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Ronald Hutton's latest book, The Druids, "...is the first comprehensive study of what people have thought about the ancient Druids and why. Written in a racy and accessible style, it is essential reading for everyone interested in exploring our mysterious past. Most books written on the Druids hitherto have been by archaeologists specialising in the Iron Age, who have occupied a great deal of space trying to find things to say about the 'original' ancient priesthood. Most have then devoted a final section of their books to people who have called themselves Druids since 1700 - until recently with contemptuous dismissal. Hutton's contention is that the sources for the ancient Druids are so few and unreliable that almost nothing certain can be said about them. Instead, he reverses the traditional balance of interest to look at the many ways in which Druids have been imagined in Britain since 1500, and what this tells us about modern and early modern society. In the process, he achieves many new insights into the development of British national identities, established and 'alternative' religions, literary culture, fraternal organisation and protest movements. He also suggests new ways in which the discipline of archaeology can be perceived - which will delight some practitioners and enrage others."*

* http://www.amazon.co.uk/Druids-History-Ronald-Hutton/dp/1852855339

Hardback. 234x156mm. 320 pages. 28 colour and 77 B&W illustrations. ISBN: 1852855339.

Still waiting for my long-awaited copy...

I'll look out for this.I am currently reading ''Druids:preachers of immortality'' by Anne Ross.

Apologies, a little off topic I'm afraid but The Dig* by John Preston may be of interest, and perhaps relevant in the wider context of archaeological digs. The novel is based on the excavation of the Sutton Hoo burial mound in Suffolk in the summer of 1939.

"The book begins when Sutton Hoo landowner Edith Pretty hires Basil Brown, a self-taught local archaeologist, to excavate the burial mounds on the field by her house. Her husband, who had died suddenly in 1934, always felt there was something inside them: now, as the end of the world draws near, she wants to know if he was right. Brown slowly digs over the field, finding nothing. He almost gives up. Then, in a moment of revelation, he makes a discovery that will change his life - for better or worse.

"Great archaeological finds, however, are as much a reminder of what gets lost as they are of what endures. Inevitably, Sutton Hoo prompts thoughts of death and of our own insignificance. 'All this talk of decay, of obliteration, of any human imprint being swept away, had left me quite unfit for company,' one of Preston's narrators confesses."**

More here at http://www.eadt.co.uk/content/eadt/features/story.aspx?brand=EADOnline&category=Features&tBrand=EADOnline&tCategory=features&itemid=IPED17%20May%202007%2010%3A14%3A46%3A520

* The Dig by John Preston. ISBN 978-0-670-91491-3. pp231. £16.99.

** http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/generalfiction/0,,2078288,00.html

"Scarre reminds us of the inconceivable labour involved in the structures that continue to amaze after four or more millennia. The construction of the enclosures around Avebury required the quarrying of 200,000 tonnes of chalk, but this was dwarfed by the labour demands of Silbury Hill. Containing a third of a million cubic metres of chalk, the great mound is now thought to have originally been a straight-sided polyhedron with up to nine walls. Scarre also reveals new theories concerning Stonehenge, where the surface shaping of some of the stones may have replicated the bark of oak and beech. The great ring could have been a monument for the dead that imitated the wooden dwellings of the living."*

The Megalithic Monuments of Britain & Ireland by Chris Scarre. ISBN 9780500286661. Paperback. 160 pages. RPR of £12.95 though available from Amazon for £9.99.

* http://www.independent.co.uk/arts/books/reviews/article2464170.ece

Picked this up the other day so haven't had a chance to read it yet. Published by Jonathan Cape Limited in 1926. Twelve chapters which include - Avebury: The First Capital of England. The Structure of Archaic England. Mount Silbury. The Long Barrows. Some 400 pages (letterpress on wove paper) thee maps and several B&W illustrations taken from Colt-Hoar's Ancient Wilshire.

Saw another copy recently (cover a bit battered) for the princely sum of £5.99 if anyone's interested.

Quote on page 26: "Hard to tell yet may be told." (Pepys on Stonehenge).

"When the landscape painter John Constable contemplated Stonehenge in 1835, he mused that literal representation of the site had "been often enough done". He was not, however, deterred. Instead, he created something utterly unique - a painting that is strangely illuminated, filled with drama, and which sets human figures against the backdrop of the stones.

"Rosemary Hill's Stonehenge accomplishes something similar. It is not primarily an attempt to answer the riddle of what the stones are, but rather a tribute to the lively assortment of people who have dedicated energy and intellect to interpreting the monument over the past three and a half centuries."*

* http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,2289314,00.html

Mysteries and Discoveries of Archaeoastronomy: From Giza to Easter Island by Giulio Magli

"In the new authoritative study of the growing discipline of archaeoastronomy, Mysteries and Discoveries of Archaeoastronomy: From Giza to Easter Island, Professor Guilio Magli asks, 'Was it an attempt to reproduce the sky on Earth? To bring down the power of the stars to where they could see it, worship it, and use it?'

"The motives of ancient civilisations have often been misconstrued, maligned, or even dismissed. Magli shows the limitations of orthodox archaeology in relation to astronomically based artefacts and examines what led the ancients to construct such magnificent structures as the city of Teotihuacan in the Mexico Valley, the Ceremonial Centre of Chaco Canyon in the United States, the Avebury stone circle in Great Britain, and the great pyramids in Egypt."

More here - http://www.sciencecentric.com/news/article.php?q=09051510-the-role-astronomy-antiquity-examined-new-book

The Gathering Night by Margaret Elphinstone
ISBN 9781847672889


"The Gathering Night, set among the hunter-gatherers of Mesolithic Scotland, is a story of conflict, loss, love, adventure and devastating natural disaster. This pre-historical novel is set deep in our stone-age past, but resonates as a parable of our troubled planet 8000 years on."

More here - http://www.margaretelphinstone.co.uk/

"Nature" would not be graced with a separate word in Mesolithic culture, with the trials and tribulations of these humans co-existing in the same holistic world with animals, rivers, mountains; inextricably linked, not separate. It is Elphinstone's formidable depiction of nature which is the greatest strength of this atmospheric novel. Nature is depicted as both cruel and benign, from the harsh and biting winter in forbidding terrain where the family pull lily-roots from the freezing mud, to a time of plenitude, when birds flutter throughout the land.

"Water and islands are at the heart of her work and here a river runs throughout the narrative; Elphinstone is in her element in depicting the sea flooding into estuaries, white gulls wheeling overhead. Here the river is a metaphor for storytelling, and this indeed is a novel which flows at its own pace, with many voices trickling into its main current. The powers and pitfalls of storytelling are explored and also exemplified; the voices of the multiple narrators oscillate so rapidly that it is difficult to build up fully-developed, three-dimensional characters."

More here -
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/the-gathering-night-by-margaret-elphinstone-1696219.html

Thought I might add this latest of Hutton's to your list, Littlestone. It's about the druids again - how the concept developed and was used "to forge a common past for the newly formed British superstate at the beginning of the 18th century", so says the review in the Fortean Times, who give it 9/10.

Geoffrey Grigson's 1960s guide to touring the countryside (The Shell Country Alphabet) has been republished (see http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/aug/08/shell-country-alphabet-geoffrey-grigson for a review). And here - http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/8627/st_peters_church_clyffe_pypard.html for a little more about Nikolaus Pevsner, Geoffrey Grigson, Paul Nash and John Piper.

"For anyone interested in regional folklore and hidden history this book is very welcome. The author has thoroughly investigated the hidden side of Dorset’s Isle of Portland. Using long out of print and unpublished works by Clara King Warry, who wrote much about the folklore, mythology and archaeology of Portland during the first half of the 20th century, Gary has managed to piece together a forgotten history of the Isle. This paints a very different picture that most people may have of suburban Portland, which is justly famous for its fine quarried limestone and the proud maritime history of two world wars."

Review by Alex Langstone and more details here - http://heritageaction.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/the-spirit-of-portland/

Not actually a book but a DVD (and CD) in which Tom Brooks suggests, in his Prehistoric Geometry in Britain, that, "...prehistoric man navigated his way across England using a crude version of 'sat nav' based on stone circle markers; they (prehistoric man) were able to travel between settlements with pinpoint accuracy thanks to a complex network of hilltop monuments. New research suggests that they were built on a connecting grid of isosceles triangles that 'point' to the next site. Many are 100 miles or more away, but GPS co-ordinates show all are accurate to within 100 metres. This provided a simple way for ancient Britons to navigate successfully from A to B without the need for maps."*

Brooks' research, "...based upon the true position of each unit relative to all others according to the Ordnance Survey National Grid, reveals that all are related geometrically by isosceles triangles (having two sides equal) and projected alignments of remarkable accuracy over great distances. Further, such isosceles triangulation was directed from and focused upon a single, central feature more than 5,000 years old - Silbury Hill on the Marlborough Downs in Wiltshire."**

* http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1213400/Ancient-man-used-stone-sat-nav-navigate-country.html#ixzz0R6gQT2Tr

** http://www.prehistoric-geometry.co.uk/index.html

Littlestone wrote:
Ronald Hutton's latest book, The Druids, "...is the first comprehensive study of what people have thought about the ancient Druids and why. Written in a racy and accessible style,
Ronald Hutton... racy and accessible??? Are you sure??

