For centuries,
historians and archaeologists have puzzled over the many mysteries of
Stonehenge, the prehistoric monument that took Neolithic builders an estimated
1,500 years to erect. Located in southern England, it is comprised of roughly
100 massive upright stones placed in a circular layout. Whi1e many modern
scholars now agree that Stonehenge was once a burial ground, they have yet to
determine what other purposes it served and how a civilization without modern
technology—or even the wheel—produced the mighty monument. Its construction is
all the more baffling because, while the sandstone slabs of its outer ring hail
from local quarries, scientists have traced the bluestones that make up its
inner ring all the way to the Preseli Hills in Wales, some 200 miles from where
Stonehenge sits on Salisbury Plain. Today, nearly 1 million people visit
Stonehenge, a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1986, every year.
STONEHENGE’S
MULTIPHASE CONSTRUCTION
Archaeologists believe England most iconic prehistoric ruin
was built in several stages, with the earliest constructed 5,000 or more years
ago. First, Neolithic Britons used primitive tools—possibly made from deer
antlers—to dig a massive circular ditch and bank, or henge, on Salisbury Plain.
Deep pits dating back to that era and located within the circle—known as Aubrey
holes after John Aubrey, the 17th-century antiquarian who discovered them—may
have once held a ring of timber posts, according to some scholars.
Did You Know?
“In 1620, George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, dug a
large hole in the ground at the center of Stonehenge looking for buried
treasure.”
Several hundred years later, it is thought, Stonehenge’s
builders hoisted an estimated 80 non-indigenous bluestones, 43 of which remain
today, into standing positions and placed them in either a horseshoe or
circular formation. During the third phase of construction, which took place
around 2000 B.C., sarsen sandstone slabs were arranged into an outer crescent
or ring; some were assembled into the iconic three-pieced structures called
trilithons that stand tall in the center of Stonehenge. Some 50 sarsen stones
are now visible on the site, which may once have contained many more.
Radiocarbon dating suggests that work continued at Stonehenge until roughly
1600 B.C., with the bluestones in particularly being repositioned multiple
times.
THE MEGALITHS OF
STONEHENGE
Stonehenge’s sarsens, of which the largest weighs more than
40 tons and rises 24 feet, were likely sourced from quarries 25 miles north of
Salisbury Plain and transported with the help of sledges and ropes; they may
even have already been scattered in the immediate vicinity when the monument’s
Neolithic architects first broke ground there. The smaller bluestones, on the
other hand, have been traced all the way to the Preseli Hills in Wales, some
200 miles away from Stonehenge. How, then, did prehistoric builders without
sophisticated tools or engineering haul these boulders, which weigh up to 4
tons, over such a great distance?
According to one longstanding theory, Stonehenge’s builders
fashioned sledges and rollers out of tree trunks to lug the bluestones from the
Preseli Hills. They then transferred the boulders onto rafts and floated them
first along the Welsh coast and then up the River Avon toward Salisbury Plain;
alternatively, they may have towed each stone with a fleet of vessels. More
recent hypotheses have them transporting the bluestones with supersized wicker
baskets or a combination of ball bearings, long grooved planks and teams of
oxen.
As early as the 1970s, geologists have been adding their
voices to the debate over how Stonehenge came into being. Challenging the
classic image of industrious Neolithic builders pushing, carting, rolling or
hauling the craggy bluestones from faraway Wales, some scientists have
suggested that glaciers, not humans, did most of the heavy lifting. The globe
is dotted with giant rocks known as glacial erratics that were carried over
long distances by moving ice floes. Perhaps Stonehenge’s mammoth slabs were
snatched from the Preseli Hills by glaciers during one of the Ice Ages and
deposited a stone’s throw away—at least comparatively—from Salisbury Plain.
Most archaeologists have remained cool toward the glacial theory, however,
wondering how the forces of nature could possibly have delivered the exact
number of stones needed to complete the circle.
WHO BUILT STONEHENGE?
