage to the sites.
Notable British barrows include:
- West Kennet Long Barrow – Neolithic long barrow in Wiltshire
- Wayland's Smithy – Neolithic long barrow and chamber tomb in Oxfordshire (historically Berkshire)
- Belas Knap – Neolithic long barrow in Gloucestershire
- Maeshowe – Neolithic chambered cairn and passage grave on Mainland, Orkney
- Duggleby Howe – Neolithic round barrow in the East Riding of Yorkshire
- Sutton Hoo – 7th-century East Anglian ship burial with exceptionally rich grave goods in Suffolk
- Devil's Humps – Bronze Age barrow group on Bow Hill in West Sussex
- Devil's Jumps – Bronze Age barrow group on the South Downs of West Sussex
- Seamer Beacon – Bronze Age barrow near Scarborough, North Yorkshire
===Czech Republic===
During the early Middle Ages, Slavic tribesmen inhabiting what is now the Czech Republic used to bury their dead under barrows. This practice has been widespread in southern and eastern Bohemia and some neighbouring regions, like Upper Austria and Lusatia, which at that time have been also populated with Slavic people. There are no known Slavic barrows in the central part of the country (around Prague), nor are they found in Moravia. This has led some of the archaeologists to speculations about at least three distinct waves of Slavic settlers, who colonized Czech lands separately from each other, each wave bringing its customs with it (including burial rituals).
At places where barrows have been constructed, they are usually found in groups (10 to 100 together), often forming several clearly distinct lines going from the west to the east. Only a few of them have been studied scientifically so far; in them, both burials by fire (with burnt ashes) and unburned skeletons have been found, even on the same site. It seems that builders of the barrows have at some time switched from burials by fire to burying of unburned corpses; the reason for such change is unknown. The barrows date too far back in history (700 AD to 800 AD) to contain any Christian influences.
File:Trizna 1899.jpg in a tumulus in 912. Painting by Viktor Vasnetsov]]
As Czech barrows usually served for burials of poor villagers, only a few objects are found in them except for cheap pottery. Only one Slavic barrow is known to have contained gold.
Most of the Czech burial barrows have been damaged or destroyed by intense agriculture in the densely populated region. Those that remain are usually in forests, especially at hilltops in remote places. Therefore, there is no general knowledge about burial barrows among Czech population.
The best Slavic barrow sites can be found near to Vitín, a small village close to České Budějovice. There are two groups of barrows close to Vitín, each containing about 80 barrows ordered in lines. Some of the barrows are as much as 2 metres high.
There are also some prehistoric burial barrows in Czech Republic, built by unknown people. Unlike Slavic barrows, they can be found all across the country, though they are scarce. Distinguishing them from Slavic ones is not an easy task for the unskilled eye. Perhaps the most famous of them forms the top of the Žuráň hill near Slavkov u Brna; it is from here that Napoleon commanded his forces during the Battle of Austerlitz.
===France===
- Bougon (Deux-Sèvres) tumuli are a set of five tumuli all at one site: the building and using took place over a long period from {{formatnum:4500}} to {{formatnum:3000}} BC. This set is considered to be one of the oldest western European megalithic necropolis.[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=6334019 Bougon Tumulus] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- The Bussy-le-Château commune (Marne) has five Roman, Visigoth and Burgundian tumuli: three of them remain relatively intact along the {{interlanguage link|Noblette river|fr|Noblette}}.{{cite book|author=P.-H. Letaudin|title=Etude historique sur La Cheppe, le camp d'Attila, et ses environs|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gAtBAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA5|access-date=27 April 2013|year=1869|publisher=Le Roy|pages=5–|language=fr}}
- The neolithic Saint-Michel de Carnac tumulus in Carnac was built between {{formatnum:5000}} and {{formatnum:3400}} BC.
