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The
following site is located in the UK, near to my West Oxfordshire home.
The
Devil's Quoits, Stanton Harcourt, West Oxfordshire.

1882 Quoit A
The photographer stands by the stone. Note the completely smooth surface
of the earth. No sign at all of the henge ditch and bank. By 1940,
when an airfield was built on the site, this was the only one standing.
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This
was once one of the seven largest stone circles henges in mainland
Britain - an oval earthwork enclosure with two entrances, a huge
rampart with a berm and ditch, and 36 standing stones. Now it is
a restored site, coming back to its ancient glory.
It
stood in a ceremonial landscape with ring ditches, flat graves,
pits and possibly a mortuary enclosure. For the best account read
"Excavations at the Devil's Quoit, Stanton Harcourt" by
A Barclay, M Gray and G Lambrick, published by the Oxford Archaeological
Unit in l995.
The
site was severely damaged first by the plough from Roman times onwards.
By the middle ages the site was the common field, divided by ridge
and furrow into individual plough strips. By them most of the stones
had been removed. By l940 three stones were standing but only one
in its original site and a wartime airfield was built there. Luckily
an excellent archeological survey was taken before this happened.
Then the site fell to gravel extraction and most of the complex
has been entirely destroyed except for the henge itself.
One
of the first antiquarians to study this stone circle was John Aubrey
sketched two stones and reported in his Monumenta Brittanica, written
in the seventeenth century, that the "east stone is nine foot
high: and as much broad: half a yard thick. The west stone is eight
foot high and about six foot broad, half a yard thick. One of these
stones was taken down by a farmer about the year 1680 to make a
bridge of."
Richard
Plot in The Natural History of Oxfordshire 1677, working from Aubrey's
notes, thought it was a Saxon barrow: "But as for the stones
near the barrow at Stanton-Harcourt, called the Devil's Coits, I
should take them to be Appendices to that Sepulchral Monument (ie
the Rollrights), but that they seem a little too far removed from
it; perhaps therefore the Barrow might be cast up for some Saxon,
and the Stones for some Britans slain hereabout (aut vice versa)
at what time the town of Eynsham, about a mile off, as Camden informs
us, was taken from the Britans by Cuthwolf the Saxon. Which is all
I can find worthy notice concerning them, but that they are about
eight foot high, and near the base seven broad; and that they seem
not natural, but made by art, of a small kind of stones cemented
together." - a reference to the fact that these are coagulate
stones.
By
the beginning of the twentieth century apart from three upright
stones the site seemed completely flat and OGS Crawford, a man with
a keen eye for prehistoric monuments of all kinds and author of
The Long Barrows of the Cotswolds (1925), could not believe the
site was a stone circle with henge. He wrote: "The great diameter
necessary (2200 feet) makes this unlikely. The diameter of the great
rampart at Avebury is only 1400 feet."
Luckily,
the henge was recognized by crop marks from the air and photographs
were taken by Major G.W. G. Allen. Otherwise the site would probably
have been lost entirely. As it was, it was given very little protection,
when the Air Ministry wanted to build a wartime airfield there.
W.F.
Grimes did an excellent survey of the whole site. But without visible
monuments, it was given over to gravel extraction - like the equally
important site at Dorchester, Oxon. Only the henge itself was conserved
- even the inside of the henge was graveled out.
When
I first visited the Quoits in the year 2000 it was a chaotic mess
in the middle of a huge extraction and waste site, Dix Pit.
But
two years later in 2002, work was under way to recreate the circle,
using the original stones and others of a similar coagulate. By
2005 several stones were standing. The site is so huge that without
a wide angle lens it is impossible to show it fully.
The
site is still being used to active gravel extraction and is not
open to the public. The creation of a lake means that the Devil's
Quoits have entirely lost their context. But at least the recreation
will give a good idea of this stunning monument.
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Quoit B
This had been re-erected away from its original position according
to Excavations at Stanton . This might have been in its original place
when John Aubrey saw it. He recognised a stone circle. |

Quoit C.
This too had been re-erected away from its original position. W.F.
Grimes suggested that this may have been the stone that was used as
a bridge. It has grooves in it, which suggest this. |

1922
This also shows how the stone stands in apparently smooth plough land,
all signs of the henge having vanished. |

1999
The original stone half buried in a wrecked site. The archeologists'
diggings are still there. Heaps of rubbish lie around. Rabbits are
tunnelling into the ditches. A wrecked site with rubbish all around.
