New Light on Stonehenge
The first dig in 44 years inside the stone circle changed our view of why—and even when—the monument was built
- By Dan Jones
- Photographs by Michael Freeman
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
The two men have spent the last six years surveying the Preseli Mountains, trying to ascertain why Neolithic people might have believed the stones had mystical properties. Most were quarried at a site known as Carn Menyn, a series of rocky outcrops of white-spotted dolerite. “It’s a very special area,” says Wainwright, himself a Welshman. “Approaching Carn Menyn from the south you go up and up, then all of a sudden you see this rampart composed of natural pillars of stone.” Clearly, Carn Menyn inspired the ancients. Gors Fawr, a collection of 16 upright bluestones arranged in a circle, sits at the bottom of a Carn Menyn hill.
But Darvill and Wainwright say the real turning point came in 2006, when the pair looked beyond Carn Menyn’s rock formations and began studying some springs around the base of the crags, many of which had been altered to create “enhanced springheads”—natural spouts had been dammed up with short walls to create pools where the water emerged from the rock. More important, some of the springheads were adorned with prehistoric art.
“This is very unusual,” says Wainwright. “You get springs that have funny things done to them in the Roman and Iron Age periods, but to see it done in the prehistoric period is rare, so we knew we were on to something.” In his history of Britain, Geoffrey of Monmouth noted that the medicinal powers of Stonehenge’s stones were stimulated by pouring water over them for the sick to bathe in. Indeed, many of the springs and wells in southwest Wales are still believed to have healing powers and are used in this way by local adherents to traditional practices. As Wainwright recalls, “The pieces of the puzzle came together when Tim and I looked at each other and said, ‘It’s got to be about healing.’”
Once the archaeologists concluded that the ancients had endowed the Carn Menyn rocks with mystical properties, “franchising” them to Stonehenge made sense. “Its intrinsic power would seem to be locked into the material from which it was made and, short of visiting Carn Menyn, which might not have been always feasible, the next best step would have been to create a shrine from the powerful substance, the stone from Carn Menyn itself,” says Timothy Insoll, an archaeologist at the University of Manchester. He has documented similar behavior in northern Ghana, where boulders from the Tonna’ab earth shrine—similarly invested with curative properties—have been taken to affiliated shrines at new locations.
Evidence that people made healing pilgrimages to Stonehenge also comes from human remains found in the area, most spectacularly from the richest Neolithic grave ever found in the British Isles. It belonged to the “Amesbury Archer”—a man between 35 and 45 years old who was buried about five miles from Stonehenge between 2400 and 2200 B.C. with nearly 100 possessions, including an impressive collection of flint arrowheads, copper knives and gold earrings.
The bones of the Amesbury Archer tell a story of a sick, injured traveler coming to Stonehenge from as far away as the Swiss or German Alps. The Archer’s kneecap was infected and he suffered from an abscessed tooth so nasty that it had destroyed part of his jawbone. He would have been desperate for relief, says Wessex Archaeology’s Jacqueline McKinley.
Just 15 feet from where the Amesbury Archer was buried, archaeologists discovered another set of human remains, these of a younger man perhaps 20 to 25 years old. Bone abnormalities shared by both men suggest they could have been related —a father aided by his son, perhaps. Had they come to Stonehenge together in search of its healing powers?
Remarkably, although Stonehenge is one of the most famous monuments in the world, definitive data about it are scarce. In part, this is because of the reluctance of English Heritage, the site’s custodian, to permit excavations. Current chronologies are based largely on excavations done in the 1920s, buttressed by work done in the ’50s and ’60s. “But none of these excavations were particularly well recorded,” says Mike Pitts, editor of British Archaeology and one of the few people to have led excavations at Stonehenge in recent decades. “We are still unsure of the detail of the chronology and nature of the various structures that once stood on the site.”
To strengthen their case for Stonehenge as a prehistoric Lourdes, Darvill and Wainwright needed to establish that chronology with greater certainty. Had the bluestones been erected by the time the Amesbury Archer made his pilgrimage to the megaliths? Establishing the timing of Stonehenge’s construction could also shed light on what made this site so special: with so many henges across Britain, why was this one chosen to receive the benedictions of the bluestones? Such questions could be answered only by an excavation within Stonehenge itself.
Darvill and Wainwright were well placed for such a project. Wainwright had been English Heritage’s chief archaeologist for several years. In 2005, Darvill had worked with the organization on a plan for research at the monument— “Stonehenge World Heritage Site: An Archaeological Research Framework”—which made the case for small-scale, targeted excavations. Following these guidelines, Darvill and Wainwright requested official permission for the archaeological equivalent of keyhole surgery in order to study part of the first bluestone setting on the site.
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Related topics: Archaeology Neolithic England Stonehenge
Additional Sources
Stonehenge and Neighbouring Monuments by R. Atkinson, English Heritage, 1990










Comments (39)
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OK this was 2008 ... in 2012, "Genesis of Genesis" expanded on the 2011 book, "Grandpa Was A Deity" and showed how Stonehenge contributed to, and in part explains, the long ages attributed to the Biblical Patriarchs... and eventually gave us our modern Western Calendar. The cover image of Stonehenge and the Star of David sows how the two are linked ... It would be really neat to see is any Stonehenge archaeologist can refute the facts presented in "Genesis of Genesis" ... but, of course, they can not. Rather, in a decade or so, they will simply represent them as their own.
