13 November 2021 CE
Images
13 November 2021 CE
13 November 2021 CE
The North East circle.
The North East circle.
Stones to the east of the North East circle.
Stones of the group to the east of the North East Circle, not at all convincing as an avenue.
Stones of the Great Circle.
Stanton Drew, stone 3
Stanton Drew, stone 4
Stanton Drew, stones 3 and 4
Stanton Drew, Cove stone
Stanton Drew, sizing the stones
Stanton Drew, sizing the stones
Stanton Drew, Great Circle and North EastCircle.
Stanton Drew, North Circle, as a symmetrical circle.
Stanton Drew, Great Circle, as a symmetrical circle
Rainbow over the North East Circle and Avenue.
Coming through the gate and entering the field this is the first stone you get to, its also the most gnarled and hoary of all.
The white stone, ive heard it told that Joseph of Arimethea brought this stone with him on one of his travels, and is thought to be the stone that Jacob used as a pillow in actual fact its a king making stone from the planet notreally.
Sorry, its just so different to all the others it just cries out for an explanation
two of these stones are not like the others.
heres a big one
View of the Circles at Stanton Drew from a sketch by Percy Shelton, Esq. – 1832
Summer solstice sunrise 2010 – There were maybe 20-30 people at the NE circle.
Solstice sunrise 2010 – looking across a segment on the North side of the great circle towards the NE circle.
Great Circle stones.
NE circle detail.
NE circle.
Part of the NE Circle.
General view of the Great and NE Circles, as seen from the SW Circle.
The North East Circle looking South West
The North East Avenue looking South, but hell, what a sky!
The Great Circle looking North.
The Great Circle looking vaguely North East.
As seen on 13 April 2008 CE
As seen on 13 April 2008 CE
NE circle
NE circle and great circle painted in Oct 07
'Lion' stone
'Rabbit' stone
August 2007 sunset over fallen stone – The Great Circle
Late August sunset NE Circle
View of the Avenue end of the Great Circle from the fencepost by the SW Circle.
Avenue looking W-ish.
Itinerarium Curiosum 1776
Slightly different angle on the Great Circle, close to the entrance, Saturday 16th September 2006
The North East Circle, on Saturday 16th September 2006.
Partial view of The Great Circle. Saturday 16th September 2006. Very overcast day with an eerie feel to it.
Saturday 16th September 2006
'Fallen Stone' Great Circle
A fallen giant.
I'm not trying to convince anyone, yet it was amusing to notice that the top of this largest northern stone in the great circle closely resembles the shape of Maes Knoll's 'tump' on the horizon.
Quite a striking simulacra with the top of this stone and Maes Knoll's skyline (See artistic interpretation below)
The painting represents a possible use of mathematics and perspective by the Neolithic and Bronzeage people.
2 Stanton Drew megaliths.
Stone motives.
Symbols on spiked object, Skara Brae.
Symbols on bed in house 7, Skara Brae.
February sunset from the NE circle
The February moon at sunset
Squared stone?
Happy New Year! 2006
Seeing in the new year at Stanton Drew
“That marked a is singular in its rugged-ness. The stone b inclines towards the north, and its present position is supposed to be its original one: in its general appearance of bending forward, it is not unlike the single stone in the avenue at Stonehenge. The stone c differs greatly from the others, in being square and massive. The largest stone, d, is prostrate; it is fifteen feet and a half in length. The engraving represents not the circular arrangement, but remarkable separate stones, of which e is at a considerable distance from either of the circles.”
(Charles Knight: Old England)
This large stone shows a simular artistic style to the small stones.
Stanton Drew.
Research images for identifying natural or modification.
Stanton Drew.
Research images for identifying natural or modification.
Stanton Drew.
Stanton Drew.
Stanton Drew.
Maes Knoll seen from Stanton Drew Great Circle.
In amongst the Buttercups....
Things Ancient and Modern
Part of the Great (fallen) Circle...
A place of rest for one of the more recent users of the Stones of Stanton Drew
Look from the North-eastish bit????
The Great Circle looking all around... but probably north- eastish???
Stanton Drew – The Great Circle – 30.12.2003 – recumbent, and thin, stone on the east side with amazing round bowls in it. Looking across the south west part of the Great Circle
Stanton Drew – 30.12.2003 – four huge stones of the circle with the village in the far background.
Stanton Drew – The North East Circle – 30.12.2003 – two huge stones in the North East circle
Stanton Drew – The Avenues – 30.12.2003 – the stone avenue from the main circle down to the other two stones
Stanton Drew – The Great Circle – 30.12.2003 – the second stone in from the main entrance. A massive recumbant slab.
The NE Circle looking SEish
NE Circle
NE Circle & Avenues
NE Circle
NE Circle stones with John for scale....
The NE circle with Avenues. The Avenues make it look a bit of a mess, they're so ruined.
North East Circle
This stone in the top north east quadrant appears to act as a focal point for the lines. Two readings tracked back to here. The surface is knotted and gnarled, unlike stone and reminding one of bone.
Taken 21st June 2003: One of the great fallen stones of the North East Circle, viewed from the west. The hazy smoke in the foreground is a burning incense stick left by the Druids. I believe it represented 'fire' part of a blessing of fire and holy water (from a plastic mineral water bottle?).
This photograph is my 1000th posting to the Modern Antiquarian. It's also exactly one year since I first posted anything to the site. What a strange way to spend your time!
Taken 21st June 2003: Two of the avenue stones (I think) bathed in the glow of early morning Solstice sunshine (viewed from the North East Circle).
Taken 21st June 2003: The North East Circle with the Druids gathered in the centre of it sharing a post-sunrise ritual.
Taken 21st June 2003: One of the avenue stones with the Solstice sun behind it.
Taken August 1995: It was our first visit to Stanton Drew. Back in those less enlightened days we used to sit or lie on the stones. Here Louise is doing her sacrificial virgin impression in the North East Circle.
Taken August 1995: After a summer of bizarreness we visited Stanton Drew for the first time. We were on my motorbike, and it broke down soon after we left. We ended up hitching a lift to Bristol in a box van. It's hot work trying to keep a motorbike upright in the back of a van!
This shot is a really obvious one, looking towards the church from the North East Circle. Look how scorched the grass is! It was an extremely hot summer.
Some of the largest stones have fallen, allowing water to pool in abstract shapes on their surfaces.
Stanton Drew (circa summer of 1993)
No don't worry the stones are not closed. But they were for parts of the 1990's. I think I took this in the middle of 1993, but I can't say for certain.
Stanton Drew stone circle, 1996
Stanton Drew, 1996
Sunset view from the NE circle towards the church and the cove.
Articles
New evidence of archaeological features in and around the three prehistoric stone circles at Stanton Drew has been revealed.
The results of a geophysical survey carried out by Bath and Camerton Archaeological Society (BACAS) in collaboration with Bath & North East Somerset Council's Archaeological Officer in summer 2010 have just been published.