Must have been sick of the dry and hard going label.

His books are always well researched though, good source books.

moss wrote:
He's a very good writer, saw him at a lecture last year pulling apart the goddess theory; a gentle man is how I would describe him fascinated by his subject. Had some problem with giving the lecture, getting over a brain tumour I think he said, but he said he could'nt hear very well because of it. Which is completely off the subject but Stuart Piggott also wrote a good book entitled "the Druids" 1968 I think which gets back to the subject...
I like Piggott's book, also T D Kendrick's book, no nonsense scholarly works.


coldrumhead wrote:
I'll look out for this.I am currently reading ''Druids:preachers of immortality'' by Anne Ross.
I really like Anne Ross, she's been featuring on the TV program Pagans and Na Ceiltich recently. The book people like least of hers is one I really like, just because she isn't afraid the theorise "Life and Death of a Druid Prince".

Littlestone wrote:
Scarre also reveals new theories concerning Stonehenge, where the surface shaping of some of the stones may have replicated the bark of oak and beech.
Now that really would be of interest to Druids... justifying why people that base their religion on those that orginally worshipped in groves of trees are so obsessed with worshipping in circles of stone....

Authors on Druids I love to hate ... Douglas Munroe.... yeauch

How about a book about the blueprint for the world energy grid , preserved in mostly man made structures,and hidden in a secret location in wales.
The grid,or pattern , is the basis for the siting of all the megalithic structures, and the key to the different forms of monuments that are found.
Due to a chance discovery(rediscovery would be more accurate) this ancient knowledge has come to light once again.

Would this be a book of possible interest.

Wiltshire Heritage Museum’s Book of the Month - http://www.wiltshireheritage.org.uk/library/ is -

Diary of a Dean

Being an account of the
EXAMINATION OF SILBURY HILL
and of
VARIOUS BARROWS AND OTHER EARTHWORKS ON THE DOWNS OF NORTH WILTS

Opened and Investigated in the Months of July & August 1849

By Dean John Merewether

With illustrations

An online edition of the book is here - http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ILcHAAAAQAAJ&dq=silbury%20hill%20merewether&pg=PA3&output=embed

Just got back from London and after much time spent in a couple of second hand shops on Charing Cross Road picked up two books from this 1930s series for not much money (£8 and £10 respectively).

I have had the Yorkshire volume for many years, now got the Berkshire and London/Middlesex ones. Obviously they're more historical interest now than accurate reference books, but they're nicely bound in navy cloth with gilt titles, each have a good gazatteer (up to Saxon period) - worth looking out for as nice things to have anyway.

Interestingly the Berkshire one includes Uffington and Wayland's Smithy, now both in Oxfordshire.

(I also picked up Burl's Brittany book and a great big hardback edition of John Aubrey's "Monumenta Britannica" from the early 1980s).

I've only begun studying but occasionally run across titles to books that I'd love to read, but that haven't appeared in English in the U.S., the supposed standard-bearer of free speech. In fact, some of the books do not seem available in original languages.
Kabira
HR Manager
http://www.recoverybull.com

Hurrah! Just saw this sitting on a shelf today, published 2009, covers Iveragh and the Kerry part of Beara. Quite weighty as you'd imagine!!

If you want this for the rock art entries, you're better off with the Survey of Iveragh from the mid-90's as the vast majority of entries for rock art simply give a reference no. SMR and co-ordinates, with a description line that only consists of something like "see Sheehan etc. 1996".

The photos are very, very nice for the most part and there's even a handful of rock art pics with, wait... side flash! 40 squids in Dubray books.

Wiltshire Heritage Museum, or Devizes Museum as I know it has started to catalogue and digitalise all their books on to the Google library, 5000 so far in five months (it just goes on and on). Whilst they are mostly 'no preview' there's some fascinating stuff that has been fully transcribed.
Links to the Google catalogue on the link below.


http://www.wiltshireheritage.org.uk/library/

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Stone-Worlds-Reflexivity-Archaeology-Publications/dp/1598742191

Just been given this by a friends as a very late birthday pressie. He picked it up secondhand at a music festival. Have put a short review on the Leskernick site.

Not had much chance to look in to book at depth but some interesting theories in it...and it also brings up again the question of 'what is a natural stone and what is a placed stone'

Britain's Portable Antiquity Heritage: Artefact Collecting and the Archaeological Record by Paul Barford and Nigel Swift. ISBN-10: 1843834561. More info here - http://www.amazon.co.uk/Britains-Portable-Antiquity-Heritage-Archaeological/dp/1843834561

Prehistoric Rock Art in Britain: Sermons in Stone by Stan Beckensall ...
Is on a pre-order discount at Amazon @ £13.29 ......

don't be put off by the title, this one oriented to us not Forteans. Britain, Europe and further afield - chapter contents more landscape inclusive than headings indicate
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Haunted-Spaces-Sacred-Places-Supernatural/dp/160163000X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1254675677&sr=1-2

Aw, come on - you just gotta, haven't you?

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Standing-Stones-Photographic-Journey-Megalithic/dp/0500051585/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1254906058&sr=8-2

:)

G x

PS - Apologies if this has been mentioned previously. If it has, didn't find it here!

A good writer, good mate, aswell as one of Julian's old mates, has just written a fine-lookking work exploring the curious notions, embedded to some degrees in archaeology & anthropology, on the ancient and traditional societies where the myth of the 'noble savage' has prevailed, been denounced, and brought back into focus.

War and the Noble Savage is here.

Give it your support!

Light xmas reading for stone people but what on earth were the tories and Thatcher doing at a stone circle AND a stone for birth control which is one you rarely see amongst all these 'fertility' stones........

"101 Things To Do With A Stone Circle covers the things people have believed about and done with stone circles and other ancient sites over the past few hundred years. The list ranges from places of executions to the venue for a rock concert, from marriages to the dining table of an intrepid antiquarian with a head for heights. Some sites have been associated with fairies, the Devil, UFOs, space aliens and visionary experiences, while others have been used for promoting fertility. The cast of characters also includes Druids, Romans, ancient Egyptians, witches and Margaret Thatcher's Tory Government. Ley-lines, murders, ghosts and dowsing all feature, as well as the use of stone circles in rock music, movies and Doctor Who."

http://tinyurl.com/yjv2fny

One of my sons thoughtfully gave me Somerville's Travels as a xmas prezzie. At first glance it looks like a coffee-table book - when you open the pages it is a bit of a treasure. The opening chapter is a journey planner for a 30 mile walk from Land's End to St Ives which takes an inland detour to chun Quoit, Lanyon Quoit and Men-An-Tol. He gives other useful reference books such as Journey to the Stones - guided Walks to the Old Stones of the Land's End Peninsular by Ian McNeil Cooke.

A bit like a walking version the Standing with Stones dvd - Christopher Somerville makes his way north (including northern Ireland) finishing in northern Scotland and Shetland. There is a journey planner with each walk and it would be easy to dip in and out of them if travelling by car.

SEARCH ONLINE FOR OLD BOOKS

http://www.archive.org/index.php
http://www.geometry.net/
http://www.scribd.com/
http://celt.ucc.ie/index.html
http://www.gutenberg.org/catalog/
http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/c/collsize/collsize?summ=all
http://www.ebooksread.com/
http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/search.html
http://www.pearl.arts.ed.ac.uk/

OR OLD MAPS
http://geo.nls.uk/os25inch/

Chalkland: an archaeology of Stonehenge and its region, by Andrew J Lawson.

"Andrew Lawson's credentials to write about Stonehenge and its environs are evident throughout this book. His involvement in excavations and fieldwork in Wessex since the 1960s and twenty years in charge of Wessex Archaeology make him best placed to write an authoritative study of Stonehenge."*

* More here - http://www.oxbowbooks.com/bookinfo.cfm/ID/83153/affiliate/antiquity//Location/Oxbow

Its Tombs, Temples and Their Orientations; Roc in his blog mentions the book, and though it is for abroad and not for the British Isles it looks a very good read, though you can only get secondhand copies.....

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tombs-Temples-Orientations-Michael-Hoskin/dp/0954086716

"This book presents and analyzes the measurements of temples and communal tombs of the Neolithic, Chalcolithic and Bronze Age, carried out during a dozen years of fieldwork in Portugal, Spain, the Balearics, southern France, Corsica, Sardinia, Malta, Sicily, Pantelleria, North Africa and Crete. The evidence is summarized at the end of the book, giving the orientations of some three thousand tombs and temples, a number of which have since been destroyed by mechanized land-clearance. The author concludes that in most regions the monuments faced sunrise, or more generally the sun when it was rising or climbing in the sky. Along the Mediterranean coast of France, however, a reverse sunset custom developed, while in North Africa at least some of the tombs faced downhill. The book concludes with a study of a Minoan cemetery on Crete where all tombs faced moonrise and look towards a mountain on whose peak was a sanctuary probably sacred to a lunar god. "

Only just seen this on the net today.
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/news/090914-rr161release
This is my turf so I`m looking forward to reading this.
There`s a google earth add on thingy here
http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mid=34fe5885270e24b587d843da81b91233
All the best.

