The Modern Antiquarian. Stone Circles, Ancient Sites, Neolithic Monuments, Ancient Monuments, Prehistoric Sites, Megalithic MysteriesThe Modern Antiquarian

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Gwallon Menhir (Standing Stone / Menhir) — Images (click to view fullsize)

<b>Gwallon Menhir</b>Posted by phil

Stonehenge (Circle henge) — Miscellaneous

Stonehenge lyrics by Spinal Tap

(Were they the inspiration for Julian's interest in the stones? )

[SPOKEN]
In ancient times, hundreds of years before the dawn of history, lived a strange race of people - the druids. No one knows who they were, or what they were doing, but their legacy remains, hewn into the living rock - of Stonehenge.

Stonehenge, where the demons dwell,
Where the banshees live and they do live well.
Stonehenge,
When a man is a man and the children dance
To the pipes of pan.

Stonehenge,
'Tis a magic place where the moon doth rise
With a dragon's face,
Stonehenge,
Where the virgin's lie
And the prayers of devils fill the midnight sky.

And you my love, won't you take my hand.
We'll go back in time to that mystic land
Where the dew-drops cry and the cats meow,
I will take you there,
I will show you how.

[SPOKEN]
And oh how they danced, the little children of Stonehenge, beneath the haunted moon, for fear that the daybreak might come too soon...

...And where are they now, the little people of Stonehenge? And what would they say to us, if we were here... tonight.

The Hellstone (Dolmen / Quoit / Cromlech) — Images

<b>The Hellstone</b>Posted by phil<b>The Hellstone</b>Posted by phil<b>The Hellstone</b>Posted by phil<b>The Hellstone</b>Posted by phil

Eggardon Hill (Hillfort) — Folklore

local saying…

"As old as Eggardon"

Shipton Gorge (Ancient Village / Settlement / Misc. Earthwork) — Images

<b>Shipton Gorge</b>Posted by phil

Chilcombe Hill (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Chilcombe Hill</b>Posted by phil

Shipton Hill (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Shipton Hill</b>Posted by phil<b>Shipton Hill</b>Posted by phil

Pilsdon Pen (Hillfort) — Links

Dorset Walks


according to this website....

Pilsdon Pen (the name is a part Celtic name, pen being well known to all walkers in Wales as the local name there for a hill) is the highest hill of Dorset, standing 277m - that is 908 feet above the sea, 92 feet short of being a mountain!?

Stonehenge and its Environs — News

Unearthed, the prince of Stonehenge


A prehistoric prince with gold ear-rings has been found near Stonehenge a few yards away from the richest early Bronze Age burial in Britain.

Earlier this year, archaeologists found an aristocratic warrior, also with gold ear-rings, on Salisbury Plain and speculated that he may have been an ancient king of Stonehenge.

The body was laid to rest 4,300 years ago during the construction of the monument, along with stone arrow heads and slate wristguards that protected the arm from the recoil of the bow. Archaeologists named him the Amesbury Archer.

see the full story at.......

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/08/21/nskul121.xml&sSheet=/news/2002/08/21/ixnewstop.html

Eggardon Hill (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Eggardon Hill</b>Posted by phil<b>Eggardon Hill</b>Posted by phil

Abbotsbury Castle (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Abbotsbury Castle</b>Posted by phil<b>Abbotsbury Castle</b>Posted by phil

Chapel Hill (Sacred Hill) — Images

<b>Chapel Hill</b>Posted by phil

Black Down (Portesham) (Barrow / Cairn Cemetery) — Images

<b>Black Down (Portesham)</b>Posted by phil

Maiden Castle (Dorchester) (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Maiden Castle (Dorchester)</b>Posted by phil<b>Maiden Castle (Dorchester)</b>Posted by phil

Carbis Bay Longstone (Standing Stone / Menhir) — Miscellaneous

I visited this site especially for the "I'm only 5000 years old exhibition:

I'd seen a sketch of the site in a book. A couple of things have changed since the sketch was made, the bus stop is now a little further away and a litter bin has been added in the last couple years!

The area arond this site is known as Longstone.
There is an estate map dated 1820 which is believed to be the earlieat recorded mention of this site.
Charles Henderson the Cornish Historian noted the site in the early Twentieth century and saw that the stone had been cut down in size.

Looks rather sad and forgotten.