I was horrified when I saw it. |

2002
The ditch is being re-dug and the stones are uncovered ready for re-erection. |

2005
The ramparts and ditch with its berm has been recreated. Some of the
stones have been put up. This picture was taken from the entrance
to the henge. |

2005
One of the stones ready to be lifted into place. Stakes mark where
other stones will be. This is going to be a great recreation of an
important site - though the ceremonial landscape of barrows in which
it once stood has been completely destroyed. |
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THE
THOR STONE, TASTON SP 35952209
The large upright Thor stone is next to a cottage garden wall
and opposite a much weathered old cross -- possibly an attempt
to christianise a pagan site. The Thor stone is so called because
it was a thunderbolt thrown by the god, Thor. Lower down the
hill is a delightful Victorian fountain.
This might be the last surviving megalith of a Neolithic portal
dolmen or some other burial tomb, rather than a stone erected
on its own. |
THE
HAWK STONE, DEAN SP 34922354
Just outside the small hamlet of Dean, the Hawk stone stands
in a field surrounded by yellow rape flowers, or by corn, ploughland
or by the dea foliage of set aside. A footpath from Dean to
Chipping Norton passes about ten yards away from it so it is
possible to get a fine view without trespassing. From the nearest
road, it can be seen just below the sky line.
It has a notch in it - produced by weathering. So far the Hawk
stone has withstood damage from tractors, thanks to a conscientious
farmer who has banked up the soil a little round the stone.
This is my favourite stone. This might be the last surviving
megalith of a Neolithic portal dolmen or some other burial tomb,
rather than a stone erected on its own.
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BOULTERS
BARN STONE, CHURCHILL. SP 28402396
Not far from the parish boundary on the Churchill to Chipping
Norton Rd and marked on the large scale OS 1921 map. This
is mentionedin OGS Crawford Long Barrows of the Cotswolds
where he says "it seems not unlikely that it is of considerable
antiquity." It is not shaped, though damage from a hedge
cutter may give it the appearance of being so. Not visible
in 2002 and 2003 because of thick ivy and overgrowing hedge.
In the winter of 2004 the hedge was cut so low that it became
visible again.
This is also known as Boulters Barn stone. In the house nearest
this stone in the triangle between the roads are a number
of huge immovable stones. Maybe there was once a long barrow
here of which these are the remains. A l930s history of the
village also suggests there was a stone row in Sarsgrove.
There exists a small row of stones just off the nearby footpath
but these are so deeply embedded I think it unlikely that
this is a prehistoric row.
This might be the last surviving megalith of a Neolithic portal
dolmen or some other burial tomb, rather than a stone erected
on its own. |
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LYNEHAM
BARROW, SP 29762111
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the A 361 near Roundabout camp, not far from road to Chadlington.
Overgrown barrow. The large stone is presumeably the blocking
stone but it seems rather far from the rest. Robert Plot,
author of The Natural History of Oxfordshire, 1677, writes:
"And so again for the fortifications called Roundcastle,
west of Begbrook Church, but in the parish of Bladen, and
Lineham Barrow (between which and Pudlycot, a seat of the
ancient families of the Lacy¹s, there is a passage underground
down to the river) I can say little of them, but that in general
Otis most probably they were made by the Danes (they being
both round) but upon what occasion I could nowhere find."
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THE
GOOSE STONES, CHASTLETON SP 265288
Only one remains, the rest were taken off for the farmer¹s
rockery, because these were not a scheduled monument. The
folk tale story is of the goosekeeper¹s geese turned
to stone. She is warned not to put them on the common but
does so. It is near Grey Goose Lane and the stones are on
what was Chastleton common. The stones were removed in the
early l990s. Not far from there is a round iron age settlement
known as Chastleton round barrow. (The seventeenth century
antiquarian, Dr Richard Plot thought this and other "castles
of earth cast up by the Danes" might have been built
about the year 1016, at a time when Edmund Ironside was fighting
Canute the Dane!) Opposite the goose stones are a tumulus
and a long barrow. Tom Wilson took us there 5.2.00 |

Gentlemen's
Magazine February 1824
I think these are the stones mentioned by Robert
Plot author of The Natural History of Oxfordshire, 1676 -
"There stands also a stone about half a mile South-west
of Enston church, on a bank by the wayside between Neat-Enston
and Fulwell, somewhat flat and tapering upward from a broad
bottom, with other small ones lying by it; and another near
the Road betwixt Burford and Chipping-norton, which I guess
might be erected for the same purpose with the two former
as above mentioned (ie monuments to Saxons or ancient Britons
dead in battle); Unless we shall rather think, both these
and them, to be have been some of the Gods of the ancient
Britons.¹ The stone on the way between Burford and Chipping-norton
may be the Five Shilling Corner stone mentioned in The Old
Stones of Rollright and District or possibly Lyneham Barrow
stone.
