Stonehenge is a Neolithic
and Bronze Age megalithic monument
located near Amesbury in the English
county of Wiltshire, about 8 miles
(13 km) north of Salisbury. It is
composed of earthworks surrounding
a circular setting of large standing
stones and is one of the most famous
prehistoric sites in the world. Archaeologists
believe that the standing stones were
erected between 2500 B.C.E. and 2000
B.C.E., although the surrounding circular
earth bank and ditch, which constitute
the earliest phase of the monument,
have been dated to about 3100 B.C.E.
The site and its surroundings were
added to the UNESCO's list of World
Heritage Sites in 1986 in a co-listing
with Avebury henge monument, and it
is also a legally protected Scheduled
Ancient Monument. Stonehenge itself
is owned and managed by English Heritage,
whilst the surrounding downland is
owned by the National Trust.
Etymology
The name "Stonehenge" is
derived from the Old English words
stan meaning "stone," and
either hencg meaning "hinge"
(because the stone lintels hinge on
the upright stones) or hen(c)en meaning
"gallows" or "instrument
of torture" (Chippendale 2004).
Medieval gallows consisted of two
uprights with a lintel joining them,
resembling Stonehenge's trilithons,
rather than looking like the inverted
L-shape more familiar today.
The "henge"
portion has given its name to a class
of monuments known as "henges."
Archaeologists define henges as earthworks
consisting of a circular banked enclosure
with an internal ditch. As often happens
in archaeological terminology, this
is a holdover from antiquarian usage,
and Stonehenge cannot in fact be truly
classified as a henge site, as its
bank is inside its ditch. Despite
being contemporary with true Neolithic
henges and stone circles, Stonehenge
is in many ways atypical. For example,
its extant trilithons make it unique.
Stonehenge is only distantly related
to the other stone circles in the
British Isles, such as the Ring of
Brodgar.
Excavations
at Stonehenge
The first recorded excavations at
Stonehenge were carried out by William
Cunnington and Richard Colt Hoare.
In 1798, Cunnington investigated the
pit beneath a recently fallen trilithon
and in 1810, both men dug beneath
the fallen "Slaughter Stone"
and concluded that it had once stood
up. They may have also excavated one
of the Aubrey Holes beneath it. In
1900, William Gowland undertook the
first extensive work, establishing
that antler picks had been used to
dig the stone holes and that the stones
themselves had been worked to shape
on site.
The largest excavation
at Stonehenge was undertaken by Lieutenant-Colonel
William Hawley and Robert S. Newall
after the site had come into state
hands. Their work, initially focusing
on righting fallen stones, began in
1919 following the transfer of land
and continued until 1926. The two
men excavated many portions of the
features at Stonehenge and were the
first to establish that it was a multi-phase
site.
In 1950, the Society
of Antiquaries commissioned Richard
Atkinson, Stuart Piggott, and John
F.S. Stone to carry out further excavations.
They recovered many cremations and
developed the phasing that still dominates
much of what is written about Stonehenge.
In 1979 and 1980 Mike Pitts led two
smaller investigations as part of
service trenching, close by the Heelstone.
Development
of Stonehenge
The Stonehenge complex was built in
several construction phases spanning
2,000 years, although there is evidence
for activity both before and afterward
on the site.
Dating and understanding
the various phases of activity at
Stonehenge is not a simple task; it
is complicated by poorly-kept early
excavation records, surprisingly few
accurate scientific dates and the
disturbance of the natural chalk by
periglacial effects and animal burrowing.
The modern phasing most generally
agreed by archaeologists is detailed
below. Features mentioned in the text
are numbered and shown on the Plan
of Stonehenge, right, which illustrates
the site as of 2004. The plan omits
the trilithon lintels for clarity.
Holes that no longer, or never, contained
stones are shown as open circles and
stones visible today are shown colored.
Before the
monument
Archaeologists have found four (or
possibly five, although one may have
been a natural tree throw) large Mesolithic
post holes which date to around 8000
B.C.E. nearby. These held pine posts
around 0.75m (2.4ft) in diameter which
were erected and left to rot in situ.
