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Kit's Coty House

Kit's Coty House or Kit's Coty is a chambered long barrow near the village of Aylesford in the southeastern English county of Kent. Constructed circa 4000 BCE, during the Early Neolithic period of British prehistory, today it survives in a ruined state.

Kit's Coty House
The monument with the Medway Valley behind
Location within Kent
Coordinates51°19′12″N 0°30′11″E / 51.3199285°N 0.5029495°E / 51.3199285; 0.5029495
TypeLong barrow

Archaeologists have established that the monument was built by pastoralist communities shortly after the introduction of agriculture to Britain from continental Europe. Although representing part of an architectural tradition of long barrow building that was widespread across Neolithic Europe, Kit's Coty House belongs to a localised regional variant of barrows produced in the vicinity of the River Medway, now known as the Medway Megaliths. Of these, it lies near to both Little Kit's Coty House and the Coffin Stone on the eastern side of the river. Three further surviving long barrows, Addington Long Barrow, Chestnuts Long Barrow, and Coldrum Long Barrow, are located west of the Medway.

They were among the first ancient British remains to be protected by the state, on the advice of General Augustus Pitt-Rivers, the first Inspector of Ancient Monuments.[1] The site is now under the ownership of non-departmental public body English Heritage, and is open to visitors all year round.[1]

Kit's Coty can be reached on foot along a track that appears at the junction where the Pilgrim's Way and Rochester Road meet.[2] The chamber is encircled by iron railings.[2] It lies approximately 2 kilometres north of another of the Medway Megaliths, Little Kit's Coty House.[2]

The name "Kits Coty" allegedly means "Tomb in the Forest" according to signs at the site, possibly related to the Ancient British *kaitom, later *keiton, meaning "forest". The site is the namesake of Kitscoty, a village in Alberta, Canada.[citation needed] The inclusion of the term "House" in the site's name has confused some visitors, who have gone to the site expecting a built dwelling.[3]

Context edit

 
Interactive map of Kit's Coty House

The Early Neolithic was a revolutionary period of British history. Between 4500 and 3800 BCE, it saw a widespread change in lifestyle as the communities living in the British Isles adopted agriculture as their primary form of subsistence, abandoning the hunter-gatherer lifestyle that had characterised the preceding Mesolithic period.[4] This came about through contact with continental societies, although it is unclear to what extent this can be attributed to an influx of migrants or to indigenous Mesolithic Britons adopting agricultural technologies from the continent.[5] The region of modern Kent would have been a key area for the arrival of continental European settlers and visitors, because of its position on the estuary of the River Thames and its proximity to the continent.[6]

Britain was largely forested in this period;[7] widespread forest clearance did not occur in Kent until the Late Bronze Age (c.1000 to 700 BCE).[8] Environmental data from the vicinity of the White Horse Stone, a putatively prehistoric monolith near the River Medway, supports the idea that the area was still largely forested in the Early Neolithic, covered by a woodland of oak, ash, hazel/alder and Maloideae.[9] Throughout most of Britain, there is little evidence of cereal or permanent dwellings from this period, leading archaeologists to believe that the Early Neolithic economy on the island was largely pastoral, relying on herding cattle, with people living a nomadic or semi-nomadic life.[10]

Medway Megaliths edit

 
The construction of long barrows and related funerary monuments took place in various parts of Europe during the Early Neolithic (distribution pictured)

Across Western Europe, the Early Neolithic marked the first period in which humans built monumental structures in the landscape.[11] These structures included chambered long barrows, rectangular or oval earthen tumuli which had a chamber built into one end. Some of these chambers were constructed out of timber, although others were built using large stones, now known as "megaliths".[12] These long barrows often served as tombs, housing the physical remains of the dead within their chamber.[13] Individuals were rarely buried alone in the Early Neolithic, instead being interred in collective burials with other members of their community.[14] These chambered tombs were built all along the Western European seaboard during the Early Neolithic, from southeastern Spain up to southern Sweden, taking in most of the British Isles;[15] the architectural tradition was introduced to Britain from continental Europe in the first half of the fourth millennium BCE.[16] Although there are stone buildings—like Göbekli Tepe in modern Turkey—which predate them, the chambered long barrows constitute humanity's first widespread tradition of construction using stone.[17]

Although now all in a ruinous state and not retaining their original appearance,[18] at the time of construction the Medway Megaliths would have been some of the largest and most visually imposing Early Neolithic funerary monuments in Britain.[19] Grouped along the River Medway as it cuts through the North Downs,[20] they constitute the most southeasterly group of megalithic monuments in the British Isles,[21] and the only megalithic group in eastern England.[22] The archaeologists Brian Philp and Mike Dutto deemed the Medway Megaliths to be "some of the most interesting and well known" archaeological sites in Kent,[23] while the archaeologist Paul Ashbee described them as "the most grandiose and impressive structures of their kind in southern England".[24]

The Medway Megaliths can be divided into two separate clusters: one to the west of the River Medway and the other on Blue Bell Hill to the east, with the distance between the two clusters measuring at between 8 and 10 kilometres (5 and 6 mi).[25] The western group includes Coldrum Long Barrow, Addington Long Barrow, and the Chestnuts Long Barrow.[26] The eastern group consists of Smythe's Megalith, Kit's Coty House, Little Kit's Coty House, the Coffin Stone, and several other stones which might have once been parts of chambered tombs, most notably the White Horse Stone.[27] It is not known if they were all built at the same time, or whether they were constructed in succession,[28] while similarly it is not known if they each served the same function or whether there was a hierarchy in their usage.[29]