.The 2010 survey was led by John Oswin and John Richards of BACAS and shows evidence of below-ground archaeological features, including a second entrance into the henge monument first identified by English Heritage in 1997. The second entrance is south-west facing and forms a narrow causeway, defined by two large terminal ends of the circular ditch. Further work at the South-West Circle suggests that it sits on a deliberately levelled platform.
Stone circles like Stanton Drew's are known to date broadly to the late Neolithic and early Bronze Age (about 3000-2000 BC). In 2009 the BACAS team produced computer plots showing what appears to be the outline of an earlier Neolithic burial mound or 'long barrow' immediately to the north of the Cove – a group of three large stones in the beer garden of the Druid's Arms. The completion of a resistance survey at the Cove has now reinforced its interpretation as a long barrow, which would date to nearly 1000 years before the stone circles. The length, width and orientation are consistent with this type of monument, including indications of flanking ditches.
"The geophysical survey work at Stanton Drew continues to throw new light on these nationally important monuments" said Bath & North East Somerset Council's Archaeological Officer, Richard Sermon. "It tells us that what we see above ground today is only part of a complex that would have rivalled those at Avebury and Stonehenge."
You can find the survey results at:
www.bathnes.gov.uk/environmentandplanning/Archaeology/Pages/default.aspx
www.bacas.org.uk/geophysics/StantonDrewLowResandCover.pdf
thisisbath.co.uk/Stanton-Drew-8211-new-Great-Circle-entrance/story-13556812-detail/story.html
Stanton Drew, located at 51.366997, -2.578645
For us this was not an easy place to find and we would recommend using a Sat Nav. The latitude and longitude given above will take you directly to the car park allocated for the circle. The narrow country lanes access make this a tricky place to drive to. Some of the roads marked as main A roads on the map were little more than country lanes and quite inadequate for the volume, speed, and size of today's traffic.
The stone structure is of large rough stones irregularly positioned and standing in flattish farm land. It is a very peaceful spot though, and an inner city dweller (Bristol?) may find it very relaxing and effecting. The size of the rings and the stones are impressive (photo 5 and 6) and the rustic local village and pub, which contains the Cove, is well worth a stroll round.
From a more technical point of view there are interesting alignments to the sunrises via the causeways, and the numbers of stones in the two main circles which provide some indication for a sunrise weather/season forecaster.
Causeways –
The circles have Eastern causeways which, from their irregular positioning of their stones, appear to have been disrupted. The stones of the causeways seem to have been in pairs.
They point towards the sunrises of 15 August – the end of summer, and the 1 Oct – the end of Autumn – as can be seen in Diagram 1. These would be important dates for a rural community.
Circles –
The circles appear to have been disrupted with displacements having taken place along the circumference rather than the radius. However it can be seen that the Great Circle does not fit a circle too well; it fits two arcs, one East, one West, far better – as can be seen in Diagram 1 which shows a Plan diagram of the Great Circle and North East Circle and their sunrise orientation. This arrangement can be seen in other structures such as Blakeley Raise, England, and Loupin' Stanes, Scotland. The centres of the circles and The Cove align with the midsummer sunrise, as can be seen in Diagram 1.
It is interesting to note that the smaller North-East circle appears to have 9 stones – which could give alignments for midsummer, spring/autumn, and midwinter if the stones were suitably placed, as for Nine Ladies in Stanton Moor, Derbyshire, England, and others circles – as can be seen in Diagram 2.
Apparently there are 27 stones present in the Great Circle (source Wikipedia). The stones seem intact although very weathered, and do not seem to have been broken up and left in pieces – although they differ in height – so the original number may have been 27. This, if the stones were placed equidistant from one another in circular shape and one aligned from a central observation point towards the midsummer sunrise, would provide alignments, like Stonehenge, for a 12 season annual cycle – as can be seen in Diagram 3. The Great Circle is so large that the centre would have to be marked in some way. The differing heights would be useful to indicate required alignments, such as midsummer.
Some of the stones in the North East circle – numbers 3 and 4 (photos 1 to 3) and The Cove (photo 4) appear to have been pushed over to lie flat, rather than sunken over with time to lie at an angle. The break lines of the stones are regular with the pieces not being displaced, indicating deliberate breakage after the stone were flat, perhaps using iron wedges and heavy hammers. Two damaged stones (3 and 4) lie together, indicating their displacement on the circle. It is recorded that the Romans destroyed the Druids and their sacred groves, and as it is highly likely that the Druids knew of and used the stone circles, it could be thought that Stanton Drew was disrupted and damaged by the Romans, perhaps to be partially restored by the British once they had left.
Please refer to the diagrams and photos.
For fuller information on sunrises weather/season forecasters please see:
Drove from Hetty Peglar to Stanton Drew, still a sunny Sunday. It felt like we were driving through a posh private housing estate to the site itself. I think it was my headspace being off kilter but I found this place difficult.
The stones glittering pink & hoary are lovely. The earth here is a great rust colour; it looks so rich & fecund!
Unfortunately fecundity; "she", "mother" & "healing" was all I heard for the next hour as a group of people pranced about with flowers & bongos in the smaller circle. Oh dear what do I sound like? Each to their own, peace & love & all that! Can't we have designated days!
Some huge stones; odd rectangular shapes. Seems to have a henge? Benevolent cows everywhere, I even petted one! Hurrah.
Overheard a comment that we weren't in the vibe cos we were taking photos on a mobile phone; better than a conversation we heard from a female group member telling "Jemima" that she'd better use the rotivator on that particularly awkward part of the garden! Right Carol, shut up.
Really it's a fantastic place, we'll pick a better time on our next visit.
The Cove is lovely.
To me Stanton Drew is one of the best and one of the worst stone circles in Britain, on the one hand the stones are massive colourful giants gnarled with ages unguessed, and theres not just one circle but three, and not just three circles but a cove too, but...
On the other hand more than half the stones are pushed over perhaps into pits dug to recieve them, so now they barely poke through the grass,
and the Great circle is almost too big to take it in as a whole circle, the passage from the big field to the south west circle was muddy last time (the kind of mud that stinks and melts wellies), this time it was bovine rush hour . The south west circle is loads different in character to the other two, it occupies a small hillock and the stones are smaller.
Although there may be two hands, a visit to Stanton drew is always worth the long drive (unless you live in Bristol) and one I will continue to make, news of the cove being part of a longbarrow and a lost henge surrounding the stones, just makes the place all the more interesting.
Today met up with Bristol based Friend for another little stony adventure; same Friend as I got lost in Cornwall with. Some reservations as a very limited bus service served by the *672 small bus (see below for details) which went the scenic Chew Valley route. Friend said the driver bore a striking resemblance to Otto from the Simpsons as he was wearing a bandana and dark glasses. When he asked us if we were going to the Stones somehow it boded well for the visit.
I had printed off the field notes from TMA which I read on train; all were distinguished contributors though Treaclechops of 2003 shone out with a sense of fun and wit (as her field notes always do when by chance I stumble upon them). I will try therefore not to duplicate what has already been written and just give a few impressions of our visit. We picked up the helpful English Heritage leaflet from the gate and dropped some money in the empty sounding honesty box.