- A few kilometers from Carnac are the {{convert|140|x|20|m|ft}} neolithic {{interlanguage link|Er-Grah tumuli|fr|Tumulus d'Er Grah}} near the famous broken Menhir.[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/search.php?query=Locmariaquer&country=6&category=0&county=556&sitetype=&days=0&condition=&ambience=&access= Locmariaquer tumuli] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- The five {{interlanguage link|Tumulus de champ Châlons|fr|Champ-Châlons tumuli}} in the Benon forest form a neolithic necropolis in the Courçon commune (Charente-Maritime).[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=6333987 Nécropole de Champ-Châlons] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- {{interlanguage link|Dissignac tumulus|fr|Tumulus de Dissignac}} is a neolithic monument located about 5 kilometres west of Saint-Nazaire (Loire-Atlantique).[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=6333666 Dissignac tumulus] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- The tumulus of Lamalou dolmen is situated at the headwaters of the Lamalou river.[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=29699 Dolmen Bergerie de Lamalou] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- Tumulus and burial chamber (dolmen) of Bergerie de Panissière is located near Alès (Gard).[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=6334941 Bergerie de Panissière] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- Tanouëdou tumulus is located near Bourbriac (Côtes d'Armor, Brittany).[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=17710 Tanouëdou tumulus] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- {{interlanguage link|Péré Tumulus|fr|Tumulus du Péré}} on Prissé-la-Charrière commune (Deux-Sèvres): a neolithic long barrow with tumulus {{convert|100|x|20|m|ft}}, dating from {{formatnum:4450}} to {{formatnum:4000}} BC.[http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=6334038 Péré Tumulus] on Megalithic Portal Map Search
- {{interlanguage link|Saint-Fiacre tumulus|fr|Tumulus de Saint Fiacre}}, on the Melrand commune (Morbihan), is listed as monument historique since 1972.{{Base Mérimée|PA00091440}}
- Appenwihr tumuli on the Appenwihr commune (Haut Rhin) are a set of nine small tumuli (about {{convert|1.50|m|ft}} tall and one higher at {{convert|4|to|5|m|ft}}), not far to the north-west. The results of the excavations are exposed in the Unterlinden Museum in Colmar.
- Tumulus des Hogues, neolithic monuments located in Habloville.{{Cite web|url=https://www.pop.culture.gouv.fr/notice/merimee/PA00110819|title=Tumulus dit des Hogues|website=www.pop.culture.gouv.fr}}
===Germany===
Hügelgrab ("barrow", "burial mound" or "tumulus") sites in Germany dating to the Early and Middle Bronze Age.
class="wikitable sortable"
!Name !Place !Region !Bundesland !Type !Date !Era |
Auleben grave-hill field
|Grave-hill field |1500–1200 BC |
Benther hill
|{{interlanguage link|Badenstedt|de|Ahlem-Badenstedt-Davenstedt}} | rowspan="4" |Hilly-grave |1800–1100 BC |Early Nordic Bronze Age |
{{interlanguage link|Kreuzlinger Forst|de|Kreuzlinger Forst}}/Mühltal
|Munich area |2000–1500 BC | rowspan="4" |Bronze Age |
{{interlanguage link|Germans Grave (Itzehoe)|de|Germanengrab (Itzehoe)}}
|1500–1300 BC |
{{interlanguage link|Giesen Tumuli|de|Hügelgräberfeld im Giesen}}
|{{interlanguage link|Giesen (village)|de|Giesen (Ortschaft)}} | rowspan="2" |Lower Saxony |1600–1200 BC |
Bonstorf Barrows
|grave-hill field |1500–1200 BC |
{{interlanguage link|Lahnberge Tumuli|de|Lahnberge#Geschichte}}
|>200 Hilly-graves | 1600 – 5th century BC |Middle Bronze Age (Tumulus culture), Late Bronze Age (Urnfield culture), Iron Age (Hallstatt Culture) |
{{interlanguage link|Wilhof mountain|de|Willhofer Berg}}
| rowspan="2" |Bavaria |Hilly-grave |1516 BC |Middle Bronze Age, early La Tene culture |
Daxberg Tumuli (Mömbris)
|{{interlanguage link|Daxberg (Mömbris)|de|Daxberg (Mömbris)}} |Hilly-grave field |2000–800 BC |
Hohenfelde
| rowspan="2" |Mecklenburg-Vorpommern |7 Hilly-graves | 1700 BC |
Neu Quitzenow
|2 Hilly-graves |1800–600 BC | |
Grabhügel von Leubingen
| grave-hill |1940 BC |
Barrows or tumuli sites in Germany dating to the Late Bronze and Iron Age.