William Stukeley's Memoir of Newton

MEMOIRS OF SIR ISAAC NEWTON'S LIFE
William STUKELEY, M.D., F.R.S. 1752
Being some account of his family; & chiefly of the junior part of his life.

Bit off topic but as it's by Stukeley it may be of interest.

http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/view/texts/normalized/OTHE00001

Wonderful, comprehensive book on the archaeology of one part of Southwest Ireland. Contains, inter alia, an excavation report and dating evidence for a Cork stone pair.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Local-Worlds-Settlement-Landscapes-South-west/dp/1848890214/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1264945170&sr=1-1

Megaliths; visiting ancient Britain and Ireland, a book for Japanese readers by Hideharu Yamada.

In Japanese, but with photo captions in English.
http://www.lithos-graphics.com/kyosekiinfo.html

Yamada also has a website with some stunning photographs of megalithic sites in Britain and Ireland (also with captions in English). See -
http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/forum/?thread=55285&message=710987

The View over Atlantis

Measure of Albion- The lost Science of Prehistoric Britain

How the World is Made- Sacred Geometry

Read 'em and be AMAZED!

The Ancient History of (south and north) Wiltshire

Written by Sir Richard Colt Hoare (1758-1833) who commissioned the careful and intensive excavation of the barrows of south Wiltshire by William Cunnington and his two assistants the Parker brothers.

Referring to the speculation by classical scholars of his day, he said
"We speak from facts not theory"

The book is available to look at and read at the Wiltshire Heritage Museum library.

Solving Stonehenge: The New Key to an Ancient Enigma

Published by THAMES & HUDSON. ISBN 978-0-500-05155-9

Book details here -
http://www.solvingstonehenge.co.uk/second_page.html
Related feature here - http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/leisure/5016097.A_midwinter_mystery/

Conceiving God: the Cognitive Origin and Evolution of Religion
By David Lewis-Williams

April fool's day is over, so this is not about what happened before god came on the scene but a book by Lewis- Williams, author of 'The Mind in the Cave' and 'Inside the Neolithic Mind'. Reviewed by that 'godless' philosophical person - A.C.Grayling in the Newstatesman.........


http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2010/04/religion-religious-lewis

ramblings..
The two comments are funny on the article, Grayling used to do an analysis of a particular aspect of thinking on the back page of the Guardian every saturday some years back, miss him ;)..

"Recently published by Oxbow Books is "The Landscape of the Megaliths" by Mark Gillings, Joshua Pollard, David Wheatley & Rick Peterson.

"This covers in detail the results of the excavations that were carried out at Avebury during the period 1997-2003. It also includes much reappraisal of long held ideas about the monuments and must be regarded as essential reading for all pursuing the most current information."*

* Info courtesy of Avebury a present from the past http://www.avebury-web.co.uk/

Not quite out yet but you can pre-order..... to quote from the description;

"Written by two experts with unrivalled information and knowledge of Silbury Hill, and combining scholarly research and readable narrative, this book sets out the archaeological story of Silbury: from an early recognition of its importance to antiquarian and archaeological investigations of the hill."

Sir David Attenborough (Foreword), Jim Leary (Author), David Field (Author)

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Story-Silbury-Hill-Jim-Leary/dp/1848020465

Currently reading Thor Heyerdahls "The Maldive Mystery" which is an amazing book! I had no idea that these little islands had so much ancient heritage. I guess this stuff is everywhere, you just have to know where to look :)

If you havn't heard of Thor, he is well worth a read. Has done some amazing stuff over the years

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thor_Heyerdahl

Has anyone ever read "69 things to do with a dead Princess" by Stuwart Home? I read it about 10years ago and was thinking about it the other day as it has a very odd story line with lots of references to the stone circles near Aberdeen. Now, as a warning, I wouldn't recommend it to anyone easily offended as its about 40% crazy and indepth literary comment, 30% stone circles and scottish landmarks and 30% graphic sex, but it does directly reference Mr Cope and The Modern Antiquarian (not something that I noticed on my first read but based on my newfound favourite website, I noticed it this time round!)

Its a very odd book and pretty hard to read on the bus as the cover is a mosaic of naked women, but I was wondering if anyone had even ever heard of it? It mentions Aubrey Burl, The stone circle; Gordons Early History as well as TMA and has quite an impressive alphabetical list of the SC's in the Aberdeen area.

Europe's Lost World: the rediscovery of Doggerland by Vincent Gaffney, Simon Fitch and David Smith.

"This new book concludes a remarkable programme of archaeological research to discover Doggerland, the enigmatic country which once linked the Yorkshire coast with continental Europe."

CBA Research Report 160. ISBN 978 1 90277177 9. 232pp, 125 full colour illustrations.

Prehistoric Coastal Communities: the Mesolithic in Western Britain by Martin Bell.

"This volume provides ground-breaking new evidence about prehistoric Britain - focusing on the little studied communities of south-west England and Wales."

CBA Research Report 149. ISBN 978 1 902771 64 8. 380pp, 152 illustrations and a CD.

Michael Dames has written a sequel to his first book on Silbury...

Silbury Resolving the Enigma - Michael Dames

"According to English Heritage, 'Silbury's significance is obscure and we can only hope to understand it if we combine our scientific approach with a vision that sees beyond modern-day beliefs'. This book meets that need. Developed from the same author's acclaimed work The Silbury Treasure, here he sets new scientific findings made at Silbury within a framework of religious ideas, associated with the invention of agriculture. Silbury re-emerges as a gigantic pregnant image of the Neolithic harvest goddess, linked to animals reared at the nearby Palisades enclosures and to local landscape features, so delivering an annual First Fruits birth. The recent discovery of a Roman town, built around Silbury, indicates that the Romans merged their own corn goddess, Ceres, with the Neolithic deity. With a survey of Britain's evocative 'Mother Earth'-shaped hills, to which folklore has adhered, Dames also relates Celtic and English traditions of pagan worship to the Silbury prototype. Silbury: Resolving the Enigma is a scholarly, boldly argued, lucid, affectionate book. With more than 150 illustrations, the author demonstrates Silbury's relevance to current environmental concerns. His other books include The Avebury Cycle, Mythic Ireland, Merlin and Wales and Taliesin's Travels. 'This is a colourful, readable and fascinating personal reinterpretation of a unique monument. As a set of hypotheses it is credible, and as a piece of literature it is a joy. Michael Dames knows and loves our land itself at least as well as anybody else alive' - Professor Ronald Hutton, Bristol University."

Just started reading "The Cygnus Mystery" By Andrew Collings. References to alignments at Avebury and all the ancient monuments in Turkey tying in around the globe with a certain star. Bloomin' good too!

It occurs to me (apologies if this has been suggested before) that it would be a useful feature to be able to "add book" to particular areas of the country/counties. There are lots of really good regional books about prehistoric sites and this would enable someone who's new to an area to find out if there are any worth seeking out.

Just a thought.

Cheryl Straffon's "The Earth Mysteries Guide to Ancient Sites In West Penwith", which is a little A5 sized guidebook to stone circles, standing stones, wells, etc has been heavily revised and reprinted after being out of print for quite a few years. It now has all colour pics and new sections on courtyard settlments, hillforts, etc (it's lost the old section on crosses, which are obviously later in date anyway).

Available from Tourist Info (St Ives & Penzance), it's 52pp and only £5.95. Also available from the meyn mamvro website.

http://www.meynmamvro.co.uk/publicat.htm

"John Aubrey and the Advancement of Learning" by William Poole is the accompanying book to the John Aubrey Exhibition at the Bodleian Library in Oxford.

The exhibition runs till 31st October and is highly recommended. John Aubrey is sometimes described as the 'first antiquarian' - famous for visiting (and drawing) Stonehenge and Avebury; he also managed to get to Boscawen-un, Stanton Drew, the Rollrights and Castlerigg - quite a feat when you remember the only form of cross country transport was walking or horsepower.

The book can be obtained at the exhibition and retails around £25

More details here
Bodleian Bookshop

Professor Munakata’s British Museum Adventure by Yukinobu Hoshino

““THE Stonehenge megaliths have been stolen!?” So exclaims Professor Munakata at the outset of a rollicking adventure set at the British Museum, in the form of a manga, or Japanese cartoon.

“The first two episodes of “Professor Munakata’s British Museum Adventure”, in Japanese, are on display at the British Museum until October 23rd. The complete series will be published in English by the British Museum Press in March 2011.”

More here – http://www.economist.com/node/16886045?story_id=16886045&fsrc=rss

A beautiful day outside but I'm waiting in for that elusive butterfly aka 'a gas engineer'.

