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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Taplow_Barrow
rdf:type
geo:SpatialThing
rdfs:label
Taplow Barrow Sépulture princière de Taplow
rdfs:comment
La sépulture princière de Taplow est une tombe de l'époque anglo-saxonne découverte en 1883 à Taplow, dans le Buckinghamshire. Jusqu'à la découverte des tombes de Sutton Hoo en 1939, il s'agissait de la plus somptueuse sépulture princière anglo-saxonne connue. The Taplow Barrow is an early medieval burial mound in Taplow Court, an estate in the south-eastern English county of Buckinghamshire. Constructed in the seventh century, when the region was part of an Anglo-Saxon kingdom, it contained the remains of a deceased individual and their grave goods, now mostly in the British Museum. It is often referred to in archaeology as the Taplow burial.
dbp:name
Taplow Barrow
geo:lat
51.53110122680664
geo:long
-0.6951000094413757
foaf:depiction
n4:Taeppas_Mound_in_the_old_churchyard,_Taplow_(geograph_3814805).jpg n4:Taplow_drinking_horns.jpg n4:Taplow_Prince_DSCF7240.jpg n4:Taplow_burial_sketch.jpg
dct:subject
dbc:Anglo-Saxon_sites_in_England dbc:Anglo-Saxon_art dbc:Medieval_European_objects_in_the_British_Museum dbc:Anglo-Saxon_burial_practices dbc:Barrows_in_the_United_Kingdom
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dbpedia-fr:Sépulture_princière_de_Taplow n15:4veKs wikidata:Q7684716
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dbo:thumbnail
n4:Taeppas_Mound_in_the_old_churchyard,_Taplow_(geograph_3814805).jpg?width=300
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left
dbp:alt
The location of the mound
dbp:epochs
dbr:Early_Medieval_period
dbp:location
dbr:Taplow_Court
dbp:mapType
Buckinghamshire
dbp:quote
The occupants and builders of the rich barrows were competitive, insecure potentates, concerned to show themselves as good as their Frankish contemporaries and better than their English rivals. We cannot know how often they were already Christian; what is clearer, and may be more important, is that they valued permanent and conspicuous commemoration, for that is something that the Church was supremely well placed to provide.
dbp:source
— The historian John Blair
dbp:type
dbr:Tumulus
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25
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51.5311 -0.6951
dbo:abstract
The Taplow Barrow is an early medieval burial mound in Taplow Court, an estate in the south-eastern English county of Buckinghamshire. Constructed in the seventh century, when the region was part of an Anglo-Saxon kingdom, it contained the remains of a deceased individual and their grave goods, now mostly in the British Museum. It is often referred to in archaeology as the Taplow burial. The Taplow burial was made in what archaeologists call the "conversion period", during which the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms were undergoing Christianisation. This period saw the erection of "Final Phase" burials: a select number of inhumations featuring lavish grave goods far richer than the graves of the preceding "migration period" (fifth and sixth centuries). The majority of these Final Phase burials were spatially separate from the new churchyard burials, although the Taplow Burial—which was likely placed next to an early church—is one of the few known exceptions. Located atop a hill, the area around it was previously an Iron Age hillfort and offers widespread views of the local landscape. Interred beneath the mound was a single individual—interpreted by archaeologists as a local chieftain—buried with a range of grave goods. These included military gear such as a sword, three spears, and two shields, as well as other items like drinking horns and glass beakers. Such elite items likely reflected the individual's aristocratic status. Several of these items were of probable Kentish manufacture, suggesting that the individual may have had links with the Kingdom of Kent. Little of the body survived, preventing osteoarchaeological analysis to determine their age or sex, although the content of the grave goods has led archaeologists to believe the individual was male. The mound was excavated in 1883 by three local antiquarians. At the time, it represented the most lavish Anglo-Saxon burial then known and remained so until the discovery of the ship burial at Sutton Hoo, Suffolk in the 1930s. At the request of the clergyman in charge of the churchyard, the grave goods recovered were donated to the British Museum, where many of them remain on display. La sépulture princière de Taplow est une tombe de l'époque anglo-saxonne découverte en 1883 à Taplow, dans le Buckinghamshire. Jusqu'à la découverte des tombes de Sutton Hoo en 1939, il s'agissait de la plus somptueuse sépulture princière anglo-saxonne connue.
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