Stonehenge (England)
Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument in Wiltshire, England, 2 miles (3
km) west of Amesbury. It consists of a ring of standing stones, with each
standing stone around 13 feet (4.0 m) high, 7 feet (2.1 m) wide and weighing
around 25 tons. The stones are set within earthworks in the middle of the most
dense complex of Neolithic and Bronze Age monuments in England, including
several hundred burial mounds.
Archaeologists believe it was constructed from 3000 BC to 2000 BC. The
surrounding circular earth bank and ditch, which constitute the earliest phase
of the monument, have been dated to about 3100 BC. Radiocarbon dating suggests
that the first bluestones were raised between 2400 and 2200 BC, although they
may have been at the site as early as 3000 BC.
One of the most famous landmarks in the UK, Stonehenge is regarded as a
British cultural icon. It has been a legally protected Scheduled Ancient
Monument since 1882 when legislation to protect historic monuments was first
successfully introduced in Britain. The site and its surroundings were added to
UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites in 1986. Stonehenge is owned by the Crown
and managed by English Heritage; the surrounding land is owned by the National
Trust.
Stonehenge could have been a burial ground from its earliest
beginnings. Deposits containing human bone date from as early as 3000 BC, when
the ditch and bank were first dug, and continued for at least another five
hundred years.
Etymology
The Oxford English Dictionary cites Ælfric's tenth-century glossary, in
which henge-cliff is given the meaning "precipice", or stone, thus
the stanenges or Stanheng "not far from Salisbury" recorded by
eleventh-century writers are "supported stones". William Stukeley in
1740 notes, "Pendulous rocks are now called henges in Yorkshire...I doubt
not, Stonehenge in Saxon signifies the hanging stones." Christopher
Chippindale's Stonehenge Complete gives the derivation of the name Stonehenge
as coming from the Old English words stān meaning "stone", and either
hencg meaning "hinge" (because the stone lintels hinge on the upright
stones) or hen(c)en meaning "hang" or "gallows" or
"instrument of torture" (though elsewhere in his book, Chippindale
cites the "suspended stones" etymology). Like Stonehenge's trilithons,
medieval gallows consisted of two uprights with a lintel joining them, rather
than 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 use,
and Stonehenge is not truly 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, at more than 7.3 metres (24
ft) tall, its extant trilithons supporting lintels held in place with mortise
and tenon joints, make it unique.
Early history
Plan of Stonehenge in 2004. After Cleal et al. and Pitts. Italicised
numbers in the text refer to the labels on this plan. Trilithon lintels omitted
for clarity. Holes that no longer, or never, contained stones are shown as open
circles. Stones visible today are shown coloured
Mike Parker Pearson, leader of the Stonehenge Riverside Project based
at Durrington Walls, noted that Stonehenge appears to have been associated with
burial from the earliest period of its existence:
Stonehenge was a place of burial from its beginning to its zenith in
the mid third millennium B.C. The cremation burial dating to Stonehenge's
sarsen stones phase is likely just one of many from this later period of the
monument's use and demonstrates that it was still very much a domain of the
dead.
Stonehenge evolved in several construction phases spanning at least
1500 years. There is evidence of large-scale construction on and around the
monument that perhaps extends the landscape's time frame to 6500 years. Dating
and understanding the various phases of activity is complicated by disturbance
of the natural chalk by periglacial effects and animal burrowing, poor quality
early excavation records, and a lack of accurate, scientifically verified
dates. The modern phasing most generally agreed to by archaeologists is
detailed below. Features mentioned in the text are numbered and shown on the
plan, right.
Before the monument (8000 BC forward)
Archaeologists have found four, or possibly five, large Mesolithic
postholes (one may have been a natural tree throw), which date to around 8000
BC, beneath the nearby modern tourist car-park. These held pine posts around
0.75 metres (2 ft 6 in) in diameter, which were erected and eventually rotted
in situ. Three of the posts (and possibly four) were in an east-west alignment
which may have had ritual significance.[citation needed] Another Mesolithic
astronomical site in Britain is the Warren Field site in Aberdeenshire, which
is considered the world's oldest Lunar calendar, corrected yearly by observing
the midwinter solstice. Similar but later sites have been found in
Scandinavia.[citation needed] A settlement that may have been contemporaneous
with the posts has been found at Blick
Mead, a reliable year-round spring 1 mile (1.6 km) from Stonehenge.
Salisbury Plain was then still wooded but 4,000 years later, during the
earlier Neolithic, people built a causewayed enclosure at Robin Hood's Ball and
long barrow tombs in the surrounding landscape. In approximately 3500 BC, a
Stonehenge Cursus was built 700 metres (2,300 ft) north of the site as the
first farmers began to clear the trees and develop the area. A number of other
adjacent stone and wooden structures and burial mounds, previously overlooked,
may date as far back as 4000 BC. Charcoal from the ‘Blick Mead’ camp 2.4
kilometres (1.5 mi) from Stonehenge (near the Vespasian's Camp site) has been
dated to 4000 BC. The University of Buckingham's Humanities Research Institute
believes that the community who built Stonehenge lived here over a period of
several millennia, making it potentially "one of the pivotal places in the
history of the Stonehenge landscape."
