Wisdomkeepers of Stonehenge Read online




  In loving memory of my mother, Joyce

  Wisdomkeepers of Stonehenge

  “Astonishing yet highly convincing theory on the function of the megalithic monuments of Britain by one of the world’s most unique historical writers. Graham Phillips explains how our Neolithic and Bronze Age ancestors possessed an acute knowledge of medicine and healing practices, using the stone circles to enhance the cultivation of plant life. A must-read for everyone interested in the lost technologies of our ancient past.”

  ANDREW COLLINS, SCIENCE AND HISTORY WRITER AND AUTHOR OF DENISOVAN ORIGINS, THE CYGNUS KEY, AND GÖBEKLI TEPE

  “Imagine if Egypt’s Great Pyramid stood alone in the desert without any remaining evidence of the civilization that built it. This is the enigma of the magnificent stone circles of the British Isles. These ancient wonders are found from the extreme north on Scotland’s Orkney Islands to Stonehenge in the south. Graham Phillips’s deep research for his compelling Wisdomkeepers of Stonehenge pulls together all the pieces of one of humanity’s most fascinating archaeological puzzles.”

  RAND FLEM-ATH, COAUTHOR OF THE MURDER OF MOSES AND ATLANTIS BENEATH THE ICE

  “Graham Phillips has always been noted for his meticulous historical research, depth of vision, and ability to follow the threads of a mystery throughout history.”

  NEW DAWN MAGAZINE

  Acknowledgments

  THE AUTHOR WOULD LIKE TO THANK the following people for their invaluable help: Deborah Cartwright for the wonderful photography; Yvan Cartwright for his fantastic IT support; Jodi Russell for extra research material; my researchers Maia Wille and Orion Wille; Sally Evans, Dave Moore, and Claire Silverman in helping with translations; and Jon Graham, Mindy Branstetter, Patricia Rydle, Kelly Bowen, and all the rest of the team at Inner Traditions.

  Contents

  Cover Image

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Epigraph

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1. An Enigma in Stone

  Chapter 2. The Birth of Civilization

  Chapter 3. Prelude: The Emerging Cultures of the Late Stone Age

  Chapter 4. The Beginning: The Stones of Stenness

  Chapter 5. Progression: The Discovery of Stone Circles throughout the British Isles

  Chapter 6. The Phases of Megalithic Construction

  Chapter 7. Rivalry among the Megalithic Complexes

  Chapter 8. Long Stones and Ley Lines

  Chapter 9. The Migration of the Beaker People and Other Cultures

  Chapter 10. Celtic Inheritance and the Roman Invasion

  Chapter 11. The Druids’ Lasting Influence

  Chapter 12. Astronomy and Medicine in the Stone Circles

  Chapter 13. Secret of the Stones and the Red-Haired Druids

  Endnotes

  Bibliography

  About the Author

  About Inner Traditions • Bear & Company

  Books of Related Interest

  Copyright & Permissions

  Index

  1

  An Enigma in Stone

  STONEHENGE IS ONE OF THE MOST FAMOUS monuments in the world. Although it stands in isolated countryside in south-central England, miles from any major town, it is one of Britain’s most popular tourist sites, attracting more than a million visitors every year. It is also one of the most ancient. Around five thousand years old, it predates the Great Pyramids of Egypt by over four centuries. In fact, it predates even recorded history and the use of metal implements, making it both a prehistoric and a Stone Age construction. And above all, it is one of the most mysterious monuments in the world. Those who created it spent years toiling away with little more than animal horns, shaped rocks, dry bones, and their bare hands for tools. The time and effort thought necessary to have built Stonehenge is staggering. Archaeologists have estimated that the cutting, hauling, and erection of the stones for just the main part of the circle would have taken almost forty million work-hours and over ten thousand people toiling full time on the project for years on end, when the entire population of south-central England was only around thirty thousand.1 Stonehenge must have been of immense importance to those who made it, yet its purpose remains a mystery. Why did the ancient people of Britain go to such extraordinary lengths to construct this enigma in stone?

