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Waylands Smithy is a Neolithic chambered long barrow, part of the Severn-Cotswold group. Built in two phases between 3590 and 3400 BC it was used as a burial site for a number of adults and children. It is located beside The Ridgeway, an ancient trackway that runs for over 60 miles through Berkshire and Oxfordshire and links a number of ritual and burial sites and monuments. It is associated with Wayland, a Saxon god of metal working and there is a legend that a horse left tethered overnight would be reshod by morning if a sum of money was left.
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