SECRETS OF STONEHENGE
G'day folks,
Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument located in Wiltshire,
England, about 2 miles west of Amesbury and 8 miles north of Salisbury.
Located on England’s Salisbury Plain, 80 miles southwest of
London, Stonehenge, the prehistoric monument featuring the remains of a circle
of huge standing stones, has long fascinated archaeologists as well as the
general public. Today, the ancient site—whose true purpose remains a
mystery—receives more than a million visitors a year. Learn more about
Stonehenge, including how it once ended up on the auction block, why summer
solstice celebrations were banned there in the late 20th century and what the
wizard Merlin and Charles Darwin have to do with it.
Stonehenge was built in phases.
Around
3000 B.C. a circular earthwork was constructed at the site, consisting of a
ditch (dug using tools made from antlers) with an inner and outer bank. Inside
the bank were 56 pits, which became known as the Aubrey Holes, after
antiquarian John Aubrey, who identified them in 1666. Archaeologists estimate
Stonehenge was home to 150 or more cremation burials from approximately 3000
B.C. to 2300 B.C., and they’ve called it Britain’s biggest known cemetery of
the time.
The two
types of stones at the center of the monument, the large sarsens and smaller
bluestones, arrived at the site sometime around 2500 B.C. Afterward, they were
shaped using various stoneworking techniques and arranged in formations. The
final stage of construction was a ring of pits now referred to as the Y holes,
dug sometime between 1600 B.C. to 1500 B.C. The Y holes encircled another ring
of pits called the Z holes, which were dug at an earlier time and surrounded
the sarsens. Researchers are unclear as to whether the Y and Z holes served any
purpose. It’s also unknown how long Stonehenge continued to be used after the Y
holes were dug.
It’s a mystery how some stones got to the site.
Among the
remaining riddles about Stonehenge is how its builders, who had only primitive
tools, managed to haul all the massive stones to the site. The sarsen stones,
which each weigh an average of 25 tons, are thought to have been brought to the
site from Marlborough Downs, about 20 miles to the north. The bluestones, which
weigh between 2 tons to 5 tons, were transported to Stonehenge from the Preseli
Hills area in West Wales, a distance of more than 150 miles. Most
archaeologists believe that humans moved the bluestones over water and land to
Stonehenge, although it’s also been suggested these stones could’ve been pushed
to the site by glaciers.
In 2000,
a Welsh group called Menter Preseli attempted to use only Stone Age tools and
methods to recreate the prehistoric journey made by the bluestones. The project
involved dragging a bluestone weighing across land on a large wooden sled then
transporting it over water by boat. However, various problems arose along the
way, including the theft of the sled (it was soon found but a crane was needed
to get the stone back on it). Later, as the stone was being carried in a sling
between two long rowboats, it fell into the water and sank (after divers
located the stone, it had to be raised by a salvage crew). Eventually, the
entire project was scrapped.
Stonehenge once was put up for auction.
Starting
in the Middle Ages and for centuries afterward, Stonehenge was privately owned.
By the late 1800s, crowds of visitors had taken a toll on the site. Sir Edmund
Antrobus, owner of the land on which Stonehenge is situated, resisted calls
from preservationists to sell the property to the British government. In the
early 1900s, Antrobus’s son put up a fence around the prehistoric monument and
for the first time in its history visitors were charged an admission fee.
Meanwhile, the British military began establishing training facilities in the
surrounding area, resulting in an influx of soldiers, equipment and,
eventually, aircraft, some of which crashed near the site. However, the passage
of the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act in 1913 protected
Stonehenge from being intentionally demolished. In 1915, after the Antrobus
family heir was killed during World War I, Stonehenge went up on the auction
block, where local resident Cecil Chubb successfully bid on the site, on a
whim, for £6,600. Three years later, Chubb donated Stonehenge to the national
government. In recognition of this deed, he was knighted by Prime Minister
Lloyd George.
Theories abound about Stonehenge’s purpose.
Stonehenge’s
builders left no known written records, so scholars (and non-scholars) have
long speculated about why it was constructed. In the early 12th century,
Geoffrey of Monmouth, one of the first people to write about the ancient site,
claimed it was erected as a memorial to hundreds of Britons who were slayed by
the Saxons. According to Geoffrey, the wizard Merlin supposedly directed that
the stones for the monument be procured from the Giants’ Ring, a stone circle
with magical healing powers said to be located in Ireland. Another theory,
suggested by John Aubrey and 18th century archaeologist William Stukeley, is
that Stonehenge was built as a Druid temple. Modern scholars say Stonehenge’s
construction predated the Druids; however, present-day Druids view it as a
sacred spot.
Another
theory, introduced in the 1960s, holds that Stonehenge was an astronomical
computer used to predict eclipses. And in 2008, archaeologists suggested that
Stonehenge was a center for healing, a prehistoric version of Lourdes that
attracted the sick and injured. Meanwhile, there’s a contingent of people who
believe Stonehenge is a landing pad for ancient space aliens, and British
authorities have received reports from the public about UFOs hovering near the
famous monument.
Summer solstice gatherings were banned at Stonehenge.
First
held in 1974 during the summer solstice, the Stonehenge Free Festival started
as a counter-culture gathering that grew significantly in size over time. After
tens of thousands of people showed up for the 1984 festival, authorities,
concerned about such issues as open drug use, banned the event for the
following year. Nevertheless, on June 1, 1985, a long convoy of vehicles filled
with would-be festival goers (who were part of a movement called the New Age
Travellers) made its way toward Stonehenge.
About
seven miles from the ancient site, police stopped the convoy. Accounts of what
happened next vary: Law enforcement officers claimed they were attacked by
people in the vehicles, while those in the convoy said the police dragged
various individuals, unprovoked, from their vehicles and beat them. The
Travellers fled to a nearby beanfield, where they were surrounded by police,
and more violence ensued. Two dozen people were hospitalized, and numerous
arrests were made. In the aftermath of the so-called Battle of the Beanfield,
summer solstice gatherings at Stonehenge were prohibited until 2000.
Darwin studied worms there.
In 1877,
naturalist Charles Darwin travelled to Stonehenge to conduct research on a
subject that had long fascinated him: earthworms. During his visit, Darwin, who
was interested in the impact that worms had on objects in the soil over time,
observed how a fallen stone at the ancient monument had sunk deeper into the ground
as a result of the activities of the lowly creatures, who continually churn
through the soil. Darwin’s research was included in what would be his final
book, “The Formation of Vegetable Mould Through the Action of Worms,” published
in 1881.
Stonehenge is just one of several prehistoric stone circles in Great
Britain.
While
Stonehenge has been referred to as the most architecturally sophisticated
ancient stone circle, the largest of them is Avebury, located 25 miles north of
Stonehenge. Constructed between 2850 B.C. and 2200 B.C., Avebury today consists
of a massive circular bank and ditch enclosing 28.5 acres. Inside the ditch is
an inner stone circle that encloses two smaller stone circles. During the
Medieval era, a number of the stones were knocked over and buried by local
Christians who believed they were pagan symbols. Later, some of the stones were
broken up and used as building materials. In the 1930s, archaeologist Alexander
Keiller, heir to a British marmalade fortune, purchased the site. Keiller
cleared away old cottages and farm buildings and re-erected many of the stones.
As with Stonehenge, it’s uncertain for what exact purpose Avebury was used by
ancient people.
Clancy's comment: I've been to this interesting place and found it quite spooky. I sat and looked, thinking and wondering how it was developed, by who and when.
I'm ...
No comments:
Post a Comment