I found the diagram in the leaflet very helpful as we made our way slowly down the slope to look at the stones from all perspectives. Looking uphill in the diagonal direction of the church tower seems to give the impression of walking towards and into a 'ritual site'. After half an hour or so we made our way back up to the South West Circle though needed to circumnavigate a small field of dairy cows to get to it. All the stones in this circle are now lying flat; it was however an interesting perspective to look downhill towards the Great Circle and small NE circle.
* Details of how to get to Stanton Drew by public transport:
The 672 from Stop CP on Colston Avenue, leaves 11.35am arrives Stanton Drew (Druid Arms) 12.46pm. Although just over an hour it was a drive through along scenic lanes with fabulous views.
Return journey from outside the Druid Arms at 15.11pm.
NB: These are the only two journeys to run but give well over two hours for visit.
I have visited this site on a couple of occasions and can't really add much to what has already been said other than this place is well worth a visit. It is very large with many large stones. The last time I visited the field had cows in it which made little Dafydd very happy! The honesty box and information sheets were still there when I last visited.
After a trip to the SW Circle, a walk through the farmyard and back to the official entrance, there's a box to leave your fee (£1.00 as at 21.9.09), together with the A4 sheets mentioned by Moth. NB: Dogs aren't allowed in the field.
Like Rhiannon, I felt rather unmoved by the Great Circle itself. It's huge, but many of the stones lie prostrate or are simply missing. It was also occupied by a herd of cows when I visited (they were lying down and showed no interest at all, which given some of my recent experiences was a blessed relief). To avoid them, I walked around the southern arc of the circle (they were camped out in the north) and made my way to the rather confusing collection of upright stones at the east and NE side. The "Avenue" runs from the east side of the Great Circle and includes some lovely stones, but its overall condition is rather jumbled.
The NE circle though is an absolute joy, one of the best I have visited. A nice size, it contains some massive blocks of oolitic limestone/red sandstone. Some are very squat and square, impassive as (I think someone else noted) Easter Island heads. A lovely spot, even under an overcast sky. I stayed here, undisturbed and alone, for about half an hour. At this point some of the younger members of the cow herd decided to get up and come over, so it seemed a good time to make my excuses and leave. Back round the southern side, just as some other visitors arrived to have the Circles to themselves. An absolutely essential site, especially if you live in Gloucestershire and yearn for something other than barrows for a change!
I visited on a dull, grey day and my mood didn't lighten when I realised that there were "ceremonies" being conducted within the circles. A group of women were being (for want of a better phrase) sprititually massaged by a middle aged man, whilst listening to "plink plink" music. Grrrrrr.....my issues with this kind of behaviour is that it makes the stones almost inaccessible for any other visitors. This was a Sunday morning (11am-ish) so I would assume it was pretty likely that others would want to visit at this time.
10 minutes later, a coach party of pensioners turned up but they were at least interested and I got a bit excited when I realised that Mike Parker Pearson was the tour guide! Once upon I time, I got excited when I met Michael Stipe; these days I'm an archaeology groupie!
I liked Stanton Drew but it felt a wee bit empty to me. Maybe it was the miserable weather but it didn't lift me in the usual way...maybe I ned to return and have a better experience?
They say size isn't everything. Stanton Drew's Great Circle may have the second largest diameter in the country, but (on this occasion at least) it left me unmoved and I found much more to interest me in the smaller circles and the views of the surrounding landscape.
The large circle and its smaller cousin to the NE are close to the river Chew, at a point where it gets rather sinuous. Ideally I would have liked to start down by the river and walked up to the circles, up along the avenues – this is surely the direction in which the complex was meant to be approached? Not only do the avenues point you this way, but the EH magnetometer survey (linked to by Chris Collyer on the main page) revealed that the original (huge) Neolithic henge had its entrance in this direction.
If you walk as far as the fence will let you by the north east circle, you will realise that the circles are situated on quite a slope. You need to walk uphill (and curiously, not straight uphill, but across the slope to the smaller circle) to process up the avenues to the circles. It would not be easy – in fact, I think it would be impossible in the case of the great circle – to see what was going on in there until you got closer. Maybe this is deliberate. There's much to be said for conducting your affairs with an element of mystery and hiddenness (think Christian rood-screens etc). Imagine the imposing effect when the timber circles stood there (see below).
The small north east circle is (and I mean this) fantastic. Not only has it managed to retain its complete quota of stones (eight), it seems to be the most perfectly and pleasingly proportioned circle I have ever visited. The stones are huge compared to the space they enclose. They create an extremely agreeable space. My distinguished companion Nigel seemed to nurture similar warm thoughts towards these stones.
The EH magnetometer survey showed that there had been four holes in the centre of this circle – were these 'ritual pits' or the sockets for more stones, now disappeared?
{I spotted this particular circle from a plane when flying into land at Bristol airport: something you may also like to try to take your mind off your nausea}
Staring you in the face from this circle is Maes Knoll, a distinctively shaped flat-topped hill and Iron Age fort. On its left end we could see a bump (known as the 'tump'?). How much of the hill's shape is natural and how much man-made I don't know, but it surely drew the eye from Stanton Drew even in the Neolithic. I'd like to think Hautville's Quoit and the hill are in a direct line with the circle, but I fear having looked at the map this isn't true. [However, since this I've read that the the great and NE circles line up with the Cove, and the Great and SW circles line up with the Quoit]. Folklore says the Quoit was thrown from Maes Knoll, which at least connects the sites in local consciousness.
Although I didn't exercise my imagination enough to appreciate it, the main 'arena' of the Great Circle must have looked outrageous in its heyday. Nine concentric circles of pits (up to 95m in diameter) were found by the magnetometer survey. Each pit was 1-2m in diameter and it is thought that at least some of them contained massive wooden posts, as at Woodhenge. Perhaps they formed part of a building, or maybe the area was open to the sky. Whatever, the pit circles are the largest and most numerous found anywhere so far. Later of course the stones were put up at the perimeter of the circle, and that is all we can see today.
Stanton Drew – The Great Circle, North East Circle & Avenues – 30.12.2003
I finally got back to Stanton Drew ten years after my aborted first try – see notes below. Where did those ten years go?
I think the access may have already changed from Moth's recent notes. The gate at the honesty box is a small normal gate (swing gate). But 30 metres onwards I then had to negotiate two narrow kissing gates in close proximity before I got in the field. The field was pretty lumpy and full of cow shit, but was pretty firm under foot, even in December.
The two accessible circles are amazing. This complex (adding in The Cove, the South West circle, and Hautville's Quoit) should be mentioned in the same breath as Avebury and Stonehenge, but rarely is, probably because, 1) the two circles and their avenues weren't open for much of the 1990's, Hautville's Quoit is a pitiful sight (on farm land), and the South West Circle has been on private land for as long as I can remember, 2) the lack of tea shop, guide book, huge car park, signposting, etc, and 3) the alleged initial reaction from a distance; that it's just a lot of jumbled stones.
