A view north-east from Windmill Hill, near Winterbourne Monkton. The viewpoint is the top of this barrow 1010949 In the foreground is another barrow, this time a bowl barrow. Hackpen Hill is in the far distance.
Roman SiteVisit

Bronze Age Bowl Barrow

in Winterbourne Monkton

📷 Photo by Brian Robert Marshall · CC BY-SA 2.0 · Wikimedia Commons

This Bronze Age burial mound near Winterbourne Monkton dates back over 3,500 years, built by early Bronze Age communities as a resting place for their dead.

It's one of the most tangible connections you can make to prehistoric life in the region. Walking around the mound itself gives you a real sense of its scale and the considerable effort required to construct it—the kind of effort that tells you how important these burial rituals were to the people who created them.

What makes visiting here so compelling is that it remains largely unmanicured. There are no visitor facilities or interpretive boards, which actually works in its favor. That rawness lets you engage directly with the archaeology without mediation, and the expansive countryside views surrounding the site add to the contemplative experience. The barrow sits within a landscape dense with prehistoric remains. Avebury Stone Circle and its complex lie nearby, so this makes an excellent addition if you're spending time exploring the broader archaeological heritage of the area.

Marlborough, the nearest market town, sits just a short drive away and offers all the practical amenities you might need, plus its own historical interest that's worth exploring. What strikes you about places like this is how many layers of human history exist in this part of the Cotswolds, with this particular mound representing some of the very oldest.

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Reference & sources
51.44159°N, 1.87602°W Data: osm