Three of the posts (and possibly four)
were in an east-west alignment and
may have had ritual significance;
no parallels are known from Britain
at the time, but similar sites have
been found in Scandinavia. At this
time, Salisbury Plain was still wooded
but four thousand years later, during
the earlier Neolithic, a cursus monument
was built 600m north of the site as
the first farmers began to clear the
forest and exploit the area. Several
other early Neolithic sites, a causewayed
enclosure at Robin Hood's Ball and
long barrow tombs, were built in the
surrounding landscape.
Stonehenge
1
The first monument consisted of a
circular bank and ditch enclosure
measuring around 110 m (360 feet)
in diameter with a large entrance
to the north east and a smaller one
to the south . It stood in open grassland
on a slightly sloping but not especially
remarkable spot. The builders placed
the bones of deer and oxen in the
bottom of the ditch as well as some
worked flint tools. The bones were
considerably older than the antler
picks used to dig the ditch and the
people who buried them had looked
after them for some time prior to
burial. The ditch itself was continuous
but had been dug in sections, like
the ditches of the earlier causewayed
enclosures in the area. The chalk
dug from the ditch was piled up to
form the bank. This first stage is
dated to around 3100 B.C.E. after
which the ditch began to silt up naturally
and was not cleared out by the builders.
Within the outer edge of the enclosed
area was dug a circle of 56 pits,
each around 1m in diameter , known
as the "Aubrey holes" after
John Aubrey, the seventeenth century
antiquarian who was thought to have
first identified them. The pits may
have contained standing timbers, creating
a timber circle, although there is
no excavated evidence of them. A small
outer bank beyond the ditch could
also date to this period .
Stonehenge
2
Evidence of the second phase is no
longer visible. It appears from the
number of post holes dating to this
period that some form of timber structure
was built within the enclosure during
the early third millennium B.C.E.
Further standing timbers were placed
at the northeast entrance and a parallel
alignment of posts ran inwards from
the southern entrance. The post holes
are smaller than the Aubrey Holes,
being only around 0.4m in diameter
and are much less regularly spaced.
The bank was purposely reduced in
height and the ditch continued to
silt up. At least twenty-five of the
Aubrey Holes are known to have contained
later, intrusive, cremation burials
dating to the two centuries after
the monument's inception. It seems
that whatever the holes' initial function,
it changed to become a funerary one
during Phase 2. Thirty further cremations
were placed in the enclosure's ditch
and at other points within the monument,
mostly in the eastern half. Stonehenge
is therefore interpreted as functioning
as an enclosed cremation cemetery
at this time, the earliest known cremation
cemetery in the British Isles. Fragments
of unburnt human bone have also been
found in the ditch fill. Late Neolithic
grooved ware pottery has been found
in connection with the features from
this phase providing dating evidence.
Stonehenge
3 I
Archaeological excavation has indicated
that around 2600 B.C.E., timber was
abandoned in favor of stone and two
concentric crescents of holes (called
the Q and R Holes) were dug in the
center of the site. Again, there is
little firm dating evidence for this
phase. The holes held up to 80 standing
stones (shown blue on the plan) 43
of which were derived from the Preseli
Hills, 250 km away in modern day Pembrokeshire
in Wales. Other standing stones may
well have been small sarsens, used
later as lintels. The far-traveled
stones, which weighed about four tons,
consisted mostly of spotted dolerite
but included examples of rhyolite,
tuff, and volcanic and calcareous
ash. Each measures around 2m in height,
between 1m and 1.5m wide and around
0.8m thick. What was to become known
as the "Altar Stone" , a
six-ton specimen of green micaceous
sandstone, twice the height of the
bluestones, is derived from either
South Pembrokeshire or the Brecon
Beacons and may have stood as a single
large monolith.
The north eastern entrance
was also widened at this time with
the result that it precisely matched
the direction of the midsummer sunrise
and midwinter sunset of the period.
This phase of the monument was abandoned
unfinished however, the small standing
stones were apparently removed and
the Q and R holes purposefully backfilled.