Am reading Britain 3000 BC by Rodney Castleden - this copy borrowed from North Wiltshire Libraries (Wootton Bassett) but I would very much like to own it. Perhaps considered by some a little out of date now as published 2003, it has clarified and helped me to order some of information I've absorbed since becoming interested in the ancient monuments and the people who built them - he starts by going through the time-line since the end of the last Ice Age up to 3000 BC.

Just read the chapter on 'House and Home' which very much focuses on Orkney. Not a text book, clearly written and illustrated, it is easy and enjoyable to read.

ISBN 0-7509-2693-7

Footnote: Partly due to being temporarily house-bound, I have just read a post by The Sea Cat over on Village Pump; also recommended reading (see Fuck Frank, part 2). I 100% agree - here's to public libraries and BOOKS.

A little less gassing please ; -)

Thanks.

LS

While down in Cornwall this year, I looked out for any archaeology gazetteers to Scilly. Here were three I found:

"Visitor's Guide To Archaeology in Scilly" - Luke Over, illust. J.F. Crussell (A.H. Read & Son, 1974). Although some of the archaeology is a little outdated, this is a nice little A5 size guidebook, divided into an overview of general history and then an island by island gazetteer, with suggested trails for exploring.

"Ancient Monuments of the Isles of Scilly" - Dept of the Environment Official Handbook, B.H. St. J. O'Neil (originally published 1949, third ed 1983). A chronogical overview, 36pp, b&w illustrations/photos.

"Scilly's Archaeological Heritage" - Jeanette Ratcliffe & Charles Johns (Historic Environment Unit, Cornwall CC 2003). Excellent little guidebook, 55pp. General overview and then island by island gazetteer. £4.50 from the Tourist Info in Hugh Town, St Mary's.

"The book was the culmination of twenty years’ study of Semitic and proto-Semitic languages. Allegro hoped it would illuminate the origins of thought, language and religion. People should then be able to better understand where they came from, shed the trappings of religion, and take true responsibility for what they did to each other and their world."

More here - http://johnallegro.org/main/index.php?module=pagemaster&PAGE_user_op=view_page&PAGE_id=15&MMN_position=16:4

Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton Ltd; First edition, second printing edition (May 18, 1970).
ISBN-10: 0340128755
ISBN-13: 978-0340128756

- by Frank Elgee. Rather lovely book from 1930, big hardback thing with illustrations of beakers and jet beads, etc.

Uffington White Horse and its landscape
ISBN 0-947816-77-1
Published by Oxford Archaeology
Thames Valley Landscapes Monograph No 18


I received my order from Oxbow books today of the Oxford Archaeology book "Uffington White Horse and its landscape". Looks great; chapter 8 is specifically about Tower Hill which lies 4 km south of White Horse Hill at the northern end of the chalk ridge south of Wayland's Smithy and the Ridgeway. It lies withing a triangle formed by three Iron age forts - Uffington Castle, Hardwell Camp and Alfred's Castle.

"In March 1993 a local schoolteacher, Mrs Liz Philips found a dozen bronze axes and other objects while walking her dog along a farm track which ran up through a ploughed field at the northern end of the ridge known as Tower Hill ..."

She reported her find to the landowner, the Ashmolean Museum and the Wantage Museum and the site was subsequently visited by Oxfordshire County Archaeologist, Paul Smith. The hoard also includes a socketed bronze axe found by a member of the public, also in 1993 (reported to Oxfordshire County Museum Service).

Authors of the Uffington book are David Miles, Simon Palmer. Gary Lock, Chris Gosden and Anne Marie Cromarty.

(I've entered the above post under 'miscellaneous"/Tower Hill)

Carving a Future for British Rock Art: New Directions for Research, Management and Presentation.

Edited by Tertia Barnett and Kate Sharpe.

”Over the last few years, the ways in which we perceive and document rock art have shifted irreversibly. Prehistoric rock art played little part in the development of British and Irish archaeology and was not recognised until the 19th century, when its equivalents in Scandinavia and the Iberian Peninsula were already well known. Previously considered a fringe activity and the work of amateur archaeologists, over the last 30 years the situation has improved considerably, and the appearance of books such as this signify the change.”

More here - http://www.oxbowbooks.com/bookinfo.cfm/ID/86309//Location/Oxbow

Also had for Christmas The Tomb Builders In Wales by Steve Burrow.
Very, very good.

An Archaeological History of Japan, 30,000 B.C. to A.D.

"An Archaeological History of Japan firmly engages post-processual theory with Asian archaeology and the book deserves to be widely read and debated for its contribution to both the prehistory of East Asia and to archaeological theory in general."—Asian Perspectives.

"Of considerable interest to anthropologists, archaeologists, and ethnographers concerned with theory and practice. Those interested in world archaeology in general will appreciate the concise presentation."—Choice.

“A notion widely shared among the Japanese is that a unique culture has existed uninterrupted on the archipelago since the first human settlements more than 30,000 years ago. The idea of a continuous shared Japanese culture, often described as "Japanese-ness," is epitomized by material items ranging from Zen Buddhist stone gardens and tea ceremony equipment to such archaeological artifacts as the prehistoric Jomon clay figurines. An Archaeological History of Japan challenges this notion by critically examining archaeological evidence as well as the way it has been interpreted.”

More here - http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/book/13773.html

The Prehistory of Japan by Gerard J. Groot.

First published 60 years ago by Columbia University Press, The Prehistory of Japan by Gerard J. Groot remains an invaluable reference work for anyone interested in the prehistory of Japan.

More here.

Not sure this is still in print - I got my copy browsing in a Castlebar bookshop en-route to Dooncarton - but nevertheless an excellent volume with many colour photos, plans and equally informative text from Carleton Jones focussing upon Ireland's megalithic tombs.

Temples of Stone - Exploring The Megalithic Tombs of Ireland
Carleton Jones
Published 2007 by The Collins Press, Cork
ISBN 13: 9781905172054

Just Started "Stairway to the Stars" and it kicks off with a pretty great section on Stonehenge. Bit heavy going in places, but looks like its going to a good read :)

A new book by Philip I Powell

https://www.createspace.com/3515641

There's some great archaeological books for sale here:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/shops/storefront/index.html?ie=UTF8&marketplaceID=A1F83G8C2ARO7P&sellerID=A2YSM4BMWGK6T9

It's nowt to do with me - I'm not on commission or owt! :D I found out about them, and believe me, if I could afford 'em, you'd not have known about 'em! ;)

G x

See - http://heritageaction.wordpress.com/2011/02/17/17th-century-stonehenge-book-discovered/ Looks interesting, although it cant be in ‘Old English’ if it’s 17th century.

"New Rock Art book due out soon
If you are a fan of Alan walker and Brian Smith, then you probably already have a copy of their book 'Rock Art and Ritual Volume 1: Interpreting the Prehistoric Landscape of the North Yorks Moors'. This book described the discovery of newly exposed features of the moorland above Robin Hoods Bay in North Yorkshire (UK), which were revealed following a devastating fire in 2003. The authors paid particular attention to the curiously marked prehistoric stones, with their interpretations of the carvings and insights into prehistoric life.
     The second volume, entitled 'Rock art and Ritual Volume Two: Mindscapes of Prehistory', will be published at the end of March and builds on the hugely successful first book. Alan Walker is quoted as saying "The rock art we were looking at in volume one was speaking in a language that really was lost as land division and organised society developed. Whilst we can't claim to have unravelled the whole picture, we feel that we really raised some issues that have never been tackled before and which should open new lines of debate and research.""

http://www.stonepages.com/news/archives/004254.html

I posted this under the wrong thread previously.

It's a novel:

http://www.lep.co.uk/lifestyle/book_review_the_stonehenge_legacy_by_sam_christer_1_2954464

"Stone Voices - The Search For Scotland" by Neal Ascherson (published by Granta).

Starting with the stones of Kilmartin, Kintraw and Oban it draws you beautifully through its 305 pages. It is a compulsive read. From our ancient forebears down to Thatcher and mine closures, Stone Voices presents a fascinating and unput-downable read. It weaves a beautiful narrative from the many threads which make up the tapestry of Scotland's history and present. Truly a joy.

Journey through the Ice Age by Paul G. Bahn and Jean Vertut.

“The cave art and carved objects left by our Ice-Age ancestors have enthralled all who have seen them with their sophistication and sheer beauty. They provide a tantalizing glimpse of our ancient past and form our most direct link with the beliefs and preoccupations of Palaeolithic people – highlighting their accute powers of observation, their astonishing mastery of a wide range of artistic techniques and their sophisticated adaption to, and incorporation of, the natural shapes of the walls, bones and stones on which they drew.”

Beautifully illustrated with photographs by the late Jean Vertut and others. 240 pages. Twelve chapters, Notes, a Bibliography and an Index. ISBN 1 84188 030 2 or on Google books via the link above.

Heathrow Terminal 5 Excavations Volume 2

The second and final volume on the excavations at Heathrow Terminal 5 was launched yesterday at The Royal Society, London. Guests from BAA, who run Heathrow Airport, and the heritage sector gathered to celebrate the successful conclusion of one the biggest and most innovative archaeological projects ever undertaken in the UK.