 
Map of the Medway Megaliths around the River Medway

The Medway long barrows all conformed to the same general design plan,[30] and are all aligned on an east to west axis.[30] Each had a stone chamber at the eastern end of the mound, and they each probably had a stone facade flanking the entrance.[30] They had internal heights of up to 3.0 metres (10 feet), making them taller than most other chambered long barrows in Britain.[31] The chambers were constructed from sarsen, a dense, hard, and durable stone that occurs naturally throughout Kent, having formed out of sand from the Eocene epoch.[32] Early Neolithic builders would have selected blocks from the local area, and then transported them to the site of the monument to be erected.[32]

These common architectural features among the Medway Megaliths indicate a strong regional cohesion with no direct parallels elsewhere in the British Isles.[33] Nevertheless, as with other regional groupings of Early Neolithic long barrows—such as the Cotswold-Severn group in south-western Britain—there are also various idiosyncrasies in the different monuments, such as Coldrum's rectilinear shape, the Chestnut Long Barrow's facade, and the long, thin mounds at Addington and Kit's Coty.[34] These variations might have been caused by the tombs being altered and adapted over the course of their use; in this scenario, the monuments would be composite structures.[35]

The builders of these monuments were probably influenced by pre-existing tomb-shrines they were aware of.[36] Whether those people had grown up locally, or moved into the Medway area from elsewhere is not known.[36] Based on a stylistic analysis of their architectural designs, the archaeologist Stuart Piggott thought that the plan behind the Medway Megaliths had originated in the area around the Low Countries;[37] conversely, Glyn Daniel thought their design derived from Scandinavia,[38] John H. Evans thought Germany,[39] and Ronald F. Jessup suggested an influence from the Cotswold-Severn group.[40] Ashbee noted that their close clustering in the same area was reminiscent of the megalithic tomb-shrine traditions of continental Northern Europe,[24] and emphasised that the Medway Megaliths were a regional manifestation of a tradition widespread across Early Neolithic Europe.[41] He nevertheless stressed that a precise place of origin was "impossible to indicate" with the available evidence.[42]

Design and construction edit

 
The back slab of the megalith, engraved with much graffiti.

The surviving part of the monument represents three stones covered by a capstone.[30] The H-shaped entrance to the tomb survives. It is made of sarsen (a fine-grained, crystalline sandstone) and consists of three orthostats supporting a horizontal capstone.[1] The archaeologist Timothy Champion suggested that these stones "give some idea of the scale of the sculpture".[30] The front part of the chamber, as well as a possible façade, are now gone.[30]

The mound and flanking ditches have largely been ploughed flat but remain visible from aerial photographs.[30] A 1981 survey found the mound to be circa 70 metres long and 1 metre high.[43] Champion suggested that in total, the long-barrow would have been about 80m long.[30] As a result of chalk rubble in the plough soul, it estimated that it had once been c.11 to 15 metres wide.[43] An area of dark soil suggested that there had been a wide ditch on the southern side.[43]

Ashbee noted that various worn pottery sherds had been found in the soil on the barrow.[44] In 1897, John Evans recounted as having found a leaf-shaped arrowhead—likely of Neolithic date—near to the site.[45]

The General's Tombstone edit

At the western end of the monument was a megalith known as "the General's Tombstone", which was destroyed in 1867.[43] This may once have been part of the long barrow's structure.[30]

Damage and dilapidation edit

Ashbee suggested that when the barrow was being slighted, the kerbstones might have been dragged away or buried under the ditches.[46]

Folklore, folk tradition, and modern Paganism edit

In 1722, the antiquarian Hercules Ayleway noted—in a letter written to his friend, the fellow antiquarian William Stukeley—a local belief that the Lower Kit's Coty House and Kit's Coty House were erected in memory of two contending kings of Kent who died in battle.[47]

In 1946, Evans recorded a local folk tale that held that the chamber at Kit's Coty House was erected by three witches who lived on Blue Bell Hill. According to this story, a fourth witch helped them put the capstone on.[48]

Several modern Pagan religions are practised at the Medway Megaliths, the most publicly visible of which is Druidry.[49] Research conducted among these Druids in 2014 revealed that some Druidic ceremonial activity had taken place at Kit's Coty.[49]

Antiquarian and archaeological investigation edit

 
Stukeley's 1722 prospect of Kit's Coty House with its remnant long barrow still just visible and labelled "The Grave"

Kit's Coty House was briefly mentioned in John Twyne's De Rebus Albionicis (written c.1550, but not published until 1590), and in William Camden's Britannia (1586): Camden reported the popular tradition that it was the tomb of the 5th-century British prince Catigern, supposedly killed at the Battle of Aylesford in 455.[50]

In 1590, a group of antiquaries visited the site. One of them, John Stow, wrote:

It was one great flat stone in the mydst standinge up right, & ij othar the lyke or greatar stones, on eche syd one in closynge the ij edge sydes of the mydle stone, and then one greatar flat stone lyenge flat over and above the othar thre. And about one quoyts cast from this monument lyethe one othar very greate stone, moche parte therof in the erthe.[50]