Posted by Bill Lipton on February 10,2013 | 03:14 PM
Your article states, ‘We now know that Stonehenge was in the making 400 year … ‘. First the circular earthworks were built and finally hundreds of years later the huge stones were installed. Amazing! It’s a simple question really … how did those who put the finishing touches to Stonehenge know what was in the minds of those who started this ‘sacred’ project. And, if you have ever watched theorists trying to erect (Stonehenge) stones only a fraction of the size of the original you would understand that whoever put the huge stones in place wouldn’t have complicated matters by first digging a ditch. The whole construction programme is further confused by archaeological ‘belief’ that, ‘before the large stones were brought in the blue stones were arranged in a double circle’. Incredible! It becomes apparent to anyone who applies a little thought to Stonehenge that archaeologists have no explanation for Stonehenge outside a few Aubrey holes, bluestones, potsherds and antler bones, oh and of course it is ‘sacred’. They appear to have abandoned it to Druids and sun worshippers. They also appear to ignore their own findings. In the English Heritage is a plate (based on archaeology) that shows the final Phase of Stonehenge had two Heel stones, two Intermediate and three Portal stones outside the Henge. Have you ever looked at the Constellation of Orion? Just as an aside there were thirty upright sarsen stones in the Henge. Giza (Great Pyramids) are thirty degrees longitude east of Stonehenge. Geoffrey
Posted by Geoffrey Morgan on January 17,2013 | 11:40 AM
Huge fan, do you think there's a reason a pick was found at stonehenge, and an arrowhead was found at bluestone henge? And what's up with the hazil? Could it have been wicca?
Posted by alexa on December 14,2012 | 03:14 PM
Perhaps if it began as a cemetery, it occurred to the people later that the spirits of the dead could help to heal the living. Thinking as such, they brought the bluestones--which were believed to have healing properties--to the site, knowing that the buried bodies (or what remained of them) were nearby, and that their spirits still lingered near the site. Because there was a source of water--which is viewed in many cultures as a symbol for healing and purity--they placed the bluestones strategically. Oftentimes, they healed themselves and their kin, and not quite as often did visitors such as the Archer happen along--and if the properties of the bluestone were as beneficial to healing as believed, not so many people would have died, and as a result would not have been buried around the site. That is how I piece this together, according to the evidence and hypotheses in the article...
Posted by Satakieli on December 2,2012 | 09:10 AM
A thought occurs, what if both are the answer both a site of healing and of interment. If it were a site for rites of leadership, the court of a king so to speak, and the kingship was perceived to be connected with healing as some old legends suggest. It could also have been a sign of honor to be buried in such a place.
Posted by william powers on October 5,2012 | 08:05 PM
Every time the word Stonehenge comes to our mind it reminds us of the remarkable efforts made by those who made this beautiful monument, http://liveoncampus.com/wire/show/3388776 here is a recreation of how Stonehenge may have been raised 4500 years ago, it takes you back in times when wooden logs were used to roll objects from one place to other with ropes made out of tree barks.
Posted by Vivek on June 24,2012 | 01:08 AM
Surely it's only the relatively recent introduction of effective medicine which provides Lourdes with sick and injured people? A few thousand years ago, one may have been very lucky to survive at all. I would suggest that a full-scale geo-scan type survey (non-invasive) should be done immediately out to the barrows on the near horizon and then determine some other 'great' places to dig. Come on English Heritage, get your fingers out!
Posted by James Clifton-Harrison on April 12,2012 | 10:00 AM
I don't think the blue stones came from Preceli mountain. I think they come from Garreg Las which means blue stone in Welsh. If you were to walk that mountain from North to South on a sunny winters day you'd soon discover why.
Posted by Huw Thomas on April 6,2012 | 05:26 PM
I was wondering why ,if bluestones were used for healing and worked why are doctor's not using them now,,they would work today to , sounds like you are saying they cured very severe illness's.since they have no widespread use they must not work now or then.so why would anyone go to a healing place that does not work.therefore i can only assume that it was not a place of healing at all.
Posted by steve schnitzler on March 6,2012 | 11:55 PM
is there any record of maintenance/construction work done on the stones at Stonhenge? I seem to remember some 50/60 years ago when "Council workers realigned some of the stones"
Ernie
Posted by melbournebird on November 8,2011 | 09:08 PM
Dear Mr. Jones,
I am doing a paper on Stonehenge for a college project and I was wondering if you wouldn't mind answering some questions for me.
Thank you,
Brandon Beck
Posted by Brandon Beck on October 18,2011 | 11:38 AM
The thought that the "bluestones" had healing properties is a good one. The lack of remains in the area around stonhenge could be taken as evidence that they worked! The lame and sick were restored and simply walked away. The grotto at Lourdes still attracts visitors for the same reason. Same for the sacred well at Glastonbury. Hauling rocks to construct religious monuments to heal the soul is one of mankind's oldest traditions. Some of these efforts were/are just more complex than others.
Posted by Tom Holliday on December 22,2010 | 03:06 PM
I am an Art student, I like to see more of your history in Archaoelogy.
Posted by Samia Karam Daou on September 3,2010 | 01:46 PM
Seeing Stonehenge on Fox News this AM. It stikes me to be some way of telling "Time". The way it is placed, and following the shadows from the North Star.
Just a thought.
Posted by Debbie on July 23,2010 | 10:20 AM
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