Link to printer-friendly page

It should not be assumed that this site is publicly accessible and it may be on private property. Do not trespass.

Monument details

HER Number:TR 25 NW 439
Type of record:Monument
Name:A double concentric ring ditch visible as a cropmark

Summary

A double concentric ring ditch visible as a cropmark centred at TR 2158 5856.


Grid Reference:TR 2158 5856
Map Sheet:TR25NW
Parish:WICKHAMBREAUX, CANTERBURY, KENT

Monument Types

  • RING DITCH (Bronze Age - 2350 BC to 701 BC)
Protected Status:Selected Heritage Inventory for Natural England: A linear Bronze Age barrow cemetery, 150m west of Wickham Mill, Wickhambreaux

Full description

If you do not understand anything on this page please contact us.

A double concentric ring ditch centred at TR 2158 5856 visible as a cropmark through aerial photography. The inner ditch circuit measures approximately 16.5m and the outer circuit approximately 21.8m.

This ring ditch is part of a collection of five probable Bronze Age barrows forming a linear cemetery running NE-SW alongside the Little Stour. It is possible that the barrow cemetery extends further to the north-east beneath Wickhambreaux village and south-west into adjacent fields. However the area to the south-west is cultivated with orchards and so traces of buried features are unidentifiable from aerial photography as with the village. As this site has been ploughed for a number of centuries all features appear to have been levelled. It is likely that very little of the barrow structures survive, though on the southern edge of the alignment deeper soil which appears to obscure parts of some of the ring ditches may have helped to preserve more of the buried remains. (1)


<1> English Heritage, 2009, Wickhambreaux, Kent: Ring Ditch Survey (Unpublished document). SKE16345.

Sources and further reading

Cross-ref. Source description
<1>Unpublished document: English Heritage. 2009. Wickhambreaux, Kent: Ring Ditch Survey.

Related records

TR 25 NW 139Parent of: A double concentric ring ditch visible as a cropmark (Monument)