|

IRON-AGE
CART/CHARIOT BURIALS
Researched and compiled by Richard Hayton
and Andre Brannan
When
first asked if I would like to attempt to provide a history for
the use of and discovery of these very special archaeological
finds, I was a little nervous to say the least. While I
have an avid and enthusiastic interest in things archaeological,
it is far removed from creating a text suitable enough and erudite
enough to cater for all tastes and levels of knowledge.
However, not to be daunted by the task, here, for what it is worth,
is my account of the iron-age cart/chariot burials of Yorkshire.
Apart from a very recent discovery of another at Newbridge near
Edinburgh, they are unique to Yorkshire, although not to Europe
as a whole. They are not to be found, or rather, they have
not been found anywhere else in England.
It
has become necessary, due to the constraints of this format, to
divide this subject into three sections. The first deals with
those discoveries made by Victorian and Edwardian antiquarians
and archaeologists, for which read on; the second with those made
since but before the year 2000 AD inclusive of 1971, which marks
the time when chariot burials were once more being discovered;
and the third section which discusses the chariot-burials since
2000 AD.
For
those who wish to move on directly to the more modern excavations,
click here
Section Two
For those wishing to be directed to the most recent finds, click
here for
Section Three
Also,
there is a slight discrepancy with the subject matter, and the
thrust of the web site. By the very definition of these
burials, they are, rather than historic, PRE historic. However,
to be pedantic, they date from the very dawn of written history
in Europe. Carts, or as they are also called, chariots as
used by the Celtic, or rather the Iron Age peoples of Europe,
were described by Roman historians. We are therefore safe,
with regard to the time period, to include them here.
The
use of the generic title of Celtic Celts in
England, is by many, frowned upon, but that is not a discussion
for here and now, enough to say only that I will endeavour to
adhere to the term Iron Age rather than Celtic.
For
a prosaic explanation of this, see http://www.britainexpress.com/History/Celtic_Britain.htm
For
a Celtic timeline see http://www.lost-civilizations.net/celtic-civilization.html
It
is I feel, necessary at the start to provide a glossary of
terms to which the uninitiated can refer from time to time
should the need arise. I have decided to locate it here,
where it can be easily found, and returned to if required.
It is not a long list, but the terms are specialised, and do require
some explanation. It also negates the requirement to explain
such terms within the body of the text, and therefore, saves me
time too!!
Glossary
of Terms:
|
Axle
|
A
turned single piece of timber to support the wheels, and to
provide horizontal stability to the vehicle, sometimes with
stops turned to act as internal buffers for wheels |
|
Felloe
|
Section of timber wheel rim into which the outer ends of the
spokes are fitted, and around which the iron tyre is hot fitted. |
|
Hub
|
Centre of the wheel, carved from a solid piece of timber,
and socketed to take wheel spokes. |
|
Linchpin
|
Metal
pin usually designed to keep the wheels on the axel.
Some suggestion of considerable sophistication in their design. |
|
Nave
ring
|
Iron
or bronze ring capping each end of the hub, therefore four
to each vehicle, meant to secure the end of the hubs from
breakage. |
|
Pole
|
Main
longitudinal member extending from the yoke to the rear of
the carriage section. Formed from a single piece of
timber. |
|
Slack
|
As
in Wetwang Slack: a small valley or depression in the ground,
found mainly as an element in the names of landscape features. |
|
Spoke
|
A
length of turned timber varying in number between four and
sixteen (more often 12 per wheel), radiating out from the
hub that provides a strong support for the wheel rim |
|
Terret ring
|
Often
bronze loops or rings on a horses harness pad or yoke
for the driving reins to pass through, have been discovered
with ornamentation. Generally two to each horse. |
|
Yoke
|
Cross
member at the front end of the main pole to which horse
harnesses are attached. Shaped to fit across a pair
of horses at about their withers. |
|
Wetwang
|
Place
name, village northwest of Driffield EY, defined in the Oxford
Dictionary of Place names: Probably field for the trial
of a legal action. O(ld)scand(inavian) vætt-vangr. |
It
is necessary to begin with defining what is meant by a cart/chariot
of the Iron Age. The approach of archaeologists and historians
tends to vary over time about which appellation to apply to the
vehicles. Depending on the age of the text encountered either
can be employed, but I have been advised that the most recent
trend is to call them chariots, so henceforth, within this
text, they shall be so referred to. It should be bourn in
mind however, if anyone does decide to follow up on this article,
then they will most certainly happen across them being called
carts. In Yorkshire, these chariots have all been
two wheeled vehicles, but on continental Europe, four wheeled
vehicles have been discovered, these can more reliably be called
carts. Possibly one reason for the dichotomy of titles has
been the envisaged use of them. Chariots indicate a warlike
vehicle, while cart indicates nothing other than a mode of transport,
an Iron Age motorcar, if you will. Is becomes a requirement
therefore to briefly examine the possibility of each usage.
For the advocates of chariots as war machines there are Roman
sources to scrutinise. Caesar, writing of his abortive expedition
to British shores in 55 B.C. said of their chariots in his Gallic
Wars book V, chapter xxx, Their
mode of fighting with their chariots is this: firstly, they drive
about in all directions and throw their weapons and generally
break the ranks of the enemy with the very dread of their horses
and the noise of their wheels; and when they have worked themselves
in between the troops of horse, leap from their chariots and engage
on foot. The charioteers in the mean time withdraw some little
distance from the battle, and so place themselves with the chariots
that, if their masters are overpowered by the number of the enemy,
they may have a ready retreat to their own troops. Thus they display
in battle the speed of horse,
[together with] the firmness of infantry; and by daily practice
and exercise attain to such expertness that they are accustomed,
even on a declining and steep place, to check their horses at
full speed, and manage and turn them in an instant and run along
the pole, and stand on the yoke, and thence betake themselves
with the greatest celerity to their chariots again.
[
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/
C. Julius Caesar.
Caesar's Gallic War. Translator. W. A. McDevitte. Translator.
W. S. Bohn. 1st Edition. New York. Harper & Brothers. 1869.
Harper's New Classical Library. OCLC: 25172949]
The
alternative usage of the vehicle is evidenced from among other
things, archaeological excavations of recently discovered chariot
burials the inhumations of which have contained The box-like
feature observed in all the recently excavated cart-burials surely
represents the box-body of the cart
.. the box-body
was buried, apparently inverted to form a canopy over the corpse.
[New
Light on the Parisi Edited by P. Halken ERAS 1989 p 5 ISBN
0 905218 03 5]
Such a box-body, when attached to the basic framework of the vehicle,
the chassis if you will, would, apart from forming a burial canopy,
also have provided the owner in life with a vehicle for transporting
him/her self in relative comfort, with the box lined in furs and
fleeces. Such a vehicle could no doubt have been used for
the transportation of goods too, but there is no evidence to support
the idea, other than common sense. What they had then it
seems is a single chassis able to be converted from one use to
another with relative ease, so that in one scenario, a warrior
could ride to a battle field in his more comfortable box, and
upon arriving, he/she and the driver could then replace the box
with the fighting platform, and vice-versa after such an interlude.
Both platforms would have been suspended by means of leather thongs,
which would have hooked onto each platform by means of a lug at
each corner. Changing them over would then be a simple matter
of unhooking one set of lugs, and hooking up the other.