Stow published a version of this report in his Annals in 1592; while another of the group, William Lambarde, published his own description in the 1596 edition of his Perambulation of Kent, drawing a comparison with Stonehenge.[50] Camden described the monument in greater detail from personal observation in the expanded 1610 English translation of Britannia:

under the side of a hill I saw foure, huge, rude, hard stones erected, two for the sides, one transversall in the midest betweene them, and the hugest of all piled and laied over them in manner of the British monument which is called Stone-heng but not so artificially with mortis and tenents. Verily the unskilfull common people terme it at this day, of the same Catigern, Keiths or Kits Coty house.[51][52]

In 1659, Thomas Philipot wrote about the site, again describing it as the tomb of Catigern.[53]

The antiquarian John Aubrey made mention of the monument in his unpublished manuscript on British archaeological sites, the Monumenta Britannica. There he included a drawing of the site produced by the classical scholar Thomas Gale.[53] Aubrey then directly cited Philipot's earlier work.[53] There is no direct evidence that Aubrey visited the site but Ashbee thought it "inconceivable that he did not" given that he made frequent visits to Kent, using a road which would have taken him very close to Kit's Coty House.[53]

William Stukeley visited the site in 1722 and was able to sketch the site whilst it was still largely intact. Before this, Samuel Pepys also saw it and wrote:

Three great stones standing upright and a great round one lying on them, of great bigness, although not so big as those on Salisbury Plain. But certainly it is a thing of great antiquity, and I am mightily glad to see it.[citation needed]

Stukeley included four engravings of Kit's Coty House in his two volumes of Itinerarium Curiosum.[54] A 1722 print of the site showed the chamber, mound, and the General's Tombstone.[43]

In c.1783, James Douglas set one of his workmen to dig on the western side of the monument, and produced a watercolour painting illustrating the scene.[55]

In 1880, the archaeologist Flinders Petrie included the stones at Addington in his list of Kentish earthworks.[56] In 1893, the antiquarian George Payne mentioned the monument in his Collectanea Cantiana, describing it as a "fallen cromlech" and noting that there were various other megaliths scattered in the vicinity, suggesting that these were part of the monument of another like it, since destroyed.[57]

In his 1924 publication dealing with Kent, the archaeologist O. G. S. Crawford, then working as the archaeological officer for the Ordnance Survey, listed Kit's Coty House alongside the other Medway Megaliths and reprinted one of Stukeley's engravings of it.[58]

The author George Orwell visited the site on 21 August 1938, as detailed in his domestic diary of that date.[59] He describes it as "a druidical altar or something of the kind. ... The stones are on top of a high hill & it appears they belong to quite another part of the country." The stones are actually well down the slope of Blue Bell Hill, 1.32 km to the north.[60]

In January 1981, Kent Archaeological Rescue Unit carried out a survey of the site.[43]

Management by English Heritage edit

Ashbee suggested that Kit's Coty House was "the best known" of the Medway Megaliths,[61] while Champion thought it "perhaps the best-known monument in Kent".[30] In 2005, Philp and Dutto referred to Kits Coty as an "important monument" that was "amongst the best known in Britain".[2]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c "History of Kit's Coty House and Little Kit's Coty House". English Heritage. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d Philp & Dutto 2005, p. 10.
  3. ^ Doel & Doel 2003, p. 104.
  4. ^ Hutton 1991, pp. 16–17.
  5. ^ Hutton 1991, p. 16; Ashbee 1999, p. 272; Hutton 2013, pp. 34–35.
  6. ^ Holgate 1981, pp. 230–231.
  7. ^ Hutton 2013, p. 37.
  8. ^ Barclay et al. 2006, p. 20.
  9. ^ Barclay et al. 2006, pp. 25–26.
  10. ^ Champion 2007, pp. 73–74; Hutton 2013, p. 33.
  11. ^ Hutton 1991, p. 19; Hutton 2013, p. 37.
  12. ^ Hutton 1991, p. 19; Hutton 2013, p. 40.
  13. ^ Hutton 1991, p. 19.
  14. ^ Malone 2001, p. 103.
  15. ^ Hutton 2013, p. 40.
  16. ^ Malone 2001, pp. 103–104; Hutton 2013, p. 41.
  17. ^ Hutton 2013, p. 41.
  18. ^ Holgate 1981, p. 225; Champion 2007, p. 78.
  19. ^ Champion 2007, p. 76.
  20. ^ Wysocki et al. 2013, p. 1.
  21. ^ Garwood 2012, p. 1.
  22. ^ Holgate 1981, p. 221.
  23. ^ Philp & Dutto 2005, p. 1.
  24. ^ a b Ashbee 1999, p. 269.
  25. ^ Ashbee 1993, pp. 60–61; Champion 2007, p. 78; Wysocki et al. 2013, p. 1.
  26. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 101; Champion 2007, pp. 76–77.
  27. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 101; Champion 2007, p. 78.
  28. ^ Holgate 1981, p. 223.
  29. ^ Holgate 1981, pp. 223, 225.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Champion 2007, p. 78.
  31. ^ Killick 2010, p. 339.
  32. ^ a b Ashbee 1993, p. 58; Ashbee 2000, pp. 325–326; Champion 2007, p. 78.
  33. ^ Holgate 1981, p. 225; Wysocki et al. 2013, p. 3.
  34. ^ Wysocki et al. 2013, p. 3.
  35. ^ Ashbee 1993, p. 60.
  36. ^ a b Holgate 1981, p. 227.
  37. ^ Piggott 1935, p. 122.
  38. ^ Daniel 1950, p. 161.
  39. ^ Evans 1950, pp. 77−80.
  40. ^ Jessup 1970, p. 111.
  41. ^ Ashbee 1999, p. 271.
  42. ^ Ashbee 1993, p. 57.
  43. ^ a b c d e f Philp & Dutto 2005, p. 11.
  44. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 110.
  45. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 97.
  46. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 106.
  47. ^ Grinsell 1976, p. 124; Doel & Doel 2003, p. 104.
  48. ^ Grinsell 1976, p. 124.
  49. ^ a b Doyle White 2016, p. 351.
  50. ^ a b c Harris 2004, p. 27.
  51. ^ Harris 2004, pp. 27–28.
  52. ^ Camden, William (1610). Britannia. London. p. 332.
  53. ^ a b c d Ashbee 2005, p. 20.
  54. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 21.
  55. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 23.
  56. ^ Petrie 1880, p. 14.
  57. ^ Payne 1893, pp. 126–127.
  58. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 33.
  59. ^ Orwell, George (2012). Davison, Peter (ed.). Diaries. New York: Liveright. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-87140-410-7.
  60. ^ Google Earth 51.3199°N 0.5029°E
  61. ^ Ashbee 2005, p. 101.

