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CHAMBER TOMB

A 'chamber tomb' is a tomb for burial used in many different cultures. In the case of individual burials, the chamber is thought to signify a higher status for the interree than a simple grave. Built from rock or sometimes wood, the chambers could also serve as places for storage of the dead from one family or social group and were often used over long periods for the placement of multiple burials. There are numerous terms for them depending on the period, design and region in question. Most were built from large stones or megaliths and covered by cairns, barrows or earth, but the term is also applied to tombs cut directly into rock and wooden-chambered tombs covered with earth barrows. Grave goods are a common characteristic of chamber tomb burials.
In Neolithic and Bronze Age Europe stone-built examples are known by the generic term of megalithic tombs.
Chamber tombs are often distinguished by the layout of their chambers and entrances or the shape and material of the structure that covered them, either an earth barrow or stone cairn. A wide variety of local types has been identified, and some designs appear to have influenced others.

Contents
Types and examples

Types and examples


General terms:

Chambered cairns

Chambered long barrows

Cromlechs, dolmens and Hunebedden

Corbelled tombs

Chamber tumulus

★ 'Gallery graves' including:


Allées couvertes


Court cairns


Giants' graves


Navetas


★ the Peak District tomb group


Severn-Cotswold or Cotswold-Severn tombs


Transepted gallery graves


Wedge-shaped gallery graves

★ 'Entrance graves' such as


Portal dolmens


Scillonian entrance graves

★ 'Passage graves' including:


★ The tholos tombs of Mycenaean Greece.


Mycenaean chamber tombs


V-shaped passage graves


Cruciform passage graves


Clava cairns

★ 'Other types:'


Domus de Janas


Dysser


Medway tombs


Shaft and chamber tombs

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