  Remarkably Stonehenge was only one of thousands of stone circles erected throughout the British Isles—together with countless solitary standing stones, stone rows, huge earthen mounds, embankments, ditches, avenues, and other earthworks—that continued to be built and maintained for a period spanning over three millennia, between around 3100 BCE and the arrival of the Romans in Britain during the first century CE, and even longer in Ireland. Through this entire era the basic design of these various monuments remained consistent. This vast array of ancient constructions is just as enigmatic as Stonehenge itself. How was it possible for scattered settlements of people—who left no evidence of the infrastructure of civilization, such as buildings, roads, and cities, nor any indication of overall leadership, taskmasters, or central government—to continue to create these monuments in unison for so long? If we hope to understand Stonehenge, it is essential to solve the enigma of this unique, enduring society. The mystery of Stonehenge cannot be solved if seen in isolation. We need to appreciate this baffling network of ancient monuments in its entirety. To start with, who built them?

  It’s common knowledge that the Great Wall was built by the Chinese, the Coliseum was built by the Romans, and Machu Picchu was built by the Incas. But who built Stonehenge? Ask even those who visit the site today, and most probably don’t know, the reason being that the culture that created Stonehenge, and the myriad other monuments from Britain of the period, doesn’t actually have a name. Technically speaking, the first of them were Neolithic—meaning Late Stone Age—people. But so were much of the rest of the world’s population at the time. We know what many ancient cultures were called because they still survive, left written records, or their remote descendants preserve their knowledge. But no such evidence exists from the ancient British Isles. However, the stone-circle builders are often referred to as the Megalithic culture because of the monuments they left behind. The name comes from the word megalith, meaning “large stone,” specifically artificial standing stones such as those at Stonehenge. Although this is not an archaeological term for the culture, not one you will find in the official Stonehenge guidebook, it is certainly a convenient name and one we’ll be using in this book. It should also be noted that a capital letter M is used when referring to the people who erected the monuments, as opposed to the lowercase m used when referring to the monuments themselves. Accordingly, the Megalithic people (or culture) were the main inhabitants of the British Isles around 3100 BCE, when the first stone circles were built and were those still using them when the practice ceased. The megalithic monuments, on the other hand, were the enigmatic constructions they left behind, be they made from stone, earth, or anything else. With that clarified, let’s briefly consider the most renowned megalithic monument, Stonehenge itself, and appreciate just what an amazing accomplishment it was for the Megalithic people who built it. (We shall return to examine it in more detail as our investigation proceeds.)

  Stonehenge once consisted of an arrangement of well over a hundred stones, up to more than 20 feet high and weighing as much as 50 tons each. They were quarried from rocky outcrops, cut to the desired shapes, hauled to where they were erected, and then heaved into position. Its outer circle was composed of thirty standing stones, each some 13 feet high, 7 feet wide, 3.5 feet thick, and weighing around 25 tons, spaced just over 3 feet apart. On top of them were placed thirty further 6-ton blocks—10 feet long, 3 feet wi
de, and 2.5 feet thick—called lintels, forming a continuous ring of rectangular arches 108 feet in diameter. (The tops of the lintels stood well over 15 feet above the ground.) This outer ring is known as the Sarsen Circle, named after the sarsen stone, a type of hard sandstone from which it was made. Immediately inside the Sarsen Circle was a simpler stone circle of about thirty smaller stones, averaging about 6 feet high, 3.5 feet wide, and 2.5 feet thick, and weighing an average of around 4 tons each. Known as the Bluestone Ring—as it was constructed from a particular type of dolerite rock commonly called bluestone due to its slightly bluish tinge—it was about 80 feet in diameter. The central arrangement of monoliths—standing stones—at Stonehenge was actually created in an open oval form. Called the Bluestone Horseshoe because of this shape, it was made from around twenty bluestones about the same size as those forming the Bluestone Ring and was some 35 feet across at its widest point. Between the oval and the circle of bluestones, there stood five massive arrangements of megaliths called trilithons. Each trilithon was formed from a pair of enormous upright sarsen monoliths, over 20 feet high and weighing up to 50 tons each, with a third sarsen stone, weighing around 8 tons, placed across the tops of them as a lintel to form a rectangular arch. As these trilithons were arranged in the same shape as the inner bluestones, this structure is known as the Trilithon Horseshoe and measured about 45 feet across. Close to the center of Stonehenge there lies a large rectangular stone. Weighing around 6 tons, this 6-footlong megalith now lies flat on the ground; it has been called the Altar Stone, although the name is misleading, as archaeologists believe that it originally stood upright as a single monolith. The scale of these stones is even more impressive when we realize that the height of the standing stones just given is not their full size: to keep the stones erect, about a third of each monolith needed to be buried below the ground. So the trilithon uprights, for instance, were well over 30 feet long.

