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All the United Kingdom England Blue Bell Hill Kit's Coty House

Kit's Coty House

The Neolithic megalith was one of the first archaeological ruins protected by the British government.

Blue Bell Hill, England

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Mictlān Tēcutli
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Kit’s Coty with backdrop of storm clouds gathering.   August Schwerdfeger/cc by 4.0
Kit’s Coty.   Simon Burchell/cc by-sa 4.0
Kit’s Coty house on a spring day.   Simon Burchell/cc by-sa 4.0
Kit’s Coty.   Tony Grist/public domain
The sarsen stones of little kits coty house   Nilfanion
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This ancient megalith crowns a chalk hill in southeast England. Archaeologists believe the stalwart structure once marked the entrance to a tomb. 

The early Neolithic period was a time of great social and cultural change in Great Britain and Europe in general, as agriculture was adopted as the primary source of sustenance and people began creating permanent settlements. Raising stone megalithic structures and building earthen mounds became a widespread phenomenon, with these constructs being used as tombs and occasionally serving ritualistic or territorial purposes.

Kit’s Coty is believed to have been constructed around 4000 BC and was originally part of a long barrow burial mound. However, over the course of thousands of years, the surrounding fields—including the burial mound—were severely damaged by ploughings and other agricultural activities.

For years, the stone structure was viewed as a mere local curiosity. It was even erroneously associated with the Celts. But the Victorian era heralded in a new appreciation for the ancient past, and with it, a growing desire to decipher the meaning of the mysterious megaliths that dot the British landscape.

Victorian archeologist Augustus Pitt Rivers documented the site in the 1870s, and it was later studied by the famous archeologist Flinders Petrie, who had an enduring fascination with the Kentish megaliths long before he became associated with his discoveries in Egypt.

The site is also notable for being among the first archeological ruins in the United Kingdom to be granted official government protection. In 1885, the iron railings that now enclose the stones were added to protect them from vandalism.

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It's possible to climb Blue Bell Hill and pay a visit to Kit's Coty and take in the superb view of the surrounding Kentish countryside. Please respect both the natural environment and the ancient structure. Keep an eye out for Little Kit's Coty, a cluster of about 20 sarsen stones lying nearby.

By car, it's possible to park on Old Chatham Road in a lay-by before the Lower Bell pub. Cross over past the pub and look for a finger post on the left heading down a flight of steps, through a chicane, and onto a tree-lined path. Keep looking through gaps in the trees to the right. The structure is adjacent to the woods.

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Monsieur Mictlan

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January 7, 2019

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  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kit%27s_Coty_House
Kit's Coty House
33 Old Chatham Rd
Blue Bell Hill, England
United Kingdom
51.319904, 0.503033
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