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Re: Seahenge. Looking back.
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harestonesdown wrote:
Howburn Digger wrote:
harestonesdown wrote:
I dunno, i just think it's so sad how it's ended up, present it now to someone who never saw the original context and it'd be a very hard to make head or tail of it. not that we've "cracked" it's meaning in any way i should add.


No-one saw it in its "original" context. The context and environment Seahenge was created in are gone aeons ago. What was revealed and excavated were the remnants after thousands of years of getting buried in sand and pummelled by the sea.
I agree it is very hard to make head or tail of or "crack" its meaning. Even large, well-preserved stone circles, tombs and alignments are still bound in mystery and conjecture. Seahenge seems to me a piece of strange ephemera... original intent... like catching fog in a net...



Well if you want to be pedantic i'm sure those who built it saw it in it's original context. :P

Btw, my thoughts are (probably influenced by being a gardener) the central oak was a way of making offerings to the earth, it makes perfect sense really. (well to me) The upside down nature was so the roots "drew" offerings down into the earth. in it's natural life the roots were responsible for drawing up nutrients, turn it upside down and it could perform the same but in reverse. i've never heard another theory that makes any sense at all.

Anyone else care to offer their theory. ?



Well as we had seen all the posts and upturned tree in the museum I wasn't sure how to address this.. Firstly as HD says what we were looking at when Seahenge was first discovered was something being destroyed by natural forces, so it's excavation was perhaps necessary to understand the depth of the wooden circle, as to the meaning that is in the realms of our own imagination.

Chris Collyer's photo is iconic, a romantic image caught in the present time and not reflecting its original stance in the landscape, and there comes to mind the 19th century romantic tourist, scenery was all 'the moping owl in the ruined ivy turreted tower' is pretty but the ivy is destroying the tower.....

http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/post/4264/sea_henge.html

Celtic imagery fits in very well with the tree with its trunk buried in the earth, to another 'upside down world' in which all things return to the ancestral but who knows.

The Lynn Museum did a good job with the installation of the posts, though sadly the great tree trunk is to the side and not in the centre of the half ring of posts. It is magnificient, as are the posts and I suspect more people will understand our prehistoric past by seeing them in this reconstruction than they would have on a beach where they were fast disappearing....


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moss
Posted by moss
12th February 2013ce
12:40

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Re: Seahenge. Looking back. (harestonesdown)

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Re: Seahenge. Looking back. (harestonesdown)

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