class="wikitable sortable"
!Name !Place !Region !Bundesland !Type !Date !Era |
Pöckinger Gemeindegebiet (Pöcking local community area)
|Munich area |grave-hill field |c. 750–500 BC |
Glauberg
| rowspan="2" |Hesse |Kings graves |5th century BC |Early Celtic Age |
Lahnberge
|>200 Hilly graves |c. 1600 – 5th century BC |Middle Bronze Age (Tumulus culture), Late Bronze Age (Urnfield culture), Iron Age (Hallstatt Culture) |
Hohmichele
| rowspan="3" |Baden-Württemberg |Kings graves |c. 600–450 BC | rowspan="3" |Hallstatt culture |
Grave-hill of Hochdorf
|Hilly-grave |5th century BC |
Lehbühl
|Hill-grave |c. 600–400 BC |
Daxberg Tumuli (Mömbris)
|{{interlanguage link|Daxberg (Mömbris)|de|Daxberg (Mömbris)}} | rowspan="2" |Bavaria | rowspan="2" |Hilly-grave field |c. 2000–800 BC | rowspan="2" |Iron Age |
Daxberg Tumuli (Erkheim)
|{{interlanguage link|Daxberg (Erkheim)|de|Daxberg (Erkheim)}} |8th century BC |
Neu Quitzenow
|2 Hilly-graves |c. 1800–600 BC | |
{{interlanguage link|Royal grave of Seddin|de|Königsgrab von Seddin}}
|Kings graves |8th century BC | rowspan="2" |Bronze Age |
{{interlanguage link|Pestrup Grave fields|de|Pestruper Gräberfeld}}
|~ 500 grave-hills |c. 900–200 BC |
Magdalenenberg
|Kings grave |c. 616 BC | rowspan="2" |Hallstatt culture |
{{interlanguage link|Wagon grave of Bell|de|Wagengrab von Bell}}
|Wagon-grave |500 BC |
{{interlanguage link|Schweinert Tumuli|de|Hügelgräberfeld „Schweinert“}}
|Falkenberg (in Schweinert Nature reserve) |642-hill-graves field |c. 1000 BC | |
Breitenfeld
|21 grave-hills |c. 700 BC – 450 AD |
Barrows or tumuli sites in Germany dating to the Stone Age.
class="wikitable sortable"
!Name !Place !Region !Bundesland !Type !Date !Era |
{{interlanguage link|Grave fields of Grabau|de|Grabauer Gräberfeld}}
|9 grave-hills |6500–5500 BC |
Mansenberge
|Great stone grave |3600–2800 BC |
Other Barrows/tumuli in Germany of unstated date.
class="wikitable sortable"
!Name !Place !Region !Bundesland !Type !Date !Era |
Beckdorf
|Hilly-grave | | |
Heidelberg
|Hill-grave | | rowspan="2" |Bronze Age |
Mellingstedt
|Hilly-grave | |
Höltinghausen
|Hilly-grave field | | |
Plankenheide
|Hill-grave | | |
Kranzberger Forst
|19 Hilly-graves | |
Maaschwitz
|Hilly-graves | | |
Plaggenschale
| | | |
Tumulus von Nennig
|Grave-hill | |
Winckelbarg
| | | | |
===Ireland===
A tumulus can be found close to the Grianán of Aileach in County Donegal. It has been suggested by historians such as George Petrie, who surveyed the site in the early 19th century, that the tumulus may predate the ringfort of Aileach by many centuries possibly to the Neolithic age. Surrounding stones were laid horizontally, and converged towards the centre. The mound had been excavated in Petrie's time, but nothing explaining its meaning was discovered. It was subsequently destroyed, but its former position is marked by a heap of broken stones. Similar mounds can be found at The Hill of Tara and there are several prominent tumuli at Brú na Bóinne in County Meath.
===Italy===
File:Tomba Margareth.jpg, Italy|left|212x212px]]Some large tumulus tombs can be found especially in the Etruscan culture, carved directly into the local limestone (tufa), and covered by a limestone dome and a layer of dirt and grass (see image to the right). From the outside, they resemble burial mounds.
