I’m
going to tell you something about
I
want to tell you what
I’m
also going to tell you something about the kind of stones they used.
The
history.
More
than 4000 years ago, the people of the Neolithic period decided to build a
massive monument using earth, timber and eventually, stones, placing it high
on Salisbury Plain in
The
order of the stones.
The stones of the main
monument appear to form layers of circles and horseshoe patterns that slowly
enclose the site. First there is an outer stone circle, now mostly in ruin.
Within this are a smaller set of stones, also set in a circle. Within the
centre of the monument are trilithons -- two pillar stones with one stone on
top -- in the shape of a horseshoe. Within this is another smaller set of
stones, also in a horseshoe.
But it is a monument
made of more than just rocks. There is the henge, or a ditch and bank, that
surrounds the stone circle. There is also a laneway that extends from the
northeast side of the monument from the open horseshoe to the River Avon, a
few kilometres away. Several stones mark this laneway, just outside the henge
of the monument.
Why
is
It
doesn't sound all that different from many of the other stone circles being
constructed around this time. So, why does this megalithic monument draw so
much attention? Christopher Witcombe, a professor of art history at
The
construction.
On the outside of the
main monument is a circle of 17 sarsen stones, or sandstones, left from a set
of about 30. These rocks stand four metres high and weigh about 25 tonnes
each. Some of them still retain their lintels, which would have been secured
in a type of tongue-and-groove slot.
Within this is a larger
sarsen stone horseshoe in the middle of the monument. There are remnants of
what would have been five sets of two stones with a lintel on top -- called a
trilithon after the Greek word for three stones. The tallest of these upright
sarsen stones is about 7 metres tall with lintel, acting as a reminder that
the word sarsen comes from "saracen", meaning heathenish, foreign
and vaguely satanic.
The
Bluestones.
Some
of the most interesting theories still being generated about
A
bluestone horseshoe can also be found within the large sarsen stone horseshoe,
which would have originally been made up of 19 stones. Again, few of these are
left. The stones were placed in such a way that they increased in size towards
the centre and alternated in shape between tall, thin pillar-like stones and
stones of a tapering obelisk shape.
These
bluestones, now severely weathered and covered in lichen, may not appear blue.
But if freshly broken, most would have a slaty-blue colour. There are five
colour variations represented in the bluestones found at
The
Aubrey Holes.
A
bank-and-ditch, or the henge of the monument, circles the main monument at
about 91 metres in diameter. On the inside boundary of the henge are 56 pits,
known as "Aubrey Holes" that can barely be seen. Closer to the stone
circles are two other sets of pits, called "Z" and "Y"
holes. These were the last additions to the monument and may have been carved
out to accommodate more bluestones, but now lay empty.
Where
are the stones from?
All
of the stones were brought far distances to Salisbury Plain, using only muscle
and primitive tools, like ropes and wooden levers. The sarsen stones are
believed to have been brought from Marlborough Downs, 30 kilometres to the
north of
Although the site may
not be as majestic as it once was, it still conveys a sense of power that
seems to enclose people in its mystery, allowing no one to escape from the
riddle of its purpose. Today, there is enough left of
I
learned a lot from this talk because in the beginning I only knew how
I
hope that you learned something from my talk too.
This
was my talk about
Groetjes
van Linda en veel plezier er mee