Over 70 hectares were excavated in advance of the new terminal by an Oxford Wessex Archaeology joint venture ‘Framework Archaeology.’ Key parts of the project were an explicitly research-led approach and new high-tech ways of working. The project was awarded the 2008 British Archaeological Award for Best Project.

Speaking on behalf of the Boards of Directors of Oxford and Wessex Archaeology Professor Geoffrey Wainwright and congratulated both BAA and archaeologists from across the sector for the successful conclusion of what he described as a ’massive endeavour.’

The book is now available to buy from Oxbow Books.

http://www.wessexarch.co.uk/blogs/news/2011/03/31/heathrow-terminal-5-book-launched

G x

The Rollright Stones and The Men Who Erected Them by T H Ravenhill.

"First published in 1926 (second edition 1932) The Rollright Stones by T H Ravenhill packs into a mere 63 pages a wealth of information on the Rollright Stones."

More and cover pic here.

Prehistoric Sites of Breconshire by George Children and George Nash - Logaston Press.

Still working my way through the book - lots of good stuff / info on sites to visit etc with a very comprehensive gazateer.

The New Antiquarians: 50 years of archaeological innovation in Wessex

"Edited by Rowan Whimster

For many people, Wessex means Stonehenge, Avebury and the other iconic monuments of prehistory. In reality its chalkland landscapes have played host to a far longer and richer sequence of communities – from Palaeolithic hunters to Iron Age farmers and Roman citizens; from Anglo-Saxon settlers and medieval merchants to the navvies who built the Kennet & Avon Canal and the Australian soldiers who trained for the trenches of the First World War.

In 2008, to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Council for British Archaeology’s Wessex group, archaeologists gathered in Southampton to review what we have learnt from the huge amount of research carried out in the region during the past 50 years and to identify the challenges for the next half-century. The conference was also a chance for those involved to tell the exciting story of discovery from their own, personal angle.

The contributors to this volume include many of the UK’s most influential archaeologists of the later 20th century, making this book an overview not only of the history of Wessex, but of the development of archaeological thinking and techniques during this period. Interspersed amongst these papers are profiles of the region’s most influential sites and the memories of some of its leading characters."

More: http://www.britarch.ac.uk/books/whimster2011

G x

East Asian Archaeoastronomy: Historical Records of Astronomical Observations of China, Japan and Korea, by Zhentao Xu, David W. Pankenier, and Yaotiao Jiang.

“The 2001 edition of Essex Archaeology and History (published by the Society at the Museum in Colchester Castle) contains over fifteen articles, including one on the Prehistoric settlement and burials at Elms Farm, Heybridge by M Atkinson and S Preston, and the Bronze Age enclosure at Springfield Lyons in its landscape context by Nigel Brown. ”Brown states that, "Despite the canalisation of the Chelmer in the 18th century and more recent drainage works, the river still floods each winter to the east of Chelmsford in the vicinity of the Cursus. The Springfield Lyons causewayed enclosure would have provided a panoramic view of the monument in the valley below.”

More here.

"Shropshire - An Archaeological Guide" - Michael Watson (2002 Shropshire Books). 108pp.

General guidebook to Shropshire's archeaology, from the Bronze Age to Medieval town and church.

Nicely presented, with colour pics throughout. There are 14 Bronze Age sites (including Mitchell's Fold and Hoarstones circles) and 13 Iron Age sites covered. The Iron Age section features good aerial photos and plans of the principle hillforts in Shropshire.

The author was (is?) Head of Archaeology for Shropshire County Council.

by Dave Bangs.

Lots on the archaeology of the Downs, and a trove of other historical info. A must-have for those interested in the area...

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Freedom-Roam-Guide-Brighton-Downs/dp/095486381X

Prehistoric Britain – The Stonehenge Enigma by Robert John Langdon.

Review here - http://www.express.co.uk/posts/view/249439/Secrets-of-the-stones

VISITING THE PAST: A Guide To Finding And Understanding Britain's Archaeology by Gillian Hovell

“A step-by-step introduction to Britain's history and what life was like from the earliest days of human habitation through to the World Wars is presented in this publication. Then many of the archaeological sites and links with the past, through buildings and other structures and much earlier remains are explored with notes and advice on what to look out for. This is a useful guide to the historical remnants that are to be found throughout the country. 66 b/w and 32 colour photos. 176 pages.”

http://www.ianallanpublishing.com/visiting-the-past-a-guide-to-finding-and-understanding-britain-s-archaeology.html

Gathering Time: dating the early Neolithic enclosures of southern Britain and Ireland, “...is a research project funded by English Heritage and the Arts and Humanities Research Council. A monograph by Alasdair Whittle, Alex Bayliss and Frances Healy that marks the completion of this eight-year project is published by Oxbow Books.”

More here.

Fascinating book describing the fort during it's various stages by G. M. Fraser. Published 1927.

SOLVING STONEHENGE: The New Key to an Ancient Enigma by Anthony Johnson.

Not a book but a fascinating research report, available online here -

http://services.english-heritage.org.uk/ResearchReportsPdfs/109_2010WEB.pdf

By David Field and Trevor Pearson.

What EH excels at. Let's hope they'll still have prehistory and research capabilities left in future after the cuts kick in, but it's not looking hopeful.

John Matthews, The Druid Source Book from the earliest times to the present day (Blandford Press, 1997).

Writing in The Guardian on 15 June Peter Forbes reports that -

“The Cro-Magnons were the creators of the cave paintings at Lascaux and Altamira – the ice age hunter gatherers whose art astounds us ("We have learned nothing," said Picasso, after seeing Lascaux). They were modern humans who entered Europe only about 40,000 years ago, and there, despite the hostile ice age environment, created the first artistically sophisticated culture. But that wasn't the end of human evolution. Modern genomics has now shown us that biological evolution actually accelerated from this point on, especially since the beginning of farming 10,000 years ago.

“Stringer is most concerned with the period from the emergence of Homo sapiens in Africa, around 195,000 years ago, to their arrival in Europe and the subsequent demise of the Neanderthals (who had left Africa hundreds of thousands of years before). The archaeological record shows Homo sapiens in Africa several times on the verge of a cultural breakthrough, but this is not consolidated until their arrival in Europe. Stringer writes: "It is as though the candle glow of modernity was intermittent, repeatedly flickering on and off again."

“Last year, the Neanderthal Genome Project, led by the Swedish biologist Svante Pääbo, finally established that modern humans in Europe and Asia (but not Africa) have some admixture of Neanderthal genes, thus ending decades of speculation. And in December last year the same team produced a total surprise: a genomic analysis of human remains from a cave in Denisova, southern Siberia, which proved to be genetically distinct from all known human types. The team declined at this stage to give the find a Linnean species name, but, by analogy with the Neanderthals, named it Denisovan after the location. The actual Denisovan specimens in Siberia were 30-50,000 years old, and the type predated both modern humans and Neanderthals.

"Apart from having what is probably a new species to fit into the pattern of human evolution, the big shock of the Denisovans is that they also have contributed something to the modern human stock in Melanesia (the islands north of Australia that include Papua New Guinea). We now see a pattern emerging of interbreeding between modern humans and earlier types: Neanderthals in Europe and Asia and Denisovans in Melanesia. There will surely be further finds. Especially interesting is East Asia, first peopled by Homo erectus as long as 1.7m years ago.”

Published today, The Origin of Our Species by Chris Stringer.

Format : Hardback
ISBN: 9781846141409
Size : 153 x 234mm
Pages : 352
Published : 20 Jun 2011
Publisher : Allen Lane

Published in 2008 Wiltshire, A Journeyman’s Tale (think this might have been mentioned before but can’t find it) by Eric Crook.

“IN A modest house in Swindon, an 86-year-old man formulates exquisitely-detailed theories that turn conventional Wiltshire archaeology on its head.
“If retired builder Eric Crook is right – and his belief that he’s right is unshakeable – the remains of a neolithic princess have lain deep beneath Silbury Hill for more than 4,000 years.”

More here - http://www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/news/9107944.The_mystery_at_Silbury_Hill__deepens/

I bought this yesterday as secondhand, (£3.50) the price at £20 is a bit prohibitive otherwise. The photos are very good, the thesis of the sexuality of stones is explored, to me at least a well worn theme, and the emphasis is on the priapic of standing stones.. But she has read Julian Cope, Aubrey Burl, Richard Bradley and Michael Dame.

The authors spent three years hunting out 'Britain's sexually inspired sites' not all of them stones of course. It's coffee book style but fascinating, the stone phallus found at Knowth is something I hadn't seen before, it is an object rather than a symbol on stone, (Dame's mentions similar stuff found round Windmill Hill I think and of course Grimes Graves). Not sure I follow the trend of thought that says rockart is all sexually inspired but given than it was found with all those beautifully decorated stones http://www.megalithicireland.com/Knowth.htm..... symbolism can mean many things.

