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Stonehenge Access Tours – A unique opportunity!

2011 Stonehenge Private Access Dates released.If you are planning to visit Stonehenge Stone Circle in 2011 then plan ahead and book a special ‘inner circle’ access tour

Book an exclusive private viewing of Stonehenge. Stepping inside the “inner circle of stones” is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Tickets are limited and each group consists of 26 (morning) or 40 (afternoon) with your own guide. With a choice of sunrise or sunset viewings, and private access to the inner circle of stones, your visit to Stonehenge is sure to be a memory you’ll cherish. As an added bonus, you’ll avoid the huge crowds.


Private Viewing of Stonehenge – Click here to book

Most visitors to Stonehenge are not allowed direct access to the stones. On this special day trip from London, you’ll be invited to enter the stone circle itself, and stand beside the mysterious rocks towering above you. Your guide will unlock the secrets of this ancient UNESCO World Heritage Listed monument. Enjoy the peace, away from the crowds, as you experience Stonehenge at its atmospheric best at sunrise or sunset. Availability is strictly limited so book early, as private viewings regularly sell out and operate on selected days in 2010/2011 only.

Lacock
Lacock is one of England’s most picturesque villages, dating back to the Saxon era. The village has provided the setting for many movies and television dramas, including Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. Take a walk before enjoying an early evening meal (or breakfast for sunrise departures) in the George, a vintage English pub built in 1361. Note, meals are at your own expense.

Bath
Bath is beautiful Georgian city, and also on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Its most celebrated resident is Jane Austin, and Bath was her birthplace and inspiration for several novels. You’ll have time to visit Bath Abbey and the magnificent Roman Baths, or simply shop and explore. You also have the option of taking a walking tour to see where Charles Dickens lived and worked as a young man, and to sample fresh cheeses from the local dairy

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If you prefer not to travel as part of a group you could always organise a private tour that include access into Stonehenge inner circle – ideal for families and small groups.   The ‘StoStonehenge Tour Company’ have an excellent record with many years experience – click here

Stonehenge Tourist Guide

>ONE of the world’s leading experts on Stonehenge discovered his passion for archaeology as a child in his Cheltenham back garden.

Professor Timothy Darvill has been awarded an OBE, in this year’s Queen’s Birthday Honours List, for services to archaeology. He is a leading expert on prehistoric Britain.

He said it was a “great privilege” to receive the honour from the Queen earlier this month at Windsor Castle and thanked his colleagues, friends and family.

“I have always been passionate about archaeology and feel fortunate to have contributed to so many amazing projects that have revealed such a great deal about our nation’s history and heritage,” he said.

Born and bred in Cheltenham, Prof Darvill has been passionate about archaeology since he was a child, according to his mother Win Darvill.

“He has always been interested from when he was a small boy. He used to dig holes in the garden all the time,” she said.

“His father, who was a civil engineer, was interested in fossils and passed it all on to Timothy and it went from there.”

The family lived in the Battledown area and Mrs Darvill now lives in Pittville.

Timothy Darvill is now a professor at Bournemouth University.

Mrs Darvill said: “When he was in his teens he was always either involved in archaeology in Cirencester or on field walks. It has always been his passion. I could not believe it when he was awarded the OBE but I am so proud.”

She said her son grew up in the right area to find all kinds of interesting landscapes.

But he developed an interest in Stonehenge from a young age too.

“He has done a lot of work on it and written many books about it. I read them but I wouldn’t like to write an essay on them,” she said.

The author of more than 20 books and 200 papers and articles, Mr Darvill famously co-directed the first excavations within the stone circle at Stonehenge for more than 40 years in April 2008.

His work featured in a BBC Timewatch programme, which examined the theory that Stonehenge was a prehistoric centre of healing.

After completing a PhD at Southampton University on the Neolithic of Wales and the west of England, he worked with the Western Archaeological Trust and the Council for British Archaeology before establishing a private practice offering consultancy services in the field of archaeological resource management.

In October 1991, he was appointed to the chair of archaeology in the newly-established archaeology group at Bournemouth University and led the Monuments at Risk survey commissioned by English Heritage in the mid 1990s and has worked in Russia, Malta, Greece, and Germany. He is chairman of the board of directors of Cotswold Archaeology, one of the top archaeological companies in the UK, and vice-president of the Society of Antiquaries of London.

Stonehenge Tourist Guide

>There are a number of operators offering sightseeing coach and bus tours this Christmas and New Year 2010 / 2011. Please see below for a list of discounted trips.

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Stonehenge Tourist Guide

>English Heritage claims it owns every single image of Stonehenge, ever………………

SteveMars sez, “Every photo image library got this by email today. ‘We are sending you an email regarding images of Stonehenge in your fotoLibra website. Please be aware that any images of Stonehenge can not be used for any commercial interest, all commercial interest to sell images must be directed to English Heritage.’ Here is one image library’s response:”
It’s kind of them to think of us, but this raises a number of questions.
Firstly, what legitimacy do they have for this claim? Is there any law that states that it is illegal to use images of Stonehenge for any commercial interest? Can someone direct me to it?

Secondly, if an image of Stonehenge is so used, how could they possibly police the usage? A quick browse through a number of rights-managed and royalty-free online picture libraries produced the following:

iStockPhoto (a US owned company) has 513 images of Stonehenge
Fotolia (US) has 648 images of Stonehenge
Dreamstime (US) has 670 images of Stonehenge
Shutterstock (US) has 737 images of Stonehenge

All the above sites sell images on a royalty free, unrestricted usage basis. If anyone buys a royalty free image from one of these suppliers then he’ll be using it as, where and when he likes, without asking English Heritage’s permission. How will they stop that?

What if we photograph the place from the air? What law can we possibly be breaking here?

While we’re looking at Clive‘s photograph, who built that ugly tarmac footpath cutting through the sacred ring?

Stonehenge Tourist Guide

>Visit the Big Dig!

Wednesday October 13th 2010

Where: Avon Fields: Former MoD Headquarters ,Netheravon Road, Durrington, Witshire

The village of Durrington is well known for its early archaeological heritage, including the largest Neolithic henge in Britain at Durrington Walls and nearby Woodhenge, both over 4500 years old. However, excavations by Wessex Archaeology in advance of the construction of new housing by Persimmon Homes South Coast on the former Ministry of Defence estate offices have started to uncover the remains of a late Iron Age/ Romano-British settlement.

