I have suspected for some time that Stonehenge was likely a roofed structure. However that was merely a guess based on respect for the building skills and options available and assuming that if they could they did. That is usually the best choice.
We hear of a twenty year monsoon circa 2400 BC. I know of such an event in 1159 BC. I need a reference for this purported event as it is very important. Two such events are completely unlikely.
Stonehenge began at least five centuries before 2400 BC which is the time the Great Pyramid was built. Supposedly no metal tools existed. However a stone back adze is a perfectly effective tool for shaping timbers. At the same time seamanship was very much operational and tools could easily have been brought up from the Mediterranean.
Metal work took a long time to be readily available but smithing itself began early. A chunk of native copper makes you into a smith in short order and do recall that mining native copper began around 2400 BC or sooner in Lake Superior. That was surely preceded by decades or even centuries of searching.
Was Stonehenge originally a roofed temple?
Because we are so
accustomed to seeing Stonehenge as free standing monoliths, British
Architect, Sara Ewbank’s theory seems “off the wall” – but there is
actually logic to her ideas. While Ewbank was working on her models of
Stonehenge in Gloucestershire (southwestern UK) British archaeologists
announced the discovery that part of Stonehenge was originally built in
Wales, then dismantled and transported 160 miles stone by stone to the
Salisbury Plain.
What does this have to do
with Native American architecture? For the past 25 years, Dr. Gordon
Freeman of the University of Alberta has been building up impressive
archaeological evidence that originally a people, kin to modern
indigenous Americans, lived on both sides of the North Atlantic. The
first stone stonehenges were in Canada then appeared 500 years later in
the British Isles.
Three years ago, Freeman
unknowningly obtained substantial evidence of a North American-British
Isle connection in the same archaeological zone in Wales, where
archaeologists later found the original location of a stonehenge,
containing THE STONEHENGE’S bluestones. This fact should give all
skeptics a pause for thought.
In a recent POOF article about a 5,200 year old temple complex on Edisto Island, South Carolina,
it was mentioned that around 2345 BC, a catastrophic 20 year long rain
storm began, which virtually depopulated Ireland and Britain.
Immediately thereafter, pottery and circular shrines built of shells
appeared on the South Atlantic Coast.
[ Hang on a second here. the date i have for this exact event is 1159 BC. 2345 BC coincides with the commencement of copper mining in Wales and Lake Superior which also coincides with our best dates for the building of the Great Pyramid - arclein ]
The Great Flood could be
when most Asiatic Europeans paddled westward to the Americas. However,
the last emigrations from Ireland of black haired, bronze skinned
peoples, occurred around 1200 BC during a period of massive volcanic
eruptions in Europe and again around 500 BC, when Iron Age Celts invaded
Ireland.
Stonehenge, the Fig Island
Shrine on Edisto Island, SC and the triangular quarried-stone temple at
Nodoroc in Metro Atlanta were all constructed in the same time period.
This is significant. An ancient stone quarry has recently been found
near Track Rock Gap in Georgia with the same “cross marks” as seen on
the Nodoroc building stones.
Founding POOF member, Edna Dixon, has sent us an intriguing
newspaper article from the Salisbury Journal in the United Kingdom. It
describes a radical new theory, which explains many unexplained
mysteries about Stonehenge on the Salisbury Plain. Architect Sarah
Ewbank theorizes that what we see today at Stonehenge was merely the
structure of the first floor of a temple.
“My interest in Stonehenge was born from a knowledge that
archaeologists, by nature of their preoccupation with digging, where
missing ‘what’s not there’; you can’t find something that no longer
exists. My designer’s mind visualized Stonehenge as the ruined remains
of a bigger structure – a huge building. This proposal does not
discount other theories of purposes. Over 4000 years of history have
passed since Stonehenge stood in the current ‘stone-only’ form.”
“In February 2015, a gap in my work program allowed time for
research. The patterns I saw fueled this project. The ‘two arcs’ led to a
setting-out plan that defines a Bronze–age unit of measurement (a
‘baunt’). The ‘four equally-spaced lines’ produced the oval, and
subsequently the built form. Both were evident within minutes of placing
the survey on my drawing board.”
“Over the past year I’ve made two models, one at 1:100 and a
second at 1:50 scale, then drawn and sketched until confident that
Stonehenge’s original form, as presented, is about right. Ideas that did
not fit were rapidly dropped; various happy coincidences that occurred
during modelling confirm the finished form. The complete building, shown
on these web-pages, needs minor refinement only. Every detail fits
perfectly with both sarsen and bluestone positions. The fact that the
core-roof is trussed explains the mystery of why the trilithons
are different heights.”