But Stanton Drew rocks – big time. Easy to get to (I think), easy to access now, enormous stones, amazing history. This is stunning. Everyone should visit (not all at once please! The car park probably holds about 4 cars, and the other car park at The Cove isn't huge). The North East Circle is the greatest stone circle I've seen so far on my travels.
It's a disgrace that there wasn't more uproar when the two main circles were closed; it's almost as though this complex doesn't want the attention it deserves. I am so happy that we can now all go to these two circles, virtually anytime we like (well....9am to sunset the sign says, any day except Christmas Day).
Propaganda and access has stopped this becoming seen as circles / complex that are truly 'great'. This is NOT a jumbled mess of stones. Anyone with half a brain will be able to immediately see that there is a large circle (mainly fallen), and then a smaller circle (mainly intact and with enormous stones almost on a par with Avebury). The other stones (the avenues) need a bit of thought but to suggest this is a jumble of stones is a ludicrous assault on human intelligence.
I had this amazing place to myself. No sounds at all except planes droning towards Lulsgate (Bristol Airport) and some birds. Please visit.
See main Weddings at Stanton Drew page for Access notes.
Tuesday 16 September
While there John and I had the Great Circle down as marginally smaller than Long Meg and her Daughters but when I looked in Burl later, it's actually a bit bigger. As my copy of Burl lives in my rucksack I really ought to remember to look at the damn thing on site a bit more often!!!
As we walked round the Great Circle looking at the fallen stones, it became simultaneously easier to imagine the circle when the stones were standing and more frustrating that the vast majority are fallen.
This is an amazing place, that would be truly mind-boggling in a Hurlers, or Machrie Moor way if only the stones were standing!!. Kind of almost in an Avebury way if you look just at Avebury itself, the West Kennett Avenue & Longstone Cove. (Leave out Silbury & everything else though, because that's where Avebury leaves everything else trailing!!)
John's still slowly converting me to the opinion that more circles should be 'restored' – not in the Cullerie sense, 'just' re-erected as well as possible. Never would've said that a few months ago! (I'll probably change my mind again anyway next time I see a 'badly' or 'overdone' one!!!)
In fact, you only have to look at the damaged but BEAUTIFUL NE circle to see what I'm on about. If the Great Circle was anywhere near as complete as this, we'd all be mind-blown bunnies I reckon.
Big stones, most of them standing. Nice proportions
Maybe it was the defiant insubordination of the smaller circle in close proximity to a much bigger 'monument', or maybe it was something about the proportions. Or maybe it was something else. But somehow, the NE circle in relation to the Great Circle put me in mind of Cnoc Fillibhear Bheag in relation to Callanish.
Well, I know what I mean, even if nobody else does!
(The Avenues are sh**ged and seem very strangely aligned, but they're still a nice little bonus!)
Also see South West Circle , The Cove and Hautville's Quoit.
Tuesday 16 September 2003
Access coming from the west, we took the B3130, turning right at the signpost for Stanton Drew. This junction is remarkable for a strange little cottage on an 'island'. One of the most bizarre domiciles I've ever seen – looks more than a little like a toadstool. Shame about the incongruous big brick chimney.
Driving into Stanton Drew, the circle is clearly signposted to the left. There's a small car park, and entrance to the field where the main circles stand is by a (kissing?) gate with an English Heritage honesty box.
And if you're lucky (we were) a little stock of b/w photocopied A4 single page info sheets. Nice touch but makes it annoying that they don't do it more often!
There's another kissing gate just before you reach the Great Circle. Looks bizarre because (at least at the moment) the only fence either side of it is a single string! This is not visible from more than a few yards away, so it just looks like a gate standing in a field!
The ground around the main and north-east circles is reasonably even, on a gentle slope.
Access to the south west circle is, from memory, over a stile and possibly through a gate too. Or 2 gates. Or 2 stiles. (Sorry!) The small field is also considerably less even and level.
Tuesday 16 September 2003
I'd been looking forward to this one for a very long time, since spotting it in Burl's ...Stone Circles of Britain, Ireland and Brittany – many years ago, not long after I got the book.
Despite having read quite a bit about it, the place still surprised me, particularly just through the sheer size of the Great Circle, and I guess, the cohesiveness of the whole 'complex'. Guess it's not ALL that often that you visit sites that are so distinctly and unavoidably inter-related. Shame about Hautville's Quoit....
Also see The Great Circle, North East Circle & Avenues , South West Circle , The Cove and Hautville's Quoit.
Went here with the delightful Jane a couple of weekends ago. Interesting seeing it at the back end of winter, as oppose to the height of summer. Although the sky was the same fabulous blue as before, I think it needs trees in full leaf to bring out the redness of the stones. The sheep seemed happy enough, and watching the sweet little lambs gambolling around made me feel slightly guilty for serving up Honeyed Welsh Lamb in celebration of St. David's day the night before.
Ooo, whoops, is a christian saint allowed to be mentioned in relation to these sites? ;0)
Stanton Drew has rather cleverly hidden itself in the back end of nowhere (if you’re searching for grub at 14:45hrs on a Friday lunchtime, anyway), and requires a scenic drive through rather fabulously named neighbouring villages . . . Norton Malreward . . . Norton Hawkfield . . . but does offer the chance of an excellent pint of Abbot Ale at the Rising Sun, Pensford. (Yes, I realize my map-reading skills are pants, especially as we were travelling west from Stoney Littleton!)
We finally found a corkingly good slap-up meal at the Maes Knoll Toby Carvery, Whitchurch, of all places. As we dined outside, the gray skies suddenly broke up, blue patches prevailed, and the sun shone down at last. ‘Hooray!,’ I thought, ‘Excellent light for stone circle photography!’
And it was splendid. Arriving at Stanton Drew, not really knowing what to expect, we made our way into another field of sheep, who were all casually doing their thing amidst some of the most stunning stones I have ever clapped eyes on. The colours were fantastic, and I have already been exhorting the delightful Jane to get down there with her field box and sketch book. Watch this space . . .
Most of the stones are massive red blocks, and although many of them have fallen (or were they pushed?), it is easy to visualize how magnificent and awe-inspiring they must have appeared in their original architectural form. Studded with white quartz, and subtly covered in ages-old lichens, they emanate a very peaceful and noble vibe.
Particularly impressive were the stones that looked like a heavily pregnant woman, and a ship’s figurehead, minus the head. Also intriguing were the three rectangular blocks that stood in a line; they had such an air of timeless resolution and wisdom about them.
I spent ages scrabbling about in the grass and sheep turds – these seem to be a recurring theme this summer – enjoying the stones exerting their energy on my photography. This time, I wasn't allowed to use a zoom lens. (See Long Meg for further notes on how stone circles control photography).
We stayed for a considerable time, not wanting to leave the idyllic complex of stones, content instead to watch the sheep using them as clearly deeply satisfying scratching posts. Wood pigeons soared past in the golden sunshine, and the stones glow with warmth, their scatterings of quartz glittering frostily.