Even so, the monument appears to have
eclipsed the site at Avebury in importance
towards the end of this phase and
the "Amesbury Archer," found
in 2002 three miles (5 km) to the
south, would have seen the site in
this state.
The "Heelstone"
may also have been erected outside
the north eastern entrance during
this period although it cannot be
securely dated and may have been installed
at any time in phase 3. At first,
a second stone, now no longer visible,
joined it. Two, or possibly three,
large portal stones were set up just
inside the northeastern entrance of
which only one, the fallen "Slaughter
Stone" ', 16 ft (4.9 m) long,
now remains. Other features loosely
dated to phase 3 include the four
"Station Stones" , two of
which stood atop mounds . The mounds
are known as "barrows" although
they do not contain burials. The "Avenue"
, a parallel pair of ditches and banks
leading 3 km to the River Avon was
also added. Ditches were later dug
around the Station Stones and the
Heelstone, which was by then reduced
to a single monolith.
Stonehenge
3 II
Evening sun seen through trilithonThe
next major phase of activity at the
tail end of the third millennium B.C.E.
saw 30 enormous sarsen stones (shown
gray on the plan) brought from a quarry
around 24 miles (40 km) north, to
the site on the Marlborough Downs.
The stones were dressed and fashioned
with mortise and tenon joints before
30 were erected as a 33 m (108 ft)
diameter circle of standing stones
with a "lintel" of 30 stones
resting on top. The lintels were joined
to one another using another woodworking
method, the tongue in groove joint.
Each standing stone was around 4.1
m (13.5 feet) high, 2.1 m (7.5 feet)
wide and weighed around 25 tons. Each
had clearly been worked with the final
effect in mind; the orthostats widen
slightly towards the top in order
that their perspective remains constant
as they rise up from the ground whilst
the lintel stones curve slightly to
continue the circular appearance of
the earlier monument. The sides of
the stones that face inwards are smoother
and more finely worked than the sides
that face outwards. The average thickness
of these stones is 1.1 m (3.75 feet)
and the average distance between them
is 1 m (3.5 feet). A total of 74 stones
would have been needed to complete
the circle and unless some of the
sarsens were removed from the site,
it would seem that the ring was left
incomplete. Of the lintel stones,
they are each around 3.2 m long (10.5
feet), 1 m (3.5 feet) wide and 0.8
m (2.75 feet) thick. The tops of the
lintels are 4.9 m (16 feet) above
the ground.
Bronze age carvings
of dagger and axe headWithin this
circle stood five trilithons of dressed
sarsen stone arranged in a horseshoe
shape 13.7 m (45 feet) across with
its open end facing north east. These
huge stones, ten uprights and five
lintels, weigh up to 50 tons each
and were again linked using complex
jointings. They are arranged symmetrically;
the smallest pair of trilithons were
around 6 m (20 feet) tall, the next
pair a little higher and the largest,
single trilithon in the south west
corner would have been 7.3 m (24 feet)
tall. Only one upright from the Great
Trilithon still stands; 6.7 m (22
ft) is visible and a further 2.4 m
(8 feet) is below ground.
The images of a dagger
and 14 axe-heads have been recorded
carved on one of the sarsens, known
as stone 53. Further axe-head carvings
have been seen on the outer faces
of stones known as numbers 3, 4, and
5. They are difficult to date but
are morphologically similar to later
Bronze Age weapons; recent laser scanning
work on the carvings supports this
interpretation. The pair of trilithons
in north east are smallest, measuring
around 6 m (20 feet) in height and
the largest is the trilithon in the
south west of the horseshoe is almost
7.5 m (24 feet) tall.
This ambitious phase
is radiocarbon dated to between 2440
and 2100 B.C.E.
Stonehenge
3 III
Later in the Bronze Age, the bluestones
appear to have been re-erected for
the first time, although the precise
details of this period are still unclear.
They were placed within the outer
sarsen circle and at this time may
have been trimmed in some way. A few
have timber working-style cuts in
them, like the sarsens themselves,
suggesting they may have been linked
with lintels and part of a larger
structure during this phase.
