Neolithic Resource

Neolithic Resource

Neolithic Burial Chambers Education Resource Pack Key Stage 2 Literacy, Numeracy, Music, Art, ICT, PSE, Curriculum Cymreig LEARN Neolithic Burial Chambers Education Resource Neolithic burial chambers in Cadw’s care: Curriculum links: Barclodiad-y-Gawres passage tomb, Anglesey Literacy — oracy, developing & presenting Bodowyr burial chamber, Anglesey information & ideas Bryn Celli Ddu passage tomb, Anglesey Numeracy — measuring and data skills Capel Garmon burial chamber, Conwy Music — composing, performing Carreg Coetan Arthur burial chamber, Pembrokeshire Din Dryfol burial chamber, Anglesey Art — skills & range Duffryn Ardudwy burial chamber, Gwynedd Information Communication Technology — Lligwy burial chamber, Anglesey find and analyse information; create & Parc le Breos chambered tomb, Gower communicate information Pentre Ifan burial chamber, Pembrokeshire Personal Social Education — moral & spiritual Presaddfed burial chamber, Anglesey development St Lythans burial chamber, Vale of Glamorgan Curriculum Cymreig — visiting historical Tinkinswood burial chamber, Vale of Glamorgan sites, using artefacts, making comparisons Trefignath burial chamber, Anglesey between past and present, and developing Ty Newydd burial chamber, Anglesey an understanding of how these have changed over time All the Neolithic burial chambers in Cadw’s care are open sites, and visits do not need to be booked in advance. We would recommend that teachers undertake a planning visit prior to taking groups to a burial chamber, as parking and access are not always straightforward. Young people re-creating their own Neolithic ritual at Tinkinswood chambered tomb, Vale of Glamorgan, South Wales cadw.gov.wales/learning 2 Neolithic Burial Chambers Education Resource The Neolithic period • In west Wales, portal dolmens and cromlechs The Neolithic period is a time when farming was dominate, which have large stone chambers possibly introduced and when people learned how to grow covered by earth or stone mounds. A good example and produce, rather than hunt and gather their food. is Pentre Ifan, in Pembrokeshire. This period is widely regarded as one of the biggest • On Anglesey, we are lucky to have two passage changes in human history. The Neolithic period in tombs, Bryn Celli Ddu and Barclodiad-y-Gawres. Wales spans the period between 4000–2500 BC. This style of tomb corresponds with Irish examples, That’s around 6000 years ago. which were the norm on the island. The first farmers brought the ancestors of cattle, sheep and goats with them from France. Domestic pigs were bred from wild boar, which lived in the woods of Wales. Sheep, goats and cattle are fond of leaves and bark, and pigs snuffle around roots. These domestic animals may have played a major role in clearing away the huge areas of dense forest that covered most of Wales. Technological changes were also made at this time, and this can be seen in the material culture. For example, pottery was not made before this period, and flint tools now reflected the need for cereal Bryn Celli Ddu passage tomb, on Anglesey gathering implements such as sickles. For the first time, permanent structures were built both for the living and Some tombs began as portal dolmens, like at Pentre the dead. Ifan, which was then elaborated and built upon by Burial practices in this period are characterized by future generations, so it might have looked more like collective burial in large, highly visible monuments with Tinkinswood. Many were of multi-phase construction. most of the excavated remains of this period being The most remarkable element of tomb construction ceremonial or funerary in nature. is the raising of the capstone. Even today, these Early Neolithic (6000-5200 years ago) massive floating stones evoke wonder. That such feats were undertaken at all, let alone that they survived Large collective monuments for the dead began to for almost 6,000 years, is a credit to Stone Age appear throughout Britain at this period. engineering. They represented a permanent link between the The technology available to these engineers appears community, the ancestral dead, and the land which basic today, but was obviously enough for the task. they occupied. A good example is the Tinkinswood Stones themselves could be used to raise ground chambered tomb in south east Wales. levels, provide footings and act as weights. Timber Houses of the dead were usually more permanent could provide frameworks, levers and ramp surfaces, than those of the living, because the ancestors while ropes of plant fibre or honeysuckle could secure represent the community and the tombs were shrines construction equipment. to these supernatural beings. The tombs may have had several functions aside Styles varied from region to region: from that of disposal