It was a glorious summer evening, and the symphony of colour made me curse myself for not having a suitable film in my bag. Fortunately, the lovely Karen had her digital camera with her, and got some fabulous colour shots; post your photos, Karen! I hope I can justify this megalithic site with my black and white images. If not, I’ll have to return with a mix of film. That’ll be a hardship, then.
Stanton Drew is a hidden gem, poorly signposted, just outside Bristol. The manner in which the site is presented hints at disagreement with ownership, a pathway being traced through obviously fenced land to the stones themselves.
Once we arrived nothing prepared me for the energy I felt. My dowsing rods twitched and soon I was aware of many lines of energy, the strongest appearing to run north to south.
After half an hour or so we felt sufficiently adjusted to enjoy our lunch, and found ourselves at The Druids Inn, which has 3 large stones in the beer garden. Checking alignment, these reek of ceremonial purpose, and it was quite odd watching children caper amongst them.
We paid a final visit to Stanton after our repast, and still the energies were noticeable, so my dowsing powers were not affected by sub conscious sensation. I allowed another visitor to try my rods, and the result appeared to replicate what we had earlier found.
lack of excavation, a powerful location and a stunning location make this site well worth a visit. What hides beneath the surface and in the stones can only be guessed at, but local folklore hints at the darker side of human nature.
Visit, but allow yourself time to become attuned.
Ooh la la – Stanton Drew is a hidden gem. Dunno why I ain't been here before. Its size takes your breath away. I arrived on a mid-summers evening – and not a soul was around.
It really is a mind fuck. The third largest circle in the UK, traces of a large wooden structure buried beneath the surface and little research done. I guess its overshadowed by Avebury et all. Which is bad – but bad meaning good...a total lack of other visitors really gave me time to soak in the stunning lush agricultural views and breath the place in.
If you're thinking of visiting – take a picnic ... oh yeah and check out the Cove (coven?) in the beer garden of the nearby Druids Arms.
A magical place that rivals Stannon ring on Bodmin Moor for sheer ambience.
Visited 21st June 2003: Having spent a short hot night in central Bristol we drove to Stanton Drew in the early hours, with William tired and bemused in the back of the car (Alfie is used to waking up at silly times in the morning). We nearly didn't make it, because the Police had closed the A37 because of a serious motorbike crash.
We got to the stones just as a small group of Druids arrived (presumably the lazy ones who couldn't get up on time). We crossed the Great Circle behind the tardy Druids joined a small group of their pals, standing in the middle of the North East Circle. The Druids started invoking the Sun, and I took the opportunity to explain to William what a Druid is ("you know how Grandma goes to church..."). These were noisy Druids (are they all like that?) so we sidled away and found a quiet spot next to one of the avenue stones. From here we watched the dawn, with a scattering of other people (maybe thirty) around us doing the same.
The sky was a beautiful wash of colours for a while, with purple and pink and blue and orange shades mixing together. Then it slowly brightened, becoming more bland and less beautiful. The Druids seemed a bit restless, and said a few more things to encourage the sun to rise. This must have worked, because it did. Through the trees to the west it lit us up, and lit the stones up. The freshness of the morning was suddenly right in our faces, and there were ripples of content from everyone there.
After a while people began dispersing. The Druids gathered under a nearby tree and made even more noise. Louise distributed chocolate and we wondered around the stones. This was our first celebration of the Summer Solstice for 5 years, and it was well worth the effort. I don't think we'll miss it again in a hurry.
Such a large site, it's difficult to get a proper perspective – at least at Avebury you can climb a bank and see much of the circle laid out in front of you.
What I got here was a feeling of a large circle for 'proper' ritual, accompanied by a 'training' circle for the neophytes. No idea if this is how it was actually used, just a strong feeling I got.
It seemed to me too that the stones were made of the same rock as at the Rollrights – all eaten away and crumbly.
A real survivor, big and bold, but like an old war horse, badly scarred and needing nurture. Despite being such a big complex – three circles! – it didn't get me going. It felt broken and somehow bereft. My state of mind perhaps? The stones are massive, impressive with highly worked flat surfaces, and as big as the monsters at Avebury. Impressively rose-coloured with peppermint lichen, the sun cast great dark shadows and allowed the spring green of the grass to sing. I made a sketch but came away feeling sad. Up at the Cove, by the church, conveniently situated in the garden of the Druid's Arms, a monumental stone of the weirdest shape defies gravity and bends over to the left. I leave feeling sad.
Wowee... this place is SERIOUS. Comparing this place to most of the circles I've seen is like comparing a punk rock gig to a chamber music concert. The stones are just wild – amazing browny-orange hues that look like crouching animals. I'm not sure I'd even dare to come here on a full moon – you could almost hear the power crackling away even on a grey Sunday afternoon.
All the more amazing because of the picture-postcard English village setting... imagine taking tea at the vicar's and he gets out his collection of shrunken heads to show you – that kind of vibe.
Big, scary, wonderful. Circles with tude.
Stanton Drew (circa summer of 1993)
I have racked my brain and cannot remember exactly when I visited Stanton Drew. I would guess it was the summer of 1993. The main circles were often considered 'closed' and I took a lovely photo of the 'Druid Stones Closed' sign, with the telephone wires seemingly radiating out of it. I asked at the farm next door, and a man told me that the guy who owned the land was a 'miserable sod' and a bit of an absent landlord. He suggested that I wander down on his (the farmers') land and get as close to the stones as I could, or even duck under the fence and take my chance – it was unlikely that the owner would be around. My natural aversion to shotguns meant that I wimped out of going closer, so I just looked at them from the fence. Also I was a relatively local lad so I knew I could visit again sometime.
Anyway, that's all in the past. This website has encouraged me to go back soon and see them properly.
A huge site, that gives you some idea (scale wise) of what might have been at Avebury. I visited alone, had a good couple of hours to myself, then watched the sunset from the smaller circle.
Pagan Hill nearby gives it's name to one of the country lanes. What an address!
Wow, this place is huge!
First visit yesterday, with only 20 mins daylight left, and we'll definitely return. Theres loads to take in, and you could definitely spend a day here.
The stones are very green (lichen), and although fallen, most stones are still in place, which really helps to visualise the site as it was.
One of Englands top sites, and as it says below-nobody comes!
First time at stanton drew. windy place. not as tourist friendly as the likes of your avebury etc, but hey, espesh dig the bouncing lambs in the farmers paddock ting by the entrance.
Standon Drew is slowly getting the attention it deserves. There has been research, confirming the old lithos from the 17th and 18th centuries. Did anyone know that the 'Druids' Arms is agreat pub? Go there! And while we're at it, visit Maes Knoll hillfort as well – West Wansdyke starts there! You don't have a clue? Read this:
wansdyke21.org.uk/wansdyke/wanvisit96w.htm
and this:
The short avenue at the NE end apparently leads to an old dried up watercourse. A water ritual? rebirth? The circles are aligned with Windmill hill and Haut Bois-and a bloody church! Seemed to feel 'closed in ' when visiting, certainly hills surround a lot of the site. More dramatic than Avebury? possibly (and possibly bigger-watch this space)
The second largest stone circle in Britain, 8 miles from the City and yet no one goes there... A quiet spot by the river with three (count 'em) circles, two avenues and outlying stones: a variation on Avebury, but nobody goes... The largest timber circle in the country and a Cove in a pub beer garden and nobody goes.... It IS lovely though.