Stonehenge 1 (ca. 3100 BC)
Stonehenge 1. After Cleal et al.
The first monument consisted of a circular bank and ditch enclosure
made of Late Cretaceous (Santonian Age) Seaford Chalk, measuring about 110
metres (360 ft) 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
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 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 BC, after which the ditch began to silt up
naturally. Within the outer edge of the enclosed area is a circle of 56 pits,
each about a metre (3 ft 3 in) 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 recent excavation
has suggested that the Aubrey Holes may have originally been used to erect a
bluestone circle. If this were the case, it would advance the earliest known
stone structure at the monument by some 500 years. A small outer bank beyond
the ditch could also date to this period.
Analysis of animal teeth found at nearby Durrington Walls, thought to
be the 'builders camp', suggests that as many as 4,000 people gathered at the
site for the mid-winter and mid-summer festivals; the evidence showed that the
animals had been slaughtered around 9 months or 15 months after their spring
birth. Strontium isotope analysis of the animal teeth showed that some had been
brought from as far afield as the Scottish Highlands for the celebrations.
Stonehenge 2 (ca. 3000 BC)
Evidence of the second phase is no longer visible. The number of
postholes dating to the early 3rd millennium BC suggest that some form of
timber structure was built within the enclosure during this period. Further
standing timbers were placed at the northeast entrance, and a parallel
alignment of posts ran inwards from the southern entrance. The postholes are
smaller than the Aubrey Holes, being only around 0.4 metres (16 in) 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. Dating evidence is provided
by the late Neolithic grooved ware pottery that has been found in connection
with the features from this phase.
Stonehenge 3 I (ca. 2,600 BC)
Graffiti on the sarsen stones include ancient carvings of a dagger and
an axe
Archaeological excavation has indicated that around 2600 BC, the
builders abandoned timber in favour of stone and dug two concentric arrays of
holes (the Q and R Holes) in the centre of the site. These stone sockets are
only partly known (hence on present evidence are sometimes described as forming
'crescents'); however, they could be the remains of a double ring. Again, there
is little firm dating evidence for this phase. The holes held up to 80 standing
stones (shown blue on the plan), only 43 of which can be traced today. It is
generally accepted that the bluestones (some of which are made of dolerite, an
igneous rock), were transported by the builders from the Preseli Hills, 150
miles (240 km) away in modern-day Pembrokeshire in Wales. Another theory is
that they were brought much nearer to the site as glacial erratics by the Irish
Sea Glacier although there is no evidence of glacial deposition within southern
central England.
The long distance human transport theory was bolstered in 2011 by the
discovery of a megalithic bluestone quarry at Craig Rhos-y-felin, near Crymych
in Pembrokeshire, which is the most likely place for some of the stones to have
been obtained. Other standing stones may well have been small sarsens
(sandstone), used later as lintels. The stones, which weighed about two tons,
could have been moved by lifting and carrying them on rows of poles and
rectangular frameworks of poles, as recorded in China, Japan and India. It is
not known whether the stones were taken directly from their quarries to
Salisbury Plain or were the result of the removal of a venerated stone circle
from Preseli to Salisbury Plain to "merge two sacred centres into one, to
unify two politically separate regions, or to legitimise the ancestral identity
of migrants moving from one region to another". Each monolith measures
around 2 metres (6.6 ft) in height, between 1 and 1.5 m (3.3 and 4.9 ft) wide
and around 0.8 metres (2.6 ft) thick. What was to become known as the Altar
Stone is almost certainly derived from the Senni Beds, perhaps from 50 miles
(80 kilometres) east of Mynydd Preseli in the Brecon Beacons.
The north-eastern entrance was 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.
The Heelstone, a Tertiary sandstone, may also have been erected outside
the north-eastern entrance during this period. It cannot be accurately dated
and may have been installed at any time during phase 3. At first it was
accompanied by a second stone, which is no longer visible. Two, or possibly three,
large portal stones were set up just inside the north-eastern entrance, of
which only one, the fallen Slaughter Stone, 4.9 metres (16 ft) 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. Stonehenge Avenue, a
parallel pair of ditches and banks leading 2 miles (3 km) to the River Avon,
was also added. Two ditches similar to Heelstone Ditch circling the Heelstone
(which was by then reduced to a single monolith) were later dug around the
Station Stones.
Stonehenge 3 II (2600 BC to 2400 BC)
Plan of the central stone structure today; after Johnson 2008
During the next major phase of activity, 30 enormous Oligocene-Miocene
sarsen stones (shown grey on the plan) were brought to the site. They may have
come from a quarry around 25 miles (40 km) north of Stonehenge on the
Marlborough Downs, or they may have been collected from a "litter" of
sarsens on the chalk downs, closer to hand. The stones were dressed and
fashioned with mortise and tenon joints before 30 were erected as a 33 metres
(108 ft) diameter circle of standing stones, with a ring of 30 lintel stones
resting on top. The lintels were fitted to one another using another
woodworking method, the tongue and groove joint. Each standing stone was around
4.1 metres (13 ft) high, 2.1 metres (6 ft 11 in) wide and weighed around 25
tons. Each had clearly been worked with the final visual effect in mind; the
orthostats widen slightly towards the top in order that their perspective
remains constant when viewed from the ground, while the lintel stones curve
slightly to continue the circular appearance of the earlier monument.
