Stonehenge
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Stonehenge
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Text for Stonehenge Survey 1810Photographs and illustrations of Stonehenge often do not provide precise geographic orientation for the normal viewing reader, who in his mind's eye may then tend to see Stonehenge more as a simple stone circle rather than as a group of differentiatable megaliths intentionally positioned by ancient man to serve a specific function. The graphic right is a scan by Andis Kaulins of a fold-out Stonehenge survey map from the year 1810. One scan was made of each map half and both then pasted together on a PC using graphics software to create one image. The original survey map is found glued to the inside margin of page 55 of William Long's book, Stonehenge and its Barrows, published in Devizes in 1876 from the Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine, vol. xvi, Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. The map gives the same view from the bottom upwards as the photograph above it. These two graphic images thus provide an excellent frontal view of Stonehenge combined with a matching "aerial" perspective of the larger megalithic site. Stonehenge is thereby viewed along its main axis, which is the Stonehenge Avenue, usually just called the Avenue. Gerald S. Hawkins in his book Stonehenge Decoded (p. 54) writes that the 30 sarsens were spaced uniformly as an outer circle with an average error of less than 4 inches, but "At the northeast, precisely--as might be expected--on the midsummer sunrise line, there was an entrance to this circle, made by spacing two stones (1 and 30) 12 inches farther apart than average". This is quite apparent in the photograph. The large fallen stone a bit to the left at the top of the avenue is the Slaughter Stone, which is not as famous as the Heel Stone, not pictured here because yours truly, the photographer, like the rising sun, is standing at the location of that Heel Stone looking down the Avenue toward the awaiting Stonehenge sarsens and trilithons. The survey map has a main caption reading "Ground Plan of Stonehenge" and thereunder the words: "Transfered to Stone, from the Original Copper Plates, by the kind permission of J. Bruce Nichols Esqre". |
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Stonehenge TextboxPlease note about this Stonehenge home page that: 1) there is a separate Stonehenge Text Page which can be openly edited pursuant to original wiki principles; and,
Most megalithic site pages, this page is an exception, can be openly edited pursuant to the Wikia protection policy. This Stonehenge page by the Megalithic Wiki founder, Andis Kaulins, is protected so that it can serve users as a simple starting template example for creating other megalithic site pages. Ultimately, the page format for each megalithic site will develop its own unique design and character, depending on what users want. For example, different "boxes" are used here for differing content: 1) Infoboxes for short facts about a megalithic site;
Many different formats are possible. Ours is merely one example. Users are also urged to create additional specially-named pages to accommodate their own photographs or to provide more detailed text information about a given site, e.g. in the instant case, Stonehenge Photos by (Your Name) or e.g. Stonehenge and its Barrows (a book by William Long) or something similar to this Video of Stonehenge. One can also create special pages for one's own theories about Stonehenge, for example, such as Stonehenge Barrows Astronomical Interpretation or even complete scans of books in the public domain, such as Stonehenge and its Barrows Text Scan. |