It is surprising what interesting things one may come across in the countryside. I was talking to a farmer acquaintance, Lionel Smart, who, apart from a brief spell as a Fleet Street journalist, has farmed all his life in the Stanton Drew area. A few days before meeting Lionel, I had been in the village and decided to walk round the lanes and across the fields. Near the end of my walk I turned right at the quaint, thatched tollhouse and noticed the sign indicating the stone circles, or the Druids' Stones, as we have always called them. [...] Lionel then told me a strange story. No matter what time of year you pass by the stones, whether it is the hottest or coldest day, or night, one always encounters a cool breeze. Of course this could have been happening even before the stone circles were put there, but, there again, it could be due to the mystery behind them, of forces there beyond our comprehension.Brian Woodham reports sceptically in the Somerset Standard, 15th November 1974.
John Wood mentions in the 1769 edition of his 'Description of Bath' that –
The predominant Colour of that part of the Stone in the Works of Stantondrue, supposed to have been taken from Oaky Hole, is Red; and it is so exceedingly hard, that it will polish almost as well as some of the purple Italian Marble, and is as beautiful: The other Stone is of two Colours, White and Grey; the white Stone seems to have been the Produce of Dundry Hill, but the grey Stone resembles the Sand Rocks about Stantondrue, and seems to have been taken from them.Oaky Hole , I thought... where can that be? I think he's determined to get oaks in there because it's the favourite tree of druids. And where would a druid and his disciples hang out – a cave, like (so he says) Pythagoras and his disciples did. He says that the cave is situated by the City of Wells – so it's Wookey Hole. Geologists probably have alternative theories, but it's interesting as a mythological explanation that gets the druids in there. Wood hypothesised that Stanton Drew itself was a druidical temple and college.
Taken from Aubrey Burl's book "John Aubrey & Stone Circles".
(As a 12 year old John Aubrey spent time playing around Stanton Drew)
The chaos told the young Aubrey nothing.
Village gossip offered explanations. Some slabs were so ponderous that no man could have raised them. They were the work of giants. The name of one of them was known, Hackwell. He had been so strong that he had thrown an immensely heavy stone from a distant hill and it landed over a mile away on that ridge on the skyline just above the circles. There were rumours claiming Hackwell was so famous that he was buried in the nearby church at Chew Magna.
Others added a warning. The boy should never try to count the stones. It was impossible anyway because of the jumble but if anyone did reach the right number that person would suffer great misfortune, maybe even death for interfering in what was best left alone.
Another superstition relates how, on the sixth day of the full moon, at midnight, the stones walk down to the river to take a drink. But the best known whimsy, probably celebrated from Puritan pulpits as justifiable punishment for profaning the Sabbath, was that the stones were the petrified remains of a wedding party that had sinned.
A fiddler and his accompanists had played merry jigs for the dancers until Saturday midnight when, of course, the merry-making had to stop before Sunday began. Defiantly, the young bride refused to abandon her pleasure. She, her husband and all their guests would dance on. Midnight came.
The fiddler vanished. The Devil flashed, flared into the night. Everyone, bride, groom, parson, dancers, musicians, all of them instantly became stones wherever they were. And there they remain.
Superstitiously apprehensive locals told Aubrey that the sinners were still to be seen. Three stones by the church were the solidified bride, groom and parson. In the fields the rings were the rigid remnants of the dancers. The avenues were the tumbled lines of musicians.
The tale-tellers said that the fate of those wicked merry makers had been observed that dreadful night by horrified bystanders and had been remembered ever since in this neighbourhood.
“That a Bride goeing to be married, she and the rest of the company were metamorphos’d into these stones: but whether it were true or not they told me they could not tell.”
Reminiscing years later John Aubrey mused:
“I know that some will nauseate these old fables; but I do professe to regard to regard them as the most considerable pieces of [‘observable’ inserted] of Antiquity’ …. After all, was not Lot’s wife turned turned into a pillar of salt”
It would be almost another thirty years before he was experienced enough to see the devilish stones with a more sceptical archaeological eye. He was living in a superstitious world.
What Bob down the pub was telling tourists in 1861. They deserved it, for their 'gaping rustic' remark.
Local intellect is undoubtedly highly mystified as to these relics. The children of the hamlet don't play at "hide and seek" about them after dark, and if public-house oracles are infallible, groans, &c. are not unfrequently to be heard in the stone-close, "when the moon is out," towards the sma' hours. One gaping rustic told us, "as how some do zay that it's a wedding, and that the fiddlers and the bride and groom were all petrified as they went to church." Now this idea is probably a fable of the seventeenth century, when music always preceded a couple to church. Another old dame said, "Others do zay, nobody can't count 'em; certain 'tis a baker did try with loaves on each, and they never could come right. But there 'tis, some do zay one thing, and zum another, that there's no believing none of 'em." So we thought, reader, don't you? An intelligent old farmer told us he had seen men dig several yards down without getting to the foundation of one of these stones. ...
From 'Cross Country' by Walter Thornbury (1861).
Stanton Drew and folklore
The following which is taken from John Wood's book A Description of Bath of 1765 describes the superstition that lay round the Wedding stones of Stanton Drew as seen by the local people. People being turned to stone, and also drinking from the stones, which is a slightly different aspect of the story.
John Wood had a weird and wonderful theory about Stanton Drew and Druids, that belongs elsewhere, but in writing his book he gave valuable information as to the the existence of the two Tyning stones, and another folklore story about Hakill the Giant who in good giant tradition threw The Coit from Maes Knoll, a hill situated west from Stanton Drew, which also encompasses Maes Knoll Hillfort and the great Wansdyke barrier which either divided two kingdoms in the late British Iron Age or was some form of defense. The work of giants perhaps recognised by our 18th century inhabitants but not rationalised as they are today!
Stanton Drew in the County of Somerset
That's where the Devil played at Sue's request,
They paid the price for dancing on a Sunday.
Now they are standing evermore at rest.
The Wedding Stones
"The remains of this model bear the name of The Wedding, from a tradition that as a woman was going to be married, she and the rest of the company were changed into the stones of which they consist "No one," says the Country People about Stantondrue, was ever able to reckon the "number of these metamorphosed Stones", or to take "a draught of them" or tho' several have attempted to do both, and proceeded till they were either struck dead upon the spot, or with such an illness as soon carried them off.
This was seriously told to me when I began to a Plan of them (the stones) on the 12th August 1740 to deter me from proceeding: And as a storm accidentally arose just after, and blew down part of a Great Tree near the body of the work, the people were then thoroughly satisfied that I had disturbed the Guardian Spirits of the metamorphosed Stones, and from thence great pains were taken to convince me of the Impiety of intent I was about.
