Rolling With The Sarsen Stones

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

I woke up this morning in London to a gentle rain, and was reminded of a comment by Mark Twain. When Twain was living in the UK, a couple of his friends from the US were out to his house to tea. A week later, he writes to someone else:

“We furnished them a bright day and comfortable weather—and they used it all up, in their extravagant American way. Since then we have sat by coal fires, evenings.”

So, hoping I hadn’t used up all the good weather, in a light rain we packed and stowed and jumped on the tube to Heathrow, where we rented a car and drove west to Salisbury.

And as always, there were surprises. The first surprise was how quickly the city was replaced by lovely green countryside. And not only countryside, but farms, large farms, growing wheat from the looks of it. I’d expected miles and miles of suburbs, but that didn’t happen at all.

IMG_1188

(Click to enlarge) The second surprise was that the rain went away, and although the day was cloudy, it was lovely.

The very best part of the day, however, was being taken on a tour of both Stonehenge and Avebury by Tim Daw. It was great to finally meet Tim. Back in 2007, a couple of years before I started writing for WUWT, Tim was gracious enough to post an article of mine about the Central England Temperature (CET) record. At present, that blog is inactive, but he is still running his family farm … and in addition, he also  works at Stonehenge, and is an amateur archaeologist himself. So there could not have been a better guide.

So we all jumped into Tim’s car and he drove us from Salisbury to Stonehenge. I knew nothing about Stonehenge … and as it turns out … nobody does. Oh, that’s not quite accurate, we know that they made urns with collars around them, and that they built long barrows for their dead, not round barrows. We know that the blue stones came from Wales, and that the sarsen stones came from about twenty miles north of Stonehenge. We know that in the Middle Ages people thought Merlin built Stonehenge.

Other than that, however, I fear we know very little more than the people from the Middle Ages about who built Stonehenge, or why. But despite that lack of knowledge, or perhaps in part because of that, the place has an awesome and remote majesty that captures nearly everyone’s imagination. Here’s what it looked like today when we were there:

stonehenge

From there, we went to Avebury, which I’m told is another “henge”. My obviously over-valued estimate of my own knowledge of the oddities of the English language has taken a thrashing on this trip. I’ve found out a few things about British place names I never knew. One was that a “minster”, as in “Westminster”, means a big church. Next, a “stoke”, as in Greystoke, is a stockade. I found out that a “staple” or “stable” in a place-name means a market, and that “Bury”, as in Salisbury where I am now, means a fortified town. I learned that “sarsen” is a corruption of “Saracen”. My new bible on these matters is here.

I also now know that a “henge” is a circular earthen wall with a ditch inside it.

Now, all over the planet people dig circular earthen walls with ditches. Why? Well, for defense, of course. It’s a great plan. The attackers are all down in the ditch, and you stand up on top and shoot at them with whatever armament you might have. So, what’s wrong with this picture?

Well … the henges on Salisbury plain all have the ditches on the inside, not the outside. They would be totally useless for defense. So the obvious question arises … why were they built?

Bad news in that regard. Nobody knows. After asking Tim question after question about any and all aspects of the builders’ lives, I decided I could just record him saying “Sadly, no one knows”, and dispense with him altogether—I could just ask the question, and then play the recording. Not that he is ignorant on these matters, quite the contrary. It’s just that regarding why the henges were built … no one knows. Regarding the beliefs or origins of those who built them … no one knows. How did they move the stones? See the previous answer …

So with my ignorance doubly confirmed, and then reconfirmed, we left Stonehenge, and Tim took us onwards to Avebury. This is another famous nearby henge. It is much larger, encircling the entire village of Avebury. And the henge is much bigger as well, perhaps a thousand feet (300m) across, with a much higher wall and a much deeper ditch.

avebury 1

Again, like Stonehenge, Avebury is imbued with a sense of profound mystery—what is the purpose of the wall and the ditch? But this time the mystery is bizarrely juxtaposed with everyday life:

avebury 2

avebury 3

After we walked all the way around the circular earthen mound and came back down to the inside of the henge, the only thing I noticed was the sense of privacy, enclosure, and comfort that the surrounding earthen wall provided. Was that why they built the hedges? Mentally, I press the button on the tape recorder and hear Tim’s voice saying “No one knows …”.