“I believe some of our Bronze-age ancestors were as capable as
people alive today; we don’t imagine a horse or cat forebears were any
less intelligent. To suggest ancient folk were less bright is
unfathomable. Even today inventions in advanced technology come from few
intelligent, curious and driven people; most of us are only users of
other people’s inventions and designs.”
“Among the Bronze-age people was a remarkable designer with
excellent three-dimensional vision who understood geometry. The
brief was probably for a round building of large capacity, involving
the number three and it’s multiples. He or she was good! Interestingly
fire-proofing has been well-considered – perhaps the previous building
burnt to the ground.”
“I believe that Stonehenge was a ‘Cathedral-like’ building with a
massive oak-framed roof, and a huge hall at it’s center. Though only
the big stones remain, location and height provide evidence to indicate
the original shape.”
“Viewed from outside, it’s round form and thatched roof were of
refined Bronze-Age form. A magestic, trussed core-roof, spanning the
central void, was supported high on top of the large central stones, the
trilthons.”
“Beneath this was a lofty oval hall. Leaning against this
structural core were radiating rafters with their lower end on the stone
circle. The central ‘core-roof’ is key to the design’s structural
integrity; without this the weight of the roof would force the
stone-circle outwards. Large openings, set high up on both ends,
flooded the hall with light. Shuttered side openings were used in
daytime.”
“Location of the central Bluestones suggest galleries surrounded
the central void. Between the trilithons and ring of Sarsen stones,
blue-stones here hint that a circular wall once enclosed the hall. A
useful veranda-walkway thus existed in the space between the enclosing
wall, and the outer sarsen-ring.”
“A large, ceremonial entrance also supported a roof gable. Thus
axial openings existed to connect with both summer and winter solstices.
However these are but moments in time. Such a magnificent, galleried
hall was likely used all-year-round, for social gatherings, singing,
feasting and dancing, maybe marriage ceremonies.”
Critique by a Historic Preservation Architect
Sarah Ewbank’s interpretation of Stonehenge as resembling
an Early Medieval Templar Church is highly improbable, but her evidence
that Stonehenge originally had a roof is highly persuasive.
First of all, Ms. Ewbank described Stonehenge as a Bronze Age
structure. It really should not be equaled to the elaborate Bronze Age
structures in the Eastern Mediterranean Basin, built about they same
time. The original timbers structures on the Salisbury Plain and
“bluestone” structures in Wales was erected around 3100 BC – 3000 BC . .
. during the Neolithic Period. Its builders did NOT have metal tools.
The Welsh blue stones were re-assembled on the Salisbury Plain into a
circle about 2400-2100 BC. This was the absolute dawn of the Bronze
Age in Britain. Most masonry work was still done with fire and stone
tools. Numerous alterations occurred at Stonehenge over the next 500
years. During this period, bronze tools became increasingly
sophisticated and plentiful. However, bronze was always a luxury item
in Europe.
The surviving architecture of Stonehenge does not provide physical
evidence to back up Sarah Ewbank’s drawings of the wooden arches,
supporting the second floor and timber rafters . Timber arches first
appeared in England in the mid-600s AD as Anglo-Saxon craftsmen
attempted to adapt Roman stone arches in Continental churches to their
heavy timber architectural tradition. One would expect the stone piers
to reflect the same aesthetic precision of her timberwork, but in fact,
they are only crudely worked into approximate rectangles.
The Norman arches in Ewbank’s model are the most improbable
architectural detail of all. Norman arches were not introduced into
England until the Norman Conquest (1066 AD) and were not a staple
feature of Anglo-Norman architecture until the next century.
The arched clerestories that Ewbank placed on the roof of her
Stonehenge appeared in Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian buildings in the
period between 800 AD and 1400 AD. They was derived from the wooden
arches constructed in early Anglo-Saxon churches.
It is far more likely that Stonehenge strongly resembled a Creek chokopa
(chokufa in Oklahoma). In 2008, the Muscogee-Creek Nation hired me to
carry out a structural analysis of the rotunda at Ocmulgee National
Monument in order to persuade Southeastern archaeologists to stop
calling our chokopas or rotundas, “earth lodges.” Even the famous
archaeologist, Lewis Larsen, had written an article in a professional
journal, which also tried to stop the practice . . . to no avail. The
Ocmulgee “Earth Lodge” had first been labeled that by 23 year old James
Ford, who at the time only had three years of undergraduate, Liberal
Arts education. The archaeologists also ignored my drawings and
continued on their errant way.
My gut feeling? Both Stonehenge and the shrine on Edisto
Island, SC were originally erected as monuments that celebrated the
builders’ survival in the Great Flood of the 24th century BC that
depopulated Ireland and much of Britain.
Link to the article on Sarah Ewbank in the Salisbury Journal:
No comments:
Post a Comment