Hakim's Quoit
Large flat stone called Hakill on the north-east side of the river by which Stantondrue is situated: And this stone tho' greatly delapidated is till ten feet long, six feet broad, near two feet thick, and lies about 1860 feet from the centre of the circle.
....Now if we draw a line from the centre of the Circle D, to the centre of the Circle B and produce it westward 992 feet, it will terminate on three stones in a garden (Druid Arms now) by the parish church of Stantondrue: two of which stones are erect, and the other lies flat on the ground............. it will terminate on two stone lying flat on the ground in a field call the Lower-Tining (stones now vanished).
In plowing the ground of Maes Knoll as well as that of Solsbury Hill, the people frequently turned up burnt stones, and often find other Marks to prove each Place to have been long inhabited: the former, according to a Tradition among the people of the Country thereabouts, was the Residence of one Hakill, a Giant, who is reported to have toss'd the Coit that make part of the works of Stantondrue from the Top of that Hill to the place where it now lies: He is also reported to have made Maes-Knoll Tump with one spadeful of Earth, and to had the village underneath that Hill given him......
The 'wedding stones' story is found at other stone circles, the wedding taking place on a Saturday and lasting through the night into Sunday, when they were all turned to stone by the piper/harper, or in this case the 'devil'. The christian church again concocting a story to stop people enjoying themselves, one wonders where this story originally came into the history timeline.
Funnily in these tales caught from the past about Stanton Drew there is no 'drinking stone' myth whereby they would have gone down to the river Chew and refreshed themselves.
The 'Song of Stanton Drew' can be found here...
Much in former times has been written on their miraculous origin, and still superstition has not entirely died out, for a native told Prof. Lloyd Morgan that if he hit the stones with his hammer he would smell the brimstone.Lloyd Morgan was professor of psychology at Bristol University. He 'spoke to the natives' on a field trip c1887.
From the Somerset Arch. Soc. Proc. (Bath Branch) for 1906.
The Reverend John Collinson mentions of the stones "it is an impiety to attempt reckoning their number."
Blimey, can't even count them without offending God, apparently. I suppose it's because a good Christian shouldn't associate him or herself with such superstitious nonsense.
'History and Antiquities of the County of Somerset' (c1780)
John Wood (the one who designed Bath's Crescent) wrote in 1750:
"No one, say the country people about Stantondrue, was ever able to reckon the number of the metaphosed stones, or to take a draught of them, though several have attempted to do both, and proceeded till they were either struck dead upon the spot, or with such an illness as soon carried them off."
When he tried to count them (why oh why, considering the warning) a cloudburst followed.
(quoted by J and C Bord in 'Prehistoric Britain from the air')
All sunlit was the earth I trod,Sir William Watson (1858-1935)
The heavens were frankest blue;
But secret as the thoughts of God
The stones of Stanton Drew.
The following information is taken from Jodie Lewis – Monuments... The Neolithic of Northern Somerset..
3 circles, 2 avenues, a cove and a henge, with of course the geo-phys'd timber circles. Great stone circle has a dia; of 112.2.m and has 26 stones, the great avenue is 49 m long and 10.4.m wide. It could well be that the timber, stone and earth phases are contemporary, with the inner sacred centre of timbers (either in situ/or rotted) being the focus round which the stone circle and the henge (for viewing) were viewed. The open/closed nature of the central timber structure could be augmented with hurdles/planks for hiding rituals. But of course timber and stone periods might be different, the stone circle just acknowledging the sanctity of the older timber circles
North-east circle is 44 m to the n/e and has 8 very large stones, the largest in the complex, diameter of the circle is 29.6.m. One of the things to be noticed about these stones, no female/male typology, just large square blocks of stone. Leading from this circle is the n/e avenue with 7 stones. Apparently in the centre of this circle were 4 anomalies (maybe pits) sharing an alignment as the four pairs of stones that are the circle, but these circles had orchards around them so therefore tree remains cannot be ruled out.
The South west circle is recorded in 1881 as having some of its stones removed for the fencing round an orchard, so presumably stones have been moved around. It lies 137,2 m s/w of the great circle, has a dia. of 44.2m and is comprised of 12 stones, and Jodie Lewis goes on to say stones have almost certainly been moved around. Again geophysics noted 3 concentric rings of pits within this circle, so again presumably another timber circle within the bounds of a stone circle.
Note; this is written down, not just for anyone reading it but for those two young men sheltering from the cold wind behind a stone (one playing some pan pipes) when I was there last autumn and when they asked for an explanation – did my best at the time but did'nt have the book...
web.arch.ox.ac.uk/archives/underhill/viewarchiveslide.php?imageID=26&albumID=1 map plan in the Underhill Archives showing the Avenue
As a note; Stanton Drew circles do not seem to relate to any outstanding landscape feature, such as Maes Knoll, but are focussed towards the river Chew, Jodie Lewis makes the point that at certain times of the year, due to flooding, the river turns red from the clay and soil leaching into the river., this would give it a significance as a meeting place (there is lithic scatter found near the site). This river also joins the River Avon further down at Keynsham were ammonites are found, such as the one at Stoney Littleton.
Part of the henge can still be seen in the foreground of Morfe's photo;
Aubrey visited Stanton Drew in the summer of 1664, but was unable to reach the stones because the field was full of ripening corn. He recorded that many of the stones had been removed and smashed during the previous few years by farmers covetous of extra land.
Leslie Grinsell suggests this explains 'the remarkable circumstance' of the lack of barrows in the area: that there may have been some but were ploughed out.
(in Grinsell's 'Archaeology of Wessex')
Tales from English Folklore.
The folktale from the stones enacted (followed by Ronald Hutton).
An animation that gives an idea of what all the timber posts might have looked like.
Definitely do not watch this with a hangover. All the zooming in and out is bad enough if you're sober.
A magic lantern slide from the H.M.J. Underhill Archive showing the North East Circle and "The Altar in the middle" as seen in the late 19th Century.
A paper by Larry Bull, written in the light of geophysical surveys at Stanton Drew.
Another stonking good page by the well travelled and learned Tickners, containing photos of the Great Circle, the North East Circle and one of the avenues.
As the name of this page suggests, it contains a colourful version of the story behind the 'Weddings' name. It also has some photos, a description of the site and a diagram of the wood henge discovered by English Heritage in 1997.
Results of geophysics survey at Stanton Drew.