From there, it was a lovely afternoon drive back to Salisbury. The clouds had built up. There were a few thunderstorms in the distance, and beneath a couple of them was “virga”, falling rain that evaporates before hitting the ground. The earth’s climate control system was back in operation, keeping the English countryside from overheating.

Back in Salisbury, we thanked Tim for his kindness. He was the very best of guides, knowledgeable and patient with rank novices like myself … a point of view for me to ponder on, indeed.

Then we walked into Salisbury town to see the Cathedral … and I’m here to tell you that it’s not any ordinary pile of stones. I’ve seem piles of stones in the form of cathedrals before … but this is a double-dyed, no holds barred cathedral.

We didn’t have much time to go in, it was late and just before closing, but it was open. The Salisbury Cathedral was built in the 13th century, and has been used continuously ever since. One of the four copies of the Magna Carta is kept there, but because of the late hour we didn’t see it. However, a service was going on, and the girl’s choir was singing when we entered the Cathedral. It was the perfect accompaniment to the structure, lovely voices echoing around the massive vaulted interior:

salisbury cathedral 2

Even in the Cathedral, however, my karma seems to be following me, no surprise there. In this case, I seem to have English clocks on the agenda. Here’s the clock from the Cathedral:

salisbury cathedral clock

And a closeup of the gear train:

salisbury cathedral clock gears

So what’s unique about this clock? Well, other than the bizarre nature of the gears, there’s nothing unique … other than the fact that it’s rumored to be the world’s oldest working clock, and it’s been running since 1386. It’s so old it never had hands to tell the time, just a bell that it rang when it was time for prayers. How curious, that the desire of humans to pray on a regular basis should set in train the long chain of clockish events that end up with John Harrison’s chronometer …

Anyhow, that’s all the news that’s fit to print from Salisbury. Tomorrow, we’re off to Bath. My thanks to all of the folks who have provided commentary, suggestions, and most importantly, offers of assistance. They are much appreciated even though they are not individually acknowledged. And my particular thanks to Tim for a most enjoyable and educational afternoon.

Regards to all,

w.

PS—On the way back from Avebury, Tim stopped in the village next to his to show us a version of the British Library that he was involved in setting up. It looks like this:

british library

It’s a “Take One, Leave One” library, and despite plenty of nay-sayers, it has worked well both there and in Tim’s village. It seems that when Post and Telecom were taking out the phone booths, they offered to sell them to the villages for one pound. So in his village, Tim and some others said sure, we’ll take it, it’ll make a great library.

But of course, this being the UK, nothing goes so simply. The day before they were to take possession of it, some drunken yobbo hit the phone booth with his car and knocked it at an angle. Didn’t damage it much, just bent it over some.

“That’s no problem”, sez Tim and his mates, “we’ll take it anyhow.”

“Oh, no, no,”, say the P&T folks, “can’t do that. It’s all super-dangerous now, someone might get hurt, we can’t sell it to you”.

So Tim and the villagers say, “So what if it’s dangerous? I mean, we’ll just put a chain ’round it and tip it back to vertical.”

“Ooooh, you can’t do that!”, sez the P&T, “It’s not your property, it belongs to the UK Government”.

Hard to fault that logic …

So then the P&T sent out a big truck and a big crane, along with one man to work on the job, two men to direct him, three men to lean on shovels and explain things to the villagers, and an Obersturmbannführer to run the whole show. They stood the phone booth back up at great government expense, and said “OK, now it’s not a dangerous phone booth any more, so we can turn it over to you”. So Tim and the folks thanked them, and put in the books.

