Posted on 03/11/2014 4:37:00 PM PDT by BenLurkin
Some 4,000 years ago a young woman's cremated bones charred scraps of her shroud and the wood from her funeral pyre still clinging to them was carefully wrapped in a fur along with her most valuable possessions, packed into a basket, and carried up to one of the highest and most exposed spots on Dartmoor, where they were buried in a small stone box covered by a mound of peat.
The discovery of her remains is rewriting the history of the bronze age moor. The bundle contained a treasury of unique objects: a tin bead and 34 tin studs, which are the earliest evidence of metal-working in the south-west; textiles, including a unique nettle fibre belt with a leather fringe; jewellery, including amber from the Baltic and shale from Whitby; and wooden ear studs, which are the earliest examples of wood turning ever found in Britain.
The site chosen for her grave was no accident. At 600 metres above sea level, White Horse hill is so remote that getting there even today is a 45-minute walk across heather and bog, after a half-hour drive up a military track from the nearest road. The closest known prehistoric habitation site is far down in the valley below, near the grave of the former poet laureate Ted Hughes.
(Excerpt) Read more at theguardian.com ...
Ping
Interesting story. I always wonder if I am distantly related to people like this lady. My ancestors mostly came from Great Britain.
I also wonder about her life story. Who she loved and who loved her if she had children, was married, and her life was hard (very likely). She seems to have had some wealth, though.
The Guardian was notorious for it’s spelling hence the
not so affectionate term The Grauniad.
It developed a reputation for lots of misprints in the days of hot-metal printing when it was published in Manchester.
Now they changed to computers they still get it wrong.Progress.
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