Bibliography edit

  • Ashbee, Paul (1993). "The Medway Megaliths in Perspective" (PDF). Archaeologia Cantiana. Kent Archaeological Society. 111: 57–112.
  •  ———  (1999). "The Medway Megaliths in a European Context" (PDF). Archaeologia Cantiana. Kent Archaeological Society. 119: 269–284.
  •  ———  (2000). "The Medway's Megalithic Long Barrows" (PDF). Archaeologia Cantiana. 120: 319–345.
  •  ———  (2005). Kent in Prehistoric Times. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 978-0752431369.
  • Barclay, Alistair; Fitzpatrick, Andrew P.; Hayden, Chris; Stafford, Elizabeth (2006). The Prehistoric Landscape at White Horse Stone, Aylesford, Kent (Report). Oxford: Oxford Wessex Archaeology Joint Venture (London and Continental Railways).
  • Burl, Aubrey (1981). Rites of the Gods. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0460043137.
  • Champion, Timothy (2007). "Prehistoric Kent". In John H. Williams (ed.). The Archaeology of Kent to AD 800. Woodbridge: Boydell Press and Kent County Council. pp. 67–133. ISBN 9780851155807.
  • Daniel, Glynn E. (1950). The Prehistoric Chamber Tombs of England and Wales. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Doel, Fran; Doel, Geoff (2003). Folklore of Kent. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 978-0-7524-2628-0.
  • Doyle White, Ethan (2016). "Old Stones, New Rites: Contemporary Pagan Interactions with the Medway Megaliths". Material Religion. 12 (3): 346–372. doi:10.1080/17432200.2016.1192152.
  • Evans, John H. (1946). "Notes on the Folklore and Legends Associated with the Kentish Megaliths". Folklore. The Folklore Society. 57 (1): 36–43. doi:10.1080/0015587x.1946.9717805. JSTOR 1257001.
  •  ———  (1950). "Kentish Megalith Types" (PDF). Archaeologia Cantiana. Kent Archaeological Society. 63: 63–81.
  • Garwood, P. (2012). "The Medway Valley Prehistoric Landscapes Project". PAST: The Newsletter of the Prehistoric Society. The Prehistoric Society. 72: 1–3.
  • Grinsell, Leslie V. (1976). Folklore of Prehistoric Sites in Britain. London: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-7241-8.
  • Harris, Oliver (2004). "Stow and the contemporary antiquarian network". In Gadd, Ian; Gillespie, Alexandra (eds.). John Stow (1525–1605) and the Making of the English Past: studies in early modern culture and the history of the book. London: British Library. pp. 27–35. ISBN 0-7123-4864-6.
  • Holgate, Robin (1981). "The Medway Megaliths and Neolithic Kent" (PDF). Archaeologia Cantiana. Kent Archaeological Society. 97: 221–234.
  • Hutton, Ronald (1991). The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles: Their Nature and Legacy. Oxford, U.K. and Cambridge, U.S.: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-17288-8.
  •  ———  (2013). Pagan Britain. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-197716.
  • Jessup, Ronald F. (1970). South-East England. London: Thames and Hudson.
  • Killick, Sian (2010). "Neolithic Landscape and Experience: The Medway Megaliths" (PDF). Archaeologia Cantiana. Vol. 130. Kent Archaeological Society. pp. 339–349.
  • Lewis, A.L. (1878). "On a Rude Stone Monument in Kent". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 7: 140–142. doi:10.2307/2841379. JSTOR 2841379.
  • Malone, Caroline (2001). Neolithic Britain and Ireland. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Tempus. ISBN 978-0-7524-1442-3.
  • Payne, George (1893). Collectanea Cantiana: Or, Archæological Researches in the Neighbourhood of Sittingbourne, and Otherparts of Kent. London: Mitchell and Hughes.
  • Petrie, W.M. Flinders (1880). "Notes on Kentish Earthworks". Archaeologia Cantiana. 13: 8–16.
  • Philp, Brian; Dutto, Mike (2005). The Medway Megaliths (third ed.). Kent: Kent Archaeological Trust.
  • Piggott, Stuart (1935). "A Note on the Relative Chronology of the English Long Barrows". Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. The Prehistoric Society. 1: 115–126. doi:10.1017/s0079497x00022246.
  • Smith, Martin; Brickley, Megan (2009). People of the Long Barrows: Life, Death and Burial in the Early Neolithic. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-0752447339.
  • Wright (1844). "Proceedings of the Committee". The Archaeological Journal. 1: 262–264.
  • Wysocki, Michael; Griffiths, Seren; Hedges, Robert; Bayliss, Alex; Higham, Tom; Fernandez-Jalvo, Yolanda; Whittle, Alasdair (2013). "Dates, Diet and Dismemberment: Evidence from the Coldrum Megalithic Monument, Kent". Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society. Prehistoric Society. 79: 1–30. doi:10.1017/ppr.2013.10.