Stonehenge
3 IV
This phase saw further rearrangement
of the bluestones, as they were placed
in a circle between the two settings
of sarsens and in an oval in the very
center. Some archaeologists argue
that some of the bluestones in this
period were part of a second group
brought from Wales. All the stones
were well-spaced uprights without
any of the linking lintels inferred
in Stonehenge 3 III. The Altar Stone
may have been moved within the oval
and stood vertically. Although this
would seem the most impressive phase
of work, Stonehenge 3 IV was rather
shabbily built compared to its immediate
predecessors, the newly re-installed
bluestones were not at all well founded
and began to fall over. However, only
minor changes were made after this
phase. Stonehenge 3 IV dates from
2280 to 1930 B.C.E.
Stonehenge
3 V
Soon afterward, the north eastern
section of the Phase 3 IV Bluestone
circle was removed, creating a horseshoe-shaped
setting termed the Bluestone Horseshoe.
This mirrored the shape of the central
sarsen Trilithons and dates from 2270
to 1930 B.C.E. This phase is contemporary
with the famous Seahenge site in Norfolk.
Stonehenge
3 VI
Two further rings of pits were dug
outside the outermost sarsen circle,
called the Y and Z Holes (11 and 12).
The Z holes were about 2m outside
the outermost sarsen circle and the
Y holes about 5m further out. These
were each of thirty pits and each
seems to match with one of the uprights
in the outer sarsen circle. They were
never filled with stones, however,
and were permitted to silt up over
the next few centuries; their upper
fills contain Iron Age and Roman material.
Monument building at Stonehenge appears
to have ended around 1600 B.C.E.
After the monument
Even though the last known construction
of Stonehenge was about 1600 B.C.E.,
and the last known usage of Stonehenge
was during the Iron Age (if not as
late as the seventh century), where
Roman coins, prehistoric pottery,
an unusual bone point, and a skeleton
of a young male (780-410 B.C.E.) were
found, it is unknown whether Stonehenge
was in continuous use or exactly how
it was used. The burial of a decapitated
Saxon man has also been excavated
from Stonehenge, dated to the seventh
century. The site was known by scholars
during the Middle Ages and since then
it has been studied and adopted by
numerous different groups.
Construction
techniques and design
Closeup of Stonehenge Stonehenge from
a distanceThe engraved weapons on
the sarsens are unique in megalithic
art in the British Isles, where more
abstract designs were invariably favored.
Similarly, the horseshoe arrangements
of stones are unusual in a culture
that otherwise arranged stones in
circles. The axe motif is, however,
common to the peoples of Brittany
at the time, and it has been suggested
at least two stages of Stonehenge
were built under continental influence.
This would go some way towards explaining
the monument's atypical design, but
overall, Stonehenge is still inexplicably
unusual in the context of any prehistoric
European culture.
Much speculation has
surrounded the engineering feats required
to build Stonehenge. Assuming the
bluestones were brought from Wales
by hand, and not transported by glaciers,
as Aubrey Burl claimed, various methods
of moving them relying only on timber
and rope have been suggested. In 2001,
as an exercise in experimental archaeology,
an attempt was made to transport a
large stone along a land and sea route
from Wales to Stonehenge. Volunteers
pulled it for some miles (with great
difficulty) on a wooden sled over
land, using modern roads and low-friction
netting to assist sliding, but once
transferred to a replica prehistoric
boat, the stone sank in Milford Haven,
before it even reached the rough seas
of the Bristol Channel.
As far as positioning
the stones, it has been suggested
that timber A-frames were erected
to raise the stones, and that teams
of people then hauled them upright
using ropes. The topmost stones may
have been raised up incrementally
on timber platforms and slid into
place or pushed up ramps. The carpentry-type
joints used on the stones imply a
people well skilled in woodworking
and they could easily have had the
knowledge to erect the monument using
such methods. In 2003, retired carpenter
Wally Wallington demonstrated ingenious
techniques based on fundamental principles
of levers, fulcrums, and counterweights
to show that a single man can rotate,
walk, lift, and tip a ten-ton cast-concrete
monolith into an upright position.