Birth, death and sex tied up with fertility, renewal and rebirth are always ongoing topics; from the 'womb to the tomb' is one to think on about here I found Cuween Hill tomb which should
http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/site/206/fairy_knowe.html
properly be called tomb of the dogs for the 24 dog skulls there, and Kilmartin valley which I am reading up at the moment and which I want to visit in the future, has the Dunchraigraig Cairn on TMA and this video gives some idea of the smallness of the chamber inside.... http://stonetapes.blogspot.com/2009/09/dunchraigaig-cairn-kilmartin-scotland.html

JC describes it thus 'a mother slit in the side of the big cairn belly'

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Landscapes-Desire-Catherine-Tuck/dp/0750929391

So there I was going to be miffy about this book, but in reality have been on a virtual mind exploration of both TMA and the book - so yes its a good book ;)

Old England. A Pictorial Museum by Charles Knight (1791–1873). Page 9 has two illustrations of Avebury ‘restored’ and two plans, one showing Silbury. Page 10 discusses Avebury and the surrounding area, with references to Aubrey, Stukeley and Colt Hoar.

Glyn Daniel: "The Prehistoric Chamber Tombs of England and Wales" (1950 Cambridge University Press)

Nice hardback book, although rather out of date it contains an excellent descriptive "inventory" and some nice black and white photographic plates and lots of plans. 256pp.

- Robert Harris (2003 Sigma Leisure).

Useful book of 26 walks (distances between 4 and 10 miles) to some of Wales' best known prehistoric sites, as well as some more obscure ones. Includes route details, but needs to be accompanied by an OS map to be useful in that respect.

Nicely written by an enthusiast, with lots of black and white lines drawings. 181pp.

The Beginnings of Japanese Art by Namio Egami.
Features the Nanakado Stone ‘Sundial’ in Towada, Akita Prefecture (late Jomon Period) which was buried under volcanic ash for some 2,000 years before being excavated.

Sacred Circles: Prehistoric Stone Circles of Wales - Julian Heath (2010, Llygad Gwalch)

Useful general introduction to Welsh stone circles, featuring 34 of the stone circles in the country, from the well-known ones like Cerrig Duon, Penmaenmawr, etc to some very obscure ones - including Llorfa, which I'd never even heard of. It aims to "encourage you not just to read about the circles, but to go out and visit them". Sounds like a winning statement of intent.

136pp and several pages of colour photos, a neat gazeteer including the author's own experiences, perhaps rather too honest in places:

Crugiau Bach - This circle is located above the village of Llanwrthwl, near Llandrindod Wells, but I am not sure how one reaches it.

Also includes a decent bibliography for further exploration and namechecks a few websites - including this one!

All in all well worth picking up. Bought new for £7.50 in Cardiff today.

“The Bronze Age barrows at Greenwich are old, but they are not the most ancient ritual site to be found in London. In 2010, archaeologists took a closer look at a group of wooden posts jutting out of the Thames mud near Vauxhall Bridge. These posts, originally about the size of telegraph poles, can be seen at low tide in front of the MI6 building. They were found to be over 6,000 years old, making them by far the oldest structure ever found in London, erected thousands of years before the stones of Stonehenge were set into place.”

Simon Webb's book, Unearthing London: The Ancient World Beneath the Metropolis, is out now. More here - http://www.guardian.co.uk/travel/2011/aug/12/londons-ancient-history

"The Green Roads of England"

by R. Hippisley Cox (first published 1914)

24 illustrations by W.W. Collins; 8 maps; and 87 plans. Much in there concerning Avebury and hillforts.

I found this little gem yesterday - a facsimile copy published by The Lost Library (ISBN 9781906621056).

Edward Thomas mentions this author in the front note of his book The Icknield Way - thanking him for his help and kindness.

"An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments of Brecknock (Brycheiniog) - Part i: Later Prehistoric Monuments and Unenclosed Settlements to 1000 A.D." Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (1997)

Absolutely beautiful hardback book, essentially Coflein (for Breconshire) in paper form.

Has comprehensive lists and details for Breconshire's: Cave Archaeology, Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic sites, Neolithic Court Tombs, Round Cairns and Barrows of the Bronze Age, Stone Circles and Stone Settings, Standing Stones, Burned Mounds, Unenclosed Settlements, Crannog (and some later things like inscribed stones). Includes lots of "lost" and destroyed sites.

329pp, 9 colour plates and 174 B&W illustrations, plans etc.

100% worth finding a second-hand copy if you're interested in South Wales' prehistory, despite being a few years old.

…standing stones, earthworks, springs and wells,.. Aubrey, Stukeley, … the very readable Alexandra Walsham’s The Reformation of the Landscape: Religion, Identity, and Memory in Early Modern Britain and Ireland (Oxford University Press, 2011).

http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Pwuc6n66U9IC&lpg=PP1&dq=walsham%20The%20Reformation%20of%20the%20Landscape%3A%20Religion%2C%20Identity%2C%20and%20Memory%20in%20Early%20Modern%20Britain%20and%20Ireland&pg=PA20#v=onepage&q&f=false

Just picked up a copy of - Prehistoric Wiltshire (an illustrated guide) by Bob Clarke. £14.99 - 125 pages.

Have only had chance for a quick flick through - looks good. Lots of colour photos!! The foreword is by Francis Pryor.

"Using wide-ranging examples and compelling images to support his often controversial theses, including the assertion that the past is a renewable resource, Cornelius Holtorf merges archaeological and cultural theory to take readers on an erudite tour of these intersections. Deliberately blurring the borders between past people and present meanings, this ambitious project seeks no less than the redefinition of the term archaeology. Equal parts amusing, infuriating, provocative and thought-provoking, this work will interest students and teachers in archaeology, anthropology, cultural studies and human geography, as well as professionals in heritage management and museums."

http://www.citeulike.org/user/kiaz/article/371049

"Indiana Jones. Lara Croft. Archaeologist as folk hero, detective, treasure hunter. The meaning of things below the surface. The life history of Stonehenge. Las Vegas' Luxor Hotel. Copies of artifacts as contemporary kitch. The connections between archaeology and contemporary culture are endless. Cornelius Holtorf merges archaeological and cultural theory to take readers on an erudite tour of these intersections, using wide-ranging examples and compelling images to support his often controversial theses. Deliberately blurring the borders between past people and present meanings, this ambitious project seeks no less than the redefinition of the term _archaeology._ Equal parts amusing, infuriating, and provocative, this work will interest students and teachers in archaeology, anthropology, cultural studies and human geography, as well as professionals in heritage management and museums. "

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0759102678/citeulike00-21

This is not a new book but definitely new to the ancient history section of my local library.

Ancient Ireland - Life before the Celts: written by Laurence Flanagan in 1998

A clearly written but modest book with black & white illustrations rather than photographs. The chapter on Passage Tombs has illustrated examples of "motifs that constitute the repertoire of passage tomb art".

http://archaeology.about.com/od/regionalstudie1/fr/flanagan.htm

I believe Laurence Flanagan has since died.

Another one (I think) to add to the list -

The History of Ancient Britain by Neil Oliver (BBC books).

I was so impressed when watching this series last year I bought the DVDs and the book! I have re-watched the series and am now finishing the book. Like the series the book is very interesting and well worth a read.

Not strictly TMA-ish, but a friend at work lent me this recently and I loved it. For TMAers who like a nice map (Jane, TheEternal, Scubi) this is a book I would recommend enormously. It's basically about obsession, but also throws in some fascinating map-related stuff. And has made me re-evaluate my opinion of the Landranger series (as I'm an Explorer kid, me).

As an aside, it namechecks The Modern Antiquarian and Julian, and has a very funny chapter that revolves partly around the alignment of Midsummer Boulevard in Milton Keynes with the midsummer sunrise ( I think something similar was mentioned on here recently in connection with Marlborough?). I also never knew that Milton Keynes has an open-air tree cathedral, built to the same scale and plan as the floor plan of Norwich cathedral. How good is that? In Milton Keynes!

"if you can sit and read a good map like others read Heat or Hello!, then this book is for you"

On the back of listening online to Tim Prevett's talk about Roads &Trackways of North Wales I ordered the book from Amazon for £12-99 (received earlier today). It includes a section on prehistoric trackways, Roman roads, roads and trackways of Pilgrimage, and Drove roads. Also covers Anglesey which I have been meaning to visit for such a long while. Am mentally planning trip.

Great little reference book with maps.

Ancient Stones on Old Postcards - Jerry Bird

I recently had this as a present (thanks Karen!) and have only had chance for a quick flick through. Looks very good. A selection of Edwardian postcards mainly from 1900 to 1915. lots of well known and less well known images.

Well worth getting.

This looks interesting. Anyone read it yet?

http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/publications/history-aerial-photography-archaeology/

This looks interesting. Anyone read it yet?

http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/publications/history-aerial-photography-archaeology/

"The Meeting of the Tracks - Rock Art In Ancient Wales" - John Sharkey (2004 Gwasg Carreg Gwalch).