This is a portal dolmen, consisting of a capstone balanced
on orthostats of which at least two are set in an 'entrance'
or "portal' formation, sometimes with a third blocking
stone. For good examples look at my Pembrokeshire page. This
one is similar to the Rollright's Whispering Knights. |
HOAR
STONE, ENSTONE SP 37782372
Just outside the village, at a crossways. Three upright stones
and a possible five fallen. Very dark because surrounded by
trees. A sign by the Ministry of Works says this is a protected
monument. Behind the stones is a concrete bunker entered from
the top by a ladder. A large heap of human crap shows how
we value our tombs. Once again these a stones which are said
to go down to the stream to drink.
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In the Victorian novel,
"Tom Browns' Schooldays" by Thomas Hughes, the
Blowing Stone lay under a large oak outside a pub - "a
square lump of stone, some three feet and a half high, perforated
with two or three queer holes, like petrified antediluvian
rat-holes." Thomas Hughes describes what happens when
it is blown - "Yes, here it comes, sure enough, a grewsome
sound between a moan and a road, and spreads itself away
ove the valley and up the hillside, and into the woods at
the back of the house, a host-like awful voice."
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THE
BLOWSTONE, KINGSTON LISLE. SU 324871
By the side of a row of cottages, the blowstone sits in its
own little enclosure. It has lots of holes one of which is
meant to make a loud noise. Richard Jefferies, the nature
writer, referred to Othe shepherd¹s legend of Alfred
the Great, and his horn of stone." King Alfred is said
to have blown the stone to summon help against the Danes.
It may originally have stood on White Horse Hill.
I came here as a small child and remember this stone as three
times the size! It is a domesticated stone with little fence
round it, a little place for collecting money and for giving
away an information sheet (not there in March). This stone
has been preserved by being suburbanised, like the stone circle
in the middle of a Scottish roundabout. |
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WAYLANDS
SMITHY SU 281854
A splendid long barrow not far from the White Horse. This
was originally a long barrow flanked with ditches with the
unfleshed bones of at least 14 people. These were buried in
a wooden chamber inside the barrow. Then a few decades later,
the barrow was given a kerb made of stones and a façade
of large sarsen slaps and dry walling. Inside a stone-build
passage were the bones of eight individuals. This barrow was
excavated in l965 and rebuilt into the monument we see today.
Folklore had it that the barrow was Wayland the Smith's blacksmith
shop. If you left a penny and your horse there, it would be
shod over night.
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| John
Aubrey, perhaps influenced by this folkloric tale, wrote "about
a mile from Whitehorse Hill on the top of the hill are a great
many stones, which were laid there on purpose, but as tumbled
out of a card; without any order; but some of them are placed
edgewise. They are a good breadthS." On a different page,
he wrote "And this great sepulchre called Wayland Smith
is not unlikely to be a great and rude monument of Hengist
or Horsa, for in their country remain many monuments like
it." |
CLEVELY
MARKER STONE, SP 38452408
A medium size stone on the track from
Enstone to Clevely, past Drystone Hill house. Originally
when Paul Bennett and Tom Wilson saw it, it was the other
side of the stone wall, facing towards the stream. But now
it is by the side of the footpath, simply placed without
being buried in the earth, with its narrower end (which
looks discoloured from the earth) at the bottom. The top
is rounded and a bit crumbly. A dog walker told me "The
farmer had removed it but they made him put it back."
As the track is too narrow for tractors it is probably reasonably
safe. It is mentioned in The Story of Enstone ed by Graham
Binns, Enstone Local History Group as "the ancient marker
stone" !!
