Unchambered long barrow

The barrow without chamber, and chamber -less barrow called in the UK ( Nichtmegalithische long hill and stone chamber Loose Long Cairns ) who finds himself in a strip of Brittany on the British Isles, Denmark and the North German lowlands to the upper reaches of the Vistula ( plants from Niedźwiedź type) (NTT). Wherein kammerlos means that no lithic chamber is provided.

Funnel Beaker Culture Total

Hunebeds of TBK in Germany

A significant number of hunebeds without chamber are known from western and southern Poland, a few from Bohemia and Moravia. The largest concentration is in Kuyavian. Often they will have been found in groups of two or three, sometimes as Sarnowo, in greater accumulation ( 9). Most are between 25 and 40 feet long; about 40% are between 60 and 80 m long. The longest Wietrzychowice Kujawy, reaches 130 m and is relatively narrow. Usually they are at the wider the short sides ( the front side ) between three and 11 meters wide, the narrower side is considered to be the end. The access ports are found on the front side. The Hauptorienlierung in about 70 % of the investigated systems is east-west or northeast -southwest.

Hill plants with an enclosure of wooden poles are in each case about 200 British ( earthen ) Long Barrows ( Nichtmegalithischen long hill and the Nichtmegalithischen Round Hill). They are especially common in Wiltshire and Yorkshire. Three facilities are located in Scotland, one on the Isle of Man. The hills were built on wooden chambers. To the east of Scotland as another chamber and megalithlose variant come the " chamberless Cains ' who are represented only in Cumbria and Northumberland about 50 stone hill without Chambers added that in England (12).

Hill plants with frames made of wooden poles (without stone content ) are partly shaped sperm Middle Neolithic enclosures of type Passy, attributable to the Cerny culture. Such hill with wooden or palisade enclosure can also be found in the area of ​​early Funnel Beaker culture. Systems of the type Konens Høj in Denmark and equipment from Niedźwiedź type in Central Germany and Poland.

British, French and Nordic systems have no connection with each other.

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