External links edit

  • Photo and location map
  • Pictures and personal experiences of Kit's Coty House at The Modern Antiquarian
  • The tomb's association with Catigern
  • Further research and history: English Heritage
  • "Coldrum Stones". The National Trust. Retrieved 27 August 2012.

coty, house, coty, chambered, long, barrow, near, village, aylesford, southeastern, english, county, kent, constructed, circa, 4000, during, early, neolithic, period, british, prehistory, today, survives, ruined, state, monument, with, medway, valley, behindlo. Kit s Coty House or Kit s Coty is a chambered long barrow near the village of Aylesford in the southeastern English county of Kent Constructed circa 4000 BCE during the Early Neolithic period of British prehistory today it survives in a ruined state Kit s Coty HouseThe monument with the Medway Valley behindLocation within KentCoordinates51 19 12 N 0 30 11 E 51 3199285 N 0 5029495 E 51 3199285 0 5029495TypeLong barrowArchaeologists have established that the monument was built by pastoralist communities shortly after the introduction of agriculture to Britain from continental Europe Although representing part of an architectural tradition of long barrow building that was widespread across Neolithic Europe Kit s Coty House belongs to a localised regional variant of barrows produced in the vicinity of the River Medway now known as the Medway Megaliths Of these it lies near to both Little Kit s Coty House and the Coffin Stone on the eastern side of the river Three further surviving long barrows Addington Long Barrow Chestnuts Long Barrow and Coldrum Long Barrow are located west of the Medway They were among the first ancient British remains to be protected by the state on the advice of General Augustus Pitt Rivers the first Inspector of Ancient Monuments 1 The site is now under the ownership of non departmental public body English Heritage and is open to visitors all year round 1 Kit s Coty can be reached on foot along a track that appears at the junction where the Pilgrim s Way and Rochester Road meet 2 The chamber is encircled by iron railings 2 It lies approximately 2 kilometres north of another of the Medway Megaliths Little Kit s Coty House 2 The name Kits Coty allegedly means Tomb in the Forest according to signs at the site possibly related to the Ancient British kaitom later keiton meaning forest The site is the namesake of Kitscoty a village in Alberta Canada citation needed The inclusion of the term House in the site s name has confused some visitors who have gone to the site expecting a built dwelling 3 Contents 1 Context 1 1 Medway Megaliths 2 Design and construction 2 1 The General s Tombstone 3 Damage and dilapidation 4 Folklore folk tradition and modern Paganism 5 Antiquarian and archaeological investigation 5 1 Management by English Heritage 6 References 6 1 Footnotes 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksContext edit nbsp Interactive map of Kit s Coty House The Early Neolithic was a revolutionary period of British history Between 4500 and 3800 BCE it saw a widespread change in lifestyle as the communities living in the British Isles adopted agriculture as their primary form of subsistence abandoning the hunter gatherer lifestyle that had characterised the preceding Mesolithic period 4 This came about through contact with continental societies although it is unclear to what extent this can be attributed to an influx of migrants or to indigenous Mesolithic Britons adopting agricultural technologies from the continent 5 The region of modern Kent would have been a key area for the arrival of continental European settlers and visitors because of its position on the estuary of the River Thames and its proximity to the continent 6 Britain was largely forested in this period 7 widespread forest clearance did not occur in Kent until the Late Bronze Age c 1000 to 700 BCE 8 Environmental data from the vicinity of the White Horse Stone a putatively prehistoric monolith near the River Medway supports the idea that the area was still largely forested in the Early Neolithic covered by a woodland of oak ash hazel alder and Maloideae 9 Throughout most of Britain there is little evidence of cereal or permanent dwellings from this period leading archaeologists to believe that the Early Neolithic economy on the island was largely pastoral relying on herding cattle with people living a nomadic or semi nomadic life 10 Medway Megaliths edit nbsp The construction of long barrows and related funerary monuments took place in various parts of Europe during the Early Neolithic distribution pictured Across Western Europe the Early Neolithic marked the first period in which humans built monumental structures in the landscape 11 These structures included chambered long barrows rectangular or oval earthen tumuli which had a chamber built into one end Some of these chambers were constructed out of timber although others were built using large stones now known as megaliths 12 These long barrows often served as tombs housing the physical remains of the dead within their chamber 13 Individuals were rarely buried alone in the Early Neolithic instead being interred in collective burials with other members of their community 14 These chambered tombs were built all along the Western European seaboard during the Early Neolithic from southeastern Spain up to southern Sweden taking in most of the British Isles 15 the architectural tradition was introduced to Britain from continental Europe in the first half of the fourth millennium BCE 16 Although there are stone buildings like Gobekli Tepe in modern Turkey which predate them the chambered