Meet
the Ancestors BBC2, presented by Julian Richards c2002

The last word on this debate must go to Dr. Ian Stead, who has
been and remains yet, one THE authorities on the subject.
His name, as readers will see, is plastered all over this text,
and rightly, for no such research can succeed in this subject
without reference to Dr. Stead.
My
thanks to him for his personal thoughts on this matter:
As
for chariot/cart burials, I prefer cart. The problem with
chariot is that it conjures up pictures of war chariots or racing
chariots - though of course it is a much more romantic title,
and I often use it in speech. Cart is much more general
and gives a better image of what we know of the vehicle.
There is no reason to suppose that it was used for war or racing.
In its final usage it was perhaps a hearse, certainly used for
women as well as men, and it may well have spent its life
as a universal means of light transport.
[Dr.
Steads comments here, exclusive to
www.yorkshirehistory.com is not an endorsement for
the contents or presentation of this article. RH]
As
will be seen later, the Rev. Stillingfleet refers to these vehicles
as British Esseda, which, upon further investigation means:
ESSEDA or ESSEDUM (from the Celtic Ess, a
carriage, Ginzrot, vol. i p377), the name of a chariot used,
especially in war, by the Britons, the Gauls and Belgae (Virg.
Georg. iii.204; Servius, ad loc.); and also by the Germans
(Pers. vi.47).
According
to the account given by Caesar (Bell. Gall. iv.33), and agreeably
to the remarks of Diodorus Siculus (v.21, 29), the method of using
the essedum in the ancient British army was very similar to the
practice of the Greeks in the heroic ages, as described by Homer,
and in the article Currus.
The principal difference seems to have been that the essedum was
stronger and more ponderous than the di/froj, that it was open
before instead of behind; and that in consequence of these circumstances
and the width of the pole, the owner was able, whenever he pleased,
to run along the pole (de temone Britanno excidet, (Juv. iv.125),
and even to raise himself upon the yoke, and then to retreat with
the greatest speed into the body of the car, which he drove with
extraordinary swiftness and skill. From the extremity of the pole,
he threw his missiles, especially the cateia (Val. Flacc. Argon.
vi.83). It appears also that these cars were purposely made as
noisy as possible, probably by the creaking and clanging of the
wheels (strepitu rotarum, Caes. l.c.; compare Tacit. Agric. 35;
Esseda multisonora, Claud. Epig. iv); and that this was done
to strike dismay into the enemy. The formidable British warriors
who drove these chariots, the "car-borne" of Ossian,
were called in Latin Essedarii (Caes. B. G. iv.24; Cic.
ad Fam. vii.6). There were about 4000 of them in
the army of Cassibelaunus (Caes. B. G. v.19). Having
been captured, they were sometimes exhibited in the gladiatorial
shows at Rome, and seem to have been great favourites with the
people (Sueton. Calig. 35, Claud. 21
). They must have held the highest rank in the armies of their
own country; and Tacitus (Agric. 12) observes that the driver
of the car ranked above his fighting companion, which was the
reverse of the Greek usage.
The
essedum was adopted for purposes of convenience and luxury among
the Romans (Propert. ii.1.76; Cic. ad Att. vi.1;
Ovid Am. ii.16.49). Cicero (Phil. ii.24) mentions the use
of it on one occasion by the tribune of the people as a piece
of extravagance; but in the time of Seneca, it seems to have been
much more common; for he (Epist. 57) reckons the sound of the
"essedae transcurrentes" among those noises which did
not distract him. As used by the Romans, the essedum may have
differed from the CISIUM in this; that the cisium was drawn by
one horse (see woodcut, p288), the essedum always by a pair. The
essedum, like the cisium, appears to have been kept for hire at
the post-houses or stations (Salonum quinto essedo videbis, Mart. x.104)
[Mansio]. The essedum
must have been similar to the Covinus,
except that the latter had a cover.
[http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/SMIGRA*/Esseda.html]
It
is however necessary to begin at the beginning, rather than the
Romanised end, so we have to ask, when, in Britain did the Iron
Age commence? The transition from Bronze Age to
Iron Age is now dated to the eighth century BC, the clearest archaeological
indicator being the cessation of bronze hoarding, although this
was not simultaneous across Britain. Despite the marked
break in depositional practice, subsistence, settlement, and pottery
all show considerable continuities across the transition in most
areas
..
When
and why the transition to iron use occurred in different parts
of Britain are key questions for future research. As yet
we have very little idea of the mechanisms of this process.
Iron was used to make some objects before the end of the Bronze
Age and gradually becomes more common in the archaeological record
between the eighth and third centuries BC.
.
If the cessation of bronze hoarding and the adoption of iron for
utilitarian objects are indeed related as seems likely
this implies that iron was already common by the eighth
century BC
..
[
http://www.personal.rdg.ac.uk/~lascretn/IAAgenda.htm#A
]
It has only recently been discovered that iron
mining and working started in what was to become East Yorkshire
very early in the new era with substantial finds in the area of
the Fowlness basin, just west of the Wolds Scarp.
[
http://www.ironmasters.hull.ac.uk/index.cfm
]
The
economic activities of the people of the Fowlness valley were
not restricted to agriculture. Early work in the Holme Project
located an iron industry, though its full significance has only
been recognised recently. The large slag blocks excavated
at Moores Farm, in 1985 (Millet 1986; and Halkon 1995) have
been carbon 14 dated from charcoal to 450-250 Cal. BC and 600-380
Cal. BC. The 5,338kg of slag, which was recorded there,
makes this one of the largest iron working sites of this period
yet discovered in Britain.
[Further
Light on the Parisi, Peter Halkon, pp 14, ISBN 0 902 122 82 7]
Given that the chariot-burials are predominantly
on higher ground than the many settlements recorded by Halkon,
suggests that the Wolds were then considered a place of reverence,
a place suitable for them to have access to their ancestors at
the time of their passing. Some discoveries of Iron Age
settlement in the locality of some of the graves however, indicate
that the up-lands was not a place exclusively for the dead.
The
Iron Age is its self, subdivided into two distinct phases.
Due to certain lacks in our knowledge of the time, the earliest
sub-section, the period between 800 BC and about 500 BC are poorly
understood . Regional variations in the chronology,
and a lack of hard dating evidence account largely for this.
There then comes another transition period generally accepted
to lie between 500 and 300 BC, when economic and social changes
have become easier to understand. Settlement expansion after
300 BC, given national variations, and the growth in scale of
agriculture and craft production, provide what many view as THE
Iron Age, the pre-Roman Britons, with their round houses in small
but numerous settlements. In
East Yorkshire, in particular the Wolds and the valleys and plains
dissecting them, where located what have been called the ARRAS
culture. This is not an ancient name, but a quite recent
one given possibly by the discoverer and excavator of some
of their barrows in the 2nd half of the 19th
century, at the farm called Arras, just east of Market Weighton,
Canon William Greenwell, more of whom later. The period
of the 300 years before the Roman arrival was marked by the permeation
of another Iron Age culture out of modern day Switzerland who
have been named after the place where they also were originally
located, La Tene, a village near the Neuenberger, also called
Lac du Neuchatel.