The inward-facing surfaces of the stones are smoother and more finely
worked than the outer surfaces. The average thickness of the stones is 1.1
metres (3 ft 7 in) and the average distance between them is 1 metre (3 ft 3
in). A total of 75 stones would have been needed to complete the circle (60
stones) and the trilithon horseshoe (15 stones). It was thought the ring might
have been left incomplete, but an exceptionally dry summer in 2013 revealed
patches of parched grass which may correspond to the location of removed
sarsens. The lintel stones are each around 3.2 metres (10 ft) long, 1 metre (3
ft 3 in) wide and 0.8 metres (2 ft 7 in) thick. The tops of the lintels are 4.9
metres (16 ft) above the ground.
Within this circle stood five trilithons of dressed sarsen stone
arranged in a horseshoe shape 13.7 metres (45 ft) across, with its open end
facing north east. These huge stones, ten uprights and five lintels, weigh up
to 50 tons each. They were linked using complex jointing. They are arranged
symmetrically. The smallest pair of trilithons were around 6 metres (20 ft)
tall, the next pair a little higher, and the largest, single trilithon in the
south west corner would have been 7.3 metres (24 ft) tall. Only one upright
from the Great Trilithon still stands, of which 6.7 metres (22 ft) is visible
and a further 2.4 metres (7 ft 10 in) is below ground. The images of a 'dagger'
and 14 'axeheads' have been carved on one of the sarsens, known as stone 53;
further carvings of axeheads have been seen on the outer faces of stones 3, 4,
and 5. The carvings are difficult to date, but are morphologically similar to
late Bronze Age weapons. early 21st-century laser scanning of the carvings
supports this interpretation. The pair of trilithons in the north east are
smallest, measuring around 6 metres (20 ft) in height; the largest, which is in
the south west of the horseshoe, is almost 7.5 metres (25 ft) tall.
This ambitious phase has been radiocarbon dated to between 2600 and
2400 BC, slightly earlier than the Stonehenge Archer, discovered in the outer
ditch of the monument in 1978, and the two sets of burials, known as the
Amesbury Archer and the Boscombe Bowmen, discovered 3 miles (5 km) to the west.
At about the same time, a large timber circle and a second avenue were
constructed 2 miles (3 km) away at Durrington Walls overlooking the River Avon.
The timber circle was oriented towards the rising sun on the midwinter
solstice, opposing the solar alignments at Stonehenge. The avenue was aligned
with the setting sun on the summer solstice and led from the river to the timber
circle. Evidence of huge fires on the banks of the Avon between the two avenues
also suggests that both circles were linked. They were perhaps used as a
procession route on the longest and shortest days of the year. Parker Pearson
speculates that the wooden circle at Durrington Walls was the centre of a 'land
of the living', whilst the stone circle represented a 'land of the dead', with
the Avon serving as a journey between the two.
Stonehenge 3 III (2400 BC to 2280 BC)
Later in the Bronze Age, although the exact details of activities
during this period are still unclear, the bluestones appear to have been
re-erected. They were placed within the outer sarsen circle and may have been
trimmed in some way. Like the sarsens, a few have timber-working style cuts in
them suggesting that, during this phase, they may have been linked with lintels
and were part of a larger structure.
Stonehenge 3 IV (2280 BC to 1930 BC)
This phase saw further rearrangement of the bluestones. They were
arranged in a circle between the two rings of sarsens and in an oval at the
centre of the inner ring. Some archaeologists argue that some of these
bluestones were from a second group brought from Wales. All the stones formed
well-spaced uprights without any of the linking lintels inferred in Stonehenge
3 III. The Altar Stone may have been moved within the oval at this time and
re-erected vertically. Although this would seem the most impressive phase of
work, Stonehenge 3 IV was rather shabbily built compared to its immediate predecessors,
as the newly re-installed bluestones were not well-founded and began to fall
over. However, only minor changes were made after this phase.
Stonehenge 3 V (1930 BC to 1600 BC)
Soon afterwards, the north eastern section of the Phase 3 IV bluestone circle
was removed, creating a horseshoe-shaped setting (the Bluestone Horseshoe)
which mirrored the shape of the central sarsen Trilithons. This phase is
contemporary with the Seahenge site in Norfolk.
After the monument (1600 BC on)
Computer rendering of the overall site
The Y and Z Holes are the last known construction at Stonehenge, built
about 1600 BC, and the last usage of it was probably during the Iron Age. Roman
coins and medieval artefacts have all been found in or around the monument but
it is unknown if the monument was in continuous use throughout British
prehistory and beyond, or exactly how it would have been used. Notable is the
massive Iron Age hillfort Vespasian's Camp built alongside the Avenue near the
Avon. A decapitated seventh century Saxon man was excavated from Stonehenge in
1923. The site was known to scholars during the Middle Ages and since then it
has been studied and adopted by numerous groups.
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