  Time has taken its toll on Stonehenge. Of the outer ring, sixteen of the upright monoliths still stand, but only six of its lintel stones still form arches. All the same, this is enough to give us an impression of the original Sarsen Circle. Three of the trilithons also survive intact, plus one of the standing stones each from the other two. Of the bluestones, only seven remain standing from the ring and five from the horseshoe, while others lie littered around, together with a few of the larger, fallen sarsen stones. One of the once proud uprights from the trilithons, for example, lies broken in two across the Altar Stone. For more than four thousand years, the relentless British weather has eroded Stonehenge. The stones are no longer the smooth, neatly shaped megaliths they once were but have been pitted and worn by wind, rain, and ice.

  But natural erosion is only part of the story of Stonehenge’s gradual deterioration. Some its megaliths were long ago broken apart and taken away for building material, which can still be found in nearby barns, cottages, and boundary walls. Perhaps the greatest damage to the ancient monoliths has been at the hands of tourists, who until recent years hacked off pieces of stone to take home as souvenirs. Some of the surviving bluestones have suffered particularly, having been chipped down to a fraction of their original size. In fact, it’s something of a miracle that anything has survived at all. Today Stonehenge is protected from such vandalism by English Heritage, a charitable trust that manages ancient sites and buildings. Now the stone circle is fenced off to keep visitors at a distance to prevent further damage. So be prepared: a visit to Stonehenge may be something of a disappointment. You won’t be able to touch the mighty monoliths or wander among the ancient weathered stones. But you can get close enough to appreciate the astonishing achievement.

  Fig. 1.1. The central monument at Stonehenge.

  This remarkable arrangement of megaliths, however, was only the heart of a huge complex of ancient constructions surrounding Stonehenge, including a circular embankment and ditch, 360 feet in diameter, encompassing the stone circle, a parallel pair of ditches and banks leading 2 miles to a smaller stone circle, and an artificial mound over 20 feet high and 65 feet across. One of the most amazing things about the Stonehenge arrangement of monuments is that it was built by people using nothing more than flint axes, bone shovels, and antlers for picks. Imagine how long and hard a multitude of workers would have needed to toil in order to cut and shape even the smallest of the megaliths from solid bedrock with such simple tools. Imagine also the backbreaking effort needed to haul the sarsen stones from where experts have determined they were quarried, 25 miles to the north of Stonehenge, without the help of draft animals, such as oxen or horses, by a people with no knowledge of the wheel. It is even more astonishing when we realize that the bluestones were somehow transported from quarries over 130 miles away (see chapter 7). And that’s just part of the story. In some way that is not fully understood, to create the Sarsen Stone Circle the builders hauled and planted the stones into upright positions, and without cranes or machines they managed to position the 6-ton blocks on top of the 13-foot-high standing stones. And remember, the trilithons were even bigger. As an engineering project, Stonehenge was, in relative terms, for its time a much grander exercise than the Apollo program, the International Space Station, or the Large Hadron Collider. It was obviously a crucial undertaking, but what exactly was it?

  Before the advent of modern archaeology, a common belief was that Stonehenge was an elaborate tomb. Throughout history, powerful individuals have built some astonishing tombs: the vast burial complex of the first Chinese emperor with its terracotta army, the Great Pyramid of the Egyptian pharaoh Khufu, and the Greek mausoleum of King Mausolus, to name but three. Although human remains have been found in and around Stonehenge, there is no evidence that the stone circle itself was ever used specifically for interment at the time it was built. In 2013 archeologists did identify around sixty burials at Stonehenge, but these seem to have dated from long before the monument we see today was built. Besides which, unlike the colossal ancient tombs erected during the lifetime of the eventual occupant, Stonehenge was created in stages over many generations.