And to complete the story … the P&T never did come around to collect their pound. Government work at its finest, find someone doing something imaginative and useful, and get in their way. What strange animals we are indeed …

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jorgekafkazar
September 6, 2013 9:00 pm

Curious George says: “Times change. When my granddaughter sat a phone booth, she was amazed: Why would anybody put a phone in a booth?”
Personally, I wish they’d bring them back.

ralfellis
September 6, 2013 9:05 pm

Theo Goodwin says: September 6, 2013 at 8:24 pm
If you are going to Scotland, I suggest you see some brochs. Brochs are stone structures that are about 2500 years old and they are unique to Scotland.
______________________________
Not true. These round-towers were also constructed all over the western Mediterranean, and all over Ireland too. And the oldest are Bronze Age – about 3,300 years old.
Here is a Minorcan round-tower, where they are called talayots. http://www.baleares.com/images/reportages/fotoreportajemenorcamonumentos.jpg
Here a couple of Sardinian round-towers, where they are called nuraghi.
http://www.alitours.com/Images/Sardinia-Nuraghe.jpg
http://www.italian-food-lovers.com/uploads/sardinian-nuraghe.jpg
Sardinia has the most – there are some 7,000 brochs all across Sardinia. Some big, some small.
Here is the Irish Cathergall round-tower, where they are called ‘forts’.
http://www.activeme.ie/wp-content/uploads/2012/08/Cahergal-Fort.jpg
Here is the Scottish Dun Beag round-tower, where they are called brochs.
http://farm5.staticflickr.com/4106/4841104629_e6be93fb86.jpg
And who built all these round towers? Ah, well, if your read Irish history of the Labor Gabala (c. AD 600) or the Scottish history of Scotichronicon (c. AD 1300), you will find that they were built by the descendants of Pharaoh Gaythelos and Queen Scota – the king and queen of Egypt who were forced into exile in Ireland in 1320 BC. Legend has it that it is from Pharaoh Gaythelos and Queen Scota that the Gailic and Scottish people were named.
And why build round towers? Well, they are not forts, that is for sure. They are temples, of course – temples to the venerable cult of the sacred tree, the tree of Genesis fame. In Ireland they are known as the sceach tree….
Now that’s a grand tour of legendary Irish and Scottish history for you….. 😉
.

Martin C
September 6, 2013 9:10 pm

Willis,
you should try to see the Giant of Cerne Abbis (sp?), I believe south of Yeovil on the Dorchester Road, maybe a bit to the west ( . .I guess I should look it up, but I’ll let you if you want . . – and it is quite a ‘surprise’ to see . . ).
Ah, the memories, seeing your pictures and your article. I was in Yeovil in 1998 for a couple of months, working at Westland helicopters supporting the UK Apache. Went sight-seeing around that part of the country on the weekends, a really beautiful part of England. Visiting Bath, and doing the tour of the roman baths, thinking about the history, was great. I’m sure you will love it.
Was there again about 6 years ago on travel, stayed in a lovely, quaint hotel called the Helyar Arms, in East Coker (south of Yeovil a few miles . .). The rooms had names, such as ‘the foxhole’. Even played skittle in the skittle alley. Recommend visiting this area if you the chance . . . OR, I could be your ‘tour guide if you go again someday . .. ! 🙂 🙂

Jean Parisot
September 6, 2013 9:24 pm

“what is the purpose of the wall and the ditch? ”
To corral your cattle, sheep, pigs, and horses – which were your wealth?

u.k.(us)
September 6, 2013 9:40 pm

ralfellis says:
September 6, 2013 at 8:31 pm
“But if I told you, you would not believe it, which is why the design has remained secret for so long.”
================
You just told the NSA you know, you might as well tell us.
They hate secrets 🙂

Geoff Sherrington
September 6, 2013 9:49 pm

Too late now, but down Wiltshire way is Lacock Abbey, modernised by Sir John Sherrington (Sharington) ca 1550+. A descendent named Fox Talbot took the world’s first photo negative here, 1835. He’s credited as being one of the 3 main inventors of photography.
That’s what we love about trips to Britain. Most people discover something to which they can relate in person. Seeing it in the actual is better than reading abut it, by far. Except for the beer.