The interior of these tumuli, however, is what makes them so unique. Most tombs have one central corridor, where sarcophagi and urns house the crematedDr. Jeffrey A. Becker, "Sarcophagus of the Spouses (Rome)," in Smarthistory, August 8, 2015, accessed November 3, 2022, https://smarthistory.org/sarcophagus-of-the-spouses-rome/ . remains of the deceased were found, and the various rooms to either side of the corridor which contain the deceased's various belongings.{{Cite web |last=Fabrizi |first=Mariabruna |title=The Etruscan Tumuli: Underground Cities for the Dead – SOCKS |url=https://socks-studio.com/2015/09/13/the-etruscan-tumuli-underground-cities-for-the-dead/,%20https://socks-studio.com/2015/09/13/the-etruscan-tumuli-underground-cities-for-the-dead/ |access-date=2022-10-31 |website=socks-studio.com |date=13 September 2015 |language=en-US}}
Many tombs also hold paintings, or frescos, that in many cases represent the funeral, scenes of real life, or the afterlife. The most significant necropolises with tumulus tombs are Veio, Cerveteri, Vetulonia, and Populonia. The tumulus of Montopoli is relative of archaic center Colli della Città along paratiberina way in Tiber Valley.
Smaller barrows are dated to the Villanova period (ninth-eighth centuries BC), but the biggest were used in the following centuries (from the seventh century afterwards) by the Etruscan aristocracy{{Citation needed|date=November 2022}}.File:Verspreiding grafheuvels-urnenvelden Nederland.svgsCultuurhistorisch Beheer: [http://www.chbeheer.nl/elementen/grafheuvel-en-urnenveld chbeheer.nl]|235x235px]]
===Netherlands===
File:Oss vorstengraf.jpg near Oss (Netherlands) from above]] Burial mounds are the most numerous archaeological monuments in the Netherlands. In many places, these prehistoric graves are still clearly visible as low hills. The oldest tumuli (grafheuvels) in the Netherlands were built near Apeldoorn about 5,000 years ago. Concentrations of tumuli from the Bronze Age are located on the Veluwe and Drenthe.
Early scholarly investigation of tumuli and hunebedden and theorising as to their origins was undertaken from the 17th century by notably Johan Picardt. Although many have disappeared over the centuries, some 3000 tumuli are known of which 636 are protected as Rijksmonument.{{cite web |url=http://www.grafheuvels.nl/vitruvius4_2008.php |title=Grafheuvelonderzoek in Nederland: een gedane zaak? |trans-title=Burial mound research in the Netherlands: a done deal? |last=Bourgeois |first=Quentin |website=grafheuvels.nl |publisher=Universiteit Leiden |date=2008 |access-date=3 February 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140221013113/http://www.grafheuvels.nl/vitruvius4_2008.php |archive-date=21 February 2014 |language=nl}} The largest tumulus in the Netherlands is the grave of a king near Oss. Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Drents Museum, and Huis van Hilde have findings from tumuli in their collections.
===Portugal===
File:Dolmen Outeiro de Gregos3.jpg (5th or 4th millennium BC)]]
One of the densest manifestations of the megalithic phenomenon in Europe occurred in Portugal. In the north of the country there are more than 1000 late prehistoric barrows. They generally occur in clusters, forming a necropolis. The method of inhumation usually involves a dolmen. The tumuli, dated from {{Circa|4450}} to 1900 BC, are up to 3 metres high, with diameters from 6 to 30 metres. Most of them are mounds of earth and stones, but the more recent ones are composed largely or entirely of stones (cairns). In Portuguese, barrows are called {{lang|pt|mamoas}}, from the Latin {{lang|la|mammulas}}, given to them by the Romans because of their shape, similar to the breast of a woman.
===Sweden===
- Anundshög, located just outside the City of Västerås, is Sweden's largest burial mound.
- Gamla Uppsala, The Royal mounds (Swedish: Kungshögarna) is the name for the three large barrows which are located in Gamla Uppsala. According to ancient mythology and folklore, it would be the three gods Thor, Odin and Freyr lying in Kungshögarna or Uppsala högar.
- Gravhög Gårdstånga, situated in Eslöv Municipality, Skåne County, is the site of a Bronze Age burial mound, (Swedish: Gravhög).
- Hågahögen, King Björn's barrow in Håga (Old Norse word: haugr) near Uppsala has a very strong connection with Björn at Haugi.
- Kungshögar, an archaeological site on the Lake Mälaren island of Adelsö in Ekerö Municipality, contains five large burial mounds.
