Stonehenge
Dr. Christopher L.
C. E. Witcombe
Professor, Department of Art History, Sweet
Briar College, Virginia
The megalithic ruin known
as Stonehenge stands on the open downland of Salisbury Plain two
miles (three kilometres) west of the town of Amesbury, Wiltshire, in
southern England. It consists of a series of earth, timber, and stone
structures that were built, revised and re-modelled over a period of
more than 1400 years.
In the 1940s and 1950s, Richard Atkinson,
Stonehenge (London: H. Hamilton, 1956). proposed that construction
occurred in three phases, which he labelled Stonehenge I, II, IIIa, IIIb,
and IIIc. This sequence has recently been revised (see Stonehenge in
Its Landscape: Twentieth-Century Excavations, Archaeological Report
10, published in London in 1995 by English Heritage) and is outlined
below.
Phase I (2950-2900
BCE)
Stonehenge Phase I
(2950-2900 BCE)
The earliest portion of the complex dates to
approximately 2950-2900 BCE (Middle Neolithic). It is comprised a
circular bank, ditch, and counterscarp bank of about 330 feet (100
metres) in diameter. Just inside the earth bank is a circle of the 56
Aubrey holes that held wooden posts.
Phase II
(c. 2900-2400 BCE)
After 2900 BCE and for approximately the
next 500 years (until 2400 BCE), post holes indicate timber settings in
the centre of the monument and at the north-eastern entrance. The
Aubrey Holes no longer held posts but were partially filled, some
with cremation deposits added to the fill. The numerous post holes
indicate timber structures but no clear patterns or configurations are
discernible that would suggest their shape, form, or function.
Phase
III (c. 2550-1600 BCE)
Stonehenge Phase III,
sub-phase 3ii (c. 2550-1600 BCE)
The Sarsen Circle
and the Trilithon Horseshoe
During Phase III the monument underwent a complicated
sequence of settings of large stones. The first stone setting comprised
a series of Bluestones placed in what are known as the Q and R
Holes (sub-phase 3i). These were subsequently dismantled and a
circle of Sarsens and a horseshoe-shaped arrangement of
Trilithons erected (sub-phase 3ii).
The Sarsen Circle, about 108 feet (33 metres)
in diameter, was originally comprised of 30 neatly trimmed upright
sandstone blocks of which only 17 are now standing. The stones are
evenly spaced approximately 1.0 to 1.4 metres apart, and stand on
average 13 feet (4 metres) above the ground. They are about 6.5 feet (2
metres) wide and 3 feet (1 metre) thick and taper towards the top. They
originally supported sarsen lintels forming a continuous circle around
the top. Each lintel block has been shaped to the curve of the circle.
The average length of the rectangular lintels is 10 feet 6 inches (3.2
metres). The lintels were fitted end-to end using tongue-and-groove
joints, and fitted on top of the standing sarsen with mortice and tenon
joints. The Sarsen Circle with its lintels is perhaps the most
remarkable feature of Stonehenge in terms of design, precision
stonework, and engineering.
Part of the outer
Sarsen Circle with lintels in place.
In front of them are stones of the Bluestone Horseshoe (see
below)
Sarsen stones are hard-grained sandstone with
a silaceous cement. They were probably brought to the site from the
Marlborough Downs, about 30 kilometres to the north of Stonehenge.
The Trilithons are ten upright stones arranged
as five freestanding pairs each with a single horizontal lintel. They
were erected within the Sarsen Circle in the form of a horseshoe
with the open side facing north-east towards the main entrance of the
monument. They were arranged symmetrically and graded in height; the
tallest is in the central position. Only three of the five Trilithons
are now complete with their lintels. The other two both have only one
standing stone with the second stone and lintel lying on the ground.
Two of the
Trilithons
In front of them can be seen two of the upright bluestones, which
originally formed an oval inside the horseshoe of Trilithons
Bluestones may have been added next (sub-phase
3iii) but were subsequently removed.
Stonehenge Phase III,
sub-phase 3iv (c. 2550-1600 BCE)
The Bluestone Oval
and the Bluestone Circle
In sub-phase 3iv, a Bluestone Oval was added
within the Trilithon Horseshoe and a Bluestone Circle
added outside the Trilithon Horseshoe but inside the Sarsen
Circle.
The term "Bluestone" refers to various types
of mostly igneous rocks including dolerites, rhyolites, and volcanic
ash. It also includes some sandstones. The Bluestones at
Stonehenge are believed to have originated from various outcrops in the
Preseli Hills in Pembrokeshire in Wales. How they were transported to
the site at Stonehenge has been the subject of much speculation.
Stonehenge Phase III,
sub-phase 3v (c. 2550-1600 BCE)
The Bluestone
Horseshoe
In sub-phase 3v, an arc of stone was removed from the
Bluestone Oval to form a Bluestone Horseshoe.
Stonehenge Phase III,
sub-phase 3vi (c. 2550-1600 BCE)
The Y and Z Holes
In the final sub-phase (3vi), two circles, one inside
the other, known as the Y and Z Holes were dug for the placement
of stones but were never filled.
Probably also dating to Phase III are the four
Station Stones (only two of which survive, and one of them has
fallen). These sarsen stones stood just inside the Bank on more
or less the same line as the Aubrey Holes. Two of the Station
Stones were surrounded by circular ditches 10 to 12 metres in
diameter. These have caused the area enclosed by the ditch to appear
mound-like and have lead to the erroneous identification of each mound
as a burial barrow.
Assigned to Phase III are also Stoneholes D and E
and the recumbent sarsen known as the Slaughter Stone located on
the north-east side in a break in the bank-and-ditch in what is regarded
as the main entrance of the monument.
At this time was also laid out an earthwork known as
the Avenue that extends north-east from the break in the
bank-and-ditch.
Located further along the Avenue, and most
likely dating to this period, is the so-called Heel Stone (Stone
96). The sarsen Heel Stone is approximately 16 feet high (4.88
metres), with another 4 feet (1.22 metres) buried below ground. The
Heel Stone is surrounded by a circular ditch of approximately the
same dimensions as the ditch surrounding each of the two Station
Stones. The stone now leans out of vertical but most likely once
stood upright. Originally, the Heel Stone may have been paired
with another stone now missing (Stonehole 97).
Heel Stone
Finally, mention should be made of the so-called
Altar Stone, a large dressed block of sandstone that lies embedded
in the ground within the Trilithon Horseshoe and "in front of"
the central and largest Trilithon pair. Two fallen stones now lie
across it. The stone is believed to be Cosheston Beds Sandstone from
south Wales, and is the only example of this type of stone at
Stonehenge. It is 16 feet long (4.9 metres), 3 feet 6 inches wide (1
metre), and 1 foot 9 inches thick (0.5 metres).
Stonehenge at the end of
Phase III
Image from Jean-Pierre
Mohen The World of Megaliths (New York: Facts on File, 1990),
page 131
online since October
10, 1996
revised August 22, 2001
modified August 22, 2005
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