Handy book on Welsh rock art, as far as I can tell not an area well-covered otherwise (even Stan Beckensall generally seems to avoid Wales, except for "biggies" like Bryn Celli ddu).

Includes recent (up to 2004) discoveries by C-PAT.

pp148, b&w illustrations throughout. Barclodiad y Gawres, Bryn Celli Ddu, Ty Illtud, Llywel and Blaenawen have their own chapters, also a good site-list/gazetteer of 45 Welsh rock art sites.

Includes some post-Roman material.

Looks interesting and not too expensive.


The Western Brecon Beacons: The Archaeology of Mynydd Du and Fforest Fawr by David K. Leighton. ISBN 978-1-871184-43-3, 180pp, £14.95 or £13.50 for Friends

http://heritageofwalesnews.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/western-brecon-beacons-archaeology-of.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed:+HeritageOfWalesNews+(Heritage+of+Wales+News)

William Gowland: The Father of Japanese Archaeology, by Victor Harris and Kazuo Goto.

ISBN-13 9780714124209 and ISBN-10 0714124206. The Wikipedia entry on Gowland is also interesting. See also The Prehistory of Japan by Gerard J. Groot.

Modern Avebury by Ronald Hutton. 32 in the Stonehenge and Avebury Revised Research Framework (SARRF) by Wessex Archaeology.

Wessex Archaeology is pleased to announce that the new draft research
agenda for the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site is now
publicly available for consultation via the SARRF website:

http://www.wessexarch.co.uk/projects/wiltshire/stonehenge-avebury-rrf

The agenda is supported by a revised resource assessment for Avebury and an update for Stonehenge, which are also available via the website.

Wessex Archaeology is being funded by English Heritage to manage the
preparation of this document and coordinate voluntary contributions from
professionals and academics with expert knowledge of the World Heritage
Site.

The project team is keen to receive feedback from colleagues and the
wider public regarding the content of the current texts. Please email
your comments and suggestions to [email protected]

Please also feel free to disseminate to anyone you feel would be
interested in commenting on the agenda or the resource assessments.

Some Avebury resource assessment papers remain outstanding, but will be uploaded to the website to view as soon as they are received.

Consultation will close in September, after which all comments received
will be carefully considered and reflected in the final revised Research
Framework documents. We appreciate your time in responding to this
consultation, and in making an important contribution to help guide
future work at the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site.

By Richard Havers (Haynes, 2009).

Stone Circles (Mysteries of the Ancient World) (1997) - Aubrey Burl £1.99
Recently picked it up in a charity shop for £1.00
Only 40 pages but with lots of colour photos and a brief but interesting overview of the stone circles of Britain and Ireland.
This is a really good book for the general reader who has just started to take an interest in stone circles. Well worth my £1.00 coin!

http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=iVjGp_ncKxAC

About fossil sea urchins being found in prehistoric graves...

I think I might make it my christmas present to myself :)

Maybe something else for a stocking filler-

The Old Ways: A Journey on Foot by Robert Macfarlane.

“Macfarlane's search in this book is for the ancient routes that criss-cross the landscape – mainly in Britain, but with occasional forays to more exotic spots. So we meander with Macfarlane not just along the old tracks of the Icknield Way and the Ridgeway, but also, more fleetingly, on "a branch line of the most famous pilgrimage route of them all, the Camino de Santiago" and on Buddhist trails in the eastern Himalayas, exploring the links between topography and belief. The subtitle of the book is "A Journey on Foot", but in reality it is not one journey, but many, and not all are on foot: some of the best passages are about the old seapaths and ocean roads linking the islands of the Outer Hebrides with Norway, Iceland and Orkney. Like the pathways that weave the countryside together, there is no central spine to this book. Instead it is held together by a tight matrix of ideas about "the compact between walking and writing", and how roads bind us to the land, and to our past.

“The poet and walker Edward Thomas (1878-1917) is a constant presence. It was his book on the Icknield Way that first led Macfarlane to his theme, and Macfarlane is fascinated by Thomas's idea of how an ancient road can be part of a ghost world "secretly sharing the landscape with the living" where you can connect with the thoughts, feelings and stories of previous walkers along the same footpaths: "walking as seance". He writes how "in the dusk of the Holloways, these pasts felt excitingly alive and co-existent – as if time had somehow pleated back on itself". Like Thomas, he is in love with the notion "that history issues from geography in the same way that water issues from a spring".”

I've just self published my second books of photos. If you like my photos on here you'll more than likely enjoy enjoy it.

http://www.blurb.co.uk/bookstore/detail/3874087

"Exploring The Islands Of Scotland" by Julian Holland

Borrowed this lovely book from the library and have just renewed it. Full of information and stunning photographs - a coffee table book I suppose but in the best possible sense.

Just been reading up on the Outer Hebrides - I didn't know for example that Pobull Fhinn stone circle and Barpa Langass burial mound are the oldest surviving stone structures in the Outer Hebrides. Does mean North Uist was populated before Callanish was built?

"Like the outposts it describes it is awash with a remarkable profusion of wildlife and history, mountains and sea" Scottish Field

Oxford University Press (2013, although actually out at the tail-end of 2012).

Up to date thoughts from Sir Barry, based on recent archaeological finds and scientific evidence, covering the period from the earliest Paleolithic arrivals on these shores up to 1100 AD. 553pp, illustrated throughout, including plentiful colour photos. Includes an extensive "further reading" list as well.

Covering such a huge period, it's obviously going to be an overview rather than a detailed study of particular aspects.

Can't wait to get stuck into this, to be honest.

These two books are probably not on the market, though 'classic' in terms of information.

1) Whittle, A., Pollard, J. and Grigson, C. 1999. The harmony of symbols: the Windmill Hill causewayed enclosure. Oxford: Oxbow Books. Gives the full and interesting account of the Alexander Keiller excavations (and other excavations) on Windmill Hill.

2) Sacred Mound, Holy Rings: Silbury Hill and the West Kennet Palisade Enclosures - A Later Neolithic Complex in North Wiltshire (Oxbow Monographs in Archaeology) [Paperback] A.Whittle with contributions by J.Best.. £46 quid on Amazon if you are not boycotting..

The causewayed enclosure at Windmill Hill was excavated by Alexander Keiller, and there are some fascinating insights into the bones found in the excavation, lost my copy sadly....

Time's Anvil: England, Archaeology and the Imagination by Richard Morris.

The ground beneath our feet is made up of layers upon layers of history, the accumulated evidence of human existence from the millennia of prehistory to the hours of yesterday. These pasts are vertiginous, ever-expanding and engulfing, and it is this dizzying panorama of the vast, tangled mass of what has gone before that Richard Morris sets out to map in Time's Anvil. For Morris, this book is an "expedition" into the past, and as such it is both expansive and singular. But Time's Anvil is also an impassioned history and defence of archaeology, a history of humanity in England, and a heartfelt meditation on transience and mortality.

Visions, Patterns and the Shaping of the Mind in Prehistoric Times by Peter S. Wells

http://blogcritics.org/books/article/book-review-how-ancient-europeans-saw/?


Quite a good review of this American? book, I suspect a bit like 'Mind in the Cave', anyway the review gives food for thought....

"The Guide To Mysterious Loch Ness" by Geoff Holder (2007 Tempus)

A rather fine book covering lots of sites in the area around Inverness and Loch Ness, includes folkore, "paranormal" stuff, prehistory, sites of historical interest, very readable and basically a narrative gazetteer.

Well worth looking for if you're getting to know the area around Loch Ness (Drew).

Two novels with only a small link to anything megalithic but I like them very much so thought I'd mention them in case anyone else might be interested.

The Testament of Gideon Mack by James Robertson - I've read a few of his books now and like them a lot. Gideon Mack is my favourite though. The testament of a faithless minister, centring on his disappearance and reappearance 3 days later. The book starts off with his encounter with a standing stone that has suddenly appeared in the nearby wood. The book makes reference to Robert Kirk and his book 'The Secret Commonwealth of Elves, Fauns and Fairies'. Stones, folklore and meetings with the devil, I can't recommend this enough.

Thomas the Rhymer by Ellen Kushner - I was a bit nervous about reading this one, as the legends of Thomas the Rhymer are favourites of mine. It's not the most in depth story and the book doesn't really go anywhere but for me, it's hard to imagine a better novel about Thomas. If you have any interest in the folklore surrounding Thomas the Rhymer, the Eildon Hills near Melrose and his meeting with the Queen of Elfland at the Eildon tree, this book is well worth looking for.

Trethevy Quoit: Cornwall’s Megalithic Masterpiece by Roy Goutte.

“This excellent and thoughtful book gives a somewhat different explanation of the construction and subsequent history of the prehistoric Trethevy Quoit burial chamber in Cornwall. The author, Roy Goutte, has spent many hours studying the chamber first hand and has come to his own fascinating conclusion as to how the cromlech arrived in its present form. The reader is introduced, step-by-step, to the author’s observations and theories through historical references, photographs, diagrams and several model reconstructions of this Cornish ‘Jewel in the Crown’ structure from the Neolithic (and how it may have originally looked). His findings are thorough and convincing with certain aspects truly ground-breaking; it would take an even more thorough investigation to successfully argue against the possibilities he advances.”

