| "Much of what has been written about
Stonehenge is derivative, second-rate or plain wrong." Chippindale,6
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view from within
looking out, showing one of the bluestones just inside
the lintelled circle of sarsens.

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Grandiose,
world-reknowned and utterly unique, Stonehenge has held
on to most of its secrets despite the efforts of
archaeologists... It is impossible to put into context by
looking at other stone circles because it is one of a
kind - there really is nothing else remotely like it. We
can find bigger stone circles at Castlerigg, Avebury, Newgrange and Stanton
Drew. We can find structures within circles at Avebury,
but nowhere else is the singular lintel structure of
Stonehenge to be found. Nor is there any other example of
the tongue and groove interlocking construction which has
enable this drystone building to stand against the
passage of Time for almost four thousand years. Indeed,
some of the attraction of Stonehenge is perhaps this
feeling that this building from so long ago, both
temporally and culturally, connects us with our past. It
reaches to us across the ages - two hundred generations
of people, from our prehistoric ancestors who left no
writing that we can discern, to us with all the trappings
of our post-industrial world...
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| Stonehenge was
built in several phases over
more than a thousand years. Later builders occasionally
reversed the efforts of previous efforts, sometimes
reusing the fruit of their labour. Few guesses as to its
purpose have yielded fruit, but some alignments with
solar and lunar phenomena can be observed, and these are
most likely intentional. The midsummer sunrise lies very
close to the axis between the Heel stone and the centre
of the circle , though since this alignment is not exact
some dispute its significance (Burl, 7
Chippindale, 8).
The midwinter sunset seems to be a better candidate for
the alignment, both astronomically
and spiritually More accurately aligned are fifty-three
postholes across the entrance in 11 rows by six, lined up
with the extreme midwinter risings of the moon (Burl 7)
which would indicate meticulous observation. Another
pertinent fact is that the latitude of Stonehenge is
remarkable in that the extreme northern and southern
rising and setting of the sun and the moon are at right
angles to eath other. This neat alignment would be
changed by moving the monument only a few miles north or
south.
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a
plan of Stonehenge as perhaps originally conceived - red
stones are existing sarsens, grey stones are missing or
fallen.

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As an engineering
achievement Stonehenge is phenomenal. The stones were
shaped with stone 'mauls' - large rounded stones that
could be comfortably held and used to pound away at the
surface of the stones. Sarsen is extremely hard, and this
process must have been difficult. Using stone mauls, and
antler picks to dig holes in the chalk, our prehistoric
ancestors raised the sarsen lintels to form a circle 100f
t (30m) across and 16ft (4.9m) above the sloping ground.
They achieved the top surface of the lintels level and
truly circular to within an inch or so (Chippindale, 9). |
| From 1000BC
Stonehenge falls into decline, and much of the damage we
see occurred in the two and a half thousand years that
followed. Stone 14 fell inwards in AD1750, on January 3,
1797 a trilithon fell back across the sarsen circle (this
was re-erected in 1958 - it is the one with the goddess
carving). A circle stone, 23, was blown down in a
gale in 1963. Though the weather can be blamed for much
of the damage, which is also concentrate on the SW side
of the circle which takes most of the force of the
prevailing wind, a lot of the damage can also be
attributed ot the work of man. Souvenir-hunters seem to
have chipped off their fair share, and the Romans may
have had a hand in some of the damage.
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There is some evidence
that the Romans may have destroyed part of Stonehenge (23) - though they were normally tolerant of local
religions the ancient Druids (as opposed to the modern
ones) opposed the Empire. In some of the Y and Z holes,
dug after the main structure was erected but left to fill
naturally, there is a concentration of bluestone chips
and Roman-British pottery above the normal silt of the
centuries. Tacitus describes the Druids, forced back by the Romans to the Isle of
Anglesey in AD61, howling curses at the Romans who were
coming to massacre them. It is possible that Stonehenge
was sacked at around that time. |
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Stonehenge is now
in the care of English Heritage who look after the
monumen and the National Trust who own much of the land.
We can only hope that the plans to move the roads which
intrude into the setting and shift the car-park further
away do come to pass, so that Stonehenge once more stands
in majesty on the plain. Without
writing or oral continuity, the Neolithic builders of
Stonehenge managed to transmit their vision across the
long intercession of three-and-a-half thousand lonely
years. More than a million visitors a year come to see
what they had to say. And though we cannot determine what
it was, or whay they felt the need, one thing is clear
enough. It mattered to the Stonehenge people to have
their rings of stone. It meant a lot to them, and we can
only admire their engineering - for Stonehenge is one of
the oldest buildings on earth.
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