Monday, September 2, 2019
Stonehenge :: essays research papers
 Stonehenge    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  On the British Isles more than nine hundred stone rings exist. Most people prefer  to call them rings rather than circles for the reason that only two percent of them are true  circles. The other ninety eight percent of these structures are constructed in an elliptical  shape. Stonehenge in itself is roughly circular. Most of these rings cannot be dated  exactly, but it is known that they are from the Neolithic period.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In southern England the Neolithic period begins around the time of the first  farming communities in 4000 B.C. to the time of the development of bronze technology  around 2000 B.C., by that time the construction of major monuments was mostly over.   Because of the scarcity of the archaeological record at the stone rings, any attempts to  explain the functions of the structures are guesses. Most attempts tend to reflect the  cultural relatedness of their times. Most people believe that these rings were constructed  by a group of people called Druids.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  This idea of Stonehenge being constructed by Druids has become deeply implanted  in the uneducated minds of popular culture from tie seventeenth century to the present. It  is common knowledge that the druids had nothing to do with these rings. The Druids  flourished after about 300 B.C., more than 1500 years after the last stone rings were  constructed. Even more, there is no evidence that suggests that the Druids even used  these stone rings for ritual purposes. Any Druidic connection with the stone rings is  purely hypothetical.  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  During the nineteenth and early twentieth century, prehistorians attributed  Stonehenge and other stone rings to Egyptian and Mycenean travelers who were thought  to have infused Europe and Bronze age culture. With the development of carbon 14  dating methods, the infusion-diffusion of British Neolithic history was abandoned and the  megalithic monuments of Britain were shown to predate those in most other countries.   While the carbon 14 method provided approximate dates for the stone rings it was no use  explaining their function. Research by scholars outside the discipline of   archaeology suggested a use different to that of rituals.                                        Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  In the 1950s and 1960s, the Oxford University engineer Alexander Thom and the  astronomer Gerald Hawkins pioneered the new field of archaeoastronomy-the study of the  astronomies of ancient civilizations. Conducting precise surveys at various stone rings and  other megalithic structures, Thom and Hawkins discovered many significant astronomical  alignments among the stones. This evidence suggested that the stone rings were used as  astronomical observatories. Moreover, the archaeoastronomers revealed the extraordinary  mathematical sophistication and engineering abilities that the native British developed  before either Egyptian or Mesopotamian cultures.  					    
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