Sites within 20km of The Great Circle, North East Circle & Avenues
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The South West Circle
photo 29 description 5 -
The Cove
photo 48 forum 1 description 12 link 1 -
Hautville’s Quoit
photo 8 forum 1 description 5 link 1 -
Middle Ham, Tynings
description 2 -
Maes Knoll
photo 28 forum 1 description 5 link 1 -
Knowle Hill Settlement
description 1 -
Burledge Hill
photo 3 description 2 -
Herriotts Bridge
description 1 -
Durley Hill
description 1 -
Stantonbury
photo 7 forum 1 description 4 -
Winford Big Barrow
description 1 -
Nempnett Thrubwell
photo 3 forum 1 description 8 link 1 -
Nempnett Thrubwell Horse Barrow
description 1 -
Winford Twin Barrows
description 1 -
Wallmead I and II
description 1 -
Bicknell Farm Round Barrow
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Felton Hill Longbarrow
photo 2 description 3 -
Nempnett Thrubwell Round Barrow
description 1 -
Home Farm Cottage
description 1 -
Tunley Farm
description 4 -
Redhill
description 2 -
Tunley Long Barrow
description 1 -
Bitton
photo 2 description 8 -
Ashton Court
photo 7 -
The Water Stone
photo 6 description 2 link 1 -
Hazle Barrow
description 1 -
Chewton Mendip barrows
description 1 link 1 -
Redhill
description 2 -
Burgh Walls
photo 1 description 2 -
Clifton Down Camp
photo 26 link 1 -
Stokeleigh Camp
photo 35 forum 1 description 4 -
Pool Farm Cist
photo 3 forum 1 description 7 -
Whitestown Farm
description 5 -
Englishcombe Manor Barrow
description 1 -
Priddy Henges (incomplete 4th circle)
photo 1 description 2 -
Harptree Barrows
description 1 -
Round Hill Tump
photo 10 description 7 -
Redland Park
photo 4 description 1 link 1 -
Priddy Circles
photo 4 forum 6 description 13 link 5 -
North Stoke
photo 13 description 3 -
Radstock
description 1 -
Seven Sisters
photo 6 description 4 -
Windmill Tump Cairn
description 1 -
Little Down Camp Barrow
photo 1 description 1 -
High Barrow Hill
description 1 -
Stow Barrow
description 1 -
Jubilee Field Barrow
photo 3 description 3 -
Three Tuns Farm
description 1 -
Lansdown Golf Course Barrows
description 1 -
Ashen Hill Barrows
photo 10 description 5 -
Miner’s Arms Inn
description 1 -
Redhill Farm and Blackwell Tyning
description 2 -
King Down Farm
description 1 -
Shoscombe Long Barrow
description 1 -
Charterhouse Warren Farm Swallet
photo 1 description 2 link 1 -
Lansdown Race Field Barrows
photo 1 description 1 -
Beacon Batch
photo 19 description 4 -
Priddy Nine Barrows
photo 18 description 8 link 1 -
Forge Barrow
description 1 -
Aveline’s Hole
photo 7 forum 1 description 7 link 4 -
Burrington (Black Down)
photo 8 description 2 -
Druid Stoke
photo 9 forum 1 description 6 -
Priddy Hill
description 1 -
Lansdown Flint Working Site
photo 2 description 1 -
Wick
photo 9 forum 1 description 6 -
Lansdown Barrows
photo 4 forum 1 description 6 -
Rowberrow Farm
description 1 -
Lansdown Camp
photo 1 description 4 -
Gorsey Bigbury
photo 5 description 3 -
Beech Wood Barrows
description 1 -
Cleeve Toot
photo 4 description 1 -
Rhino Rift Barrow
photo 3 description 3 -
Blacker’s Hill
photo 1 description 2 -
Flock Down Field Barrows
description 1 -
St Lawrence Church
description 1 -
Read’s Cavern
photo 3 description 2 -
Berwick
description 1 -
Black Down (Priddy)
photo 9 description 2 -
Drove Cottage Henge
description 1 -
Southfield Farm
description 1 -
Eastwater Farm
description 1 -
Whitnell Corner
description 3 -
Priddy 51
description 1 -
Giant’s Grave (Holcombe)
photo 2 forum 1 description 2 link 1 -
Freezing Hill
photo 2 description 3 -
Rowberrow Warren
photo 5 description 2 -
Wellington Farm
description 1 -
Beechbarrow
description 1 -
Badock’s Wood
photo 8 forum 1 description 3 link 1 -
Stony Littleton
photo 95 forum 8 description 26 link 5 -
Tyning’s Farm
description 1 -
Langridge
photo 9 description 4 -
Pen Hill
photo 1 description 5 -
Rowberrow Cavern
description 1 -
Priddy Long Barrow
description 1 link 2 -
Temple of Sulis
photo 4 forum 5 description 7 link 2 -
Shortwood Hill
description 2 link 1 -
Totty Pot
description 1 -
Kings Weston Hill
photo 14 forum 1 description 1 -
Kings Weston Hill Barrows
photo 3 description 1 -
Ashbridge Farm
description 1 -
Portbury
photo 2 description 4 -
Blaise Castle
photo 12 forum 1 description 1 -
Dolebury Warren
photo 18 description 6 link 1 -
Cheddar Gorge and Gough’s Cave
photo 9 description 21 link 4 -
Tog Hill Camp
description 2 -
Bristol Plain Farm
description 1 -
Rowbarrow
description 2 -
Moor View
description 1 -
Maesbury Castle
photo 11 description 4 -
Cadbury Hill (Congresbury)
photo 3 description 2 -
Faulkland
photo 10 description 5 -
Ebbor Gorge
photo 6 forum 1 description 6 link 1 -
The Giants Graves
description 1 -
Fairy Cave
description 1 -
Kingsdown Camp
description 3 -
Bury Hill Camp
photo 2 description 3 -
Bathampton Downs barrows
photo 5 description 1 -
Wookey Hole
photo 2 forum 1 description 9 link 3 -
Hole Ground
description 1 -
Deerleap Stones
photo 15 description 11 -
Bracelet Cave
description 1 -
Henley Hill
description 1 -
Charmy Down Barrows
description 1 -
Hurdle Stone
description 3 -
Cadbury Camp (Nailsea)
photo 4 description 3 -
Big Tree Long Barrow
photo 2 description 2 -
Hinton Charterhouse Barrow
description 1 -
Claverton Down Barrow
description 1 -
The Wimblestone
photo 7 description 4 -
Little Solsbury Hill
photo 25 forum 1 description 11 -
Hayes Wood Enclosure
photo 1 description 1 -
Charmy Down
description 1 -
Monkswood
description 1 -
Bathampton Camp
photo 10 link 1 -
Beacon Barrow
description 1 -
Tumpy Field Barrows
description 1 -
Beacon Hill
photo 13 description 5 link 1 -
Bathampton and Claverton Downs
photo 8 forum 2 description 9 link 1 -
King’s Castle
description 2 -
Wells Museum
photo 4 description 3 -
King Offa’s Tomb
photo 1 description 2 -
Triple H Cave
description 1 -
Conkwell
photo 7 forum 1 description 2 -
Hinton Hill
photo 12 description 5 -
Banwell Fort
description 3 -
Wadbury Camp
photo 1 description 1 -
Jug’s Grave
photo 6 forum 3 description 4 link 1 -
Barrow Hill (Buckland Dinham)
photo 7 description 4 -
Walton Common
photo 1 -
Banner Down Long Barrow
description 1