RACookPE1978
Editor
September 6, 2013 9:59 pm

Well, obviously. Ya gotta dig the ditch to make the wall. 8<)
And, any foreman can tell you, the deeper the ditch, the higher the wall looks.
After all, the pyramids were designed when the pharaoh said he wanted a monument "And make it "that high" "that wide" and "that tall." And, you understand, the pharaoh was thinking he had described a cube.
But the contractor was thinking "How can I make that tall with as few as bricks in as short a time as possible?"

September 6, 2013 10:01 pm

ralfellis,
Thanks for that interesting info. Reading it at first I thought, “Those aren’t forts!”
I agree with your analysis that they were temples. Anyway, thank you for the fascinating bit of history — of which I can never get enough!

Pingo
September 6, 2013 10:06 pm

Nice story! Most americans bypass central uk, eg manchester, leeds, york. However in this m62 corridor you find the birth of the industrial revolution. I realised only a few weeks ago that the the world’s first canal, which i live a few feet from, has a river running under it. Culverted over 200 years ago

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
September 6, 2013 10:14 pm

A “henge” appears to be what current usage, per Wikipedia, calls a berm. From the “Military Use” section:

History
In medieval military engineering, a berm (or berme) was a level space between a parapet or defensive wall and an adjacent steep-walled ditch or moat.[1] It was intended to reduce soil pressure on the walls of the excavated part to prevent its collapse. It also meant that debris dislodged from fortifications would not fall into (and fill) a ditch or moat.
In the trench warfare of World War I, the name was applied to a similar feature at the lip of a trench, which served mainly as an elbow-rest for riflemen.
Modern usage
In modern military engineering, berm has come to mean the earthen or sod wall or parapet itself. The term especially refers to a low earthen wall adjacent to a ditch. The digging of the ditch (often by a bulldozer or military engineering vehicle) can provide the soil from which the berm is constructed. Walls constructed in this manner are an effective obstacle to vehicles, including most armoured fighting vehicles, but are easily crossed by infantry. Because of the ease of construction, such walls can be made hundreds or thousands of kilometres long.

Thus they are a good defense against Roman chariots and armored wagons.
The ditch would be on the inside of the circular wall, because the people wanting the defense would be gathered inside of where the wall goes, and the ditch is where the dirt they shoveled to make the wall came from.
Also as a construction detail, you’d want the outside to be steep to deter attackers, vertical would be good. When getting the dirt from the inside, you can ramp the inside and easily pack ground on top of the outer edge of the wall. If you got dirt from the outside, well, you can only throw a a shovelful of dirt so high up a wall, with getting it to land right at the top of the wall being a really good trick.

u.k.(us)
September 6, 2013 10:24 pm

Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity.
George S. Patton

Mike McMillan
September 6, 2013 10:59 pm

Flying home from Gatwick, our course often went past Salisbury. I tried to spot Stonehenge, but never did.
On google Earth, the area around Stonehenge ( 51.178872° -1.826219°) for 5 to 10 miles has many circular features, often just darker areas in cultivated fields.

September 6, 2013 11:08 pm

What’s the meaning of Stonehenge? – the NSFW video we all love at the henge…..
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=klJhWr_FTaE&w=560&h=315]
WARNING – contains a rude word.

Steve Garcia
September 6, 2013 11:08 pm

Willis and Anthony –
Willis, you got it right 3 times in the post text, but you misspelled “sarsen” in the title.

Perry
September 6, 2013 11:13 pm

Willis,
Here’s a link about the Stonehenge Archer, the Amesbury Archer & the Boscombe Bowmen.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stonehenge_Archer
Cordially,
Perry

u.k.(us)
September 6, 2013 11:15 pm

RACookPE1978 says:
September 6, 2013 at 9:59 pm
Well, obviously. Ya gotta dig the ditch to make the wall. 8<)
==================
I think you just nailed it.
The walls have been eroded over the years.
Although I might disagree with your contractors thinking, death at the point of a sword might focus the mind towards structural integrity 🙂

Man Bearpig
September 6, 2013 11:23 pm

If you get a chance go to Cheddar Gorge, that is also stunning.
Stonehenge was close to my neck of the woods and it is still somewhere I drive past every now and again, its like an urge to drive past it whenever I am out that way visiting friends.