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CUP
AND SAUCER STONE, CROPREDY, SP46664665
This worked stone, thought to be either
a font or the base of a cross, now sits on a mown road edge
near a new estate. The road is called Cup and Saucer - so
the stone has been acknowledged. It looks rather odd in
its mown site.
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FIVE
SHILLING STONE, SP29682077
Identified by Tom Wilson and Paul Bennett
as the stone that lies against a stone wall on the Chipping
Norton side of Five Shilling corner on the A361 on the other
side of but not far from Lyneham Barrow. The wall borders
an old quarry full of ivy, rubbish and excrement. It's very
smelly in there!
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CHIPPING
NORTON, SP 31212708
An oolite stone in the lower car park
probably the oldest bit of Chipping Norton. Perhaps a marker
stone on the track to Rollright stones, or maybe the last
bit of an ancient long barrow long since covered by the
town.
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SLATEPITS
COPES LONG BARROW, SP 32891651
The portal and blocking stone are visible. Unlike other long
barrows, there is only a small sign of digging. It has been
spared the Victorian amateur antiquarians! In l857, the keeper
who found this barrow, and who presumably dug into it, found
three skulls. The forest is closed except to Leafield villagers
on Palm Sunday. A book of Cornbury reminiscences speaks of
"the musical rock" in the forest, to which expeditions
would be made. The long barrow megaliths do not fit the description.
There is a less well preserved long barrow a bit higher up
in Wychwood and one large but plundered one further on towards
Swinbrook in a different part of the old Wychwood forest.
No megaliths are visible in either of these.
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CHASTLETON
BARROW SP 26662867
Just two stones protrude near a very big
tree in the far end of a copse next to the A436 on the Oxfordshire
and Warwickshire county border. (Prehistoric mouments are
often used as bordermarks). There is a slight incline in
the land and some further stones on the site may be those
cleared from the ploughed field. George Lambrick in “Rollright
Stones” (HBMC 1988) classifies the site as a simple portal
dolmen tomb. It is not far from here that Crawford in 1922
thought he had found the Cornwell stone circle at SP 26602850.
This is probably just an ornamental copse with stones cleared
into it.
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LANGLEY FARM STONE SP 315 1525
TThis is built into the wall at Langley farm up from Fordwells,
in the area which was once the forest of Wychwood. The farm
house is on the site of the old hunting Lodge of the Forest,
built for King John, one of the places where Henry V111 courted
Anne Boleyn. The stone lies outside the 1300 AD medieval borders
of Wychwood forest but outlying manors were afforested at
various times, including Shipton under Wychwood, so it's possible
that it is some kind of marker stone. The owner told me "there
was meant to be a tunnel from this stone to Minster Lovell
hall." This suggests that it is more than just a stray boulder.
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LEAFIELD
SP 316 153
Just at the back of the Fox pub near the village green is
a footpath between the pub and a cottage. This spot is called
Greenfield Gate on an 1854 map, The Forest and Purlieus of
Wychwood by William Brian Wood, meaning the gateway or entrance
to the forest. In the boundary inquisition in the first year
of Charles 1, this is called Field Green gate - ie the gate
at the green of the village, Field. A standing stone about
up to two feet high at the highest point, two long and 10
inches thick, stands parallel to the pub wall and concrete
has been poured into the gap between the wall and the stone.
It may have been roughly shaped or it may be on its side.
Grooves on the side suggest it has used as a "polissoir,"
to sharpen scythes etc. Compare this with the Polisher stone
in Wiltshire. Forest boundary records of the seventeenth century
onwards mention Leafield, La Felde, Field town or just Field.
This stone may have marked the entrance to the forest.
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TUDHILL STONE.
SP 288 138 AND OTHER WYCHWOOD LOST BOUNDARY STONES
This boundary stone is marked on the OS
map at SLP 288 138. It is clearly marked on the l854 map
The Forest and Purlieus of Wychwood by William Brian Wood
and is also visible on A Plan of Wychwood Forest drawn l770
by Thomas Pride. You can just see it below the “O” of South
Lawn on this map detail from the l854 map. The map suggests
a sizeable stone. It is also known as Tudhill cross because
a predecessor may have had a cross on it – there is no cross
visible now. About 25 years ago it got in the way of farm
machinery and was moved into the hedge. Then it was moved
to where it now stands on the side of the road where the
old Hit and Miss pub was. It is marked T W, which at a guess
means Tudhill Wychwood. This is a shaped stone that looks
to me relatively modern – perhaps at the time of disafforestation
between l856-58. It probably replaced an earlier one marked
with a cross, since it was also sometimes called Tudevin
or Tudhill cross in the boundary descriptions.
