Lligwy Burial Chamber Explained

Lligwy Burial Chamber is a Neolithic burial chamber in Lligwy, near the east coast of Anglesey, Wales, United Kingdom. It consists of a circle of upright stones, made into a low chamber by a very large roof slab estimated at 25 tonnes. Excavation in 1909 found the remains of some 15 to 30 people, and pottery suggesting a late Neolithic date. Close to the village of Moelfre, the site is within a few metres of the road, where there is room to leave a single car for short periods.

Burial chamber

Lligwy Burial Chamber is a very robust, neolithic chamber. The eight uprights which support the massive capstone are larger than they at first appear, because half of their 21NaN1 height is buried in the ground. The capstone is about 5.51NaN1 long and 4.51NaN1 wide, with a thickness of around 11NaN1. It is estimated to weigh about and is in contact with only three of the uprights. A gap between the uprights on the eastern side probably indicates where an entrance passage stood, with a way out of the mound; It is unclear whether this chambered tomb was covered by a cairn, but if it was, no trace remains today.[1] Deep grooves in the limestone capstone imply that erosion by rainfall has taken place, further evidence that the structure may not have been covered by a cairn.[2]

Excavations in 1909 discovered artefacts in two separate layers, indicating that the site was used during two separate periods. The bones from up to thirty people have been found in the chamber, as well as shellfish (mussels and limpets) and many animal bones. Fragments of pottery from the two different settlements periods are present; grooved ware dating to the Neolithic period and beaker ware from the early Bronze Age.[1] Some 400-2NaN-2 to the west lies the well-preserved Din Lligwy hut circle, but this is not a contemporary structure, probably dating from the second to fourth centuries AD.[3]

Lligwy Burial Chamber is a scheduled ancient monument. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales curates the archaeological, architectural and historic records for this site. Included in the archives are many digital images of the site, a DOE photographic collection, NMR site files, Cadw guardianship records, colour photographs, black and white photographs, aerial photographs and an extract from the June 1933 edition of Archaeologia Cambrensis with the title "The Pottery from the Lligwy Burial Chamber, Anglesey".

Media

The HeritageTogether project [4] has used photogrammetry to create 3D models of the site [5]

Access

The burial chamber is in the care of Cadw; the site is open to the public, free of charge, throughout the year, except for Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, Boxing Day and New Year's Day. The burial chamber is very close to the road and can be accessed on foot from a parking bay at the edge of the unclassified road, about 0.751NaN1 north of Llanallgo.[6]

External links

53.3499°N -4.2529°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lligwy . Stone-circles.org.uk . 5 May 2016.
  2. Book: Lynch, Frances . Sharp, Mick. Williamson, Jean. Anglesey: Past Landscapes of the Coast. 2009. Windgather Press . 978-1-909686-34-2 . 35–36.
  3. Book: Longley, Darren. Burford, Tim. Stewart, James. The Rough Guide to Wales. 2015 . Rough Guides Limited . 978-0-241-20625-6 . 598.
  4. Web site: HeritageTogether | Creating 3D models from photographs.
  5. Web site: Anglesey / Sir Fôn - Lligwy Burial Chamber - HeritageTogether. heritagetogether.org.
  6. Web site: Lligwi Burial Chamber . Cadw . 6 April 2023.