J Martin
September 6, 2013 11:24 pm

If you visit York, you might also like to take the opportunity to visit a stately home which is 15 miles outside York.
http://www.castlehoward.co.uk/House-and-grounds.html
Unusual names the next generation of curators have, Merlin and Octavia.
http://www.castlehoward.co.uk/House-and-grounds/The-House-and-Family/The-Howard-Family.html

James Bull
September 6, 2013 11:26 pm

As you say there are many theories as to why Stone Henge was build.
I like the idea that they were sitting around one day in prehistory having their version of a pint and thought lets build a great stone ring, that should keep them guessing why we did it.
James Bull

September 6, 2013 11:28 pm

Great holiday description and thanks . But I had a chuckle when you mentioned the word,
“Obersturmbahnfhurher”. A Long time ago someone told me a similar name.
“Obersturmeisenbahnhinundhersetzer”
I have always wondered who had the seniority?

Doug UK
September 6, 2013 11:33 pm

I write this from my home in Fordingbridge Hampshire UK – which is 20 min drive down the A338 from Salisbury. Thank you for writing so fantastically well about things I take for granted.
When i drive past Stonehenge, Salisbury Cathedral or walk my dogs in the New Forest I simply accept these things as “normal” – seeing these things through a visitors eyes is a bit of a revelation.
Try this – google maps UK – put in SP6 2JZ – then zoom out a bit and look to the East. The B3078 twists to the North a bit and is called Roger Penny way after a local policeman killed on this road. Look for a large white circle in the New Forest just NE of “Pitts Wood Enclosure” and West of “Studley Wood”.
If you zoom in you will see various markings and circles fanning out from the centre.
This was the secret target area where bombs were tested by the RAF in WW2. In fact the largest bomb ever to be dropped on the UK in WW2 was dropped here by the RAF from a Lancaster. It was the Barnes Wallis Earthquake bomb. I find it amazing that on the ground, walking my dogs, you can only just about see the markings – they are 70 years old now after all – but Google Maps have enabled us to see “back in time”.
It is not exactly Area 51 :0) – but we are quite proud of it. Very pleased you enjoyed Salisbury. You will enjoy Bath. And DO visit the Roman Baths that give that wonderful city its name.

September 6, 2013 11:33 pm

sorry
“Obersturmeisenbahnfuhrerhinundhersetzer”

Richard111
September 6, 2013 11:41 pm

In 1947 I was living in Larkhill. Us children used to play around the stones. No restrictions in those days. We used to collect beech nuts in the wood nearby. Gone now. I did read once long ago that the big stones that originated from Wales were brought there by one of the previous ice ages. Seemed reasonable to me.

September 6, 2013 11:42 pm

Personally, I think henges are agricultural.
Not only can they be used in the winter for sheltering livestock form the wind (and so fertilising the soil inside) but in the summer they catch the rain in the ditch…. good for crops.
It occurred to me because the main industry at the time was agriculture and henges would work like that.
But I have no evidence. A test would be in their were elevated nitrate levels inside the henge relative to outside.
Alternatively, if it was a jail then the occupants were probably slaves – another old industry..

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
September 6, 2013 11:53 pm

Obersturmbannführer was a paramilitary Nazi Party rank used by both the SA and the SS. It was created in May 1933 to fill the need for an additional field grade officer rank above Sturmbannführer as the SA expanded. It became an SS rank at the same time.[1] Translated as “senior assault (or storm) unit leader”[2], Obersturmbannführer was junior to Standartenführer and was the equivalent to Oberstleutnant (lieutenant colonel) in the German Army.[3]

The overseer was a Nazi?