- Skalunda hög in Västergötland, the site of Skalunda Barrow, an historic burial mound.
===Norway===
File:Jellhaugen grave mound, Halden.jpg, Norway's 2nd biggest tumulus. Photo: Tore Schrøder]]
- Raknehaugen, dated to c. 550 AD, is located in the traditional district of Romerike. At 77 m in diameter and a height of 15 m, it is the largest tumulus in Northern Europe.{{Cite web|url=https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=no&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=no&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.akershus.no%2Fansvarsomrader%2Fkulturminner%2Fkulturminneartikler%2Fullensaker%2F%3Farticle_id%3D203229&edit-text=|title=Raknehaugen, Norway (by Google translate)}}
- Jellhaugen outside Halden, Østfold, considered the 2nd biggest in Norway, and dated back to around 500 AD.
- Gokstadhaugen a burial mound in Sandefjord, Vestfold, revealed a ship burial containing the Gokstad ship, a Viking era ship dating to the 9th century. The ship is the largest in the Viking Ship Museum in Bygdøy, Oslo.
- Oseberghaugen, the Oseberg burial mound at Oseberg near Tønsberg in Vestfold county, contained the Oseberg ship, a well-preserved Viking era ship dating from around 800 AD.
- Borrehaugene (Borre mound cemetery) forms part of the Borre National Park in Horten, Vestfold. The park covers {{convert|45|acre|m2}} and its collection of burial mounds includes, seven large mounds and one 25 small cairns.
- Båthaugen, a boat burial mound found at Rolvsøy in Tune, Østfold, contained the Tune ship, a Viking Age ship of the "karv" type. The ship was built around AD 900 and is made of clinkered oak planks.
- Storhaug (Great Mound) ship's burial mound Avaldsnes on Karmøy in Rogaland County, Norway contained a ship made of oak.
- Grønhaug (Green Mound), a ship burial at Avaldsnes, contained an approximately {{convert|15|m|ft|abbr=off|adj=on}} long boat with remains of a man's grave from the 10th century.
- Flagghaugen (Flag Hill Mound) at Avaldsnes, one of Norway's richest grave dating from the pre-Viking Period, contained a neck ring of {{convert|600|g|oz|abbr=off}}t) of pure gold, weapons, bandoleer mountings and various tubs of silver and bronze.
- Karnilshaugen, in Gloppen in the county of Sogn og Fjordane, is Karnil's tumulus.
- Osneshaugen, in Ulsteinvik in the county of Møre og Romsdal, is a tumulus overlooking the Osnes beach. It is believed to have been sacked, and has not been excavated in modern times. It has been dated to the Bronze Age.
===Denmark===
File:Tinghøj Hammershøj Kvorning 2010-01-08 edit filtered.jpg and Viborg, one of about 26,000Inge Adriansen. Nationale symboler i det Danske Rige, 1830–2000, Vol. 2, 2003, p. 123. {{ISBN|978-87-7289-794-3}}. conserved tumuli in Denmark. Photo from January 2010 AD]]
Denmark has about 20,000 preserved tumuli, with the oldest being around 5,000 years old. A great number of tumuli in Denmark has been destroyed in the course of history, ploughed down for agricultural fields or used for road or dyke constructions. Tumuli have been protected by law since 1937 and is officially supervised by the Danish Agency for Culture.{{cite web|url=http://www.kulturstyrelsen.dk/kulturarv/fortidsminder/fredede-fortidsminder/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140821052434/http://www.kulturstyrelsen.dk/kulturarv/fortidsminder/fredede-fortidsminder/|url-status=dead|archive-date=21 August 2014|title=Fredede Fortidsminder|publisher=Danish Agency for Culture|language=da|date=28 January 2015|access-date=2 September 2015}} Examples of tumuli in Denmark are:{{Cite web|url=http://www.denstoredanske.dk/Geografi_og_historie/Ark%C3%A6ologi/Ark%C3%A6ologi_og_forhistorie/gravh%C3%B8j|title=gravhøj {{!}} Gyldendal – Den Store Danske|website=www.denstoredanske.dk|language=da|access-date=10 December 2017}}{{Cite web|url=http://www.denstoredanske.dk/Danmarkshistorien/I_begyndelsen/Bronzealderen/H%C3%B8jfolket/Tusinder_af_gravh%C3%B8je|title=Tusinder af gravhøje {{!}} Gyldendal – Den Store Danske|website=www.denstoredanske.dk|language=da|access-date=10 December 2017}}{{Cite news|url=http://www.dr.dk/Nyheder/Indland/2014/10/24/160855.htm|title=Professor: Vi risikerer, at gravplyndrere røver hele vores historie|work=DR|access-date=10 December 2017|language=da}}
- Yding Skovhøj in Horsens municipality, Jutland is one of Denmark's Bronze Age burial mounds built on the top of the hill.