More here.

Ice Age art: arrival of the modern mind, a catalogue compiled by Jill Cook, Senior Curator in the Department of Prehistory and Europe at the British Museum, to accompany the Ice Age art exhibition there.

“This ground-breaking book explores the extraordinary sculpture and drawings created during the last European Ice Age, between 40,000 and 10,000 years ago – the oldest known figurative art in the world.”

More here.

Though not really that much connected to megaliths I have really enjoyed these two books by Ronald Turnbull. I like looking at the different rocks/stones that are used in various stone circles, chambered cairns, etc but my knowledge is pretty poor as to what each type actual is. I find some geology books a bit hard work but these two are quite easy going with some lovely photos. One covers coastal geology (mainly south of the border) and the another the mountains.

Sandstone and Sea Stacks: A Beachcomber's Guide to Britain's Coastal Geology
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sandstone-Sea-Stacks-Beachcombers-Britains/dp/0711232288/ref=la_B002IYV75S_1_17?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1370871021&sr=1-17

Granite and Grit: A Walker's Guide to the Geology of British Mountains
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Granite-Grit-Walkers-Geology-Mountains/dp/071123180X/ref=la_B002IYV75S_1_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1370870508&sr=1-4

Architecture, Regional Identity and Power in the Iron Age Landscapes of Mid Wales: The Hillforts of North Ceredigion by Toby Driver.

"This is a study of the Iron Age hillforts of north Ceredigion (Cardiganshire), mid Wales. Over one hundred diverse and unusual hillforts and defended enclosures are known in this topographically distinctive landscape, framed between the west coast of Cardigan Bay and the eastern high ground of the Cambrian Mountains. This new research sheds light on their architecture, chronology and the dynamic use of the regional terrain in later prehistory, reaching conclusions that have resonance for the wider study of British hillforts."

Silbury Hill: The Largest Prehistoric Mound in Europe. Edited by Jim Leary, David Field and Gill Campbell.

"Silbury Hill, the largest prehistoric mound in Europe, has long been an enigma. Set within the chalk downlands of the Stonehenge and Avebury World Heritage Site, it is traditionally thought to have been the burial place of King Sil. First investigated in 1776, then again in 1849, successive archaeological interventions culminated in Professor Richard Atkinson's televised campaign in the late 1960s. Following the dramatic collapse of the 1776 excavation shaft at the summit of the Hill in 2000, detailed surveys revealed that voids associated with the earlier excavations existed deep within the mound."

Due for publication by English Heritage on 28 November 2013 (and a bargain at a mere £75 ;-) More here.

Stone Worlds - Narrative and Reflexivity in Landscape Archaeology:
Barbara Bender, Sue Hamilton and Chris Tilley. Left Coast Press;

"The well-known authors examined the the Neolithic and Bronze Age Landscape on Bodmin Moor... especially the site of Leskernick."

Fabulous book, can't put it down, the frontspiece has the early Neolithic 'Propped Stone', it was in all probability because Leskernick Hill did not have a weird tor formation, now how is that for being ingenious.... My book is secondhand £7.50 but new culled from one of the booksellers behind Amazon's front.

Edit; A thread from last year mentions an article written by the authors..
http://www.headheritage.co.uk/headtohead/tma/topic/65613/

http://www.ucl.ac.uk/leskernick/articles/stone/stone.htm

Shaman by Kim Stanley Robinson. The story of a boy's day-to-day struggle to survive in the wilderness captures the brutal conditions of the Ice Age.

“The shaman is a sorcerer, a doctor, a mystic, an engineer and an artist, too: guided by Thorn, Loon is allowed access to a series of underground caverns, where successive generations have painted dramatic scenes on the walls. Robinson has based these specifically on the Chauvet Pont d'Arc cave in the Ardèche, which was discovered two decades ago, and has recently been the subject of Werner Herzog's documentary Cave of Forgotten Dreams; his descriptions are vivid and beautiful.

“...this is mainly Loon's story. Through him, we meet the rest of the Wolf pack, a tight tribe of around 40 humans: Schist, the headman, and his wife, Thunder; the other teenage boys, Hawk and Moss; and the old woman, Heather, who has an encyclopaedic knowledge of herbs...

“Robinson injects some drama with a conflict against another tribe of ice-dwelling northerners, but this is mostly a simple story of day-to-day survival in the Ice Age. The most moving section of the book is a melancholy friendship between Loon and one of "the old ones", the Neanderthals who had inhabited Europe undisturbed until humans arrived from Africa.”

More here.

The Secrets of Stonehenge by Mick Manning and Brita Granström.

“Stonehenge has captured the imagination as long as man can remember - long after he can remember what it was built for.

“Throughout it talks in a positive, non-contradictory way but also without dogma and this subject is so controversial to so many that avoiding dogma is a big plus in this book's favour. It also goes back in history to before the henge we see today and shows what excavations have revealed about the site before.

“Couple this history with cartoon like drawings and historical asides this book is a great asset for children to learn from.”

From a review of the book here.

With Christmas around the corner, The Secrets of Stonehenge might be a stocking filler for kiddies with stonehead parents (or for people of any age who just like graphic novels – cough, cough ;-)

I wonder if anyone else has come across this book - The Living Mountain by Nan Shepherd? Written in the 1940's but not published until the 70's. It's a very beautifully written book about the Cairngorms. I thought I'd mention it here as I'm sure a lot of TMA folk would enjoy it. I won't describe it as my words would be too clumsy to do it any justice. Please just google it. This little book has left a lasting impression on me.

Looks a good read, deals with megaliths, and an excellent biography of Hutton at the end, his favourite Neolithic long barrow being the one at Gatcombe Park, Glos.....

Pagan Britain

By Ronald Hutton
Yale University Press, 400pp, £25.00 and £36.00
ISBN 9780300197716 and 98584 (e-book)
Published 21 November 2013


http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/books/pagan-britain-by-ronald-hutton/2010124.article

Also a review;
http://www.theguardian.com/books/2014/jan/23/pagan-britain-ronald-hutton-review

Picking up on the mention of the Hippisley Cox book in another thread, an up-to-date companion can be found in the shape of Hugh Thomson's 'The Green Road Through The Trees' (Windmill Books paperback) an account of a walk the length of the Icknield Way taking in all the usual landmarks, not just the Neolithic/Iron Age ones. Whilst not exclusively concerned with TMA topics/sites and containing a lot of stuff about himself and his influences it's a good read because he's an engaging writer and it's the sort of book that makes you want to get out there and see these places. TMA and Julian get a mention, proving that his and the book's soul are in the right place.

Interesting PDF - a thesis "Contextualising Prehistoric Rock Art In Ireland" by Blaze Valeska O'Connor.

http://researchrepository.ucd.ie/bitstream/handle/10197/3703/VOLUME1_FULL_Locked.pdf?sequence=1

Bought this in a charity shop in Pembroke for £1.00 - bargain.
(Cover price £6.00 - Greencroft Books)

Have started reading it. Interesting read with some nice colour photos.
It is all about Carningli (Angel Mountain) and surrounding area within the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park.

To be released on the 8th November 2014, written by Carmel Diviney, it follows the protest at the making of the M3 motorway under the Hill of Tara.

"Tara, steeped in history and legend, was renowned as the spiritual, cultural and political heart of ancient Ireland. The routing of the M3 Motorway through the Tara Skryne Valley, an archaeologically rich complex comparable to Egypt’s Valley of the Kings in its unique heritage, was condemned by archaeologists and academics internationally, including the World Archaeological Congress 2007."


http://authormedia.co.uk/tara-calling-desecration-sacred-landscape/

'Between Tomb and Cist by archaeologist Beverley Ballin Smith reports on the Historic Scotland funded investigation of the funerary monuments of Crantit, Kewing and Nether Onston, Orkney.'

http://www.orkneyjar.com/archaeology/2014/12/12/between-tomb-and-cist-new-book-launched/


http://www.culture24.org.uk//history-and-heritage/archaeology/art509924-tombs-in-neolithic-orkney-reveal-ancient-beliefs-taboos-and-superstitions-of-mourners-and-dead

Saw Rhiannon's recent folklore post and realised I'm reading this book on the same subject. Brilliant book!

Following the separate thread, an excuse to dust off this one.

http://www.dominicktyler.com/portfolio-test/books/uncommon-ground/

The Making Of The British Landscape - Francis Pryor ...just starting to get to grips with this. Needed for fieldwalking. 10/10 so far. Reviews on book by big guns say 'beautiful/thrilling/magisterial/surpassing Hoskins/compelling/deeply rewarding' etc. Yup. £16-99 well spent.

Prehistoric Rock Art in Northumberland - Stan Beckensall ...very interesting. A labour of love type tome. And, it seems, there may be a parallel or link between some rock art here and that at Kilmartin. As a bye the bye, I was very surprised to find that the last person to add a book here quite a while back was....me. Does'nt anybody read these days?