long barrows constitute humanity s first widespread tradition of construction using stone 17 Although now all in a ruinous state and not retaining their original appearance 18 at the time of construction the Medway Megaliths would have been some of the largest and most visually imposing Early Neolithic funerary monuments in Britain 19 Grouped along the River Medway as it cuts through the North Downs 20 they constitute the most southeasterly group of megalithic monuments in the British Isles 21 and the only megalithic group in eastern England 22 The archaeologists Brian Philp and Mike Dutto deemed the Medway Megaliths to be some of the most interesting and well known archaeological sites in Kent 23 while the archaeologist Paul Ashbee described them as the most grandiose and impressive structures of their kind in southern England 24 The Medway Megaliths can be divided into two separate clusters one to the west of the River Medway and the other on Blue Bell Hill to the east with the distance between the two clusters measuring at between 8 and 10 kilometres 5 and 6 mi 25 The western group includes Coldrum Long Barrow Addington Long Barrow and the Chestnuts Long Barrow 26 The eastern group consists of Smythe s Megalith Kit s Coty House Little Kit s Coty House the Coffin Stone and several other stones which might have once been parts of chambered tombs most notably the White Horse Stone 27 It is not known if they were all built at the same time or whether they were constructed in succession 28 while similarly it is not known if they each served the same function or whether there was a hierarchy in their usage 29 nbsp Map of the Medway Megaliths around the River MedwayThe Medway long barrows all conformed to the same general design plan 30 and are all aligned on an east to west axis 30 Each had a stone chamber at the eastern end of the mound and they each probably had a stone facade flanking the entrance 30 They had internal heights of up to 3 0 metres 10 feet making them taller than most other chambered long barrows in Britain 31 The chambers were constructed from sarsen a dense hard and durable stone that occurs naturally throughout Kent having formed out of sand from the Eocene epoch 32 Early Neolithic builders would have selected blocks from the local area and then transported them to the site of the monument to be erected 32 These common architectural features among the Medway Megaliths indicate a strong regional cohesion with no direct parallels elsewhere in the British Isles 33 Nevertheless as with other regional groupings of Early Neolithic long barrows such as the Cotswold Severn group in south western Britain there are also various idiosyncrasies in the different monuments such as Coldrum s rectilinear shape the Chestnut Long Barrow s facade and the long thin mounds at Addington and Kit s Coty 34 These variations might have been caused by the tombs being altered and adapted over the course of their use in this scenario the monuments would be composite structures 35 The builders of these monuments were probably influenced by pre existing tomb shrines they were aware of 36 Whether those people had grown up locally or moved into the Medway area from elsewhere is not known 36 Based on a stylistic analysis of their architectural designs the archaeologist Stuart Piggott thought that the plan behind the Medway Megaliths had originated in the area around the Low Countries 37 conversely Glyn Daniel thought their design derived from Scandinavia 38 John H Evans thought Germany 39 and Ronald F Jessup suggested an influence from the Cotswold Severn group 40 Ashbee noted that their close clustering in the same area was reminiscent of the megalithic tomb shrine traditions of continental Northern Europe 24 and emphasised that the Medway Megaliths were a regional manifestation of a tradition widespread across Early Neolithic Europe 41 He nevertheless stressed that a precise place of origin was impossible to indicate with the available evidence 42 Design and construction edit nbsp The back slab of the megalith engraved with much graffiti The surviving part of the monument represents three stones covered by a capstone 30 The H shaped entrance to the tomb survives It is made of sarsen a fine grained crystalline sandstone and consists of three orthostats supporting a horizontal capstone 1 The archaeologist Timothy Champion suggested that these stones give some idea of the scale of the sculpture 30 The front part of the chamber as well as a possible facade are now gone 30 The mound and flanking ditches have largely been ploughed flat but remain visible from aerial photographs 30 A 1981 survey found the mound to be circa 70 metres long and 1 metre high 43 Champion suggested that in total the long barrow would have been about 80m long 30 As a result of chalk rubble in the plough soul it estimated that it had once been c 11 to 15 metres wide 43 An area of dark soil suggested that there had been a wide ditch on the southern side 43 Ashbee noted that various worn pottery sherds had been found in the soil on the barrow 44 In 1897 John Evans recounted as having found a leaf shaped arrowhead likely of Neolithic date near to the site 45 The General s Tombstone edit At the western end of the monument was a megalith known as the General s Tombstone which was destroyed in 1867 43 This may once have been part of the long barrow s structure 30 Damage and dilapidation editAshbee suggested that when the barrow was being slighted the kerbstones might have been dragged away or buried under the ditches 46 Folklore folk tradition and modern Paganism editIn 1722 the antiquarian Hercules Ayleway noted in