I m a g i n e . .
. .
Walking for miles through the
dense forest that covers the land. Mist swirls around,
the air is cold and clammy. Yet in the murkiness you
sense a presence, that draws you towards it - a faint
breath of Spring in the midst of winter.
Tired, you stumble on a clearing
in the trees, the mist dispels and the pale light of the
low winter sun breaks through. In the clearing before you
standing stones nestle against the trees that surround
the clearing, and a soft air of magic suffuses the air.
The wind and the rain of ages past, has carved fantastic
patterns on the stones. In the stillness of the stones,
an ermine dances in the rays of the winter sun. This is
Megalithia, land of ancient stones.
It is also the British Isles - with hundreds of
megalithic monuments preserved for us. Share with me a
while, gentle traveller, a special piece of the history
of these Isles.
Everyone has, of course, heard
of Stonehenge, but
far fewer have heard of magnificent Avebury - big enough to
contain a whole village within the boundaries, and many
more treasures to delight and puzzle the traveller to
these great stones linking us to the very dawn of human
knowledge. Cornwall
is incredibly rich in prehistoric stones, and Scotland
hosts the Standing
Stones of Callanish - a huge and atmospheric stone
circle and avenues on the Isle of Lewis. In Wales, and
particularly the Isle of Anglesey, hundreds
of stones have marked the centuries since prehistoric
man.
Ireland has a great megalithic tradition from the
beautiful county of Cork peppered with standing stones
and circles, and the remarkable Newgrange, a chamber
so accurately constructed that only on the midwinter
sunrise does a single shaft of light light up the
chamber. The passage of the seasons was precious
knowledge at these times, and many sites have significant
alignments on the Sun or the Moon.
There is a quick introduction
to the people behind the stones, and a list of sites you can view here. You can search for over 1000 sites by
name and location - the site database contains over 1200
sites. Latitude and Longitude values are also given for
UK sites, for GPS users and archaeo-astronomers. Try it - you may find some
treasures near you!
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