  In more recent years evidence has emerged that Stonehenge acted as an ancient astronomical observatory. When viewed from the center of the circle, various stones seem to have been placed deliberately to align with the sun and particularly bright stars at the same time each year. It is thought that such observations would allow the Stonehenge builders to determine the exact time to sow, reap, and tend to crops and also to reckon the precise time of the year to perform important ceremonies.2 The monoliths of Stonehenge certainly did align with various heavenly bodies at particular times of the year, but why make Stonehenge so big and elaborate, requiring so much effort and drain on precious resources? Although some form of ancient astronomical thinking certainly seems to have been involved in the construction of Stonehenge, there has to have been far more to its purpose than simply to act as a giant calendar. After all, you could do the same thing by simply using wooden poles.

  In searching for clues as to Stonehenge’s original purpose, it would help if we had some written records. Unfortunately the peoples of Britain had no form of writing until after the Romans arrived in 55 BCE, when Julius Caesar made an attempt to conquer the country. He didn’t get far, and the following year gave up entirely and returned to continental Europe to attend to more pressing matters. Between then and the eventual conquest of Britain by Emperor Claudius in 43 CE, there was a considerable influx of goods and ideas from the Roman Empire, and foreign visitors have left us a few records of life in parts of the country at the time. The Britons themselves even began to include Latin inscriptions on items such as coins and grave markers, but most of what is known concerning the British Isles before this period comes down to archaeology. There is, however, folklore surrounding Stonehenge and other megalithic monuments that might hold some interesting clues.

  In the twelfth century the Welsh cleric Geoffrey of Monmouth related in his work The History of the Kings of Britain that Stonehenge was at that time called the Gian
t’s Dance, as it was believed that the stones were originally erected by giants in Ireland and later magically transported to England by Merlin the magician.3 What’s interesting about this legend is that it recounts that the stones were once moved from elsewhere, far away, and indeed some of them really do appear to have been brought to Stonehenge from a great distance. The bluestones that make up the inner ring and horseshoe are of a particular type of dolerite known as plagioclase feldspar, found in the Preseli Hills of South Wales. Recently archaeology professor Timothy Darvill of Bournemouth University identified the site where the stones were quarried to have been around Carn Menyn in the Welsh county of Pembrokeshire, over 130 miles west of Stonehenge.4 It has been suggested that they originally formed a stone circle in that region and were later transported to Stonehenge (see chapter 7). Just why these stones would be so important when equally good building materials could be found much closer to home has remained a mystery. However, although it’s doubtful that Merlin (if he indeed existed) had anything to do with it, as the Arthurian story is set a couple of millennia after the completion of Stonehenge, around the year 500 CE, and Stonehenge’s construction is unlikely to have involved magic, the hauling of dozens of 4-ton stones over such a huge distance could be considered an almost miraculous achievement for the time.

  Many ancient sites have legends and folklore attached to them that have been helpful in rediscovering age-old historical secrets. Near the town of Mold in North Wales, for instance, there stands an earthen mound that for centuries was said to be haunted by a figure in golden armor. When the site was eventually excavated, it was found to contain a four-thousand-year-old skeleton wearing a ceremonial chest-and-shoulder adornment made from solid gold. The figure in the “golden armor” had lain there at peace for millennia, yet knowledge of his or her burial seems to have been passed down over the centuries to eventually be remembered in the form of a ghost story.5 Another example is the Cheesewring, an unusual rock formation on Bodmin Moor in Cornwall in southwest England. Folklore related that travelers who became lost on the moors were guided to safety by an immortal Druid, an ancient Celtic priest, who dwelt in the vicinity, who would also offer them sustenance from a golden cup.6 When a nearby burial mound called Rillaton Barrow was eventually excavated, the remains of a high-status individual, thought to have been a Bronze Age priest, were discovered, along with grave goods including a pure gold cup, probably used for ceremonial purposes. The mound had remained undisturbed for over 3,500 years, so once again it seems that folk memory of the person buried there with a gold goblet was transmitted from generation to generation, by word of mouth, until it transformed into the legend of the helpful Druid.