[http://www.searchspaniel.com/index.php/La_Tene]
La
Tene art-forms radiated out from their homelands to much of the
known Iron Age culture across northern Europe. In England,
particularly this artistic, and maybe even cultural influence
was most manifest in the ARRAS of East Yorkshire. According
to one source, In the western fringe of Europe the continuity
of the indigenous traditions is far more impressive than similarity
with Pan-European La Tene culture. The conclusion must be
that the folk movements which effected so much of Europe left
this peripheral zone largely unscathed. This is not to imply
that the region [north-western Europe including the British
Isles] received no migrant groups. A number of vehicle
burials found in Yorkshire, which belong to the locally named
Arras culture, have very close similarities to those of the Seine
valley and northern France. This has suggested to many that
the burials reflect an immigrant elite, an observation which gains
further support from the similarity of the tribal name, Parisi*,
and that of the Parisi in the Seine valley. The alternative
view, that the elite was indigenous, and was simply adopting foreign
burial mode to distinguish its self cannot, however, be ruled
out.
[Prehistoric
Europe an Illustrated History edited by Barry Cunliffe, Oxford
University Press, pp 368, 1997, ISBN 0 19 288063 2.]
Furthermore, according to another excellent source, the
East Yorkshire Arras culture is no longer considered to be the
result of any large scale invasion or influx from the continent.
Settlement research, for example at Wetwang Slack and North Cave,
and particularly the analysis of domestic pottery, has made a
strong claim for the continuity of occupation in the region, from
well before the fourth century BC to the Roman period.
[The
Arras Culture: Robert Van de Noort, An Historical Atlas of East
Yorkshire, The University of Hull Press, p. 24, 1996, ISBN 0 85958
652 9]
Dr. Stead on the subject of chronology wrote: Most of
the artefacts from the Yorkshire cart-burials are distinctively
British types, which is a major difficulty when chronology is
considered. In the century after Caesars expeditions
British Iron Age chronology gradually increases in credibility,
achieving really well-dated contexts by Claudian times.
But in the centuries before Caesar [i.e. Julius Caesar RH]
artefacts provide scant evidence of date, and chronology is
vague and sketchy in the extreme. As long-lived types and
survivals can be dated in the approach to the Roman period, so
the imbalance between virtually no early dates and some secure
late dates inevitably favours low chronologies. Never-the-less,
of the artefact-types found in the cart-burials only the Kings
Barrow [see later] linchpin resembles a form which also
occurs in the first century AD. There are closer parallels
with the types represented by metal-working debris at Gussage-All-Saints
a deposit probably dating from the first century BC where
horse-bits, terrets and linchpins comparable with those from Arras
were produced. These types may well have been in use before
the first century BC, but there is little in the way of evidence.
The Arras horse-bit is related to one in a La Tene I burial at
Somme-Tourbe (Marne) although the orientation of the links
in the French example is more akin to Irish bits. The Danes
Graves [see later] linchpin can be matched in the La Tene I burials
in Champagne, and also at Manching where it is more likely to
have been La Tene I than III.
The British cart-burials
may belong to the first century BC perhaps some could be
later; there are hints that the tradition started as early as
c400 BC; unfortunately as yet we have no means of measuring progress
through the fourth, third, and second centuries BC. Our
nine [then] burials could span several hundred years.
[Keltski
Voz; 1984, Cart Burials in Britain, Ian Stead, pp39-40]
*
The term Parisi originates from Ptolemys (Claudius Ptolemaeus
c.90 168 AD) Geographica II 3.10, which says little other
than:
beside
the gulf suitable for a harbor,
are the Parisi and the city Petuaria 20°40'
56°40'.
Or, as it appears in the original greek
Πετοναρία.
[http://www.romanmap.com/htm/ptolemy/pt3_10.htm]
[An
Atlas of Roman Britain Barri, Jones & David Mattingly]
Dr.
Ian Stead made a full appraisal of Yorkshires chariot-burials
in 1979, which no self-respecting follow-up can ignore.
In this he compares all aspects of Yorkshire vehicle burials with
those of Continental Europe.
Vehicle
burial is used here as a general term to cover both cart
burial (two wheels) and wagon burial (four wheels).
Vehicle burial can thus be used to translate exactly the French
sepulture a char and the German wagengrab
in instances where it is not clear whether four or two wheels
were found, or where the term is used to cover both cart-burials
and waggon-burials. Chariot burial has been
discarded because it has often been taken to imply that the vehicle
was a war chariot. The well known engravings of cart burials
in Champagne, showing the skeleton accompanied by weapons, naturally
suggest that the vehicle was also part of the warriors panoply.
But not all cart-burials are associated with weapons even
in Champagne and in Yorkshire weapons are absent.
Furthermore, on the continent there is a continuity in tradition
between burials with Hallstatt and La Tene carts (pp. 26 and 28),
and the wagons are unlikey to have been used in war. Both
Hallstatt and La Tene vehicles were probably regarded in the same
light when placed in the grave, possibly in a limited funerary
capacity, carrying the corpse to the grave, or perhaps going beyond
that and speeding the journey to the other world.
Yorkshire
cart-burials may be divided into two groups: those in which the
vehicle has been dismantled; and those in which it has been buried
complete. The former group is the better documented, for
in 1897 an example was excavated at Danes Graves by Mortimer and
Greenwell and a fairly detailed account with a plan was published
(fig. 5); recently, in 1971, another was excavated with very great
care by Brewster, at Garton Slack, and useful interim notices
have been published, although the full report is not yet available.
Also, The more common Yorkshire
rite, in which the cart had been dismantled, cannot be matched
in a La Tene context on the continent; a burial at Husby, Kr.
Flesburg, Schleswig Holstein, held a dismantled cart but it was
accompanied by a cremation and is well beyond the geographical
limits of La Tene culture (Raddatz 1967). Other La Tene
III cremations contained parts of vehicles, but there can be no
question of a direct link with Yorkshire. Dismantled carts
do seem to occur in Late Hallstatt times, in eastern France and
in Switzerland, but the records are unfortunately inadequate.
All of which seems to point to the Yorkshire chariot-burials not
being linked in any significant ritual manner to those of European
burial rites.
[The
Arras Culture, Ian Stead, The Yorkshire Philosophical Society,
York, 1979 Chariot Burials pp 20 29, ISBN 902 357
034]
The references to Yorkshire sites made by Dr. Stead
will be explained herein as we progress falteringly along the
timeline. One of the very first, if not the first,
discoveries of a chariot burial was made in the early 19th
century, at the farm of Arras, near Market Weighton, in the East
Riding. It is from the name of the farm that the title of
ARRAS Culture derives, although who was the first to coin the
phrase is in doubt. It is the Arras people who
are, as far as is known, responsible for the following graves
and their contents.
The
name Arras derives from Erg, which passes through Hergus and erghus
to become Arras in the 16th century. Whilst passing along the
road between York and Hull in 1699, Abraham De la Pryme noticed
a large group of small burial mounds which he thought were Roman.