a letter written to his friend the fellow antiquarian William Stukeley a local belief that the Lower Kit s Coty House and Kit s Coty House were erected in memory of two contending kings of Kent who died in battle 47 In 1946 Evans recorded a local folk tale that held that the chamber at Kit s Coty House was erected by three witches who lived on Blue Bell Hill According to this story a fourth witch helped them put the capstone on 48 Several modern Pagan religions are practised at the Medway Megaliths the most publicly visible of which is Druidry 49 Research conducted among these Druids in 2014 revealed that some Druidic ceremonial activity had taken place at Kit s Coty 49 Antiquarian and archaeological investigation edit nbsp Stukeley s 1722 prospect of Kit s Coty House with its remnant long barrow still just visible and labelled The Grave Kit s Coty House was briefly mentioned in John Twyne s De Rebus Albionicis written c 1550 but not published until 1590 and in William Camden s Britannia 1586 Camden reported the popular tradition that it was the tomb of the 5th century British prince Catigern supposedly killed at the Battle of Aylesford in 455 50 In 1590 a group of antiquaries visited the site One of them John Stow wrote It was one great flat stone in the mydst standinge up right amp ij othar the lyke or greatar stones on eche syd one in closynge the ij edge sydes of the mydle stone and then one greatar flat stone lyenge flat over and above the othar thre And about one quoyts cast from this monument lyethe one othar very greate stone moche parte therof in the erthe 50 Stow published a version of this report in his Annals in 1592 while another of the group William Lambarde published his own description in the 1596 edition of his Perambulation of Kent drawing a comparison with Stonehenge 50 Camden described the monument in greater detail from personal observation in the expanded 1610 English translation of Britannia under the side of a hill I saw foure huge rude hard stones erected two for the sides one transversall in the midest betweene them and the hugest of all piled and laied over them in manner of the British monument which is called Stone heng but not so artificially with mortis and tenents Verily the unskilfull common people terme it at this day of the same Catigern Keiths or Kits Coty house 51 52 In 1659 Thomas Philipot wrote about the site again describing it as the tomb of Catigern 53 The antiquarian John Aubrey made mention of the monument in his unpublished manuscript on British archaeological sites the Monumenta Britannica There he included a drawing of the site produced by the classical scholar Thomas Gale 53 Aubrey then directly cited Philipot s earlier work 53 There is no direct evidence that Aubrey visited the site but Ashbee thought it inconceivable that he did not given that he made frequent visits to Kent using a road which would have taken him very close to Kit s Coty House 53 William Stukeley visited the site in 1722 and was able to sketch the site whilst it was still largely intact Before this Samuel Pepys also saw it and wrote Three great stones standing upright and a great round one lying on them of great bigness although not so big as those on Salisbury Plain But certainly it is a thing of great antiquity and I am mightily glad to see it citation needed Stukeley included four engravings of Kit s Coty House in his two volumes of Itinerarium Curiosum 54 A 1722 print of the site showed the chamber mound and the General s Tombstone 43 In c 1783 James Douglas set one of his workmen to dig on the western side of the monument and produced a watercolour painting illustrating the scene 55 In 1880 the archaeologist Flinders Petrie included the stones at Addington in his list of Kentish earthworks 56 In 1893 the antiquarian George Payne mentioned the monument in his Collectanea Cantiana describing it as a fallen cromlech and noting that there were various other megaliths scattered in the vicinity suggesting that these were part of the monument of another like it since destroyed 57 In his 1924 publication dealing with Kent the archaeologist O G S Crawford then working as the archaeological officer for the Ordnance Survey listed Kit s Coty House alongside the other Medway Megaliths and reprinted one of Stukeley s engravings of it 58 The author George Orwell visited the site on 21 August 1938 as detailed in his domestic diary of that date 59 He describes it as a druidical altar or something of the kind The stones are on top of a high hill amp it appears they belong to quite another part of the country The stones are actually well down the slope of Blue Bell Hill 1 32 km to the north 60 In January 1981 Kent Archaeological Rescue Unit carried out a survey of the site 43 Management by English Heritage edit Ashbee suggested that Kit s Coty House was the best known of the Medway Megaliths 61 while Champion thought it perhaps the best known monument in Kent 30 In 2005 Philp and Dutto referred to Kits Coty as an important monument that was amongst the best known in Britain 2 References editFootnotes edit a b c History of Kit s Coty House and Little Kit s Coty House English Heritage Retrieved 7 April 2018 a b c d Philp amp Dutto 2005 p 10 Doel amp Doel 2003 p 104 Hutton 1991 pp 16 17 Hutton 1991 p 16 Ashbee 1999 p 272 Hutton 2013 pp 34 35 Holgate 1981 pp 230 231 Hutton 2013 p 37 Barclay et al 2006 p 20 Barclay et al 2006 pp 25 26 Champion 2007 pp 73 74 Hutton 2013 p 33 Hutton 1991 p 19 Hutton 2013 p 37 Hutton 1991 p 19 Hutton 2013 p 40 Hutton 1991 p 19 Malone 2001 p 103 Hutton 2013 p 40 Malone 2001 pp 103 104 Hutton 2013 p 41 Hutton 2013 p 41 Holgate 1981 p 225 