Carbis Bay Longstone (Standing Stone / Menhir) — Images

<b>Carbis Bay Longstone</b>Posted by phil<b>Carbis Bay Longstone</b>Posted by phil<b>Carbis Bay Longstone</b>Posted by phil<b>Carbis Bay Longstone</b>Posted by phil

The Cheesewring (Rocky Outcrop) — Images

<b>The Cheesewring</b>Posted by phil<b>The Cheesewring</b>Posted by phil

Hampshire — News

Rescue begins for seabed relics from 6000BC


http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,722701,00.html
Maev Kennedy, arts and heritage correspondent
Monday May 27, 2002
The Guardian

A time capsule from the stone age, described by English Heritage chief archaeologist David Miles as unique in Britain and of international importance, is threatened by a combination of changing sea levels, dredging and trawling, and the wakes of boats and ferries crossing the Solent straits between the Hampshire coast and the Isle of Wight - as well as the effects of the weekend's gales.
Parts of the site lost six inches of protective silt and peat this winter alone.

On the sea bed, which was dry land until 6,000BC, prehistoric stone tools still lie where they were made or dropped, among the roots of giant oak trees. The first finds, including flint arrows and knives, recently brought up by archaeologist divers, are so perfectly preserved they look like modern replicas.

The first excavators were blue lobsters, which archaeologists gradually realised were kicking out ancient man made stone tools, as they dug themselves into the muddy seabed.

Tree roots and branches have come up with the marks of stone tools. Finds of organic material, including timber, leather, and animal and possibly human remains, are confidently expected, preserved in the deep layers of silt and peat.

Further surveying and excavation work planned by the Hampshire and Wight Trust for Maritime Archaeology has become a giant piece of rescue archaeology, as material is laid bare by every tide: once exposed to air, any organic material starts decaying instantly.

Archaeologists had believed all trace of human habitation had been swept away in the inundation which created the Isle of Wight. Recent discoveries prove that the land flooded more gradually, as the sea broke in through the sand bars protecting the salt marshes. However, the flooding was fast enough to force the rapid abandonment of habitation sites, flint working sites, and killing sites where prey species were trapped, slaughtered and butchered for thousands of years: the date of the finds ranges from stone hand axes 30,000 years old, to the flint tools made by the last inhabitants before the water broke through.

On the Isle of Wight, county archaeologists Frank Basford and Rebecca Loading are patrolling hundreds of endangered sites in the inter-tidal zones, recording and recovering artefacts which include ancient causeways and fish traps, and a tangle of Roman rope in the mud of a modern harbour.

More modern objects from countless shipwrecks are also at risk. Recent finds include a syringe from the medicine chest of a 17th century ship's surgeon, for injecting mercury into the urethra of any luckless sailor who had contracted syphilis.

English Heritage will be monitoring and grant aiding the work, as an Act of Parliament, which becomes law on July 1, extends its powers to cover maritime archaeology.

Kilmartin Area — News

Sacred pool ringed by totem poles in Scotland's ritual glen


British Archaeology news
Issue 64, April 2002.

An early Bronze Age timber circle containing an inner ring of totem poles set around a deep, sacred pool is thought to have once stood at the head of the Kilmartin Valley in Argyll, site of one of Scotland's richest concentrations of prehistoric ritual monuments.

Post-excavation analysis of the pits and postholes found when the site was excavated in the 1990s (BA November 1997) has concluded that the timber circle was far more unusual than was initially thought. The circle stood on a terrace overlooking the valley; and at its heart was a large hollow nearly 7 metres wide and 2 metres deep. Now full of peat, the hollow must have contained standing water over a long period of time.

Around this pool was an inner ring of post-holes, thought to have once held totems. At the base of one was a cremation burial under a stone. From the outer ring of 30 oak posts, some 47 metres in diameter, a timber-lined processional avenue appears to have snaked down to the valley floor.

Clare Ellis, in charge of post-excavation at the Edinburgh firm AOC Archaeology, said the pool was likely to have been a 'votive pool' - a phenomenon thought to be unparalleled at any other known stone or timber circle in Britain. No metalwork was found in the pool, but offerings of 'organic materials' such as sacrificial animals could have been made, from which no evidence has survived. Traces of wood in the pool may have belonged to a fence.

In and around the timber circle were six contemporary cyst burials. In one, a woman in her 20s or 30s was buried with a decorated food vessel. The decoration on the pot had been created by pressing a fingernail repeatedly into the wet clay.

Traces of much earlier monuments were also found underlying the circle. One end of an early Neolithic cursus - a ritual procession monument - was uncovered at the edge of the terrace, a place with a magnificent view across the Kilmartin Valley. The massive structure, some 45 metres wide, was defined not by banks and ditches but by hundreds of close-set oak posts. By the time the circle was built some 1,500 years later, these posts had no doubt disappeared; but the memory of the sacred importance of the site had probably survived. Also found were a number of late Mesolithic cooking pits containing charcoal dated to about 4,500 BC, perhaps marking the site of an overnight camp.

