STONEHENGE
STONEHENGE
STONEHENGE
Around 2100-2000 BCE, a circle about 108 feet (33 metres) in diameter
comprised of originally of 30 neatly trimmed upright sandstone blocks
(known today as sarsens), standing on average 13 feet (4 metres)
above the ground, about 6.5 feet (2 metres) wide, and 3 feet (1 metre)
thick, supporting a continuous ring of sarsen lintels (held in place by
tongue-and-groove joints) was constructed in the centre of the original
circular bank-and-ditch. A little later was added inside the circle of
sarsens, in the shape of a horseshoe, ten upright sarsens arranged as
five pairs with a single lintel.
Around 2000-1550 BCE, a horseshoe of smaller upright igneous stones
without lintels (the bluestones) were brought from a site in Wales and
placed inside the horseshoe of sarsens.
Already in the 18th century the British antiquarian William Stukeley had
noticed that the horseshoe of great trilithons and the horseshoe of 19
bluestones at Stonehenge opened up in the direction of the midsummer
sunrise. It was quickly surmised that the monument must have been
deliberately oriented and planned so that on midsummer's morning the
sun rose directly over the Heel Stone and the first rays shone into the
centre of the monument between the open arms of the horseshoe
arrangement.
The alignment also made it clear that whoever built Stonehenge had
precise astronomical knowledge of the path of the sun and, moreover,
must have known before construction began precisely where the sun
rose at dawn on midsummer's morning while standing on the future site
of the monument. This point needs to be made because, as I suspect,
with Stonehenge and many other such monuments, it was the site, a
particular place within the landscape, that was important; only later were
these sites marked in some more permanent manner by the digging of
ditches and banks and (or instead) the erection of wood or stone
structures.
For reasons we shall never know, this particular spot in the landscape
was so important that not only were ditches and banks dug and, later,
stone circles and horseshoe arrangements constructed to mark it, but
that some of the stones were deliberately transported there with
considerable effort from a great distance away.
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