Champion 2007 p 78 Champion 2007 p 76 Wysocki et al 2013 p 1 Garwood 2012 p 1 Holgate 1981 p 221 Philp amp Dutto 2005 p 1 a b Ashbee 1999 p 269 Ashbee 1993 pp 60 61 Champion 2007 p 78 Wysocki et al 2013 p 1 Ashbee 2005 p 101 Champion 2007 pp 76 77 Ashbee 2005 p 101 Champion 2007 p 78 Holgate 1981 p 223 Holgate 1981 pp 223 225 a b c d e f g h i j Champion 2007 p 78 Killick 2010 p 339 a b Ashbee 1993 p 58 Ashbee 2000 pp 325 326 Champion 2007 p 78 Holgate 1981 p 225 Wysocki et al 2013 p 3 Wysocki et al 2013 p 3 Ashbee 1993 p 60 a b Holgate 1981 p 227 Piggott 1935 p 122 Daniel 1950 p 161 Evans 1950 pp 77 80 Jessup 1970 p 111 Ashbee 1999 p 271 Ashbee 1993 p 57 a b c d e f Philp amp Dutto 2005 p 11 Ashbee 2005 p 110 Ashbee 2005 p 97 Ashbee 2005 p 106 Grinsell 1976 p 124 Doel amp Doel 2003 p 104 Grinsell 1976 p 124 a b Doyle White 2016 p 351 a b c Harris 2004 p 27 Harris 2004 pp 27 28 Camden William 1610 Britannia London p 332 a b c d Ashbee 2005 p 20 Ashbee 2005 p 21 Ashbee 2005 p 23 Petrie 1880 p 14 Payne 1893 pp 126 127 Ashbee 2005 p 33 Orwell George 2012 Davison Peter ed Diaries New York Liveright p 85 ISBN 978 0 87140 410 7 Google Earth 51 3199 N 0 5029 E Ashbee 2005 p 101 Bibliography edit Ashbee Paul 1993 The Medway Megaliths in Perspective PDF Archaeologia Cantiana Kent Archaeological Society 111 57 112 1999 The Medway Megaliths in a European Context PDF Archaeologia Cantiana Kent Archaeological Society 119 269 284 2000 The Medway s Megalithic Long Barrows PDF Archaeologia Cantiana 120 319 345 2005 Kent in Prehistoric Times Stroud Tempus ISBN 978 0752431369 Barclay Alistair Fitzpatrick Andrew P Hayden Chris Stafford Elizabeth 2006 The Prehistoric Landscape at White Horse Stone Aylesford Kent Report Oxford Oxford Wessex Archaeology Joint Venture London and Continental Railways Burl Aubrey 1981 Rites of the Gods London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0460043137 Champion Timothy 2007 Prehistoric Kent In John H Williams ed The Archaeology of Kent to AD 800 Woodbridge Boydell Press and Kent County Council pp 67 133 ISBN 9780851155807 Daniel Glynn E 1950 The Prehistoric Chamber Tombs of England and Wales Cambridge Cambridge University Press Doel Fran Doel Geoff 2003 Folklore of Kent Stroud Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 2628 0 Doyle White Ethan 2016 Old Stones New Rites Contemporary Pagan Interactions with the Medway Megaliths Material Religion 12 3 346 372 doi 10 1080 17432200 2016 1192152 Evans John H 1946 Notes on the Folklore and Legends Associated with the Kentish Megaliths Folklore The Folklore Society 57 1 36 43 doi 10 1080 0015587x 1946 9717805 JSTOR 1257001 1950 Kentish Megalith Types PDF Archaeologia Cantiana Kent Archaeological Society 63 63 81 Garwood P 2012 The Medway Valley Prehistoric Landscapes Project PAST The Newsletter of the Prehistoric Society The Prehistoric Society 72 1 3 Grinsell Leslie V 1976 Folklore of Prehistoric Sites in Britain London David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 7241 8 Harris Oliver 2004 Stow and the contemporary antiquarian network In Gadd Ian Gillespie Alexandra eds John Stow 1525 1605 and the Making of the English Past studies in early modern culture and the history of the book London British Library pp 27 35 ISBN 0 7123 4864 6 Holgate Robin 1981 The Medway Megaliths and Neolithic Kent PDF Archaeologia Cantiana Kent Archaeological Society 97 221 234 Hutton Ronald 1991 The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles Their Nature and Legacy Oxford U K and Cambridge U S Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 17288 8 2013 Pagan Britain New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 197716 Jessup Ronald F 1970 South East England London Thames and Hudson Killick Sian 2010 Neolithic Landscape and Experience The Medway Megaliths PDF Archaeologia Cantiana Vol 130 Kent Archaeological Society pp 339 349 Lewis A L 1878 On a Rude Stone Monument in Kent The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 7 140 142 doi 10 2307 2841379 JSTOR 2841379 Malone Caroline 2001 Neolithic Britain and Ireland Stroud Gloucestershire Tempus ISBN 978 0 7524 1442 3 Payne George 1893 Collectanea Cantiana Or Archaeological Researches in the Neighbourhood of Sittingbourne and Otherparts of Kent London Mitchell and Hughes Petrie W M Flinders 1880 Notes on Kentish Earthworks Archaeologia Cantiana 13 8 16 Philp Brian Dutto Mike 2005 The Medway Megaliths third ed Kent Kent Archaeological Trust Piggott Stuart 1935 A Note on the Relative Chronology of the English Long Barrows Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society The Prehistoric Society 1 115 126 doi 10 1017 s0079497x00022246 Smith Martin Brickley Megan 2009 People of the Long Barrows Life Death and Burial in the Early Neolithic Stroud The History Press ISBN 978 0752447339 Wright 1844 Proceedings of the Committee The Archaeological Journal 1 262 264 Wysocki Michael Griffiths Seren Hedges Robert Bayliss Alex Higham Tom Fernandez Jalvo Yolanda Whittle Alasdair 2013 Dates Diet and Dismemberment Evidence from the Coldrum Megalithic Monument Kent Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society Prehistoric Society 79 1 30 doi 10 1017 ppr 2013 10 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kit s Coty House Photo and location map Pictures and personal experiences of Kit s Coty House at The Modern Antiquarian The tomb s association with Catigern Further research and history English Heritage Coldrum Stones The National Trust Retrieved 27 August 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kit 27s Coty House amp oldid 1185547574, 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