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Stonehenge
Stonehenge is without a doubt the most important surviving prehistoric structure in the country. It is an icon of British history.
The mystery surrounding its creation has attracted much attention over the centuries and theories for its existence have ranged from the religious to the astrological although modern thinkers have tended to regard it as the former.
Whoever built it appears to have achieved the impossible though - lugging stones weighing up to 45 tons 32kms from the Marlborough Downs to Salisbury Plain. It was built over a period of 2,000 years and although its purpose is ultimately a mystery it seems to have had a ceremonial use.
The structure was developed in three stages dating back to 3100 BC when a circle of timbers surrounded by a ditch and bank was constructed. Then the first 80 stones were erected in 2300 BC - each weighing 5 tons and carried all the way from the Preseli hills in west Wales. Heavier stones were then brought from the Marlborough Downs and were positioned to align themselves with the rising of the mid-summer sun.
How did they get these stones to stand upright? The truth is nobody really knows. It required sheer muscle power and hundreds of men to move one of these megaliths.
Visiting the site today, you will not help but be overwhelmed by the sheer size of the stones which make up one of Britain's greatest mysteries.
Behind The Scenes: Among the Stones
Caesar SaysJulius Caesar is one of our best-preserved sources on the ancient Druids. In the middle of the 1st century BC, he spent eight years as the governor of Gaul (roughly, modern France), which was at that time a predominately Celtic society. According to Caesar, the Druids were a polytheistic priestly class who ordinary Celts regarded as highly as Celtic noblemen. They studied ancient texts, philosophy, astronomy and the wisdom of the gods. They believed that the soul was immortal and passed from one person to another at the point of death.
Multipurpose Priests
Druids were busy people. As well as conducting public and private sacrifices, they acted as mentors to young men. They were also judges, who resolved public and private quarrels. Druids didn't take part in warfare and didn't pay tributes. They were led by an Arch-Druid, who, once a year, presided over a meeting of all Druids at a sacred site in the centre of Gaul.
The History of Stonehenge
Phase 1Around 3,100BC, there was a circle of timber posts surrounded by a ditch and a bank. It was dated from antlers and bones used to dig the ditch by hand. On the edge of the bank, there were 56 holes (known as Aubrey Holes after the 17th-century antiquarian who found them). The holes would have held wooden posts, but what were these posts for? Perhaps to hold up a roof of a building, or to mark out a ceremonial space.
Phase 2
Around 2,500 BC, the circle was rebuilt using bluestones from the Preselli mountains in Pembrokeshire. Each stone weighed about five tons and had to be dragged nearly 250 miles to the sea and then floated on rafts up the River Avon and overland to Salisbury Plain. Why was the site considered so important?
Phase 3
Around 2,300 BC, Stonehenge was rebuilt and made bigger and better than before. The existing bluestones were dug up and rearranged and new, even bigger stones were imported from Marlborough Downs. These giant Sarsen stones were heaved upright and linked on the top by lintels, with the heaviest weighing 45 tons. It consisted of about 60 stones and at its centre was the Altar Stone. This time, the alignment was towards the rising of the sun on midsummer's day. Possibly some kind of giant calculator for working out the calendar?
Legend and literature
In the 12th century, Geoffrey of Monmouth relates how Merlin the magician moved stones from Ireland to Ambrius (thought to be Amesbury near Stonehenge) and so linked the circle with supernatural happenings. The Druids, the religious elite of Ancient Britain revived in the 18th century, have long connections with Stonehenge, but the stones predate them by about one thousand years. The imagery of Stonehenge is powerful: it was chosen by Turner for one of his best paintings and by Thomas Hardy as the setting for the dramatic closing scene of Tess of the D'Urbervilles, where the doomed lovers, on the run from the law, stumble across it in the dark.
World importance
Stonehenge has been designated a World Heritage site, not just because of the henge itself but because Salisbury Plain is littered with other amazing sites including the nearby woodhenge (c 2,300BC), and the Cursus (3,100 BC), so-called because it was thought to be an ancient chariot racing track.
Feature supplied by Heritage magazine.
For more information look at Stonehenge on Wikipedia.


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