Estimates of the manpower
needed to build Stonehenge put the
total effort involved at millions
of hours of work. Stonehenge 1 probably
needed around 11,000 man-hours (or
460 days) of work, Stonehenge 2 around
360,000 (15,000 days or 41 years)
and the various parts of Stonehenge
3 may have involved up to 1.75 million
hours (73,000 days or 200 years) of
work. The working of the stones is
estimated to have required around
20 million hours (830,000 days or
2,300 years) of work using the primitive
tools available at the time. Certainly,
the will to produce such a site must
have been strong, and it is considered
that advanced social organization
would have been necessary to build
and maintain it.
The bluestones
British archaeologist Roger Mercer
has observed that the bluestones are
incongruously finely worked and has
suggested that they were transferred
to Salisbury Plain from an as yet
unlocated earlier monument in Pembrokeshire.
J. F. S. Stone (1958) felt that a
Bluestone monument had earlier stood
near the Stonehenge cursus and been
moved to their current site from there.
If Mercer's theory is correct then
the bluestones may have been transplanted
to cement an alliance or display superiority
over a conquered enemy although this
can only be speculation. Oval shaped
settings of bluestones similar to
those at Stonehenge 3IV are also known
at the sites of Bedd Arthur in the
Preseli Hills and at Skomer Island
off the southwest coast of Pembrokeshire.
Some archaeologists have suggested
that the igneous bluestones and sedimentary
sarsens had some symbolism, of a union
between two cultures from different
landscapes and therefore from different
backgrounds.
Recent analysis of contemporary
burials found nearby, known as the
Boscombe Bowmen, has indicated that
at least some of the individuals associated
with Stonehenge 3 came either from
Wales or from some other European
area of ancient rocks. Petrological
analysis of the stones themselves
has verified that they could only
have come from the Preseli Hills and
it is tempting to connect the two.
The main source of the
bluestones is now identified with
the dolerite outcrops around Carn
Menyn, although work led by Olwen
Williams-Thorpe has shown that other
bluestones came from outcrops up to
10 km away.
Aubrey Burl (2001) and
a number of geologists and geomorphologists
have contended that the bluestones
were not transported by human agency
at all and were instead brought by
glaciers at least part of the way
from Wales during the Pleistocene.
There is good geological and glaciological
evidence that glacier ice did move
across Preseli and did reach the Somerset
coast. However, it is uncertain that
it reached Salisbury Plain, and no
further specimens of the unusual dolerite
stone have so far been found in the
vicinity. One current view is that
glacier ice transported the stones
as far as Somerset, and that they
were collected from there by the builders
of Stonehenge.
Theories about
Stonehenge
Early
interpretations
StonehengeMany early historians were
influenced by supernatural folktales
in their explanations. Some legends
held that Merlin the wizard had a
giant build the structure for him
or that he had magically transported
it from Mount Killaraus in Ireland,
while others held the Devil responsible.
Henry of Huntingdon was the first
to write of the monument around 1130,
soon followed by Geoffrey of Monmouth
who was the first to record fanciful
associations with King Arthur which
led the monument to be incorporated
into the wider cycle of European medieval
romance.
In 1615, Inigo Jones
argued that Stonehenge was a Roman
temple, dedicated to Caelus, (a Latin
name for the Greek sky-god Ouranos),
and built following the Tuscan order.
Later commentators maintained that
the Danes erected it. Indeed, up until
the late nineteenth century, the site
was commonly attributed to the Saxons
or other relatively recent societies.
The first academic effort
to survey and understand the monument
was made around 1640 by John Aubrey.
He declared Stonehenge the work of
Druids. This view was greatly popularized
by William Stukeley. Aubrey also contributed
the first measured drawings of the
site, which permitted greater analysis
of its form and significance. From
this work, he was able to demonstrate
an astronomical or calendrical role
in the stones' placement.
By the turn of the nineteenth
century, John Lubbock was able to
attribute the site to the Bronze Age
based on the bronze objects found
in the nearby barrows.