Surviving monuments in the Kilmartin Valley include a 'linear cemetery' of Bronze Age cairns, several standing stones, a stone circle and numerous elaborate rock art panels.

http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba64/news.shtml#item3

Glastonbury Tor (Sacred Hill) — News

Concrete for a new footpath to the top of Glastonbury Tor


Wednesday, 2 January, 2002, 13:06 GMT
Trust defends Tor work

The National Trust has defended a decision to use concrete for a new footpath to the top of Glastonbury Tor, Somerset.
More than £300,000 has been found to pay for the restorations at the Tor.

Huge visitor numbers have led to erosion on the existing route up the hill - the Isle of Avalon of ancient legend.

But conservationists say the path should be re-laid with wood chippings, not concrete.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/england/newsid_1738000/1738766.stm

Bury Castle (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Bury Castle</b>Posted by phil<b>Bury Castle</b>Posted by phil

Roche Rock (Natural Rock Feature) — Images

<b>Roche Rock</b>Posted by phil<b>Roche Rock</b>Posted by phil<b>Roche Rock</b>Posted by phil<b>Roche Rock</b>Posted by phil<b>Roche Rock</b>Posted by phil

The Rumps (Cliff Fort) — Images

<b>The Rumps</b>Posted by phil

The Rumps (Cliff Fort) — Miscellaneous

A massive triple rampart and ditch system protected an area of 2.5ha at the tip of the headland. Several hut circles lie within the defended enclosure.

Tintagel (Cliff Fort) — Images

<b>Tintagel</b>Posted by phil

Warbstow Bury (Hillfort) — Images

<b>Warbstow Bury</b>Posted by phil

Goodaver (Stone Circle) — Images

<b>Goodaver</b>Posted by phil

St Dennis (Hillfort) — Images

<b>St Dennis</b>Posted by phil<b>St Dennis</b>Posted by phil

Stonehenge (Circle henge) — News

Deep road tunnel


Stonehenge hopes for deep road tunnel
By Ben Webster, Transport Correspondent


THE Government will consider making a road tunnel near Stonehenge much deeper than originally planned to avoid damaging neolithic and Bronze Age remains.
The Highways Agency, which manages England’s trunk roads, has admitted that its previous proposal to excavate and then cover a 1.2-mile ditch only 200 yards from the stones could damage burial mounds and medieval field boundaries in the area. Ministers pledged three years ago to bury the A303, the heavily congested holiday route to Devon, where it passes the World Heritage Site. In 1989 the Commons Public Accounts Committee described Stonehenge’s traffic-snarled setting as a national disgrace.

Stonehenge lies between the A303 and the A344, close to the junction of the two roads. Under the plan for the site, the A344 would be closed, the visitor centre relocated out of sight of the stones and the A303 turned into a dual carriageway.

The “cut and cover” tunnelling method was chosen because it was estimated to be £20 million cheaper than boring a much deeper tunnel. Under the original plan, engineering works so near to the standing stones would have blighted the area for three years. However, the Highways Agency has now agreed to reconsider the costs and benefits of boring the tunnel and has asked the contractors Costain and Balfour Beatty to produce a report by July.

“It would be cheaper to do a ‘cut and cover’ but there is an issue over the extra environmental gain from a bored tunnel,” Ed Bradley, the Highway Agency’s project manager, said. He added that evidence was emerging that bored tunnels were cheaper than originally thought, and that the extra cost was likely to be closer to £10 million than £20 million.

However, the Highways Agency is resisting pressure from heritage and environmental groups to make the tunnel twice as long as planned because this could double the overall cost of £125 million for the seven-mile project.

Kate Fielden, an archaeologist advising the Council for the Protection of Rural England, said that a “cut and cover” tunnel could destroy a group of burial mounds at the western entrance to the tunnel. She said: “‘Cut and cover’ would change the landscape right beside Stonehenge. A bored tunnel would be better but the one currently proposed is far too short.”

Ms Fielden said that Stonehenge was a national treasure, but the Government wanted to do a cheap deal for a new dual carriageway even if it meant damaging two thirds of the historical area around the stones.

A public inquiry into the scheme is likely to be held next year and construction could start in 2005, with the tunnel and new Winterbourne Stoke bypass opening in 2008.

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/0,,2-258161,00.html

Essa Standing Stones — Images

<b>Essa Standing Stones</b>Posted by phil<b>Essa Standing Stones</b>Posted by phil<b>Essa Standing Stones</b>Posted by phil<b>Essa Standing Stones</b>Posted by phil
Previous 50 | Showing 151-200 of 509 posts. Most recent first | Next 50
Born in Cornwall 1966.

Main interests include Hillforts and barrows. I try to cover mainly Cornish sites but about five times a year get to visit Dorset where my wifes family live. Fairly keen on folklore and earth mysteries etc.

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