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The
Legend of Stonehenge Stonehenge has fascinated
thousands of people throughout the ages, even today people are still
wondering about the origins of the mysterious Stonehenge. Today's
scientists and historians are still unable to come to a solid theory of
when, why, by whom, and how the intriguing rock structure was built.
Throughout history as we know it, there have been a countless number of
propositions pertaining to these commonly unanswered questions. One
interesting but debatable point is that throughout history, idea's about
the origin of Stonehenge have followed the fashions of the age. In
medieval times it found a place in patriotic schemes of early British
history. The 17th century age of learning marks the first attempts to
analyze it. In the 18th century its history was submerged under religious
dogma. (SC 1983, 6) Today it seems that it is undergoing a more scientific
analysis using radiocarbon dating and other techniques. Many of today's
scientists and historians reject many of the earlier stories about
Stonehenge. Whatever the origin and reason, Stonehenge is one of the most
fascinating structures ever built, and it's legacy will continue to live
on even ages after we are gone. Many people have some
vague knowledge of Stonehenge, enough at least to know it exists. But
there are many things that make Stonehenge a very special structure. The
name 'Stonehenge is believed to be of Saxon origin, although the building
is much older. It comes from the roots 'stone and 'henge' or 'hang',
meaning 'the place of hanging stones'. (SC 1983, 10) It is located in
central southern England, in the country of Wiltshire. It resides about 30
miles north of the English channel, and about 80 miles west of London. It
is located on a fairly flat stretch of land, known as Salisbury Plain. (SC
1983, 10) But what makes Stonehenge so special? For one, it is different
from many other stone circles in western Britain due to the fact that many
of the stones are trimmed into rectilinear forms. (SC 1983, 11) Another
thing that makes it so remarkable is the sheer size of the stones that it
is composed of. Some of its stones are among the largest ancient
structures still standing in the British Isles. To really understand what
Stonehenge looks like, in it's entire enormity, we must take a detailed
look at it's structure. The circle of stones lying on the outer circle of
Stonehenge is called 'The Outer Sarsen Circle'. It is composed of 30
squarish upright stones made of a type of sandstone called Sarsen. It
forms a 100 ft diameter. Each standing stone reaches about 13 1/2ft above
the ground, and is about 7ft wide and 3 3/4ft thick. The stones sitting
atop the uprights are called lintels, and are about 10 1/2ft long, 3 1/2ft
wide, and 2 3/4ft thick. They are attached to the tops of the stones by a
method similar to that of the mortise & tenon, a common woodworkers
joint. No mortar was used whatsoever in Stonehenge. The outer Sarsen
circle forms a remarkable continuous circle within about an inch of
perfection. However not all of the outer circle is still standing. (SC
1983, 12>) The Outer Bluestone Circle lies right within the outer
Sarsen circle and is composed of a type of igneous rock called Bluestone
(due to its blue-ish coloring). It contains about 60 Bluestones which are
all about 6 1/2ft high, 3-4ft wide, and 2 1/2ft thick. The circle is about
75ft in diameter. They are upright, and contain no lintels. Many are
missing or fallen. (SC 1983, 13) The Inner Sarsen Trilithons are arranged
in a horseshoe shape, 45 feet diameter, and are composed of 5 independent
Trilithons. (Trilithon means '3 stones' in Greek) Each Trilithon contains
2 uprights, with a lintel connected in the Mortise & Tenon manner.
They reach an average of about 22ft high. Only 3 are still standing, but
all the pieces are there. (SC 1983, 14) The Inner Bluestone Circle is
another horseshoe shape, composed of about 19 Bluestones with no lintels.
