Clava
Clava refers to a group of Bronze Age burial monuments in Scotland, best known as the Clava Cairns at Balnuaran of Clava, near the village of Clava north of Inverness. The site forms a funerary landscape dating to roughly 2000–1500 BCE and is one of the most complete surviving examples of Bronze Age tombs in northern Scotland.
Architecturally, the Clava Cairns consist of circular burial mounds with stone-lined chambers and short passages, typically
The monuments show a shared tradition of communal burial and ceremonial space in the Bronze Age, with
The Clava site is protected as a scheduled monument and is managed by Historic Environment Scotland. It
Etymology and usage: the name Clava derives from the nearby locality Balnuaran of Clava; the term is