Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites
In 1986, Stonehenge and Avebury stone circle were inscribed together on the UNESCO World Heritage Site List, becoming one of the UK’s first World Heritage Sites. The site spans around 50 km2 and includes settlements, burial grounds, healing centres and avenues and today is managed by English heritage. Stonehenge and Avebury stone circle gained a place on the prestigious list due to their outstanding prehistoric monuments, which are thought to date back to the Neolithic and Bronze Age. The ancient megaliths of these sites provide an unparalleled insight into the mysterious rituals, beliefs, customs and engineering abilities of prehistoric peoples.
Stonehenge
The Stonehenge circle of standing stone is perhaps the world’s most famous prehistoric monument and Britain‘s greatest national icon. This standing stone circle monument , cemetery, and archaeological site located on Salisbury Plain, Stonehenge has come to symbolise mystery, power and endurance. It has long fascinated archaeologists and historians, who still do not fully understand the story around it. For example, Stonehenge is known for ceremonial design and the fact that the first 1,600 feet of the avenue from Stonehenge is built on the summer solstice sunrise and winter solstice sunset-a phenomenon that may be because of sun worship, calendar keeping, or other purposes. Regardless of the lack of answer, this continues to fascinate visitors who wander around the concentric structures searching for answers.
Construction of Stonehenge inner circle and then the largest stone circle is thought to have begun in 3000 BC, though there are many theories around the rock formation. Radiocarbon dating in 2008 suggested that the first stones were raised between 2400 and 2200 BC, whilst another theory suggests that bluestones may have been raised at the site as early as 3000 BC after being dragged all the way from Wales.
A recent discovery of a vast Neolithic stone circle in Waun Mawn, Wales, backs this theory. With a diameter of 100 metres, it is identical to the ditch that encloses Stonehenge, and it is also aligned with the midsummer solstice sunrise. A series of buried stone-holes that follow the circle’s outline has been unearthed, with shapes that can be linked to Stonehenge’s bluestone pillars. One of them bears an imprint in its base that matches the unusual cross-section of a Stonehenge bluestone. This evidence suggests that Stonehenge was originally built in Wales, extracted from the nearby Preseli quarries, and venerated for years before being dismantled and dragged more than 140 miles to Salisbury, where it was resurrected as a second-hand monument. Traces of ancient sunlight lingering in the soil at the Waun Mawn site were analysed and given a likely construction date of around 3,300 BCE.
Archaeological evidence found by the Stonehenge Riverside Project in 2008 indicates that Stonehenge could have been a burial ground from its earliest beginnings. The dating of cremated remains found on the site indicate that deposits contain human bone from as early as 3000 BC, when the ditch and bank were first dug. Such deposits continued at Stonehenge for at least another 500 years.
In 2021 archaeological excavations around the Stonehenge site further discovered bronze age graves, Neolithic poetry, and the vestiges of a mysterious C-shaped enclose that might have been a prehistoric industrial area. Close to the western end of a proposed new road tunnel at Stonehenge were found two burials of Beaker people, who arrived in Britain about 2,500 BCE. Also in the grave was a copper awl or fragment of a pin or needle and a small shale cylindrical object, of a type that is not believed to have been found before. And in the same area was a pit dating to the age of the Beaker people containing the tiny ear bones of a child and a very simple pot – a sign that this too was a grave. The C-shaped enclosure was found a little further south. Ditches that flank the C-shaped enclosure contain burnt flint, suggesting a process such as metal of leatherworking was carried out here thousands of years ago.
Avebury
While Stonehenge is considered to be the most architecturally sophisticated prehistoric stone circle and Neolithic site in the world, Avebury stone circle is the largest. Avebury is a monument containing three stone circles, around the charming thatched cottages in the village of Avebury in Wiltshire, around half an hour’s drive from Stonehenge. Avebury is thought to have been built and carved over many centuries from around 2850 BC until 2200 BC.
It is important to know that a henge is not a stone circle; they are two different things. The henge refers to the man-made earthen bank with a ditch inside it that contains a large, flat-topped area. It is thought that this flat-topped area is designed to be enclosed as some sort of sacred space. As a result, it is what is inside the henge that makes it interesting. Inside the Avebury Henge, you will find much of the village of Avebury, the largest stone circle in Europe and two smaller stone circles.
Odyssey Traveller offer a range of Small group tours stone circles as central to that experience for groups of up to 12 mature travellers, couples or solo travellers. This includes visits to Orkney to the Callinish standing stone in Scotland, as well as prehistoric burial cairns including the West kennet long barrow, the Glastonbury tor, Silbury hill as well as a Stonehenge tour often at sunrise to give the group on this guided tour stone circle access available only to those on a small group tour.