It was not until 1815 that a group of local gentry, Barnard Clarkson
from Holme on Spalding Moor, Rev W. Stillingfleet and Thomas Hull
from Beverley opened the barrows. At the time of digging over
a hundred were visible above the ground. Due to several hundred
years of ploughing none are now visible apart from appearing as
crop marks.
http://www.ironmasters.hull.ac.uk

In
February of 1847, a letter was read to the monthly meeting of
the Archaeological Institute in London, written by the Rev. Edward
William Stillingfleet, vicar of South Cave. The letter was
addressed to Charles Newton Esq., dated January 28th
1847, and described events of some forty years previous.
He wrote: Having obtained permission from the proprietors
of the estates and their tenants, at occasional opportunities
during the summer months of the years 1815, 1816, and 1817, I
joined a party, which was formed for the purpose of opening a
group of barrows, at Arras and Hessleskew, on the south-western
boundary of the Yorkshire Wolds. After some speculation
regarding the likelihood of a British tribe in the
area, and discoursing the topography of the area in question,
the Rev. Stillingfleet later continues:
In
his indefatigable, and most interesting researches on the Wiltshire
Downs, Sir Richard Colt Hoare**
had not the good fortune to discover any barrow of a British
charioteer. We discovered two. [My emphasis
R.H.] That in which the articles here represented were
found, is situated on the very edge, and to the north of the present
turn-pike road. The elevation of this barrow was uncertain
from the circumstance of its crown having been levelled, probably
at the time when the turn-pike road was formed; its diameter was
from eight to nine yards. The cist was nearly a circle of
eleven or twelve feet. [The word cist here
pronounced the same as kissed, means a coffin or burial
chamber made of stone or a hollowed out tree OED.]
**
The Ancient History of South Wiltshire. London, published by
William Miller, printed by W. Bulmer and Co., 1812.
Sir
Richard Colt Hoare (1758-1838) was the grandson of Henry Hoare,
the banker, who had laid out the gardens at Stourhead. At the
beginning Colt Hoare was only called upon to finance Cunningtons
enterprise of recording all that could be discovered about the
inhabitants of Wiltshire from prehistoric to Roman times. In the
course of the preparations though he acquired a rapidly growing
interest and knowledge, became a collaborator, and was soon described
by a fellow enthusiast as barrow mad. Colt Hoare wrote
the work with the support of William Cunnington who had assembled
much of the archaeological information on excavation sites but
died in 1810. Stephen and John Parker did the actual excavation
work, while Philip Crocker made all the surveys and executed the
detailed drawings for the plates.
[http://www.polybiblio.com/quaritch/%7BAP50%7D.html]
Stillingfleet
continues: In a cist, as just observed, almost circular,
excavated to a depth of about a foot and a half in chalky rock,
and upon a nearly smooth pavement, the skeleton of a British charioteer
presented its self; surrounded by what in life formed the sources
of his pride and delight, and no inconsiderable part of his possessions.
The letter continues to tell, in considerable detail of the discovery,
which I have decided to include here almost in full. While
it cannot be said to be concise, it can be seen as a window into
early 19th century archaeological methodology, when
that science was in its very infancy, as also was the reporting
of any such finds. The letter, therefore continues:
The
head of this charioteer was placed to the north, with an eastern
inclination. He rested on his back, his arms crossed on
his breast, and his thigh and leg bones, when bared, presented
to the eye what may be termed a singular grained [sic]
work: both the thigh and leg bones appearing to have been crossed
in opposite directions. Very near to his head were found
the heads of two wild boars [a not uncommon votive offering
also found in other such inhumations R.H.]. Inclining
from the skeleton, on each side, had been placed a wheel
[My emphasis R.H.]; the iron tire [sic] and ornaments
of the nave of the wheel [see diagram R.H.] only remaining.
The tire [sic] of the wheel to the east of the body was
found perfect in the ground; but unfortunately it broke into several
pieces on removal, owing to its corroded state. Small fragments
of the original oak still adhered to the iron. In diameter,
these wheels had been a trifle more than two feet eleven inches;
the width of the iron tire about one inch five eighths.
The diameter of the ornaments of iron, plated with copper and
varnished green [now known to be verdigris, a bright bluish
green encrustation or patina formed on copper or brass by atmospheric
oxidisation OED], which had encircled the nave as a kind of
rim, was nearly six inches [called these days
nave rings see diagram R.H.]. Stillingfleet
then continues to describe the discovery of two skeletal horses,
one beneath each wheel, postulating that due to the lengths of
their respective leg bones, although they were not of the same
height, neither stood more than 13 hands.*
He then continues to quote Caesars description of the chariots,
in Latin, see above translation. Continuing then: On
the western side of the British charioteer were found two very
singular articles of the length of five inches, round at one end,
and curved at the other; of iron plated with green-varnished copper,
which our workmen called linch-pins. It seems
to me astonishing to say the least, that workmen of the Wolds
area should so rightly [it seems] ascribe the usage of items buried
in the ground for two millennia. One has to ask, were similar
such items still used by land workers on their own horses at the
time of the excavation? The described linchpins
sound remarkably similar to those later to be discovered at Wetwang
in the 21st century.
Whatever had been their use, similar articles were exhibited
at York amongst Lord Prudhoes discoveries at Stanwick, [North
Yorkshire], which are now deposited in the British
Museum. Besides these, (in different parts of the barrow,
but all I think, on the western side,) were found two little rings,
three-quarters of an inch in diameter; and five buckles, semicircular,
of various sizes, in some of which the tongue still remained.
These buckles undoubtedly belonged to the harness; and their fellows
may be seen in the Stanwick collection. (Compare plate iv fig.
4.)
On
the same side, near the legs of the skeleton, were found two other
appendages of the equipage of this British charioteer, in full
length about ten inches. They are formed by two substantial
rings, of the outer diameter of three inches and a quarter, joining
on strong globular links, being tied together by another strong
double link of two inches three quarters long. Like the
rest of the articles found, they are of iron, plated in copper
coated green; and the large rings have a pretty chain pattern
running round them. These articles would generally be pronounced
to be the bits of bridles; and a general verdict must be received.
Objects similar to these have often been discovered, and may be
seen, both in the Stanwick, and Polden Hill collections.
One of the most intricate in its form, appears to have been that
which was purchased by Dr. Stukeley, and pronounced, by that learned
antiquary, to have belonged to the harness of a British chariot.
There then follows some discourse concerning the then known burial
practices of the British, and comparing them with
other similar Continental burials.

this barrow was laid open with great success, and afforded
a valuable evidence as to the mode in which the British charioteer,
of renown in his day, had been entombed. In fact we brought
into day-light a concealed mausoleum dedicated to his memory and
fame: more durable than the splendid architectural mausoleum of
a refined age, and perhaps as rational. The uncivilised
Brigantian [My emphasis R.H.], after surrounding
the remains of his chieftain with memorials of his character,
rank, and celebrity, raised a simple mound; and bade it
speak to other years. The skull of the skeleton was
that of an old man. The labourers were certain that he must
have been a king, and as we could not contradict them, we
named this the Kings Barrow [My emphasis
R.H.], to distinguish it from the sepulchre of another British
charioteer whose remains were found in the ground of Hessleskew.
Curious to note the Rev. Stillingfleet refers to the burials as
being Brigantian rather than Parisiian, as most [I would imagine],
scholars of that time would have been aware of Ptolemys
maps and his Geographica. The significance of Stillingfleet
naming this, and the subsequent barrow burial means their identification,
if not their precise location, can be placed in the chronology
for discovering these features. However, very recent discoveries
made at the Ferrybridge chariot-burial, may make a rethink on
this necessary, more in section two.
