Monument Class Description

Monument Class Description

A Monument Class Description provides a synthesis and summary of the archaeological evidence for a particular type of British ancient monument. The Monument Class Descriptions were created by English Heritage as part of the Monuments Protection Programme.

Because archaeological remains are seldom good subjects for rigorous classification, these monument classes are regarded as provisional. However, they provide a good basis for beginning to understand the variability of the archaeological record in England.

Contents

Prehistoric Monuments

Early Prehistoric Monuments

Bronze Age

  • Avenues (multi-period)
  • Bank Barrows (multi-period)
  • Bell Barrows
  • Bowl Barrows (multi-period)
  • Burnt Mounds
  • Cairnfields
  • Clothes Line Enclosures (multi-period)
  • Coaxial Field Systems (multi-period) - see field systems
  • Cross Dykes (multi-period)
  • Cup and Ring Marked Stones (multi-period)
  • Enclosed Cremation Cemeteries (multi-period)
  • Entrance Graves (multi-period)
  • Fancy Barrows
  • Four Poster Stone Circles (multi-period)
  • Hill Figures (multi-period)
  • Hilltop Enclosures (multi-period)
  • Inhumation Cemeteries (multi-period)
  • Irregular Aggregate Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Itford Hill Style Settlements
  • Large Irregular Stone Circles (multi-period)
  • Large Regular Stone Circles (multi-period)
  • Linear Earthworks (multi-period)
  • Martin Down Style Enclosures
  • Multiple Enclosure Forts (multi-period)
  • Rams Hill Style Enclosures
  • Regular Aggregate Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Ring Cairns
  • Round Barrow Cemeteries (multi-period)
  • Springfield Style Enclosures (multi-period)
  • Standing Stones (multi-period)
  • Stone Alignments (multi-period)
  • Stone Circles---Small
  • Stone Hut Circles
  • Unenclosed Bronze Age Urnfields

Iron Age

  • Banjo Enclosures
  • Cliff Castles
  • Clothes Line Enclosures (multi-period)
  • Coaxial Field Systems (multi-period) - see field systems
  • Cross Dykes (multi-period)
  • Enclosed Oppida
  • Gussage Style Settlements
  • Hill Figures (multi-period)
  • Hilltop Enclosures (multi-period)
  • Inhumation Cemeteries (multi-period)
  • Irregular Aggregate Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Irregular Open Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Large Multivallate Hillforts
  • Large Univallate Hillforts
  • Later Prehistoric Ports
  • Linear Earthworks (multi-period)
  • Multiple Ditch Systems
  • Multiple Enclosure Forts (multi-period)
  • Regular Aggregate Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Romano-Celtic Temples (multi-period)
  • Rounds (multi-period)
  • Springfield Style Enclosures (multi-period)
  • Standing Stones (multi-period)
  • Slight Univallate Hillforts
  • Small Multivallate Hillforts
  • Square Barrows
  • Unenclosed iron Age Urnfields
  • Viereckschanzen (multi-period)
  • Wooton Hill Style Enclosures

Roman Monuments

  • Aggregate Villages (Romano-British)
  • Amphitheatres (Romano-British)
  • Basilican Temples (Romano-British)
  • Bridges (Romano-British)
  • Canals (Romano-British)
  • Cemeteries (Romano-British)
  • Classical Temples
  • Courtyard Houses
  • Cross Dykes (multi-period)
  • Curtain Frontier Works (Romano-British)
  • Extraction Pits
  • Farmsteads (Romano-British)
  • Fort-Vici (Romano-British)
  • Harbours (Romano-British)
  • Ironworks
  • Irregular Aggregate Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Irregular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Irregular Open Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Major Villas
  • Mausolea (Romano-British)
  • Mines
  • Pharoi
  • Potteries
  • Quarries (Romano-British)
  • Regular Aggregate Field Systems
  • Roads (Romano-British)
  • Romano-Celtic Temples (multi-period)
  • Roman Fishponds
  • Roman Fortlets
  • Roman Fortresses
  • Roman Forts
  • Rounds (multi-period)
  • Romano-British Lime Kilns
  • Romano-British Mansiones
  • Romano-British Salterns
  • Saxon Shore Forts
  • Signal Stations
  • Vineyards (multi-period)
  • Viereckschanzen (multi-period)
  • Watermills (Romano-British)

Early Medieval Monuments

  • Animal Pounds
  • Aristocratic Residences (Saxon)
  • Barrow Fields
  • Coaxial Field Systems (multi-period) - see field systems
  • Colleges (multi-period)
  • Cremation Cemeteries (Anglo-Saxon)
  • Cross Dykes (multi-period)
  • Double Houses (Pre-Conquest)
  • Gate Bridge and Causeway Chapels (multi-period)
  • Hermitages (multi-period)
  • High Crosses
  • Hlaews
  • Inhumation Cemeteries (Anglo-Saxon)
  • Irregular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Irregular Open Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Monastic Granges (multi-period)
  • Moots (multi-period)
  • Nuneries (multi-period)
  • Palaces (Anglo-Saxon)
  • Parish Churches (multi-period)
  • Shrines (Post-Roman) (multi-period)
  • Vineyards (multi-period)