- Hov Dås in Thisted municipality, North Jutland is one of Denmark's neolithic burial mounds built on the top of the hill.
- Klekkende Høj is a megalithic passage grave constructed in the Stone Age on the island of Møn. It takes its name from the nearby village of Klekkende.
- Lindholm Høje is a major Viking and Iron Age burial site and former settlement, situated to the north of and overlooking the city of Aalborg.
- Grønjægers Høj, meaning "the mound of Green Hunter", dates to the Nordic Bronze Age and is located near Fanefjord Church on the Danish island of Møn.
- Gorm and Thyra's Høje, two huge burial mounds at Jelling.
=North America=
==Canada==
File:Serpent Mounds NHS.jpg, located near Peterborough, Ontario, was named because of the zig-zag serpent shapes of its mounds.]]
L'Anse Amour is an archaeological site located in the Strait of Belle Isle in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. This site consists of a single burial mound that is 8 meters in diameter. The remains of a juvenile were found at the site along with a variety of artifacts, including tools and points made from stone and animal bones, a bone whistle, and red ochre colored stones. The juvenile is oriented with their head facing north and their body fully extended. This site has been dated to 8,300 years ago.{{Cite book |last1=Pauketat |first1=Timothy |title=The Archaeology of Ancient North America |last2=Sassaman |first2=Kenneth |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2020 |isbn=978-0521762496 |edition=illustrated |location=Cambridge |publication-date=February 27, 2020 |pages=262}}
This site has been pointed to as an early example of the burial traditions characteristic of the Maritime Archaic Community. Similar sites are located throughout this region, although this tradition seems to have reached its peak around 1,000 years after the construction of the site at L'Anse Amour. Many of these Maritime Archaic burial sites are removed from areas of habitation and may have acted as meeting places for people from across wide areas. The Innu people, who inhabit this area today, were sometimes fearful that the souls of the dead could do harm to the living and therefore buried them in isolated areas under stones. While archaeologists are unsure of the intentions behind the location and construction of this site, these more recent beliefs may suggest that the juvenile at L'Anse Amour may have been buried in this way to protect the living.
The Augustine Mound is an important Mi'kmaq burial site in New Brunswick.
Taber Hill is a Haudenosaunee burial mound in Toronto, Ontario.
In the southern regions of Manitoba and Saskatchewan, evidence of ancient mound builders was discovered by archaeologists, beginning with excavations by Henry Youle Hind in 1857.[http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/28/moundbuilders.shtml (Manitoba History) The Manitoba Mound Builders: The Making of an Archaeological Myth, 1857–1900]. Gwen Rempel. 1994. Retrieved 6 February 2017.[http://parkscanadahistory.com/series/mrs/323.pdf Aboriginal Mounds in Southern Manitoba: An Evaluative Overview]. E. Leigh Syms. 1978. Retrieved 6 February 2017.][http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/archaeology_history_of.html History of Archaeology, Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan.] Retrieved 6 February 2017.
In Southwestern British Columbia, several types of burial mounds are known from the Salishan region (Hill-Tout 1895).
==United States==
{{Main|Mound builder (people)|List of burial mounds in the United States}}
File:Grave Creek Mound.jpg, located in Moundsville, West Virginia, was built by the Adena culture.]]
Mound building was a central feature of the public architecture of many Native American and Mesoamerican cultures from Chile to Minnesota. Thousands of mounds in the United States have been destroyed as a result of farming, pot-hunting, amateur and professional archaeology, road-building and construction. Surviving mounds are still found in river valleys, especially along the Mississippi, Tennessee and Ohio Rivers, and as far west as Spiro Mounds in Oklahoma.
