Standing
stones are my passion. Most people know about Stonehenge and perhaps
Avebury, but few realise just how many stone circles are still visible
in our landscape. And as well as the stone circles there are the
stones of long barrows and a large number of single standing stones,
some quite modest in size.
Some of these single stones may have been christianised, with a
cross carved into them. Others were used as parish boundaries, even
milestones, used as markers in the same way as rivers, tracks and
Roman roads were used when parish boundaries were established.
Many of these stones will have preceded the parishes by thousands
of years. Perhaps they were track markers for prehistoric people
moving through, rather than over, the landscape. Perhaps they were
sacred spots like the wayside shrines of later Christianity. So
what looks like, and indeed is, a parish boundary marker may be
much older than the parish that it marks.
Here
are details of those I have visited in Berkshire, Cornwall, Gloucestershire,
Oxfordshire, and Wiltshire. In Oxfordshire I had immense help from "The
Old Stones of Rollright and District" by Paul Bennett and Tom Wilson,
a marvellously well researched book now alas out of print. In Gloucestershire,
"Old Stones of the Cotswolds" by DP Sullivan, (Reardon Publishing
-www.reardon.co.uk) was helpful.
Buy these if you can get your hands on them.
In spring 2000 I went to Co. Cork, Ireland, to hunt for stone circles.
There are said to be 86 out of 145 Irish stone circles in that one county.
I photographed about eight of them, and caught a far off glimpse of about
six more. Wellies, waterproof clothing, binoculars and zoom lenses will
help those making the same visit. The difficulty is two fold - finding
them on the ground in the first place and then getting permission to look
at them. You will need two essential books - A Guide to the Stone Circles
of Britain, Ireland and Brittany by Aubrey Burl and The Stone Circles
of Cork and Kerry by Jack Roberts (Bandia), both booklet and map.
The latter can be bought at the Clonalkily tourist office. I have labelled
my photographs with the numbers given in these two books.
After my "IRELAND 2000" selection, I include details of UK-based sites.
together with active links to three very interesting circle-related web
sites.
If
you care about stone circles, read 3rd Stone magazine and investigate
the Stone Circle Web Ring at:-
or
the Earth Mysteries and Sacred Rings Site at:
http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/aburnham/emring
for ancient or sacred sites, earth mysteries, labyrinths, earth
energies, reiki, dowsing etc. The best Stonehenge
and Avebury website, with lots more about megaliths in
Wiltshire and Oxfordshire is at http://www.stonehenge-avebury.net/