Many of the other forest boundary stones are now lost –
the Frethelstone was broken up to make a new road. “I was
shown the spot where, until the disafforesting, it had long
lain prostrate” says J R. Akerman in A View of the Ancient
Limits of the Forest of Wychwood, Archaeologia l858. The
Ladiham stone “a low flat boundary stone resembling the
head stone of a grave and inscribed Ladiham Cornor’ was
still extant in 1858 and may still languish in the woodland
not far from Ladiham long barrow. The Hoarstone near Priestgrove,
was cracked in several places. I have walked the ground
and could not find anything but some large slabs the other
side of the field, probably just cleared from the field.
There were boundary stones between Low barrow and Fordwells
which I have not found. I am still searching.
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EYNSHAM
STONE now SP 433 091
This now stands at the back of Eynsham's Catholic church,
where Father John Tolkein gave it sanctuary. It was discovered
in the ditch of a Bronze Age enclosure that preceded Eynsham's
Anglo Saxon abbey. It is oolitic stone, of the kind used in
the Rollrights. The excavators, Oxford Archaeological Unit,
were digging on the site of the old Abbey enclosure. The Bronze
Age ditch may have surrounded a settlement or may have had
a sacred purpose preceding Christianity. For more detail read
Aelfric's Abbey: excavations at Eynsham Abbey, Oxfordshire,
1989-92, by Alan Hardy, Anne Dodd and Graham D Keevil. |
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ROLLRIGHT
STONE CIRCLE COMPLEX, CHIPPING NORTON, SP 296 309
The
circle stands on a prehistoric trackway, surrounded by what
were Neolithic and Bronze Age tombs. Richard Plot, in The
Natural History of Oxfordshire in 1677 described it as "certain
huge stones placed in a circle: the common people call them
Rollrich-stones, and dream they were sometimes Men, by a miraculous
metamorphosis turned into hard stones. The highest of them,
which without the circle looketh into the earth, they call
the King, because he should have been King of England (forsooth)
if he had once seen Long Compton, a little town lying beneath
The other five standing on the other side, touching as it
were one another, they imagine to have been Knights mounted
on horseback, and the rest of the Army." His illustration
shows the circle with the King Stone just visible behind it.
Plot, working from the manuscript of John Aubrey's Monumenta
Brittanica, argued against the idea that the stone circle
was a burial monument. It could be, he thought, a triumphal
pile set up to mark a victory, " though I cannot but
somewhat incline, yet am verily persuaded, that at the same
time it might serve also for the election and inauguration
of a King" He thought it might be the coronation circle
for Rollo the Dane.
"A temple of the Druids of the first kind,
together
with the Arch Druid's barrow hard by," is how William
Stukeley described it in 1740. The stones, he wrote, were
"corroded like worm-eaten wood, by the harsh jaws of
time." Stukeley's illustration of the Whispering Knights
shows the remainder of a mound around it and the circle in
the background.
It is an unusual circle, consisting originally of many stones
close enough to touch each other - a design found in Cumbria,
Ireland and Wales. There are 22 stones left in the circle.
For a complete account of the whole site, read The Rollright
Stones: The archaeology and folklore of the Stones and their
surroundings, by George Lambrick.
On the same side and not far from the circle are THE WHISPERING
KNIGHTS, four upright stones and a fallen capstone which would
have been directly supported by three of them. This was a
portal dolmen like Enstone. Look at my Pembrokeshire pages
for better preserved ones. Across the road is the KING STONE,
damaged by people who chipped off bits to use as amulets.
It may have been a marker stone for a burial mound or the
sole survivor from a portal dolmen. There is a Neolithic one
the other side of the field boundary and two Bronze Age ones
near the King Stone.
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Oxfordshire
Blowstone
Chastleton Barrow
Chipping Norton
Churchill
Clevely
Cropredy
Devil's Quoits
Five Shilling Stone
Goose Stones
Hawk Stone
Hoar Stone
Langley Farm
Lyneham Barrow
Slate Pits
Thor Stone
Waylands Smithy
Leafield
The Lost Tudhill Stone
Eynshamstone
Rollright Stone Circle |