Aerial view of the late Iron Age/ Romano-British settlement at Durrington, Wiltshire

This settlement lies within the north-west corner of the modern village of Durrington and at one time appears to have been surrounded by an enormous ditch over 6m in width and up to 4m in depth. The full extent of the enclosed settlement has yet to been determined, although it is possible- and further work will confirm this- that the enclosed settlement may be of a very substantial size.

The 6m wide enclosure ditch at Durrington

The excavations appear to be located at the southern edge of the settlement. Although the excavations are at an early stage, a wealth of archaeological features have been found including part of the enclosure ditch, possible granaries, large storage and quarry pits, cremation burials and a corn-drying kiln, as well as traces of earlier prehistoric activity within the site. The excavation is due to continue over the next year and will investigate the nature of this previously unknown settlement, which continued in the later Romano-British period and into the fifth century AD and may have been the first steps in the formation of the medieval estates at Durrington and the origin of the present village.

Come and see what they have found and find out more about the heritage of Avon Fields.

Free site tours Wednesday October 13th 2010 at 3.00pm and 5.00pm.

No booking required.
Please wear boots or sturdy shoes.
For more information please contact Andrew Manning or Margaret Bunyard 01722 326867 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting 01722 326867 end_of_the_skype_highlighting a.manning@wessexarch.co.uk

Stonehenge Tour Guide

>This artcle written by Malanie Philips (Daily Mail) is sure to anger Pagans and the Druid Order
Will someone please tell me this is all a joke. Until now, Druids have been regarded indulgently as a curious remnant of Britain’s ancient past, a bunch of eccentrics who annually dress up in strange robes at Stonehenge to celebrate the summer solstice.

However, according to the Charity Commission, they are to be recognised as a religion and, as a result, afforded charitable status, with the tax exemptions and other advantages that follow.
After a four-year campaign, the Commission says it accepts that the Druids worship nature and that they also believe in the spirits of places such as mountains and rivers, as well as in ‘divine guides’.

This, apparently, makes them qualify as a religion.
Can it be long before the BBC transmits Stones Of Praise, or solemnly invites listeners to Radio 4’s Thought For The Day to genuflect to a tree?
Some might shrug this off. After all, the Druids don’t do any harm to anyone. What skin is it off anyone else’s nose how they are categorised?
CULT ?
Well, it actually matters rather a lot. Elevating them to the same status as Christianity is but the latest example of how the bedrock creed of this country is being undermined. More than that, it is an attack upon the very concept of religion itself.
This is because Druidry is simply not a religion. Now, it’s true that religion is notoriously difficult to define. But true religions surely rest on an established structure of traditions, beliefs, literature and laws.
Above all, they share a belief in a supernatural deity (or more than one) that governs the universe

By these standards, Druidry is surely not a religion but a cult — a group defined merely by ritual practices but which stands outside mainstream religion.

Nor does it seem to conform to the definition of a religion according to charity law.

When Radio 4’s Sunday Programme suggested yesterday morning to Phil Ryder, chairman of the Druid Network, that the legal definition of religion included a ‘significant belief in a supreme being or entity’, he saw no contradiction. Druids, he said cheerfully, might venerate many gods, inanimate objects or nature.

How very inclusive of them! But the key point is surely that none of these beliefs involves a ‘supreme’ being that exists beyond the Earth and the universe. On the contrary, Druids worship what is in or on the earth itself.

When asked further how Druidry benefited the public interest — the key test for charitable status — Mr Ryder burbled that its ethical framework consisted of forming ‘honourable and sustainable relationships’ with everything in the world, including animals, people and nature.

But there are many who subscribe to no belief system at all and who would say they, too, want to live in harmony with the earth and everything in it. Are they, therefore, also to be regarded as religious folk and given charitable status?

Maybe Prince Charles, who famously talks to his plants, could register himself on that basis as the founder of a new religion? Duchy Devotions, anyone?

If the Druids qualify as a religion, can other cults such as the Scientologists be far behind?
Can it be long, indeed, before the wise and learned theologians of the Charity Commission similarly grant charitable status to sorcery, witchcraft or even the Jedi — the fictional Star Wars ‘religion’ which the 2001 census recorded as having no fewer than 390,127 adherents in England and Wales.
The whole thing is beyond absurd. But it is also malevolent. For it is all of a piece with the agenda by the oh-so politically correct Charity Commission to promote the fanatical religious creed of the Left — the worship of equality.
The Commission was primed by Labour for this attempt to restructure society back in 2006, when charity law was redrawn to redefine ‘public benefit’ as helping the poor.
This put the independent schools in the front line of attack, since education was no longer itself considered a benefit — as it had been since time immemorial — but only insofar as it furthered the ideology of ‘equality’.

Extraordinary

Thus, we have arrived at the extraordinary situation where some of these schools, which have delivered such inestimable benefit to the nation, face the loss of their charitable status, which is to be given instead to people who dance naked around stones and worship the sun.
But the new respectability of paganism cannot be laid entirely at the Charity Commission’s door. For in recent years, pagan practices have been rapidly multiplying, with an explosion of the occult: witchcraft, parapsychology, séances, telepathy and mind-bending cults.
Astonishingly, around 100 members of the Armed Forces now classify themselves as pagans, and a further 30 as witches.
There are thought to be about 500 pagan police officers. A Pagan Police Association has even been set up to represent officers who ‘worship nature and believe in many gods’.
They have been given the right to take days off to perform rituals, such as leaving food out for the dead, dressing up as ghosts and casting spells, or celebrating the sun god with ‘unabashed sexuality and promiscuity’.
Britain’s prison authorities are equally hospitable to the occult: under instructions issued to every prison governor, pagan ‘priests’ are allowed to use wine and wands during ceremonies in jails. Inmates practising paganism are allowed a hoodless robe, incense and a piece of religious jewellery among their personal possessions.

Political correctness gone mad or what? As one disgusted police officer exploded: ‘What has it come to when a cop gets time off so he can sit about making spells or dance around the place drinking honey beer with a wand in his hand?’

