Monday, September 15, 2014

Why was Stonehenge Built?


 
    They really do not know  and it can never be confirmed  but the actual real extent of the site and its complexity has  been largely expanded.  We do know that people came here for a reason.
 
 
A lot of past emphases has been placed on ritual but that is more our own expectations.  such would exist. but the background culture was tribal and this means that this was an annual gathering place for the surrounding culture to gather and sort things out.  Iceland viking culture is a good example and it is quite imaginable to derive something similar.


A also think this happened commonly before settled agriculture started to produce real towns.  This one lasted long enough to support this added astronomical and spiritual site to strengthen the cultural unity.


Curiously it appears there is no evidence of significant trade happening either.  More likely the tin trade went down to the sea and did not overlap this site.
 
 
Why was Stonehenge built? 'Groundbreaking' discovery of 15 new monuments suggests the answer could lie BENEATH the ground
 
Stonehenge project used magnetic sensors to scan landmark in Wiltshire
Experts found 15 previously unknown Neolithic monuments underground
Sites suggest that Stonehenge was not an isolated monument in an unspoilt landscape, but that there was lots of human activity nearby
Study revealed a large gap in the Cursus barrier, indicating it acted as a gateway for 'worshipers' as well as a marker for the passage of the sun
Cursus is a strip of land which ran east to west for around two miles (3km)
Two pits at either end of the Curcus could have been used for ritual fires
Expert thinks Stonehenge was built to ‘monumentalise’ a procession


By Sarah Griffiths for MailOnline


Published: 17:17 GMT, 22 August 2014


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2731994/Why-Stonehenge-built-Discovery-15-new-monuments-suggests-answer-lie-BENEATH-ground.html#ixzz3BWSozNuj



Humans have marvelled at the majesty of Stonehenge for thousands of years, but the famous landmark’s original purpose has remained a mystery.


Now, a new technique has revealed 15 previously unknown Neolithic monuments around the mysterious monument in Wiltshire.


And one archaeologist thinks they could provide evidence that the stone circle was at the heart of a busy heathen processional route over 4,000 years ago.


A new technique has revealed 15 previously unknown Neolithic monuments around Stone Henge - and could provide clues about its original purpose



Archaeologist Vince Gaffney, of the University of Birmingham, is involved in the Stonehenge Hidden Landscapes Project – a four-year collaboration with the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for Archaeological Prospection and Virtual Archaeology in Austria.


The team has conducted the first detailed underground survey of the area surrounding Stonehenge, covering around four square miles (6km), journalist Ed Caesar reported for Smithsonian.


They discovered evidence of 15 unknown and poorly-understood late Neolithic monuments, including other henges, barrows, pits and ditches, which could all harbour valuable information about the prehistoric site.


In the summer of 2009, geophysicists used magnetic sensors and ground-penetrating radar to scan the area around Stonehenge, detecting unknown structures.


The sensors let experts detect evidence of ancient digging and buildings by mapping variations in the Earth’s magnetic field.









Historians are not sure what purpose the Curcus served and Professor Gaffney describes it as a 'bloody great barrier to the north of Stonehenge'


‘This is among the most important landscapes, and probably the most studied landscape, in the world,’ Professor Gaffney told the magazine.


‘And the area has been absolutely transformed by this survey. It won’t be the same again.’


Professor Gaffney believes these sites suggest Stonehenge was not an isolated monument in an unspoilt landscape, but that there was lots of human activity nearby.


As long ago as 1620, diggers discovered cattle skulls and burnt coals buried in the centre of the stone circle and around 60 years ago, carbon dating of a piece of charcoal in a pit led scientists to believe that Stonehenge was erected in 2,600BC.


In 2003, Mike Parker Pearson of University College London claimed that the workers who built Stonehenge lived in a nearby settlement of Durrington Walls, after unearthing evidence of huts, tools, and animal bones.


He also said that the stone circle was a cemetery, as well as a religious monument.



WHAT WAS THE PURPOSE OF STONEHENGE?


No-one is exactly sure why – and how- Stonehenge was built.


Experts have suggested it was a temple, parliament and a graveyard.


Some people think the stones have healing powers, while others think they have musical properties when struck with a stone.


They could have acted as a giant musical instrument to call ancient people to the monument.


What is clear, is that the stones were aligned with phases of the sun.


People were buried there and skeletal evidence shows that people travelled hundreds of miles to visit Stonehenge – for whatever reason.


Now, experts think that the route was a busy one and that Stonehenge could be viewed differently from different positions.


It seems that instead of being a complete barrier, the Curcus acted as a gateway to guide visitors to the stone circle.


In the latest study, which took 120 days spread over four years, the experts created a new map of the Stonehenge landscape.


They included what we think of as Stonehenge, as well as a long strip of land called the Curcus, which ran east to west for around two miles (3km).


It is thought the ditch barrier predates the stone circle by several hundred years.


The Curcus barrows – mass graves – to the south of the Curcus were marked as well as the 15 new finds.


It is hoped their contents will become clear with future excavation.


Historians are not sure what purpose the Curcus served and Professor Gaffney as a ‘bloody great barrier to the north of Stonehenge.’


Some experts think it was linked to the passage of the sun and this was supported by new clues.


The team discovered gaps in the ditch including a large break in the northern side to allow people to enter and exit the Curcus.


Professor Gaffney thinks the gaps served as ‘channels though the landscape’ to enable people to move north and south.


He also found a huge pit at the eastern end of the Curcus, which is today 3ft (1metre) underground.












No-one is exactly sure why - and how- Stonehenge was built. Experts have suggested it was a temple, parliament and a graveyard



Because it was large – 14.7ft (4.5metres) in diameter – the team thinks it was used for rituals as a ‘marker of some kind’. It is also located on the path of the sunrise on the summer solstice.


‘We thought, that’s a bit of a coincidence!’ Professor Gaffney said.


‘That was the point at which we thought, What’s at the other end? And there’s another pit.


‘Two pits, marking the midsummer sunrise and the midsummer solstice, set within a monument that’s meant to be something to do with the passage of the sun.’


Professor Gaffney told Mr Caeser that on the longest day of the year, the pits form a triangle with Stonehenge, marking sunrise and sunset.


He thinks they may have had fires burning in them and that the site was designed to be seen in the day and night, especially at sunrise and sunset.


‘Increasingly we can see the area around Stonehenge as providing extensive evidence for complex liturgical movement - which we can now understand, largely because we know where things are,’ he said.


He also believes the building of Stonehenge was a ‘monumentalising’ of a procession.









Stonehenge is a prehistoric stone circle monument, cemetery, and archaeological site located on Salisbury Plain, about 8 miles (13 km) north of Salisbury, Wiltshire, England


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