[{"id":2767,"url":"http://www165.123.244.137/location/2767/","title":"PG/1157","type":"Grave","parent":"Private Graves 1101-1200","control_properties":[],"free_form_properties":[{"prop":"Context Title","property_value":"PG/1157","inline_note":"","footnote":""},{"prop":"Context Name (Publication)","property_value":"PG/1157 (Royal Tomb)","inline_note":"","footnote":""},{"prop":"Context Description","property_value":"PG/1157 is a \"death pit of the poorer sort\" (UE2 p.168) but Woolley was uncertain whether to connect PG/1151 and PG/1156 above it into a single royal grave of the sort of complicated structure seen in PG/1050 and PG/1054. Both PG/1151 and PG/1156 were coffin burials with minor high-end materials and the PG/1151 coffin had a lyre leaning against it (recovered in plaster).\r\n\r\nBeneath the coffins was a shaft filled with plano-convex bricks. At its base was a layer of pottery and then 58 skeletons. Woolley could identify no chamber with this death pit and proposed that it had been destroyed; he eventually decided the two coffins above were likely to be intrusive and unrelated to PG/1157 but published them together.","inline_note":"","footnote":""},{"prop":"Nissen Date","property_value":"Mk - Ur I","inline_note":"","footnote":""}]}]