Archaeoastronomy
and Stonehenge
Stonehenge on midsummerStonehenge
is aligned northeast–southwest,
and it has been suggested that particular
significance was placed by its builders
on the solstice and equinox points,
so for example, on a midsummer's morning,
the sun rose close to the Heelstone,
and the sun's first rays went directly
into the center of the monument between
the horseshoe arrangement. It is unlikely
that such an alignment is merely accidental.
A huge debate was triggered
by the publication of Stonehenge Decoded,
by British born astronomer Gerald
Hawkins, who claimed to see a large
number of astronomical alignments,
both lunar and solar, at the site
and argued that Stonehenge could have
been used to predict eclipses. Hawkins'
book received wide publicity, partly
because he used a computer in his
calculations, then a rarity. Further
contributions to the debate came from
British astronomer C. A. Newham and
Sir Fred Hoyle, the famous Cambridge
cosmologist, as well as by Alexander
Thom, a retired professor of engineering,
who had been studying stone circles
for more than 20 years. Their theories
faced criticism from Richard Atkinson
and others who have suggested impracticalities
in the "Stone Age calculator"
interpretative approach.
The consensus is that
most of the astronomical case, although
not all, was overstated.
Stonehenge
as part of a ritual landscape
Sunset at StonehengeMany archaeologists
believe Stonehenge was an attempt
to render in permanent stone the more
common timber structures that dotted
Salisbury Plain at the time, such
as those that stood at Durrington
Walls. Modern anthropological evidence
has been used by Mike Parker Pearson
and the Malagasy archaeologist Ramilisonina
to suggest that timber was associated
with the living and stone with the
ancestral dead amongst prehistoric
peoples. They have argued that Stonehenge
was the terminus of a long, ritualized
funerary procession for treating the
dead, which began in the east, during
sunrise at Woodhenge and Durrington
Walls, moved down the Avon and then
along the Avenue reaching Stonehenge
in the west at sunset. The journey
from wood to stone via water was,
they consider, a symbolic journey
from life to death.
There is no satisfactory
evidence to suggest that Stonehenge's
astronomical alignments were anything
more than symbolic and current interpretations
favor a ritual role for the monument
that takes into account its numerous
burials and its presence within a
wider landscape of sacred sites. Many
also believe that the site may have
had astrological and/or spiritual
significance attached to it.
Alternative
views
Stonehenge's fame comes not only from
its archaeological significance or
potential early astronomical role
but also in its less tangible effect
on visitors, what Christopher Chippindale
(2004) described as "the physical
sensation of the place," something
that transcends the rational, scientific
view of the monument. This manifests
itself in the spiritual role of the
site for many different groups, and
a belief that no single scientific
explanation can do justice to it as
a symbol of the great achievement
of the ancient Britons and something
that continues to confound mainstream
archaeology.
Some people claim to
have seen UFOs in the area (perhaps
connected with the military installations
around Warminster) that has led to
ideas of it being an extraterrestrial
landing site. Alfred Watkins found
three ley lines running through the
site and others have employed numerology,
dowsing, or geomancy to reach diverse
conclusions regarding the site's power
and purpose. New Age and neo-pagan
beliefs might see Stonehenge as a
sacred place of worship which can
conflict with its more mainstream
role as an archaeological site, tourist
attraction, or marketing tool. Post-processualist
archaeologists might consider that
treating Stonehenge as a computer
or observatory is to apply modern
concepts from the contemporary technology-driven
era back into the past. Even the role
of indigenous peoples in archaeology,
rarely applied in Western Europe,
has created a new function for the
site as a symbol of Welsh nationalism.
The significance of
the "ownership" of Stonehenge
in terms of the differing meanings
and interpretations held by the many
orthodox and unorthodox stakeholders
in the site has been increasingly
apparent in recent decades. Researchers
(Blain and Wallis) have pointed to
the huge variety of views which show
the continued and growing importance
of Stonehenge, as symbol and "Icon
of Britishness;" and indicate
also the increased awareness of pasts
by many people with no training in
archaeology or heritage. For many,
Stonehenge and other ancient monuments
form part of the "living landscape"
which holds its own stories and which
is there to be engaged with as people
mark the seasons of the year. Today's
mythology around Stonehenge includes
the recent history of the "Battle
of the Beanfield" and the previous
Free festivals. Stonehenge has not
one meaning but many. Today, curators
from English Heritage facilitate "managed
open access" at solstices and
equinoxes, with some disputes over
the days on which these fall. Blain
and Wallis argue that issues over
access relate not only to physical
presence at the stones but to interpretations
of past and validity of new-indigenous
and pagan usages in the present and
such alternative views have been central
in alerting public awareness to the
issues of roads, tunnels, and landscape.
