
The Medway Megaliths in a European Context
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Patterns of Inheritance and Attitudes to Women Revealed in Wills: the Tonbridge area 1500-1560
Parish Churches in the Diocese of Rochester, c. 1320- c. 1520
The Medway Megaliths in a European Context
THE MEDWAY MEGALITHS IN A EUROPEAN
CONTEXT
PAUL ASHBEE
The Medway's megalithic long barrows, a uniform series with nearunmatched
lofty rectangular chambers, flanked by commensurate
facades, with considerable barrows contained by stone kerbs, were a
concentration of the most grandiose and impressive structures of
their kind in southern England. Stone-built and earthen long barrows
are of similar intent. Some may be timber translated into stone or vice
versa (Ashbee, 1984,33-54; Clarke, 1982,28). A long barrow's timber
chamber, preserved by anaerobic conditions in the Cambridgeshire
Fens (Haddenham, Hodder and Shand, 1988) was of slab construction,
a clear copy of a stone edifice.
Neither of the Medway's groups of long barrows, those on Blue
Bell Hill and their fellows on the western side, clusters upon a
causewayed enclosure as in Wessex (Ashbee, 1978, 83, fig. 22). Such
an enclosure could, however, have been on low ground by the
Medway (Mercer, 1990; Tilley, 1996,279-84). One may remain to be
discovered or have long since been destroyed by gravel extraction.
Their close-knit siting is, however, characteristic of the Northern
European mainland (Midgley, 1985, 205). Although of stone, they
have been included in the predominantly southern and eastern
distribution of earthen long barrows (Ashbee, 1984, figs. 1,2) and are
at no great distance from the European mainland's Channel coast.
THE MEDWAY AND THE EUROPEAN MAINLAND
On the European mainland long barrows, and their like, congregate at
the periphery of the loess lands, which were settled by early Neolithic
farmers, the Linear Pottery (Linearbandkeramik, the abbreviation
LBK is preferred to the English translation) people (Whittle, 1994,
154-66; 1996, 144-52, passim). Their husbandry was a stable
specialisation, characterised by a speedy, sustained, spread, as is
269
PAUL ASHBEE
attested by widespread similarities of pottery and long-houses.
Indeed, radiocarbon dates from northern Hungary and Holland are
statistically inseparable (Whittle, 1977, 253-55). There are three
principal areas of long barrow proliferation, Northern Europe
(Midgley, 1985; 1992), western France (Daniel, 1960) and Britain
(Piggott, 1954, passim). They were intrinsic to the spread of agriculture
into these regions, a process which gradually and profoundly
changed the life of the Mesolithic indigenes. Long barrows so closely
resemble the long-houses of the LBK people (whence our English
Neolithic agriculture is ultimately derived) that conscious imitation
must have been integral (Ashbee, 1982). Indeed, long barrow ditches
even echo the construction pits which flank certain LBK long-houses
(Ilett, 1984, 28, fig. 2, 12) and the Medway's megalithic long barrows
would, when raised, have been surrogate long-houses (Fig. 1). Patently
their origins result from processes that, largely, developed across the
Dover Straits.
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