Barking
How on earth has our supposedly rational society come to subscribe to so much totally barking mumbo-jumbo?
In part, it developed from the New Age embrace of Eastern beliefs in the inter-connectedness of everything in the universe. The defining characteristic of such faiths is a spirituality which is concerned with the self rather than the world beyond the individual.

These beliefs were, therefore, tailor-made for the ‘me society’ which turned against Biblical constraints on behaviour in the interests of others. They were subsequently given rocket fuel by environmentalism, at the core of which lies the pagan worship of ‘Mother Earth’.
And they were then legitimised by the doctrines of equality of outcomes and human rights — which, far from protecting the rights of truly religious people, aim to force Biblical morality and belief out of British and European public life altogether.
This is because human rights and equality of outcomes are held to be universal values. That means they invariably trump specific religious beliefs to impose instead equal status for all creeds.

But if all creeds, however absurd, have equal meaning then every belief is equally meaningless. And without the Judeo-Christian heritage there would be no morality and no true human rights.
There is nothing remotely enlightened about paganism. It was historically tied up with both communism and fascism, precisely because it is a negation of reason and the bedrock values behind Western progress.
The result is that, under the secular onslaught of human rights, our society is reverting to a pre-modern era of anti-human superstition and irrationality. From human rights, you might say, to pagan rites in one seamless progression.
Anyone who thinks radical egalitarianism is progressive has got this very wrong. We are hurtling backwards in time to a more primitive age**

**Is that such a bad thing ?  Food for though!
Stonehenge Tour Guide

http://www.stonehenge-stone-circle.co.uk/

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TESTS on teeth from a skeleton of a teenager found buried near Stonehenge suggest they came from someone who grew up around the Mediterranean Sea.

The remains of the youngster – estimated to have died 3,550 years – were found with a distinctive amber necklace.

The conclusions come from analysis of different forms of the elements oxygen and strontium in the skeleton’s tooth enamel.
The teenager, known to archaeologists as the boy with the amber necklace, was found in 2005 about 5km south east of Stonehenge on Boscombe Down.
It was discovered next to a Bronze Age burial mound while roadworks were being carried out.
The findings indicate that a diverse range of people who came to Stonehenge from across Europe.
The findings will be discussed at a science symposium in London to mark the 175th anniversary of the British Geological Survey (BGS).

Stonehenge Tour Guide

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There’s just time (until the end of the month) to have your say on a formal British document to be submitted to UNESCO laying out, inter alia, how Stonehenge and Avebury ought to be managed.

See http://consult.wiltshire.gov.uk/portal/spatial_planning/consultee_documents/avebury_whs/ (see below)

(You can send your views direct to strategiclandscape@wiltshire.gov.uk )

We have our own views on the matter and here is the submission we have made:

“We note that: “The process of producing the Statement of OUV is not an opportunity to change or add to the reasons for inscription but a chance to distil them into a single document which will be key [to] the World Heritage Property’s protection. It is however possible to reflect challenges which have emerged over the last 25 years as well as changes in the management and protection context.“

In that case, we would like to say that a very obvious “change in the management and protection context“ which has emerged over the last 25 years is the fact that there has been a vast growth, due to the internet, in the number of people nationally and internationally who have a strong personal interest in the WHS and make frequent repeated visits to it and these now comprise the overwhelming preponderance of stakeholders – yet their needs are not addressed in a way which reflects that fact.

Even the introductory remarks of this consultation exercise betray a failure to recognise this reality: “This consultation provides an opportunity for local people, community groups and other organisations to comment on its Statement of Outstanding Universal Value”. The clear message is that unless you are local or a member of a community group or other organisation this consultation is not for you.
Involving and informing the local community or specially favoured groups first and leaving the wider community effectively ignored or disenfranchised is no longer appropriate. In our submission the need to rectify this matter goes to the very heart of both the management and protection of the World Heritage Site and a step-change is overdue.”

** Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Property Statement of Outstanding Universal

This consultation is being hosted on behalf of the Stonehenge and Avebury Steering Committees of which Wiltshire Council is a member.

The Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Property is one of Wiltshire’s greatest assets. This consultation provides an opportunity for local people, community groups and other organisations to comment on its Statement of Outstanding Universal Value. This Statement sets out formally why Stonehenge and Avebury are internationally important and what qualifies them to appear on the World Heritage List. It also sets out how requirements for management and protection of these qualities are being met.

This document is important for the protection of what makes Stonehenge and Avebury internationally significant. It defines the World Heritage Site’s Outstanding Universal Value (OUV). The United Kingdom signed up to protect the OUV of its World Heritage Sites when it ratified the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage (1972).

The planning system has a very important role in this protection. Planning Circular 07/2009 states clearly the need to protect the Outstanding Universal Value of World Heritage Sites, while the guidance accompanying the new Planning Policy 5 on the Protection of the Historic Environment (2010) identifies the Statement of OUV as a critical resource for local planning authorities in plan-making and reaching decisions relating to the significance of World Heritage Sites. The document will also inform all management decisions which should prioritise the protection OUV as defined in the Statement. Your comments on the Statement of OUV could therefore contribute to protecting the very special qualities of Stonehenge and Avebury for this and future generations.

Since 2007 UNESCO has required a Statement OUV for all new World Heritage Properties. Stonehenge and Avebury were inscribed in 1986. All sites inscribed prior to 2007 are now required to submit retrospectively a Statement of OUV. This must be based on the original reasons for inscription set out in evaluation and decision documents from 1986. The process of producing the Statement of OUV is not an opportunity to change or add to the reasons for inscription but a chance to distil them into a single document which will be key the World Heritage Property’s protection. It is however possible to reflect challenges which have emerged over the last 25 years as well as changes in the management and protection context.

The original documents submitted to UNESCO during the nomination of the Stonehenge, Avebury and Associated Sites World Heritage Property in 1986 can be accessed via this link to the UNESCO website: http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/373/documents/

The Statement of OUV consists of four sections:

Statement of Significance

Statement of Integrity

Statement of Authenticity

Requirements for Management and Protection

The first section, the Statement of Significance, was agreed by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee in 2008 after a period of consultation and sign off by the Stonehenge and Avebury Steering Groups representing key local and national stakeholders.

We are now due to submit the final three sections:

2. Statement of Integrity
3. Statement of Authenticity
4. Requirements for Management and Protection
We would appreciate your comments to assist us in shaping a robust and comprehensive document.