Mounds were used for burial, to support residential and religious structures, to represent a shared cosmology, and to unite and demarcate community. Common forms include conical mounds, ridge-top mounds, platform mounds, and animal effigy mounds, but there are many variations. Mound building in the US is believed to date back to at least 3400 BC in the Southeast (see Watson Brake). The Adena and the Mississippian cultures are principally known for their mounds, as is the Hopewell tradition. The largest mound site north of Mexico is Cahokia Mounds, a vast World Heritage Site located just east of St. Louis, Missouri.
=South America=
==Uruguay==
File:Cerrito de Indios.jpg, Uruguay]]
{{Main|Cerritos de Indios}}
The Cerritos de Indios (Spanish for: Indian Mounds or Indian Little Hills) are a collection of more than 3000 tumulus or earth mounds found mainly in the eastern region of Uruguay.
Of different sizes and shapes, some of them date back 4000–5000 years, being among the oldest examples of tumulus building in the new world. The identity of the people group responsible for their construction is unknown, as they left no written records.{{Cite web|title=The Earthen Mounds (Cerritos) of Southern Brazil and Uruguay|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/329177660|website=Research Gate}}
It is believed that mounds were used for burial, as well for living and practicing agriculture in the flat marshlands and plains of eastern Uruguay.{{Cite journal|last=López Mazz|first=José M.|title=Las Estructuras Tumulares (Cerritos) del Litoral Atlantico Uruguayo |trans-title=The Tumular Structures (Cerritos) of the Uruguayan Atlantic Coastline |language=es|url=https://www.mna.gub.uy/innovaportal/file/20809/1/lopez_mazz_j._m._2001._las_estructuras_tumulares_cerritos_del_litoral_atlantico_uruguayo..pdf |journal=Latin American Antiquity|volume=12|issue=3|date=September 2001|pages=231–255|publisher=Cambridge University Press|doi=10.2307/971631|jstor=971631|s2cid=163375789 }}
See also
- Barrow-downs, in Tolkien's Middle-earth
- Muranë
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- {{cite journal | last=Albright |first=William F. | year=1923 | title=Interesting finds in tumuli near Jerusalem | journal=Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research | volume=10 | issue=April | pages=1–3 | doi=10.2307/1354763 | jstor=1354763 | publisher=The American Schools of Oriental Research| s2cid=163409706 }}
- {{cite journal | last=Amiran |first=Ruth | year=1958 | title=The tumuli west of Jerusalem, Survey and Excavations, 1953 | journal=Israel Exploration Journal | volume=8 | issue=4 | pages=205–227}}
- {{cite journal | last=Barkay |first=Gabriel | year=2003 | title=Mounds of mystery: where the kings of Judah were lamented | journal= Biblical Archaeology Review | volume=29 | issue=3 | pages=32–39, 66, 68}}
- {{cite book | last=Grena |first=G. M. | year=2004 | title=LMLK – A Mystery Belonging to the King vol. 1 | location=Redondo Beach, California | publisher=4000 Years of Writing History | isbn=0-9748786-0-X}}
- Grinsell, L.V., 1936, The Ancient Burial-mounds of England. London: Methuen.
- {{cite book | last=Nelson |first=Sarah Milledge | year=1993 | title=The Archaeology of Korea | location=New York | isbn=0-521-40783-4 | publisher=Cambridge University Press}}
External links
{{Commons category|Tumuli}}
{{EB1911 poster|Barrow (grave-mound)|Barrows}}
- {{cite EB1911|wstitle=Tumulus |short=x}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20150328044440/http://www.eng-h.gov.uk/mpp/mcd/intro2.htm English Heritage Monument Class Descriptions]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20120314124917/http://www.tumulusstory.250x.com/ The Victorian Barrow Diggers of Wales]
- [http://wikimapia.org/#lat=50.7994424&lon=4.9584174&z=18&l=0&m=b Location Tumuli of Grimde Tienen]
- [https://sitereports.nabunken.go.jp/en Comprehensive Database of Archaeological Site Reports in Japan]
- [https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/evakap/heritage-quest/about/research Heritage Quest], research project using LiDAR data
- Llewellynn Jewitt (1870), [https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/52906 Grave-mounds and Their Contents], London: Groombridge and Sons.
{{Germanic peoples}}
{{Prehistoric technology| state=expanded}}
{{Authority control}}