It stands just within the inner Sarsen Trilithons. They range from 6-8ft
in height, and only 6 are still in place. (SC 1983, 15) The Alter Stone is
a big rectangular piece of gray-ish sandstone, different from all the
other types of rock. It is about 16ft long, and probably stood upright but
is now snapped in two. The name 'Alter Stone' refers to the theory that
the Druids used the Stonehenge as a temple, and the large stone lying in
the center was their alter. (SC 1983, 15) All in all, about half of the
entire structure is missing, and some of the remaining half is fallen
and/or broken. However there is still enough standing to be able to tell
the original form. Now with the image of Stonehenge in mind, we may have a
better understanding of what makes it so special, and why so many
different theories were devised pertaining to it's origin. Stanenges, where stones of wonderful size have been erected after the manner of doorways, so that doorway appears to have been raised upon doorway; and no one can conceive how such great stones have been so raised aloft, or of why they were built there. (SC 1983, 20) This quote, written in
1130 by a man named Henry Huntington, was one of the first things ever
recorded in writing about Stonehenge. He was referring to the point that
if you look from a certain angle, the two Sarsen Circles do seem to form
doorways on top of each other. (More on doorways later, as associated with
the Druids) The way Huntington refers to Stonehenge as 'Stanenges' is
significant because it shows that a name was established for Stonehenge
that early, and before the Norman scholars ever wrote of it. During the
Medieval era, 1136, a man named Geoffrey of Monmouth wrote a book that set
the stage for many of the associations we draw today between the Druids (Merlyn
in particular), Stonehenge, and the Legend of King Arthur. This book on
the origin of Stonehenge was entitled The History of The Kings of Britain.
(SC 1983, 22>) The story begins in Britain, where the new British king
Vortigern has seized the throne through treason. He sets up a peace
meeting at Amesbury (Salisbury Plain) with the Saxon king Hengist because
the Saxon armies are a threat to his kingdom. The Saxons pull hidden
daggers at the meeting, and murder 460 British Lords. Vortiger, after
being captured and released, flees to Wales where he builds a great tower
on Mount Snowdon with the help of Merlyn the Druid. Then the rightful
British king, Aurelius Ambrosius, comes back and burns Vortigern in his
tower. There then ensues a battle between Aurelius and the Saxons. The
British win, and Hengist is executed. Aurelius decides to set up a great
and everlasting memorial to the Mt. Amesbury Massacre. Merlyn is called
forth do devise a building, and he tells Aurelius of a great stone
structure located in Ireland. Send for the Giants Round,
which is on Mount Killaraus in Ireland. In that place there is a stone
construction which no man of this period could ever erect, unless he
combined great skill and artistry. The stones are enormous, and there is
no one alive strong enough to move them. If they are placed in position
round this site, in the way they are put up over there, they will stand
for ever.... (SC 1983, 22) The structure he was
referring to of course, was Stonehenge. So as the story goes, The kings
brother, Uther Pendragon, took 15,000 men to Ireland to bring back the
stones. They were unsuccessful however, and had to recruit Merlyn to move
them. He takes down the stones himself, and sets them up at the massacre
site in the exact same formation. Aurelius is supposedly buried there when
he dies, as well as Uther Pendragon who succeeds him. Uther's son, the
legendary King Arthur succeeds him, and is supposedly tutored in the ways
of the Druids by Merlyn. That is the beginning of the Druids and Arthur's
association with Stonehenge. That view/legend was prominent throughout
much of the medieval era. (SC 1983, 22>) Geoffrey's idea's about
Stonehenge and Arthur are said to be made up today. Everything after
Vortigern was supposedly made up. However the tale still lives on,
although it has acquired many variations. Some of the people who scorned
Geoffrey's work included William of Newburgh, John Leland, and William
Lambarde. (SC 1983, 24 + 29 + 37) Towards the Elizabethan
Age, the questions about Stonehenge seemed to shift away from Geoffrey
type stories, and more towards where the actual stones came from and how
they got there. There were many paintings of Stonehenge that we still know
of today. (SC 1983, 36 + 38 + 41) During the Renaissance, there emerged
many tales pertaining to the actual stones. Some of these tales included
ideas that 'you can never count the stones twice and arrive at the same
number', 'whoever counts the stones of Stonehenge will die' or 'to count
the stones was to tempt the power of the devil'. There were also myths
saying that the stones contained magickal powers. (SC 1983, 44) Many
famous kings visited Stonehenge, among them were the Stuart Kings,
including James I and Charles II. James one had his great royal architect,
Inigo Jones, write a book on Stonehenge. Stonehenge Restored was the first
book dedicated entirely to a single monument. (SC 1983, 47) Many theories
also popped up about who built it, and of how old it was. One man's
theory, Dr. Glisson, was close to what radiocarbon dating shows us today. Dr. Stukeley first devised
the theory that Stonehenge was used by the Druids as a temple. Basically,
the Druids were thought to be the Priests of the ancient Britons (TDW
1993, 10) and Stonehenge was an ancient British temple. (SC 1983, 85) Thus
the association was made between the two. Although there was not too much
support for this idea, and many today still hold it untrue, it was
generally accepted, more so today then it was back then. Stukeley
published a 4 volume book containing his idea's. However at the time it
was published, Christianity was on the rise and was trying to wipe out all
the other religions. This did not support a very friendly environment for
his works. (SC 1983, 88) Many idea's about the Druids use came up, most of
them were images of the 'savage' Druids performing 'Sacrifices' to their
'Gods'. (SC 1983, 83>) The Druids understood
gateways and all that they mean. They built gateways at Stonehenge. Each
stone circle has its gateway, It's entrance place between two stones.
