barrows

BARE-ohz

Ancient earthen burial mounds — elongated (long barrows) or circular (round barrows) — raised over the dead in Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain and northern Europe. Barrows are among the oldest deliberate structures in the landscape, some over 5,000 years old. They mark the skyline on chalk downs and moorland, grass-covered but unmistakable — the land remembering its dead.
Etymology
Old English beorg (hill, mound, burial mound), from Proto-Germanic *bergaz. Related to berg (mountain). The burial mound named for the hill it resembles.
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