According to the 12th-century writer Geoffrey of Monmouth,
whose tale of King Arthur and mythical account of English history were
considered factual well into the Middle Ages, Stonehenge is
the handiwork of the wizard Merlin. In the mid-fifth century, the story goes,
hundreds of British nobles were slaughtered by the Saxons and buried on
Salisbury Plain. Hoping to erect a memorial to his fallen subjects, King
Aureoles Ambrosias sent an army to Ireland to retrieve a stone circle known as
the Giants’ Ring, which ancient giants had built from magical African
bluestones. The soldiers successfully defeated the Irish but failed to move the
stones, so Merlin used his sorcery to spirit them across the sea and arrange
them above the mass grave. Legend has it that Ambrosias and his brother Uther,
King Arthur’s father, are buried there as well.
While many believed Monmouth’s account to be the true story
of Stonehenge’s creation for centuries, the monument’s construction predates
Merlin—or, at least, the real-life figures who are said to have inspired him—by
several thousand years. Other early hypotheses attributed its building to the
Saxons, Danes, Romans, Greeks or Egyptians. In the 17th century, archaeologist
John Aubrey made the claim that Stonehenge was the work of the Celtic high
priests known as the Druids, a theory widely popularized by the antiquarian
William Stukeley, who had unearthed primitive graves at the site. Even today,
people who identify as modern Druids continue to gather at Stonehenge for the
summer solstice. However, in the mid-20th century, radiocarbon dating
demonstrated that Stonehenge stood more than 1,000 years before the Celts
inhabited the region, eliminating the ancient Druids from the running.
Many modern historians and archaeologists now agree that
several distinct tribes of people contributed to Stonehenge, each undertaking a
different phase of its construction. Bones, tools and other artifacts found on
the site seem to support this hypothesis. The first stage was achieved by
Neolithic agrarians who were likely indigenous to the British Isles. Later, it
is believed, groups with advanced tools and a more communal way of life left
their stamp on the site. Some have suggested that they were immigrants from the
European continent, but many scientists think they were native Britons
descended from the original builders.
STONEHENGE’S FUNCTION
AND SIGNIFICANCE
If the facts surrounding the architects and construction of
Stonehenge remain shadowy at best, the purpose of the arresting monument is even
more of a mystery. While historians agree that it was a place of great
importance for over 1,000 years, we may never know what drew early Britons to
Salisbury Plain and inspired them to continue developing it. There is strong
archaeological evidence that Stonehenge was used as a burial site, at least for
part of its long history, but most scholars believe it served other functions
as well—either as a ceremonial site, a religious pilgrimage destination, a
final resting place for royalty or a memorial erected to honor and perhaps
spiritually connect with distant ancestors.
In the 1960s, the astronomer Gerald Hawkins suggested that
the cluster of megalithic stones operated as an astronomical calendar, with
different points corresponding to astrological phenomena such as solstices,
equinoxes and eclipses. While his theory has received quite a bit of attention
over the years, critics maintain that Stonehenge’s builders probably lacked the
knowledge necessary to predict such events or that England’s dense cloud cover
would have obscured their view of the skies. More recently, signs of illness
and injury in the human remains unearthed at Stonehenge led a group of British
archaeologists to speculate that it was considered a place of healing, perhaps
because bluestones were thought to have curative powers.
STONEHENGE TODAY
One of the most famous and recognizable sites in the world,
Stonehenge draws more than 800,000 tourists a year, many of whom also visit the
region’s numerous other Neolithic and Bronze Age marvels. In 1986 Stonehenge
was added to UNESCO’s register of World Heritage sites in a co-listing with
Avebury, a Neolithic henge located 17 miles away that is older and larger than
its more famous neighbor. Stonehenge has undergone several restorations over
the years, and some of its boulders have been set in concrete to prevent
collapse. Meanwhile, archaeological excavations and development of the
surrounding area to facilitate tourism have turned up other significant sites
nearby, including other henges.
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