Irish folklore is full of tales of people who disappear into the land of
Sidhe, the fairies, by accidentally, or deliberately, walking between one
of a Trilithon which acts as a gateway into that other world. (TDW 1993,
12) This quote supports the
fact that the Druids were the architects of Stonehenge. They had a belief
in these types of 'Gateways'. Henry Huntington also referred to Stonehenge
as containing 'Gateways' earlier. The Druids were however, heavily
associated with trees. The name 'Druid', actually means 'Men of Oak'. And
the Druids held many trees to be sacred, among the most sacred tree of
course, was the oak. (TDW 1993, 13) So why then, would they have a heavy
association with Stonehenge? The land around Stonehenge was practically
'treeless', and the Druids always tended to meet at 'Groves', a circular
clearing in the middle of trees. (TDW 1993, 14) This might support the
fact that the Druids indeed did not have a heavy association with
Stonehenge, and if they did, they only used it, not built it. 'Where the
Druids reared their rocky circles to make permanent remembrance of sin,
& the tree of Good and Evil sprang from the rock circle & snake of
the Druid...' (EOS 1980, 124) Today, views of Stonehenge
are not so different. There have been many attempted breakthroughs, but
none successful. Some feel that although the actual scientific view of
Stonehenge is more important, so are the myths and stories that come with
it, even though they may be untrue. Most people, however, do not stop to
think about why Stonehenge has attracted so many people and ideas. (Today,
it receives close to a million visitors per year) The attraction of
Stonehenge here is very simple: there are not yet enough facts about it to
bury it in certainty, in a scientific final solution to all its questions.
Its great present virtue is precisely that something so concrete, so sui
generis, so individualized, should still evoke so much impressions of
feeling and thought. (EOS 1980, 125) The other Stonehenge, this vast
labyrinth of words, pictures, speculations, feelings, impressions, may
never be quite so important as the scientists Stonehenge, but it is no
less real in any deep or sane sense of human history. Almost everyone who
visits the monuments feels this. Never can a building have had its actual
scale and height vis-à-vis man so persistently exaggerated or its
surroundings so romanticized, both before and after the Romantic Movement
proper. It is not that artists, or ordinary visitors, want Stonehenge to
be larger than it is. It is large than it is. (EOS 1980, 126) I can agree with this to a
very large degree, even though I have never seen the monument myself.
Stonehenge has, and always will continue to intrigue people. Maybe it is
not so much the truth about it, but the stories that emerge from it. For
some of the myths concerning Stonehenge (Arthurian Legend, for example)
are just so unforgettable that they will never die. Who knows what the
purpose of Stonehenge is, but whatever the purpose, it has served itself
well. What is Stonehenge? It is
the roofless past; Man's ruinous myth; his uniterred adoring Of the
unknown in sunrise cold and red; His quest of stars that arch his doomed
exploring. And what is Time but
shadows that were cast By these storm-sculptured stones while centuries
fled? The stones remain; their stillness can outlast The skies of history
hurrying overhead. Bibliography Philip Carr-Gomm, The Druid Way, Rockport MA - Element Books, Inc. © 1993 (Reffered to within internal notation as TDW) Christopher Chippindale, Stonehenge Complete, New York - Cornell University Press, ©1983 (Reffered to within internal notation as SC) John Fowles, The Enigma Of Stonehenge, New York - Philpot Museum, © 1980 (Reffered to within internal notation as EOS |