Please note comments are sought only on the last three sections: integrity, authenticity and management and protection. The first section, the Statement of Significance, has already been agreed by UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee.
Guidance on the UNESCO definitions of authenticity and integrity can be found the World Heritage Operational Guidelines (paras 79 – 89 and Annex 4) which can be found at http://whc.unesco.org/en/guidelines/ Further background information can be found in the management plans for the two halves of the World Heritage Site. They include sections summarising integrity and authenticity as well as the provisions for management and protection

You can access the Stonehenge Management Plan on the English Heritage website via this link http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/daysout/properties/stonehenge/world-heritage-sites/stonehenge-management-plan/

You can access the Avebury Management Plan on the Wiltshire Council website via this link http://www.wiltshire.gov.uk/leisureandculture/museumhistoryheritage/worldheritagesite/aveburyworldheritagesitemanagementplan.htm

Local Wiltshire Tour Guide

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Britain is littered with the remains of past lives, civilisations and cultures, many of which remain a source of mystery and conjecture. We may never know the exact reasons why these circles, standing stones, henges, hill-figures and monuments were erected or the peoples and belief systems that led them to complete some of these sometimes massive structures such as Silbury Hill and Stonehenge. These pages are an ongoing investigation into some of these ancient sites and landscapes with a view to gaining an understanding of the lives of the people who inhabited these islands more than 2000 years ago..
Obviously it is beyond the scope of this blog to hope to document every British prehistoric monument – there are estimated to be well over 1000 stone circles alone and the number of identified round barrows currently stands at over 10000. The sites I have included (currently about 350) are simply those that I have visited in England and Wales and cover a fair cross section of the pre-Roman sites in these countries, although the odd Roman remain is featured – I have yet to visit any sites in Scotland or Ireland. There are also several sites which have been included either because their age and purpose is unknown, or they may just be local curiosities. The areas of Lincolnshire, Humberside, Derbyshire and Yorkshire feature more pages than other regions, not because there are necessarily more ancient sites here but simply because they the closest to where I am based and therefore have received more frequent investigation than sites further afield.
England

AvonStanton Drew Neolithic Stone Circles and Cove. Stanton Drew
Stoney Littleton Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Wellow

CambridgeshireFlag Fen Bronze Age Visitor Centre. East of Peterborough
Robin Hood and Little John Standing Stones? West of Peterborough
CornwallBoscawen-un Bronze Age Stone Circle. St. Buryan
Boskednan Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Northwest of Penzance
Chun Quoit Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Morvah
Hurlers Bronze Age Stone Circles and Standing Stones. Minions
King Doniert Stone Celtic Inscribed Crosses. North of St. Cleer
Lanyon Quoit Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Madron
Longstone / Long Tom Christianised Standing Stone? Minions
Men an tol Neolithic Standing Stones. Northwest of Penzance
Merry Maidens Bronze Age Stone Circle and Standing Stones. St. Buryan
Rillaton Barrow Bronze Age Round Cairn. Minions
Stannon Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Bodmin Moor
Tintagel Ruined Castle. Southwest of Boscastle
Trethevy Quoit Neolithic Chambered Tomb. St. Cleer
Trippet Circle Stone Circle. Bodmin Moor
Zennor Quoit Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Zennor

CumbriaBlakeley Raise Bronze Age Stone Circle. Southwest of Ennerdale Bridge
Broadfell Cairn Bronze Age Round Cairn. North of Orton
Castlehowe Scar Bronze Age Stone Circle. East of Shap
Castlerigg Circle Neolithic/Bronze Age Stone Circle. Keswick
Copt Howe Bronze Age ? Rock Carvings. Northwest of Chapel Stile
Druid’s Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. South of Ulverston
Gamelands Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Orton
Giant’s Grave Bronze Age Standing Stones. Kirksanton
Glassonby Round Cairn and Rock Carving. Northwest of Glassonby
Greycroft Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. North of Seascale
Hardknott Roman Fort Roman Fort. Hardknott Pass
Hill of Skulls Bronze Age Round Barrow. Shap
King Arthurs Round Table Neolithic Henge. South of Penrith
Little Meg Circle Bronze Age Round Cairn. South of Glassonby
Long Meg and Her Daughters Bronze Age Stone Circle. Northeast of Little Saltkeld
Low Moor Barrow Long Cairn. East of Askham
Moor Divock Southeast of Pooley Bridge
Moor Divock Cairns Bronze Age Burial Mounds.
The Cockpit Bronze Age Ring Cairn.
The Cop Stone Natural Rock Feature/Alignment.
White Raise Barrow Bronze Age Round Cairn & Cist
Mayburgh Henge Neolithic Henge. South of Penrith
Mossthorn Neolithic Long Cairns. West of Penrith
Pike of Stickle Neolithic Axe Mine. Langdale
Raise Howe Bronze Age Round Cairn. Crosby Ravensworth
Sewborrans Bronze Age Standing Stone. West of Penrith
Shap Circles (including Kemp Howe) Bronze Age Stone Circles. Shap
Shap Stone Row (including Goggleby Stone) Bronze Age Stone Alignment. Shap
Skirsgill Bronze Age Standing Stone. Southwest of Penrith
Sunkenkirk Bronze Age Stone Circle. North of Hallthwaites.
Temple Sowerby Roman Milestone. Southeast of Temple Sowerby

DerbyshireArbor Low Henge Neolithic/Bronze Age Henge and Circle. Bakewell
Bamford Moor Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. North East of Bamford
Brown Edge / Totley Circle
Bronze Age Ring Cairn or Stone Circle. Totley Moor
Bull Ring Neolithic Henge. Dove Holes
Creswell Crags Old Stone Age Cave Dwelling. East of Creswell
Crook Hill Bronze Age Stone Circle. West of Ashopton
Curbar Edge Cairn Bronze Age Round Cairn. Curbar Edge
Five Wells Neolithic Chambered Cairn. West of Taddington
Froggatt Edge Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. North of Chatsworth
Harland Edge Bronze Age Cairn. South East of Chatsworth
Holy Moor Bronze Age Carved Rock. West of Holymoorside
Hordron Edge Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. East of Ashopton
Ladybower Tor Bronze Age Carved Rock. North East of Ashopton
Mam Tor Late Bronze Age/Iron Age Hillfort. West of Castleton
Minninglow (Page 1) Neolithic Chambered Tomb. North East of Roystone Grange
Minninglow (Page 2) Neolithic Chambered Tomb. North East of Roystone Grange
Moscar Moor Bronze Age Kerbed Cairn. South East of Ashopton
Nine Stones Close Bronze Age Stone Circle. West of Stanton Moor
Old Woman Stone Bronze Age Standing Stone. North East of Bamford
Park Gate Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. South of Chatsworth
Raven Tor Bronze Age Triple Cairn and Cist. South of Chatsworth
Rowtor Rocks Bronze Age Rock Carvings. Birchover
Smelting Hill Bronze Age Stone Circle. North East of Abney
Strawberry Lea Bronze Age Stone Circle or Kerb Cairn. Totley Moor
Big Moor North of Chatsworth
Barbrook I Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle
Barbrook II Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle
Barbrook III Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle

Barbrook IV Bronze Age Ring Cairn
Barbrook V Bronze Age Ring Cairn

Swine Sty Bronze Age Settlement Site
Eyam Moor
Northwest of Grindleford
Eyam Moor II Bronze Age Stone Circle
Eyam Moor III Bronze Age Stone Circle
Eyam Moor Cairn Bronze Age Cairn
Stanage Cairn Bronze Age Round Cairn and Cup Marked Stone
Wet Withens (Eyam Moor I) Bronze Age Stone Circle
Gardom’s Edge East of Baslow
Gardom’s Edge Carved Rock Bronze Age Carved Stone
Gardom’s Edge Enclosure (Meg’s Wall) Neolithic Enclosure Walls
Gardom’s Edge Ring Cairn Bronze Age Ring Cairn
Gardom’s Edge Standing Stone Bronze Age Standing Stone
Gardom’s Edge Pit Alignment Iron Age Pit Alignment
Gardom’s Edge Round House Bronze Age / Iron Age House
Three Men of Gardom’s Bronze Age Barrow/Cairn
Gibbet Moor East of Chatsworth
Alignment Bronze Age Standing Stone Alignment
Four Poster Bronze Age Four Poster Stone Circle and nearby Cist
Hob Hurst’s House Bronze Age Cairn

Standing Stones Bronze Age Standing Stones
Stanton Moor Northeast of Birchover
Stanton Moor Introduction
Doll Tor Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle
Nine Ladies Circle Bronze Age Circle
Stanton Moor North Bronze Age Stone Circle
Stanton Moor Central Bronze Age Ring Cairn
Stanton Moor South Bronze Age Stone Circle

Devon
Black Tor Row (East) Bronze Age Stone Rows / Cairns. Dartmoor (Images only so far)
Black Tor Row (Southwest) Bronze Age Stone Row. Dartmoor (Images only so far)
Brisworthy Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Dartmoor (Images only – text to be added)
Drizzlecombe Rows Bronze Age Stone Rows. Dartmoor (Images only – text to be added)
Drizzlecombe Settlement Bronze Age Settlement. Dartmoor (Images only – no text yet)
Fernworthy Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Dartmoor
Fernworthy Row North Bronze Age Stone Row. Dartmoor
Grey Wethers Circle Bronze Age Double Stone Circle. Dartmoor
Grimspound Bronze Age Settlement Site, Dartmoor
Kes Tor Round Pound Bronze Age / Iron Age Settlement Site, Dartmoor
Merrivale Dartmoor
Merrivale Circle Bronze Age Circle / Standing Stone. (Images only – text to be added)
Merrivale Ring Cairn Bronze Age Ring Cairn. (Images only – text to be added)
Merrivale Rows Bronze Age Stone Rows. (Images only – text to be added)
Merrivale Settlement Bronze Age Settlement. (Images only – text to be added)
Ringmoor Cairn Bronze Age Cairn. Dartmoor (Images only – text to be added)
Ringmoor Row Bronze Age Row / Cairn Circle. Dartmoor (Images only – text to be added)
Scorhill Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Dartmoor
Sharpitor Row Bronze Age Row / Cairns / Cist. Dartmoor (Images only – text to be added)
Sharpitor Settlement Bronze Age Huts. (Images only – text to be added)
Shovel Down Bronze Age Stone Rows, Standing Stone, Circle and Cairns. Dartmoor
Spinster’s Rock Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Northeast of Dartmoor
Yellowmead Bronze Age Multiple Cairn Circle. (Images only – text to be added)

DorsetCerne Abbas Giant Hill Figure. Cerne Abbas
Grey Mare and her Colts Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Abbotsbury
Jordan Hill Roman Temple
Roman Temple. Weymouth
Lanceborough King Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. East of Dorchester
Maiden Castle Neolithic/Iron Age/Roman Hillfort. Southwest of Dorchester
Winterbourne Abbas Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Winterbourne Abbas

Durham
Barningham / How Tallon Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. South of Barnard Castle
Barningham Moor (Central) Bronze Age Carved Rocks. South of Barnard Castle
Barningham Moor (Northwest) Bronze Age Carved Rocks. South of Barnard Castle
Barningham Moor (South) Bronze Age Carved Rocks. South of Barnard Castle
Barningham Moor (Southwest) Bronze Age Carved Rocks. South of Barnard Castle

GloucestershireBelas Knap Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Winchcombe
Hetty Peggler’s Tump Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Uley
Notgrove Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Bourton-on-the-Water
Nympsfield Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Frocester