of the dead, in the same way that a church is not simply a burial place. However, • In the Cotswolds-Severn region, internal stone- the main function which is visible in the archaeological built chambers are located under wedge-shaped record is the burial of human remains. Generally mounds faced with local limestone. For example, these tombs contain several bodies, there were Tinkinswood and Parc le Breos Cwm chambered around 50 at Tinkinswood — men, women and tombs, in south Wales. children. cadw.gov.wales/learning 3 Neolithic Burial Chambers Education Resource It is possible that the bones of the buried people Neolithic burial chambers as an were not just kept in the tombs, but were brought education resource out into the light of day and perhaps used in Neolithic burial sites are ideal places for educational ceremonies. This might explain why skeletons were enquiries and projects. The fact that we do not have incomplete, with some people only represented by all the answers make these places interesting for a handful of bones. Let us not overlook the idea that pupils to research and discover what is known about these handfuls may have been infused with a special them and the people who built them, whilst imagining meaning or magic. and re-creating what is not known through creative processes of making music, drama performances, Burial in chambered tombs may have been reserved and art. for important people, but it could be for other reasons too. Perhaps people were selected for special reasons, The remains of burial sites are ideal places for outdoor like witch doctors, shamans or wise women, or people learning, and are also excellent stimuli for classroom chosen because they were representatives of a family learning. The sheer size and theatrical nature of group; or had died in a specific way. Neolithic burial sites makes them interesting and engaging places for learners to explore, and study The contents of Neolithic chambers often included of these places supports the teaching of a wide range broken pottery and the occasional pot, a few pieces of skills. Engaging with these places also helps learners of worked flint or stone tools and, more rarely, a piece value and further understand their heritage, and the of worked bone, like a bone pin, which may have held sites themselves. a leather coat together. Neolithic sites are a rich source of educational Later Neolithic (5500-4700 years ago) enquiry, as: There was a change in burial practices in Anglesey and other areas around this time. Megalithic passage • They are mysterious places, which makes them an tombs were constructed in North Wales, as in Ireland ideal focus for open-ended questioning, discussion, and northern and western Scotland. The most famous and the development of thinking skills. in Wales is Bryn Celli Ddu on Anglesey. Newgrange is • They are undeniably theatrical places, and often the most famous have very good acoustic properties, making them in Ireland, and wonderful places for performances which integrate Maes Howe music and drama. in Scotland. • They are part of the cultural heritage and built They consist of heritage of Wales, and there are examples located chambers at the across the landscape of Wales. end of stone- • They are often to be found in rural locations lined passages, surrounded by nature, which allows learners to covered with consider the extent of change in the landscape large round through history. mounds of earth. • They were built as sacred places of ritual, and as such are places which inspire exploration of the Rock art is a big existential questions that humans have always common feature, asked. usually geometric • They were built by the first farmers, study of and patterns, comparison between Neolithic and modern farming sometimes methods, plants and animals will naturally lead to deliberately Bryn Celli Ddu rock art stone consideration of sustainability issues. hidden. • Many of the sites are associated with local folklore, Astronomical features are often present. For example, which allows for exploration of myth and legend, Bryn Celli Ddu is aligned to the summer solstice, the traditional stories and culture of Wales, the longest day of the year. and the more recent history of the local areas around the sites. cadw.gov.wales/learning 4 Neolithic Burial Chambers Education Resource Why use Neolithic sites, sound and detail and high level oracy skills, including the cultivation music as a stimulus for learning? of listening skills. Neolithic sites are part of our heritage, but because Academics have suggested that Neolithic people put they pre-date the written word, there is no far greater importance on the sound world than we documentation explaining their purpose or use in do today. Each sound may have had

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