Difference between revisions of "Stonehenge"

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[[Image:Stonehenge.jpg|right|340px]]
 
[[Image:Stonehenge.jpg|right|340px]]
'''Stonehenge''' is a megalithic monument located in southern [[England]] (lies on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire). The earliest references to the name are in Anglo Saxon ('Stanhenge') and Middle English ('Stanhenges') from 'stan' for stone and 'henge' meaning hanging or suspended. The tallest stone, one of the trilithons, is around 22 feet high. At present it is a tourist attraction and a place of pilgrimage for neo-druids.
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'''Stonehenge''' is a megalithic monument located in southern [[England]] (it lies on [[Salisbury]] Plain, in [[Wiltshire]]). The earliest references to the name are in Anglo Saxon ('Stanhenge') and Middle English ('Stanhenges') from 'stan' for stone and 'henge' meaning hanging or suspended. The tallest stone, one of the trilithons, is around 22 feet high. At present it is a tourist attraction and a place of pilgrimage for neo-druids.
  
Stonehenge was constructed between 3000 and 1600 BC. <ref> [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7625145.stm Dig pinpoints Stonehenge origins.] </ref>
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Stonehenge was constructed between 3000 and 1600 BC. <ref> [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7625145.stm Dig pinpoints Stonehenge origins.] </ref> The purpose of the site is as yet uncertain, although several different theories exist. The construction of the site can be considered a masterwork of engineering, considering the limited tools of the age in which it was built.
  
 
Stonehenge is aligned to the sunrise at the summer [[solstice]], or longest day of the year, around June 21. On that day, a person standing in the centre of Stonehenge will see the sun appear to rise over the Heelstone, a beautifully worn piece of sandstone around 16 feet high.
 
Stonehenge is aligned to the sunrise at the summer [[solstice]], or longest day of the year, around June 21. On that day, a person standing in the centre of Stonehenge will see the sun appear to rise over the Heelstone, a beautifully worn piece of sandstone around 16 feet high.
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Contrary to some fringe theories, there was no plan in [[World War I]] by the British government to demolish Stonehenge in order to make room for a longer runway for the nearby air-force base. <ref> [http://www.math.nus.edu.sg/aslaksen/gem-projects/hm/Stonehenge.pdf The Legend of Stonehenge] </ref> The Royal Air Force was not established until April 1918 and the height of the stones posed no problem.
 
Contrary to some fringe theories, there was no plan in [[World War I]] by the British government to demolish Stonehenge in order to make room for a longer runway for the nearby air-force base. <ref> [http://www.math.nus.edu.sg/aslaksen/gem-projects/hm/Stonehenge.pdf The Legend of Stonehenge] </ref> The Royal Air Force was not established until April 1918 and the height of the stones posed no problem.
  
Stonehenge currently receives an important amount of visitors during the summer season. Furthermore, the [[Druidry|Druids]] insist on holding their ceremonies there as they have done for thousands of years but they were stopped by the government in the mid 1980s, and, after fifteen years, controlled access to Stonehenge was granted in 2000. <ref> [http://www.lugodoc.demon.co.uk/Druids/DRUIDS.htm Lugodoc's Guide to Druids] </ref> However the Druids had nothing to do with the construction of the stone rings. <ref> [http://www.sacredsites.com/europe/england/stonehenge.html Stonehenge, England] </ref>
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Stonehenge currently receives an important amount of visitors during the summer season. Furthermore, the [[Druidry|Druids]] insist on holding their ceremonies there as they have done for thousands of years but they were stopped by the government in the mid 1980s, and, after fifteen years, controlled access to Stonehenge was granted in 2000. <ref> [http://www.lugodoc.demon.co.uk/Druids/DRUIDS.htm Lugodoc's Guide to Druids] </ref> However the Druids had nothing to do with the construction of the stone rings; the site significantly predates druidism. <ref> [http://www.sacredsites.com/europe/england/stonehenge.html Stonehenge, England] </ref>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 22:17, June 14, 2011

Stonehenge.jpg

Stonehenge is a megalithic monument located in southern England (it lies on Salisbury Plain, in Wiltshire). The earliest references to the name are in Anglo Saxon ('Stanhenge') and Middle English ('Stanhenges') from 'stan' for stone and 'henge' meaning hanging or suspended. The tallest stone, one of the trilithons, is around 22 feet high. At present it is a tourist attraction and a place of pilgrimage for neo-druids.

Stonehenge was constructed between 3000 and 1600 BC. [1] The purpose of the site is as yet uncertain, although several different theories exist. The construction of the site can be considered a masterwork of engineering, considering the limited tools of the age in which it was built.

Stonehenge is aligned to the sunrise at the summer solstice, or longest day of the year, around June 21. On that day, a person standing in the centre of Stonehenge will see the sun appear to rise over the Heelstone, a beautifully worn piece of sandstone around 16 feet high.

Contrary to some fringe theories, there was no plan in World War I by the British government to demolish Stonehenge in order to make room for a longer runway for the nearby air-force base. [2] The Royal Air Force was not established until April 1918 and the height of the stones posed no problem.

Stonehenge currently receives an important amount of visitors during the summer season. Furthermore, the Druids insist on holding their ceremonies there as they have done for thousands of years but they were stopped by the government in the mid 1980s, and, after fifteen years, controlled access to Stonehenge was granted in 2000. [3] However the Druids had nothing to do with the construction of the stone rings; the site significantly predates druidism. [4]

References

  1. Dig pinpoints Stonehenge origins.
  2. The Legend of Stonehenge
  3. Lugodoc's Guide to Druids
  4. Stonehenge, England