Lincolnshire
Dragonby Natural Rock Formation. North of Scunthorpe
Drake Stones Natural Rock Formation? Anwick
Honington Camp Iron Age Camp/Settlement. Southwest of Ancaster
Julian’s Bower Maze Turf-cut Maze. Alkborough
Lincoln Roman Town
Lincoln
Shearman’s Wath Neolithic Henge. North of Horncastle
The Lincolnshire Long Barrows
Map and Introduction
Ash Hill Neolithic Long Barrow. Binbrook
Ash Holt Neolithic Long Barrow. Cuxwold
Beacon Plantation Neolithic Long Barrow. Swaby
Burgh on Bain Neolithic Long Barrow. Burgh on Bain
Deadmen’s Graves I, II Neolithic Long Barrows. Claxby
Giant’s Hills I, II Neolithic Long Barrows. Skendleby
Hills Brough Farm Neolithic Long Barrow(?). South of Caistor
Hoe Hill I,II Neolithic Long Barrows. Binbrook
Spellows Hill Neolithic Long Barrow. Partney
Tathwell Neolithic Long Barrow. Tathwell
Lincolnshire Round Barrows
Beacon Hill Bronze Age Round Barrow, Cleethorpes
Bully Hill Bronze Age Round Barrow, Northeast of Tealby
Bully Hills Bronze Age Round Barrow Cemetery. Tathwell
Burgh on Bain Bronze Age Barrows. Burgh on Bain
Buslingthorpe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Buslingthorpe
Butterbumps Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. Willoughby
Cleatham Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. Manton
Donnington-on-Bain Bronze Age Barrow. Donington on Bain
Folk Moot & Butt Mound Bronze Age Round Barrows. Silk Willoughby
Fordington Barrows Bronze Age Round Barrows(?). Ulceby
Grim’s Mound Bronze Age Round Barrow. Burgh on Bain
Hagworthingham Bronze age Round Barrow. Hagworthingham
Hatcliffe Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. Hatcliffe
Howe Hill Bronze Age Round Barrow. Ulceby
King’s Hill Barrow/Mound. Bardney
Ludford Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. Ludford
Mill Hill Bronze Age Round Barrow. Claxby
Revesby Barrows Bronze Age/Roman Round Barrows(?). Revesby
Ring Holt Bronze Age Round Barrow. Dalby

NorfolkHolme-Next-the-Sea (Seahenge) Bronze Age Wooden Circle. Hunstanton

NorthumberlandChatton 1a Bronze Age Carved Rock. Chatton
Chatton 2, 4 & 5 Bronze Age Carved Rocks. Chatton
Goatstones Bronze Age Four-Poster Stone Circle. Broadpool Common (Images only)
Ketley Crag Rock Shelter Bronze Age Carved Rocks. Chatton
Lordenshaw Area 3 & 4 Bronze Age Carved Rocks. South of Rothbury
Lordenshaw Cairns Bronze Age Cairns. South of Rothbury (Images only)
Lordenshaw (Horseshoe Rock) Bronze Age Carved Rock. South of Rothbury
Lordenshaw (Main Panel) Bronze Age Carved Rock. South of Rothbury
Lordenshaw Hillfort Iron Age Hillfort and Settlement. South of Rothbury (Images only)
Matfen Stone Bronze Age Standing Stone. South of Matfen (Images only)

OxfordshireHoar Stone Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Enstone
Rollright Circle Neolithic / Bronze Age Circle and Tomb. Little Rollright
Uffington White Horse Iron Age(?) Hill Figure. Uffington
Wayland’s Smithy Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Ashbury

RutlandBraunston Goddess Carved Churchyard Figure. Braunston
Wing Maze Turf-cut Maze. Wing

SomersetGlastonbury Abbey, Tor and Holy Well. Glastonbury

WiltshireAvebury AreaAvebury Henge Neolithic Henge and Circle Complex. Avebury
Seorfon Barrows Bronze Age Round Barrows. Southeast of Avebury
Silbury Hill Neolithic Mound. South of Avebury
The Sanctuary Neolithic Stone & Timber Circle. Southeast of Avebury
West Kennet Avenue Neolithic Avenue. Southeast of Avebury
West Kennet Barrow Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. South of Avebury
Stonehenge Area
Stonehenge Neolithic / Bronze Age Complex. Amesbury
Stonehenge Page 2
The Stonehenge Stone Circle Website
Carpark Post Holes
Mesolithic Timber Post Holes. Stonehenge Carpark
Durrington Walls Bronze Age Henge, Durrington
New King Barrows Bronze Age Barrows, Amesbury
Normanton Down Neolithic / Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. South of Stonehenge
The Avenue Neolithic / Bronze Age Earthwork. Northeast of Stonehenge
The Cursus Neolithic / Bronze Age Earthwork. North of Stonehenge
The Cursus Group Bronze Age Round Barrows. North of Stonehenge
Winterbourne Stoke Group Neolithic / Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery
Woodhenge Bronze Age Henge & Timber Structure. North of Amesbury
Histouries UK – Tour operator based in Salisbury offering tours to Stonehenge and Avebury
Stonehenge Tour Company – London tour opeartor specialises in Stone Circle Tours

York
York Museum Stone Bronze Age Carved Rock. York Museum Gardens

Yorkshire (East Riding – formerly North Humberside)Arras Barrow Cemetery Iron Age Barrow Cemetery. Market Weighton
Callis Wold Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. North of Pocklington
Dane’s Dyke Bronze Age Bank and Ditch. West of Flamborough Head
Hall Ings Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. North of Hull
High Gardham Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. Northwest of Hull
Littlewood Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. Northwest of Hull
Newbald Lodge Southeast Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. Northwest of Hull
Towthorpe Plantation Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. East of Wharram Percy
Westwood Common Barrow Cemetery. West of Beverley
Rudston Cult Centre
Overview Map
Ba’l Hill Neolithic Round Barrow. Wold Newton
Little Argham Henge Neolithic Henge. North of Rudston
Rudston Beacon Sacred Hill. South of Rudston
Rudston Cursus Neolithic Cursus. South and East of Rudston
Rudston Monolith Neolithic Standing Stone. Rudston
Southside Mount Barrow Neolithic(?) Barrow. South of Rudston
Willie Howe Neolithic Round Barrow. West of Burton Fleming
See also Folkton, Sharp Howe, Spell Howe, Willerby Wold under North Yorkshire