*An
analysis of the remaining bones of the horses discovered in the
Kings Grave has been made, and possibly confirms Stillingfleets
original contention that there were two animals in the burial.
Measurements using the modification of Kiesewalters factors
provide for respective standing heights of 1.32m and 1.30m at
the withers is within the range of variation of a single horse.
However, measurements of the teeth shows an animal of about 9-10
years, while the mandible in the burial is from an aged horse
of some 25+ years. The results are therefore inconclusive.
[Keltski
Voz, 1984; Ian Stead, Cart-burials in Britain, appendix by A.J.
Legge]

Stillingfleet continues:
This
Charioteers Barrow
[at Hessleskew] was small. It had been levelled nearly to the
adjacent surface of the soil; was not elevated so much as by two
feet in its summit; and in diameter about eight feet. Yet,
in this barrow we found an ancient North Briton resting on his
shield; his skull partially marked by corrosion from the verdigrease
[sic] of its bosses. I am sorry that I omitted noting
how many bosses there were; but one of them, nearly entire, measures
four and a half inches in diameter. It is thin, and of the
material usually found in this group. On discovery, a small
portion of wood of the shield adhered to this boss. It was
surrounded by a thin rim of the same material; we also found a
part of the iron rim of the shield, much corroded, and, in that
state, about one inch in width: all supporting the opinion, that
ancient British shields were not large in size [some vertical
and horizontal measurements would here have been helpful, as so
many other aspects were so diligently measured. R.H.]
Inclining from the body of the British warrior, both on the western
and eastern side [indicating the skeleton was aligned north/south
as in the previous burial], had been placed a wheel and a bridle
bit, with iron rings which belonged to the chariot, or to its
trappings. These bits were of iron, without any coat of
brass, corroded by age, and somewhat resembled the harsh snaffle-bit
of our own horse-breakers. One bit was taken out almost
entire; the other was injured by the workmen. The diameter
of the wheels was only about two feet eight inches: a sufficient
indication of the lightness of the British chariot. The
diameter of the rim of the nave of these wheels, also of iron,
was about five inches. Oak was still attached to part of
the tire [sic] of the wheels, and the nails which had been
used as rivets, were entire. The tire [sic] of only
one of them was perfectly traced in the ground, with its nave;
and unfortunately even that broke into pieces on removal from
its earthen bed. Two wide boars tusks had been placed
on the body of this British charioteer. One of them had
been enclosed in a singular kind of outer case of thin brass.
It was found in good condition, perforated by a square hole, by
which it had probably been suspended from the neck or girdle of
the hunter. The case was adapted to the curve of the boars
tusk; and in a straight line measures five inches. The length
of the boars tusk itself is four and a half. It has
evidently been polished; has a diamond pattern engraved on its
top to the length of three quarters of an inch, and a square hole
bored through it, corresponding with the hole in its case.
There is then a brief paragraph concerning a lack of similar objects,
which has been marginally annotated by an anonymous hand that
is sadly, indecipherable, at least on my copy. The narrative
continues:
the
discoveries of this barrow, record the interment of a warrior,
a mighty hunter, and a person of celebrity in his day and amongst
the people of his clan; glorying in the chace
[sic] after an animal said to have been scarcely less savage
than the wolf; and reluctant that the memory of his deeds should
be consigned to oblivion. Had it not been for the material
of which the boss of the shield and the case of the boars
tusk is formed, we might have regarded this interment as of a
prior date to that of the regal charioteer. And may it not
lawfully be so regarded? May not this, if either, have been the
war chariot; while the kings equipage more nearly resembled
that of a British
**Esseda,
which figured at a later date on the fashionable drives of ancient
Rome? Dr. Stukely quotes authority to shew, that Celtic
bridles were curiously wrought; and regards the circumstance of
the bridle found at Silbury Hill being perfectly plain and rude
as an argument of its great antiquity.
**ESSEDA
see above for detailed definition.
These
remarks are submitted to the candour and indulgence of the members
of the Archaeological Institute. A country clergyman, occupied
by professional engagements, with only such opportunities for
research as are afforded in a secluded situation, may lawfully
be excused for venturing on little beyond matter-of-fact statements.
Yet, after all, matter-of-fact statements are not among the least
valuable. It is by the collation of discoveries made in
our own islands with the result of the researches of our northern
continental neighbours that a mass of evidence will in due time
be collected, in regard to the customs of the various tribes,
who have peopled Britain, in different eras. We shall thence
become far better acquainted with the habits, manners, pursuits,
and commerce of our remote ancestors
..
I
am, dear Sir, Your faithful servant, Edward William Stillingfleet.
Doc.
YE/571/226,233
My
thanks to the staff of Beverley Reference & Local Studies
Library, Champney Road, Beverley East Yorkshire for making the
above document available.
The reverends sentiments made one hundred and fifty years
ago, still hold good today, for as much as progress has been made
in researching, locating, excavating, recording, and, hopefully,
conserving Iron age sites and artefacts, much is still left unresolved,
our knowledge remains far from complete.
Another
reverend gentleman, Canon William Greenwell,
had decided to return to Arras farm site, where he discovered,
in 1877, what was to be called the Ladys Grave,
named by Fox (1958: 6), according to Dr. Stead, in keeping with
the titles given by the excavators of the other three important
Arras grave groups. This grave was another found by chance
during the excavation of a chalk pit, and Greenwell recorded the
finds. These are repeated by Dr. Stead, and herein by me,
from Stead [1979: pp. 22] Under a barrow 14 feet (4.3m)
diameter and 1½ feet (45cm) high was a huge circular grave 12
feet (3.6m) diameter and 3 feet (1m) deep. About the middle
of the grave was the skeleton of a woman (identified by Rolleston,
see the report in Greenwell 1877: 457) on its left side, with
the head at the north end (Greenwell 1906: 284, but at the west
end in 1877: 454) and accompanied by bones of two pigs.
According to the workmen who uncovered the grave the skeleton
had been extended; beyond that it is not clear how much of the
layout of this grave Greenwell himself observed and how much he
learnt from the workmen.
Under
the head of the woman was a mirror. Behind the back were
the iron tyres of two wheels laid partially one over the other,
and within each tyre were two bronze hoops, those of the corresponding
naves, and a circular piece of iron. In front of the face
were two bits laid slightly above the bottom of the grave
(Greenwell 1906: 284-5). A small bronze object, possibly
the shank of a whip, was also found in the grave, and in examining
the spoil thrown out by the workmen, Greenwell discovered a terret.
[The
Arras Culture, Ian Stead, the Yorkshire Philosophical Society,
York, 1979 chariot-burials, pp 22, ISBN 902 357 034]
In
May 1906, Thomas Sheppard F.G.S., Curator of the Municipal Museums
in Hull, heard tell of an unusual discovery made at Hunmanby,
which lies between Flamborough Head and Scarborough. He
and two other gentlemen excavated what was left of a tumulus after
a landslip had removed some of it into the clay pit adjacent.
The objects exposed by the recent landslip were a bronze
bridle-bit, and fragments of thin bronze plate.