Medieval Monuments

  • Almshouses (multi-period)
  • Aqueducts (Medieval)
  • Archery Butts (multi-period)
  • Artillery Castles (multi-period)
  • Bastles (multi-period)
  • Beacons (multi-period)
  • Blockhouses (multi-period)
  • Brickworks (Medieval)
  • Camerae
  • Chain Towers (multi-period)
  • Charterhouses
  • Clapper Bridges (multi-period)
  • Cockpits (multi-period)
  • Coastal Fish Weirs (multi-period)
  • Colleges (multi-period)
  • Cottages (multi-period)
  • Coureries
  • Cross Dykes (multi-period)
  • Decoy Ponds (multi-period)
  • Deerparks (multi-period)
  • Double Houses (Post-Conquest)
  • Dovecotes (multi-period)
  • Earthen Artillery Defences (multi-period)
  • Enclosure Castles
  • Field Barns (multi-period)
  • Field Works (multi-period)
  • Fishponds (multi-period)
  • Friaries
  • Frontier Works
  • Glassworks
  • Hermitages (multi-period)
  • Hospitals (multi-period)
  • Ironworks
  • Irregular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Limekilns
  • Magnates Residences
  • Moats
  • Motte and Bailey Castles
  • Motte Castles
  • Monasteries- male (Post-Conquest)
  • Monastic Granges (multi-period)
  • Moots (multi-period)
  • Multi-Span Bridges
  • Nuneries (multi-period)
  • Potteries (Medieval)
  • Parish Churches (multi-period)
  • Quadrangular Castles
  • Regular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Regular Open Field Systems
  • Ringworks
  • River Fisheries (multi-period)
  • Roads
  • Secular Cathedrals
  • Shell Keeps
  • Shielings
  • Single Span Bridges
  • Stockaded Enclosures
  • Shrines (Post-Roman) (multi-period)
  • Tower Keep Castles (multi-period)
  • Trackways
  • Vills
  • Vineyards (multi-period)
  • Warrens
  • Water Meadows
  • Watermills
  • Woods (multi-period)

Post Medieval Monuments

  • Almshouses (multi-period)
  • Animal Pounds
  • Archery Butts (multi-period)
  • Artillery Castles (multi-period)
  • Bastles (multi-period)
  • Beacons (multi-period)
  • Blockhouses (multi-period)
  • Cathedrals (Post-Reformation)
  • Chain Towers (multi-period)
  • Clapper Bridges (multi-period)
  • Cockpits (multi-period)
  • Coastal Fish Weirs (multi-period)
  • Cottages (multi-period)
  • Decoy Ponds (multi-period)
  • Deerparks (multi-period)
  • Dovecotes (multi-period)
  • Earthen Artillery Defences (multi-period)
  • Field Barns (multi-period)
  • Field Works (multi-period)
  • Fishponds (multi-period)
  • Hospitals (multi-period)
  • Ice Houses
  • Irregular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • Martello Towers
  • Mausolea
  • Monastic Granges (multi-period)
  • Non-Conformist Chapels
  • Parish Churches (multi-period)
  • Regular Enclosed Field Systems (multi-period)
  • River Fisheries (multi-period)
  • Tower Houses (multi-period)
  • Tower Keep Castles (multi-period)
  • Woods (multi-period)

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • description — [ dɛskripsjɔ̃ ] n. f. • 1160; lat. descriptio 1 ♦ Action de décrire, énumération des caractères (de qqch.). Description orale, écrite. Faire, donner une, la description de qqch., de qqn. Description exacte, fidèle, précise. Description d une… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Description of a Struggle — The Petřín hill (in German Laurenziberg) in Prague is featured prominently in Description of a Struggle. Description of a Struggle (German: Beschreibung eines Kampfes ) is a short story by Franz Kafka. Contents …   Wikipedia

  • Oliver P. Morton (monument) — Oliver P. Morton and Reliefs Artist Rudolf Schwarz Year 1907 (1907) Type Bronze, granite Dimensions 480 c …   Wikipedia

  • Social class in the United States — A monument to the working and supporting classes along Market Street in the heart of San Francisco s Financial District Income in the United States Affluence in the …   Wikipedia

  • Túmulo en campana — Un túmulo en campana, algunas veces mencionado como túmulo tipo Wessex, túmulo en forma acampanada, túmulo campaniforme, o túmulo con berma es un tipo de túmulo identificado tanto por John Aubrey como por William Stukeley. Las dimensiones de este …   Wikipedia Español

  • Túmulo en cuenco — Grabado de un túmulo en cuenco por Richard Hoare Colt. Túmulo en cuenco es el nombre de un tipo de montículo funerario o túmulo.[1] Un túmulo es un montículo de tierra utilizada para cubrir una tumba. El túmulo en cuenco recibe s …   Wikipedia Español

  • Túmulo en estanque — Grabado de un túmulo en estanque por Richard Colt Hoare …   Wikipedia Español

  • Disc barrow — Section and plan of a generic disc barrow A disc barrow is a type of tumulus or round barrow, a variety of fancy barrow identified in English Heritage s Monument Class Descriptions. A disc barrow comprises a circular or oval shaped flat platform …   Wikipedia

  • Henge — Vista aérea de los henges neolíticos de Thornborough en Yorkshire del Norte, Reino Unido. Henge (palabra inglesa) es una estructura arquitectónica prehistórica de forma casi circular u ovalada, por definición de un área de más de 20 metros de… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Túmulo en disco — Sección y planta de un túmulo en disco genérico. Un túmulo en disco es un tipo de túmulo, dentro del grupo de los túmulos redondos,[1] y que en clasificaciones anteriores se encontraba como variedad de los túmulo de prestigio (en inglés f …   Wikipedia Español

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”