Yorkshire (North)Acklam Wold Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. West of Acklam Village
Ann Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Appletreewick Bronze Age Stone Circle. East of Hebden.
Beacon Howes Bronze Age Round Barrows. West of Ravenscar
Blakey Topping Sacred Hill ? and Stone Alignment. Northeast of Pickering
Breckon Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. East of Grosmont
Broxa Bronze Age/Iron Age Barrow Cemetery. Broxa Forest
Commondale Bronze Age Stone Circle. East of Great Ayton
Danes Hills Iron Age Barrow Cemetery. East of Riccall
Dargate Dikes Bronze Age Earthwork. Langdale Foerst
Devils Arrows Bronze Age Standing Stones. Boroughbridge
Duggleby Howe Neolithic Round Barrow. West of Kirby Grindalythe
Flass Brow Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Flat Howe Bronze Age Round Barrows. East of Grosmont
Folkton Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. South of Folkton
Foster Howes Bronze Age Round Barrows. Southeast of Grosmont
Fox Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Langdale Forest
Hanging Grimston Barrow Cemetery. North of Uncleby Wold
Harwood Dale Bronze Age Stone Circle. Harwood Dale Forest
High Bridestones Bronze Age Stone Circles. East of Grosmont
High Woof Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Hole of Horcum Dikes/Settlement Area. Northeast of Pickering
Howden Hill Sacred Hill ? Langdale End
Lilla Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Louven Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Low Bridestones Bronze Age Stone Row ? East of Grosmont
Low Woof Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Old Wife’s Neck Bronze Age Standing Stone. Fylingdales Moor (Images only)
Pen Howe Bronze Age Round Barrows. East of Grosmont
Ramsdale Stones Bronze Age Stone Circle. Fylingdales Moor (Images only)
Ravenscar Bronze Age Rock Carving. Ravenscar
Robbed Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Sharp Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. South of Folkton
Sil Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Grosmont
Simon Howe Bronze Age Round Cairn and Alignment. South of Goathland
Spell Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. Southeast of Folkton
Thieves Dikes Bronze Age Earthworks. Northeast of Silpho
Thimbleby Nine Stones Bronze Age Stone Circle or Setting. SE of Osmotherley
Thornborough Henges Neolithic Henges, Northwest of Tanfield
Three Howes Bronze Age Round Cairns. South of Grosmont
Tripsdale Bride Stones Bronze Age Round Barrow/Kerb Circle. SE of Chop Gate
Wain Stones Bronze Age Carved Rocks. South of Great Broughton
Wharram Percy Bronze Age Barrow Cemetery. West of Wharram Percy
Willerby Wold Neolithic Long Barrow. North of Foxholes
Yarnbury Neolithic Henge. North of Grassington
Yockenthwaite Bronze Age Stone Circle. Northwest of Kettlewell
Allan ToftsNorth of Goathland
Page 1 (North) Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Page 2 (North) Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Page 3 (Centre) Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Page 4 (West and East) Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Fylingdales Moor – Eastern Area
Brow Moor
Robin Hood’s Butts Bronze Age Round Barrows. (Images only)
Brow Moor Area 5 Page 1 Bronze Age Round Barrows.
Brow Moor Area 5 Page 2 Bronze Age Round Barrows.
Brow Moor Area 5 Page 3 Bronze Age Round Barrows.
Brow Moor Area 5 Page 4 Bronze Age Round Barrows.
Brow Moor Area 6 Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Brow Moor Area 7 Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Jugger Howe Moor
Jugger Howe Bronze Age Round Barrow. (Images only)
Jugger Howes Bronze Age Round Barrows. (Images only)
Stony Marl Moor
Grey Horse Stone Bronze Age Standing Stone? (Images only)
Stony Marl Howes Bronze Age Round Barrows. (Images only)
Stony Marl Carved Rocks Bronze Age Carved Rocks.
Wragby Barrow Bronze Age Round Barrow. (Images only)
See also –
Askwith Moor
, Tree of Life, Snowden Carr, Death’s Head Rock under West Yorkshire

Yorkshire (South)
Ash Cabin Flat Bronze Age Stone Circle. West of Sheffield
Bar Dyke Cross Dyke. Southwest of Stocksbridge
Bar Dyke RIng Bronze Age Ring Cairn. Southwest of Stocksbridge
Carl Wark Iron Age Hillfort. Southwest of Sheffield
Ecclesall Wood Bronze Age Rock Carving. Southwest Sheffield
Ewden Beck Bronze Age Ring Cairn. Southwest of Stocksbridge
Yorkshire (West)
Adel Churchyard Stones
(PRAWR 207, 208) Bronze Age Carved Rocks. Adel
Knotties Stone (PRAWR 396) Bronze Age Carved Rock. Otley Chevin
The Bull Stone Bronze Age Standing Stone. Otley Chevin
Baildon Moor
Introduction
Baildon 1 (Dobrudden) (PRAWR 147) Bronze Age Carved Stone
Baildon 2 (PRAWR 154) Bronze Age Carved Stone
Baildon 3 (PRAWR 151) Bronze Age Cup Marked Stone
Baildon 4 (PRAWR 146) Bronze Age Carved Stone
Rombald’s Moor (including Ilkley, Burley, Morton and Addingham Moors)
Introduction
Anvil Rock (PRAWR 215) Bronze Age Cup Marked Rock
Backstone Beck Neolithic/Bronze Age/Iron Age Huts & Enclosure
Backstone Beck Stones 1 (PRAWR 285, 287) Bronze Age Carved Rocks
Backstone Beck Stones 2 (PRAWR 282, 283) Bronze Age Carved Rocks
Backstone Circle Stone Circle ?
Badger Stone (PRAWR 250) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Barmishaw Stone (PRAWR 253) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Bradup Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle.
Doubler Stones (PRAWR 41, 42) Bronze Age Carved Rocks
Great Skirtful of Stones Bronze Age Round Cairn.
Green Crag Slack (PRAWR 325) Bronze Age Cairns and Carved Rocks
Green Gates (PRAWR 255, 256, 257) Bronze Age Carved Rocks
Grooved Stone (PRAWR 390) Bronze Age Rock Carving
Grubstones Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle
Hanging Stones (PRAWR 284) Bronze Age Rock Carvings
Haystack (PRAWR 302) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Horncliff Circle Bronze Age Enclosure
Idol Stone (PRAWR 322) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Little Skirtful of Stones Bronze Age Round Cairn.
Neb Stone (PRAWR 237) Bronze Age Cup Marked Rock
Pancake Rock (PRAWR 332) Bronze Age Cup Marked Rock
Panorama Stone (PRAWR 227, 228, 229) Bronze Age Carved Stones
Pepperpot (PRAWR 261) Bronze Age Cup Marked Rock
Piper’s Crag Stone (PRAWR 212) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Planets (PRAWR 295) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Second Idol Stone (PRAWR 288) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Sepulchre Stone (PRAWR 214) Bronze Age Cup Marked Rock
Swastika Stone (PRAWR 217) Bronze Age/Iron Age(?) Carved Stone
Silver Well (PRAWR 238) Bronze Age Cup Marked Rocks
Twelve Apostles Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle.
Weary Hill Stone (PRAWR 244) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Willy Hall’s Wood Stone (PRAWR 258) Bronze Age Carved Rock
Woofa Enclosure (PRAWR 372) Enclosure and Bronze Age Carved Rocks
Sites in the former West Riding that are now part of North Yorkshire
Askwith Moor Bronze Age Carved Rocks
Snowden Carr Bronze Age Carved Rocks
The Death’s Head Rock (PRAWR 577) Bronze Age Carved Rock, Snowden Carr
The Tree of Life Rock (PRAWR 598)
Bronze Age Carved Rock, Snowden Carr
PRAWR = Prehistoric Rock Art of the West Riding (Boughey and Vickerman 2003)

