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- Q5431003 subject Q13313665.
- Q5431003 subject Q7160299.
- Q5431003 subject Q7778100.
- Q5431003 subject Q8185166.
- Q5431003 subject Q8259769.
- Q5431003 subject Q8290474.
- Q5431003 subject Q8292626.
- Q5431003 abstract "The Fairy Toot is an extensive oval barrow in the civil parish of Nempnett Thrubwell, Somerset, England (grid reference Template:OS coord).It is an example of the Severn-Cotswold tomb type which consist of precisely-built, long trapezoid earth mounds covering a burial chamber. Because of this they are a type of chambered long barrow.Fairy Toot was formerly a chambered cairn which is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, on the national monument register as '198102'. The Fairy Toot south-southwest of Howgrove Farm is a mound 60 m long, 25 m wide and now 2.5 m high, retained by a stone wall. Its summit is covered with ash trees and shrubs. Formerly it was considerably higher.On being opened and essentially destroyed between 1787 and 1835 by the Reverend Thomas Bere of Butcombe and the Reverend John Skinner of Camerton, it was found to contain two rows of cells, running from south to north, formed by immense stones set edgeways, and covered by others of larger dimensions. A human skull from the barrow is now in the Bristol Museum and Art Gallery.At the time it was conjectured to be a work of the Druids, but its origins are far older and probably date from the Neolithic period.Wade and Wade in their 1929 book "Somerset" described it as "a remarkably fine tumulus of masonry, said to have been one of the finest in Britain, in the chambers of which skeletons have been discovered. A few vestiges of it now only remain, the rest has been used as a lime-kiln."The site was visited in the past as it was known as a place for curing warts.".
- Q5431003 thumbnail Fairy_Toot_Field_-_geograph.org.uk_-_2655676.jpg?width=300.
- Q5431003 wikiPageExternalLink article.php?sid=5270.
- Q5431003 wikiPageExternalLink 23393.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q101971.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q1115575.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q131081.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q13313665.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q1877111.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q21.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q2194206.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q219538.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q23154.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q23157.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q2916887.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q3400905.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q34023.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q46303.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q4968867.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q5069563.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q7160299.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q7321974.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q7778100.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q8185166.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q8259769.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q8290474.
- Q5431003 wikiPageWikiLink Q8292626.
- Q5431003 point "51.353117 -2.689946".
- Q5431003 type SpatialThing.
- Q5431003 comment "The Fairy Toot is an extensive oval barrow in the civil parish of Nempnett Thrubwell, Somerset, England (grid reference Template:OS coord).It is an example of the Severn-Cotswold tomb type which consist of precisely-built, long trapezoid earth mounds covering a burial chamber. Because of this they are a type of chambered long barrow.Fairy Toot was formerly a chambered cairn which is a Scheduled Ancient Monument, on the national monument register as '198102'.".
- Q5431003 label "Fairy Toot".
- Q5431003 lat "51.353117".
- Q5431003 long "-2.689946".
- Q5431003 depiction Fairy_Toot_Field_-_geograph.org.uk_-_2655676.jpg.