Myths and legends
The Heelstone
"Friar's Heel" or the "Sunday
Stone"
The "Heel Stone" was once
known as "Friar's Heel."
A folk tale, which cannot be dated
earlier than the seventeenth century,
relates the origin of the name of
this stone:
The Devil bought the
stones from a woman in Ireland, wrapped
them up, and brought them to Salisbury
plain. One of the stones fell into
the Avon, the rest were carried to
the plain. The Devil then cried out,
"No-one will ever find out how
these stones came here." A friar
replied, "That's what you think!"
whereupon the Devil threw one of the
stones at him and struck him on the
heel. The stone stuck in the ground
and is still there.
Some claim "Friar's
Heel" is a corruption of Freyja's
He-ol or Freyja Sul, from the Nordic
goddess Freyja and (allegedly) the
Welsh words for "way" and
"Friday" respectively.
Arthurian legend
Stonehenge is also mentioned within
Arthurian legend. Geoffrey of Monmouth
said that Merlin the wizard directed
its removal from Ireland, where it
had been constructed on Mount Killaraus
by giants, who brought the stones
from Africa. After it had been rebuilt
near Amesbury, Geoffrey further narrates
how first Ambrosius Aurelianus, then
Uther Pendragon, and finally Constantine
III, were buried inside the ring of
stones. In many places in his Historia
Regum Britanniae Geoffrey mixed British
legend and his own imagination; it
is intriguing that he connects Ambrosius
Aurelianus with this prehistoric monument,
seeing how there is place-name evidence
to connect Ambrosius with nearby Amesbury.
Recent history
The sun rising over Stonehenge on
the Summer solstice 2005 (21 June).By
the beginning of the twentieth century
a number of the stones had fallen
or were leaning precariously, probably
due to the increase in curious visitors
clambering on them during the nineteenth
century. Three phases of conservation
work were undertaken which righted
some unstable or fallen stones and
carefully replaced them in their original
positions using information from antiquarian
drawings.
Stonehenge is a place
of pilgrimage for neo-druids and those
following pagan or neo-pagan beliefs.
The midsummer sunrise began attracting
modern visitors in 1870s, with the
first record of recreated Druidic
practices dating to 1905 when the
Ancient Order of Druids enacted a
ceremony. Despite efforts by archaeologists
and historians to stress the differences
between the Iron Age Druidic religion,
the much older monument, and modern
Druidry, Stonehenge has become increasingly,
almost inextricably, associated with
British Druidism, Neo Paganism and
New Age philosophy.
Sun rises behind the
Heel StoneThe earlier rituals were
augmented by the Stonehenge free festival,
held between 1972 and 1984, and loosely
organized by the Politantric Circle.
However, in 1985 the site was closed
to festival goers by English Heritage
and the National Trust, by which time
the number of midsummer visitors had
risen from 500 to 30,000. A consequence
of the end of the festival was the
violent confrontation between the
police and new age travelers that
became known as the Battle of the
Beanfield when police blockaded a
convoy of travelers to prevent them
from approaching Stonehenge. There
was then no midsummer access for almost
fifteen years until limited opening
was negotiated in 2000.
A plan for a new highway
access and heritage center were proposed
in 1993, but in July 2005, these plans
were thrown into uncertainty following
refusal of planning permission for
the visitors' center by Salisbury
District Council whilst the British
government placed the rising costs
of the road scheme under review.[2]
The Magic of Stonehenge:
Suggests the site could be the source
of a mysterious power that might hold
all of Britain in a strange magnetic
force field. Original broadcast: 10
September 1977.