Wales

Anglesey
Barclodiad y Gawres Neolithic Passage Grave. Llangwyfan
Bodowyr Neolithic Passage Grave. Brynsiencyn
Bryn Celli Ddu Neolithic Passage Grave. Llanddaniel Fab
Caer Leb Settlement Romano-British Settlement. Brynsiencyn
Din Lligwy Romano-British Walled Settlement. Moelfre
Lligwy Barrow Neolithic Chambered Barrow. Moelfre
Penrhos Feilw Standing Stones. SW of Holyhead
Plas Newydd Neolithic Chambered Barrow. Plas Newydd Park
Presaddfed Neolithic Barrows. Bodedern
Trefignath Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. South of Holyhead
Ty Newydd Neolithic Burial Chamber. Llanfaelog

ClwydCefn Meiriadog Chambered Cairn. South of Prestatyn
Gop y Goleuni Neolithic Barrow(?). South of Prestatyn
Gwytherin Four Stones Stone Alignment. Gwytherin Church Yard
Maen Achwyfaen Bronze Age Monolith/Christian Cross. South of Prestatyn
DyfedCarreg Coetan Arthur Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Newport
Carreg Samson Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Northwest of Mathry
Devil’s Quoit Neolithic Burial Chamber. West of Pembroke
Gors Fawr Circle Bronze Age Stone Circle. Mynachlogddu
King’s Quoit Neolithic Burial Chamber. West of Tenby
Llech Y Tripedd Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Moelgrove
Parc Y Meirw Stone Row. East of Fishguard
Pentre Ifan Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. South of Nevern

GlamorganCarn Llechart Stone Circle(?) and Cairn. West of Pontardawe
Maen Cetty (Arthur’s Stone) Neolithic Chambered Tomb. Southwest of Llanrhidian
Parc Le Breos Cwm Neolithic Chambered Cairn. Penmaen
St. Lythans Neolithic Chambered Tomb. West of Cardiff
Tinkinswood Neolithic Chambered Tomb. West of Cardiff

Gwent
Harold’s Stones Bronze Age Stone Row/Alignment. Trellech

PowysGrowing Stone Neolithic Monolith. Cwrt-y-Gollen
Gwernvale Neolithic Chambered Long Barrow. Crickhowell
Maen Llia Standing Stone. South of Sennybridge


360 Degree Panoramas (uses Java)
Main page with thumbnails
See also individual monument pages above.

Arthur’s Stone (Maen Cetty) Chambered Tomb. Glamorgan
Bamford Moor Circle Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Barbrook I Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Barbrook II Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Barbrook III Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Barningham / Eel Hill Carved Rock. Durham
Barningham / How Tallon Stone Circle. Durham
Carl Wark and Higger Tor Hillfort. South Yorkshire
Castlerigg Stone Circle. Cumbria
Commondale Stone Circle. North Yorkshire
Fernworthy Stone Circle. Dartmoor. Devon
Froggatt Edge Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Gamelands Stone Circle. Cumbria
Gardom’s Edge Carved Rock Rock Art. Derbyshire
Goatstones Stone Circle. Northumberland
Grey Horse Stone Standing Stone. North Yorkshire
Grey Wethers Stone Circle. Dartmoor. Devon
Grey Wethers South Stone Circle. Dartmoor. Devon
Grim’s Mound Round Barrow. Lincolnshire
Hagworthingham Round Barrow. Lincolnshire
High Bridestones Standing Stones/Circles. North Yorkshire
Hordron Edge Circle Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Kes Tor Round Pound Settlement Site. Dartmoor. Devon
Long Meg & Her Daughters Stone Circle. Cumbria
Lordenshaw Carved Rocks and Hillfort. Northumberland
Mayburgh Henge Neolithic Henge. Cumbria
Merrivale Stone Rows. Dartmoor. Devon
Parkgate Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Smelting Hill Stone Circle. Derbyshire
St. Lythans Chambered Tomb. Glamorgam
Tinkinswood Chambered Tomb. Glamorgam
Twelve Apostles Stone Circle. Yorkshire
Wet Withens Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Yellowmead Multiple Cairn Circle. Dartmoor. Devon



180 Degree Partial Panoramas
(uses HTML)
See also individual monument pages above.

Deadmen’s Graves Long Barrows. Lincolnshire
Hole of Horcum Natural Feature and Earthworks. North Yorkshire
Honington Camp Iron Age Settlement. Lincolnshire
Ketley Crag Carved Rock. Northumberland
Pancake Rock Carved Rock. West Yorkshire
Swastika Stone Carved Rock. West Yorkshire

Timelapse Videos

Barbrook I Sunset Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Hordron Edge Clouds Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Hordron Edge Moonrise Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Hordron Edge Sunset Stone Circle. Derbyshire
Parkgate Clouds Stone Circle. Derbyshire

British Stone Circle Tour Guide

>The new visitor centre planned for Stonehenge in Wiltshire could open its doors by 2013 if funding can be found, according to a report in the Salisbury Journal.

It was announced earlier this year that the coalition government would not be providing the £10m funding promised by the former Labour administration towards the centre’s £27m price tag.
Operators English Heritage (EH) nevertheless decided to proceed with the project, which has already received planning permission.

At a meeting of Wiltshire Council’s Amesbury Area Board on 2 September, EH project development manager Martin Harvey said: “We believe the project remains absolutely achievable.
“If all goes well with the remainder of this year, we believe we can still start work on the site in 2012 and open for business the following year.”
He added that EH have put in an application to the Heritage Lottery Fund, and is completing current plans in the meantime using money from previous sources.

Needless to say we will be keepng a very close eye on this and will advise as and when we reciev news.

Stonehenge Tour Guide