Attention
was first paid to the slipped mass of gravel. This was
carefully examined, and yielded the iron hoop of a chariot wheel,
though it was in several fragments. The hoop is slightly
over an inch in width, but on account of its oxidised state, it
is not possible to ascertain the exact original thickness of the
iron. The rim appears to have been turned inwards on each
side. Sand and small pebbles adhered to the tyre.
From the specimens obtained the diameter of the wheel was calculated
to have been nearly three feet. Portions of the iron hoops
for the naves were also secured. These appear to be of a
thicker material, and, if complete, would be six or seven inches
across. Sheppard continues to describe
how some elements of wood remained attached to both iron hoops,
and explains that no traces of spokes, nor the number of spokes
were discovered. He also says that some other non-descript
pieces of iron were found, about which all he said was that they
were curved. He then moves on to explain the remaining grave
section, describing the grave pit as basin shaped,
with one end about six inches deeper than the other. The
dimensions of the grave are stated as being 11 feet 6 inches across
the top, and, 3 feet 6 inches deep, measured to the original ground
level. He states that towards the bottom of the grave was
a quantity of greyish material, with the peculiar greasy
feeling so characteristic in places of that nature. Perhaps,
if any modern day archaeologist happens to read this, they might
be able to explain whether the greasy feel
of the layer had anything to do with the inhumation, or whether
it is a natural occurrence, or indeed if it really exists.
Sheppard
then explains the discovery of traces of bronze within the grave,
stating that some was so thin, and so badly corroded as to not
bear touching, while some other was in the form of a beading
or tube cut horizontally, about a quarter of an inch wide.
He then continues After several hours work it was
seen that lying on the bottom of the grave was a large shield
of wood, apparently oak, ornamented on the upper surface with
exceedingly thin plates of bronze, and with a border formed of
more substantial material a strip of bronze, about one-sixteenth
of an inch in thickness, and three-quarters of an inch in width.
This had been carefully hammered over into a U section, into which
the edge of the wood shield was clearly fitted. This bronze
strip was fastened to the wood be means of small bronze rivets,
about a quarter of an inch long, exactly the thickness and shape
of an ordinary house-hold pin-head. Unfortunately the greater
part of this shield had fallen with the land-slip, and with the
exception of a few pieces of bronze, forming the border, not any
of it was recovered; nor is this to be wondered at, as even in
that portion examined in position both wood and its ornamental
plates were so fragile an decayed, that they would not bear touching.
As far as I am aware, nothing now remains of this shield, if shield
it was, which is a shame, as so few have survived. It might
have ranked not only alongside the Battersea shield, but also
the Witham Shield [See
Celtic Art and Design, Iain Zaczek, Studio Editions,
1995, pp 14, ISBN 1 85891 191 5],
which from Sheppards description, it might have easily rivalled.
More of the description of this shield can be had
by emailing me at the address provided on the
Homepage.
Sheppard then continues: Near the edge of the shield,
and a few inches above it, were two curved pieces of iron of doubtful
use possibly part of the chariot as well as various
other pieces of that metal. Amongst the latter were two
rivet-like pieces of iron (i.e. small bars with heads
at the ends) with the wood still adhering to the sides, evidently
used in connection with the construction of the chariot.
These and many other evidences of the vehicle itself having been
buried, are of importance, as according to some authorities a
chariot-burial sometimes means that only the wheels
and horse-trappings were buried with the warrior.
As
might be expected from the nature of the sub-soil, bones were
very few indeed. Immediately below the tyre of the wheel
presently to be described, however were a fragment of bone ant
parts of two teeth of a horse, in an advanced state of decay,
but apparently good evidence of the animal having been buried
with the chariot.
Perhaps
one of the most interesting finds, however, was the iron tyre
of the second wheel, the upper portion of which was found in position
about a foot from the bottom of the grave. It was soon found
that the wheel had collapsed, the lower portion being flattened
out on the bottom of the excavation. The position of the
iron demonstrated that the wheel, and presumably the chariot also,
had been buried in its normal standing position, and that as the
wood decayed the tyre gradually subsided under the weight of the
earth above. Had the wheels alone been buried, even in a
standing position, the soil would gradually have taken the place
of the decaying wood, and the tyre would have been found complete.
Between the two crushed portions of this iron rim were found the
remains of the smaller ring of iron which surrounded the nave
of the wheel.
Dr.
Ian Stead, in 1979, wrote this concerning the upright burials
of some vehicles In
contrast to this practise of burying a dismantled vehicle in a
grave, is the rite observed at Pexton Moor, where the cart had
been buried entire, the wheels in an upright position. The
circumstances of this discovery were not ideal: the barrow was
opened in 1911, when one iron tyre was excavated (Kirk 1911),
it was re-examined 24 years later when another tyre and further
features were recorded, and another 24 years had to pass before
the report was published (Stead 1959). Unlike the burial
discussed so far, on or adjoining the chalk Wolds, this one was
on limestone hills, and its barrow was composed mainly of sand.
It was surrounded by a square plan barrow ditch and had been 17
feet (5.2m) across and, at the time of its first excavation, about
4 feet (1.2m) or 5 feet (1.5m) high. There was no grave,
but the cart-wheels had been buried in two shallow pits, some
10 inches (25cm) deep, orientated almost diagonally to the square
plan ditch. No bones survived, and the only other find was a horse-bit,
discovered some 5 feet (1.5m) in advance of one of the wheel-holes.
Only
8km from the Pexton Moor cart burial another had been found in
the middle of the nineteenth century, at Cawthorn Camps.
Several features recall the Pexton Moor burial, and it seems likely
that this cart, too, had been buried upright.
[The
Arras Culture, Ian Stead, the Yorkshire Philosophical Society,
York, 1979 chariot-burials, pp 20 28, ISBN 902 357
034]

This
would verify Sheppards conclusion regarding the up-right
situation of the vehicle-burial site at Hunmanby. Sheppard
continues: The bridle-bit of bronze1 found
in the first instance [see image] is very similar in type
to the specimen from Arras, now in York Museum, which is figured
and described by the Re. Edward William Stillingfleet [see
above]. The Hunmanby bridle-bit, however, is rather larger,
and is more delicate in design. The two rings forming the
bit are made of bronze, they are 2⅞ [two and seven eighths]
inches in diameter, and the OO-shaped piece is 2½ inches in length.
Sheppards footnote here shows some glee at a subsequent
publication 1 In Canon Greenwells
paper on Early Iron Age Burials in Yorkshire, just issued (Archaeologia,
vol. Lx., pp. 251 322), a postscript is added relating
to the Hunmanby burial. In this, referring to the bridle-bit,
Canon Greenwell writes It is stated to be made of bronze,
but is, no doubt, like many others which have occurred elsewhere,
of iron, bronze-coated. In this however, Canon Greenwell
is mistaken. The Hunmanby bridle-bit is broken in more than
one place, and unquestionably is bronze to the core.
One can understand Sheppard gloating at Greenwells erroneous
assumption, and it was indeed necessary to correct it as soon
as possible before the record was changed to fit Greenwell,
who was, at the time, a great authority on the subject.
Controversy amongst archaeologists, it seems, is NOT a new phenomenon.
[Note
on A British Chariot-Burial at Hunmanby, in East Yorkshire, T.
