Broome Stone Circle
Broome Stone Circle was a stone circle located in the south-western English county of Wiltshire. The ring was part of a tradition of stone circle construction that spread throughout much of Britain, Ireland, and Brittany during the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age, over a period between 3300 and 900 BCE. The purpose of such monuments is unknown, although archaeologists speculate that the stones represented supernatural entities for the circle's builders.
The monument was visited and recorded by
Location
The Broome Stone Circle was a mile north of the Fir Clump Stone Circle.[1]
Context
While the transition from the
These stone circles typically show very little evidence of human visitation during the period immediately following their creation.[6] This suggests that they were not sites used for rituals that left archaeologically visible evidence, but may have been deliberately left as "silent and empty monuments".[7] The archaeologist Mike Parker Pearson suggests that in Neolithic Britain, stone was associated with the dead, and wood with the living.[8] Other archaeologists have suggested that the stone might not represent ancestors, but rather other supernatural entities, such as deities.[7]
In the area of modern Wiltshire, various stone circles were erected, the best known of which are Avebury and Stonehenge. All of the other examples are ruined, and in some cases have been destroyed.[9] As noted by the archaeologist Aubrey Burl, these examples have left behind "only frustrating descriptions and vague positions".[9] Most of the known Wiltshire examples were erected on low-lying positions in the landscape.[9]
Later history
The antiquarian John Aubrey visited the site and described "a great stone 10 foot high (or better) standing upright, which I take to be the Remainder of these kind of Temples… in the ground below are many thus o o o o o in a right line".[1] The stone circle was destroyed in the mid-nineteenth century. At this point, somebody purchased the Longstone, had it broken up, and used the rubble for street metalling in Cricklade, 8 miles to the north-west.[1]
References
Footnotes
- ^ a b c Burl 2000, p. 311.
- ^ a b Hutton 2013, p. 81.
- ^ Hutton 2013, pp. 91–94.
- ^ a b Hutton 2013, p. 94.
- ^ Burl 2000, p. 13.
- ^ Hutton 2013, p. 97.
- ^ a b Hutton 2013, p. 98.
- ^ Hutton 2013, pp. 97–98.
- ^ a b c Burl 2000, p. 310.
Bibliography
- Burl, Aubrey (2000). The Stone Circles of Britain, Ireland and Brittany. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-08347-7.
- Gillings, Mark; Pollard, Joshua; Wheatley, David; Peterson, Rick (2008). Landscape of the Megaliths: Excavation and Fieldwork on the Avebury Monuments, 1997–2003. Oxford: Oxbow. ISBN 978-1-84217-313-8.
- Hutton, Ronald (2013). Pagan Britain. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-19771-6.
- Pollard, Joshua; Reynolds, Andrew (2002). Avebury: The Biography of a Landscape. Stroud: Tempus. ISBN 978-0752419572.}
Further reading
- Aubrey I, 107
- VCH Wiltshire I(1), 1957, 111-12
- Burl, Prehistoric Avebury 1979, p. 237
- WAM 23 (1887), 115-16