Sheppard, F.G.S. Curator of Municipal Museums, Hull: Hull Museums
Publications Nos 37-48, Sept. 1907]
Of
the Hunmanby site, Stead (1979) simply says, The only
other vehicle burial from which part of a grave group survives
cannot clearly be assigned to either the dismantled Arras, or
the intact Pexton Moor types. It was found by chance at
Hunmanby in 1907, and had been badly disturbed half of
it had slipped away in a fall from the edge of a quarry
but Sheppard was able to examine the site and excavate the surviving
part of the grave. His description (Sheppard (1907) is obscure
in places, and he did not publish a plan of the remains.
This seems to say, although I might well be in error, that Stead
was unsure of the total reliability of Sheppards report.
He certainly appears to be chiding of Sheppards methodology.
It is not for me to comment either way. What is more certain
is that Dr. Stead is convinced that there were two distinct burial
rites, those of the Arras and Wetwang type of the East Riding
with dismantled chariots, and those of Pexton and Cawthorne Camps
[see later] sites where the chariots were buried upright and intact.
Could this indicate a division of burial ritual? Or is it
more simply that were was no set prescription in the Iron Age
for the burial of chariots, as none seem to be completely identical?
Did conditions such as local geology have a bearing? To
excavate a burial plot to inter an intact chariot in chalk bedrock
of the Wolds would have required considerably more effort, but
also, it is suggested that the upright burials were buried in
sand rather than having a deeper grave. This, I think still
needs consideration.
Sheppard
makes mention of a Mr. Mortimer, this is John Robert Mortimer,
who for more than 40 years made it his lifes work to excavate
the hundreds of tumuli that are/were clustered on the Wolds escarpment.
His seminal work Forty Years Researches in British and Saxon
Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire, A. Brown & Sons, Ltd.
London, Hull and York, 1905, with over 1,000 illustrations; is
without doubt one of the most important works concerning
the archaeological burials in the East Riding. Sadly however,
it is an extremely rare, and valuable work also (copies currently
range in price between £150 and £200). Any researcher must
by whatever legal means, refer to it. Would that it was,
somehow, more readily available to the general public in these
days of electronic and digital documentation and reproduction.
I was lucky enough to be provided brief access to a copy by Martin
Foreman, at the Hull & East Riding Museum, High Street, Hull,
to whom I am greatly indebted. J.R. Mortimer (1825
1911) was by trade a corn merchant then archaeologist who lived
at Driffield, East Yorkshire; he excavated hundreds of the barrows
in his local area including Duggleby Howe. His avid interest
in the subject was then well known, and he trained local workmen
to recognise items of archaeological interest, which, when they
were brought to him, he would pay for. In 1877, he bought
some land in Driffield upon which he built at his own expense,
a museum to house the results of his excavations. Two years
after his death the 66,000 items of his collection were bought
by the Hull Corporation, and transferred to the Victoria Galleries,
in the City Hall, in 1918. From there, the collection finally
found a permanent home at the Hull and East Riding Museum, High
Street, Hull, where the collection remains.

Mortimer
commences with the sorrowful admission that it was Not
until towards the close of my work amongst the barrows, viz.,
in 1897 had I the good fortune to find any remains of a British
chariot, although ----- had been found on the Wolds.
Prior to describing his own discovery however, Mortimer talks
of a possible other, saying On December 15th,
1879, the guard of the North Eastern Railway ballast train informed
me that he was present at the finding of the large shap granite
boulder in the ballast pit at Seamer station
.. [between
Filey and Scarborough] He also said he was present when the
remains of what he called a small horse and cart were found in
the pit, about the year 1862. On being questioned, he stated
that the horse and cart were found in a quantity of d
[word
obscured] soily matter, which, as far as he could remember, filled
the hole 4 to 5 feet in depth that had been dug into the clean
gravely material forming the upper part of the pit. He added
that one of the workmen made his long smock-frock into a sack
by tying up the neck, in which way he carried away the bones and
bits of iron and afterwards sold them. The hoops of the
wheels were broken and much rusted and all the wood had disappeared.
This
appears to be a discovery worthy of being recorded, as it seems
to have been nothing less than a British interment, consisting
of the remains of a chariot, with the bones of the horse and probably
those of the charioteer, which would not be recognised by the
workmen.
[Forty
Years Researches in British and Saxon Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire,
J.R. Mortimer, A. Brown & Sons, Ltd. London, Hull and York,
1905, pp 358]
This
raises a point or two. First, it should be explained that
in mid-Victorian times, as when this discovery made, the selling
of old iron and bones was a means of furthering income by a few
pennies, some will even remember the horse drawn carts wandering
through the streets with their drivers calling Any old iron
Rag bones. Second, that there was reported
the skeleton of but a single horse. It has to be remembered
that the combustion engine had not been invented; most country
people were familiar with horses, and presumably with their skeletal
remains. British chariots as has been demonstrated were
drawn by two horses, but the skeleton of one only is mentioned
in the guards story, although the passage of time might
have clouded his otherwise seemingly excellent memory. Mortimer
himself seems uncertain about the veracity of the tale, but erring
on the safe side, decided to include it so that others might make
their own judgement, a wise move I think, for had he not done
so, then a possible other chariot burial location could have been
lost for all time.
Mortimer
continues to describe briefly, a fifth discovery [the others have
already been herein discussed] made by Canon Greenwell in a barrow
on Westwood, Beverley, in 1875. Saying only that it consisted
of the hoops of two chariot wheels, about 3 feet in diameter,
and what was almost certainly an iron bit, or bits.
[Ibid
pp 359]
He next goes on to describe his own chariot discovery,
almost in passing; Still later, the remains of a chariot
were found in No.13 of the Danes Graves, which
I excavated during the first fortnight in July 1897. These
[see diagram] consisted of the iron hoops of the wheels and naves,
and rings of bronze and iron belonging to the chariot and his
charioteer.
Another
early discovery was made at Danes Graves near Great Driffield,
East Yorkshire. In one of the almost 500* or so barrows
that were in the area, of which only about 200 are now known to
have survived, there were found the skeletons of two male individuals.
Also in the grave were the iron tyres of two wheels, two and a
half feet in diameter, with, at their centres their respective
nave rings. Two iron linchpins and two bronze coated snaffle
bits, and a further five metal rings and other objects were unearthed.
In yet another opened barrow at Danes Graves was the skeleton
of a woman, lying on her left side with her left hand in
front of her face, almost as if she were sleeping. Behind
her head were the remains of two pigs or boars, and a mirror,
made of iron. Remains in the form of snaffle bits and harness
rings verified it as a chariot burial.
[The
Archaeology of Yorkshire, F and H.W. Elgee, first by Methuen &
Co. Ltd., 1933, this edition S.R. Publishers, 1971, pp 107-110,
ISBN 0 85409 664 7]
*
Mortimer provides the evidence for the numbers of tumuli at the
Danes Graves site quoting from several earlier accounts including
Leland, Dugdale, and Camden. He also includes much from
Canon Greenwell, whom he quotes thus: They are found
[the tumuli] in a hollow in the chalk hills of the Wolds, about
four miles north of Driffield. They are called the Danes
Graves and number nearly 200, lying close together in a
wood. A footnote added by Mortimer says Before
the Wolds were enclosed a great many more existed; it is stated
that there were, originally, as many as 500.
[A
Summary of What is Known of the So-called Danes Graves,
near Driffield. By J. R. Mortimer, read October 7th,
1897. Proceedings of the Yorkshire Geological Society, vol.
13, 1895 1899]
Dr. Ian Stead has provided a more accessible dialogue
of Mortimers excavation The Danes Graves cart-burial
(Mortimer 1897: 3-4; 1898: 121-4; Greenwell 1906: 276-8) was under
a mound 27 feet (8.2m) in diameter and 3 feet (1m) high, in a
grave 8½ feet (2.5m) by 7½ feet (2.3m) and 2½ feet (75cm) deep.
The main axis of the grave was north and south, in the western
half were the remains of two wheels, flat on the floor; and in
the eastern half were two skeletons. The wheels were represented
by iron tyres and iron nave hoops, and there were two linch-pins
and various harness rings nearby. Mortimer (1897:4) notes
a clear and distinct cavity, two inches (5cm) wide, in the
soil filling the grave close above the wheels. This cavity
extended horizontally more than 4 feet (1.2m) in a curved direction,
and was caused unquestionably by something which had gone to decay
probably the curved frame of one of the sides of the chariot.
Of the skeletons, the more northerly was crouched, orientated
south-west north-east, on its right side, and was accompanied
by an iron and bronze brooch and some pig bones. The second
skeleton was also crouched, but orientated north-south, on its
left side, and without surviving personal possessions.
[The
Arras Culture, Ian Stead, The Yorkshire Philosophical Society,
York, 1979 Chariot Burials, pp 20, ISBN 902 357 034]
Mortimer continues;
This appears to be the sixth instance of
the discovery of remains of a British chariot in East Yorkshire.
References should be made to two more, though they are somewhat
doubtful finds.
At
the commencement of my barrow digging one of the labourers (John
Gilbank of Wetwang) told me that when a boy, he was engaged by
Mr. Holtby, of Haywold, near Huggate, as a yearly servant, and
that he remembered assisting to cart away some howes (barrows)
and spread them on the land
[shock horror!]. In doing this the iron tyres
of two small wheels and many bones were found in one of them,
all of which were carted away with the soil.
The
other probable find was in 1888, during the construction of the
Driffield and Market Weighton Railway, in a deep cutting in the
chalk between Middleton and Enthorpe stations [neither
of which are operational nor indeed is this particular
branch-line]. One of the navvies a Driffield man
told me that on undermining the side of the cutting and
letting down a mass of rock into the ballast waggon, a quantity
of bones and rusted iron were observed, mixed with the stones
and soil, which they tipped over the end of the embankment.
No further notice was taken of them, except that he put two or
three pieces in his pocket. He gave me the pin, or bolt
[see image], but had lost the others. It is 5½ inches
long; the middle portion is iron, 3¼ inches long and half-an-inch
square, to which are fixed two ends of solid bronze, one being
in the form of a flattened ring. Its greatest diameter is
1½ inches, and the hole through it is sufficiently large to admit
the end of ones little finger. About half-an-inch
below this aperture, but diagonally opposite to it, is a second
perforation, nearly a quarter of an inch wide.
. This
article seems to be similar to two articles called lynch-pins
from the so-called Kings Barrow at Arras
..
[Forty
Years Researches in British and Saxon Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire,
J.R. Mortimer, A. Brown & Sons, Ltd. London, Hull and York,
1905, pp 359-360]
While
Mortimer is clearly uncertain about these two reports, he still,
and rightly, includes them. It may be that there were such
finds, but without any other evidence but the so-called lynch-pin
to support them, they have to be considered as apocryphal.
More
than twenty years prior to Mortimers chariot-burial discovery
at Danes Graves, Greenwell had excavated one at Beverley,
in 1875, under a barrow 21 feet (6.5m) diameter and 2 feet (60cm)
high (Greenwell 1877: 456; 1906: 278). The grave was orientated
north-south and measured 6¼ feet (1.9m) long by 4½ feet (1.4m)
wide, and 2¾ feet (84cm) deep. Soil conditions had destroyed
any trace of bone and the only finds were objects of iron in poor
condition. About the middle of the grave, towards
the east side, were the tyres of two wheels, laid flat, side by
side, each having within it a ring, the hops (sic) of the
respective naves
. on the west side of the grave were two
snaffle-bits. (Greenwell 1906: 278)
[The
Arras Culture, Ian Stead, The Yorkshire Philosophical Society,
York, 1979 Chariot Burials, pp 20, ISBN 902 357 034]
Mortimer
(361) also describes the discovery made by Thomas Kendal, of Pickering,
in the North Riding, about the year 1849, when the remains of
a chariot were found in a barrow close to the Roman period Cawthorne
Camps site, just north of Pickering. He says: I
well remember Mr. Kendal naming this find to me many years ago,
and he much regretted that he was not able to sketch, so as to
give the shape and position of the chariot. He described
the mound as being mainly composed of light coloured sand, and
said that the position, and in the main, the form of the chariot
was clearly visible. The tyres of the wheels were well preserved,
whilst the pole (which had measured about 7 feet) and other woodwork
was shown by dark lines of decayed wood, clearly defined in the
light coloured sand. It is much to be regretted that so
good an opportunity of obtaining a restoration of the chariot
was lost.
[Forty
Years Researches in British and Saxon Burial Mounds of East Yorkshire,
J.R. Mortimer, A. Brown & Sons, Ltd. London, Hull and York,
1905, pp 361]
In
furtherance to this, Stead (1979: 22) says of this find: Only
8km from the Pexton Moor cart burial another had been found in
the middle of the nineteenth century, at Cawthorne Camps.
Several features recall the Pexton Moor burial, and it seems likely
that this cart too, had been buried upright. Stead
acquired this, again from Mortimer, who, continuing his narrative
about this burial says: On April 2nd, 1894,
I interviewed Mr. Thomas Dowson, of Pickering, who was Kendals
foreman in all his barrow digging. Though he was about seventy-eight
years of age he retained a vivid recollection of the barrow openings
at which he had assisted. He fully confirmed what Kendal
had told me about the chariot, and added that the mound is situated
very near the south-eastern corner of the most easterly of the
three Cawthorne Camps, [see
Roman Fortifications www.yorkshirehistory.com]
and that at the time its height would be a little over
three feet. One of the chariot wheels was pressed down nearly
flat, and the decayed wood of the spokes, which numbered only
four, was shown very clearly. The other wheel stood upright,
and nearly reached the top of the barrow. the diameter of
these wheels, judging from the tyre now preserved, was about 3
feet; and from preserved portions of the tyre of the naves they
seem to have been hoped with iron plated with bronze. Mr.
Dowson said the pole reached eastwards about 7 feet from the body
of the chariot, and at the terminal end were decayed hooks and
rings of iron and brass (bronze).
[Ibid]
This concludes the first section, comprised as it is of the early
discoveries of chariot-burials. There then followed a hiatus
of several decades before another was revealed, and with advancing
techniques in archaeology, aerial photography, crop marks, geophysical
surveying, and the like, the archaeological wealth of these subsequent
burials has become much more appreciated, and dare one say
exciting.
Richard Hayton
Please click here to move on to
Section Two
|