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Riddles in Stone: Myths,
Archaeology and the Ancient Britons
Richard Hayman
Who built Avebury and Stonehenge? Why and
when were more than 600 stone circles, and thousands of barrows and cairns,
erected in prehistoric Britain? What were they used for and what do they
tell us about the beliefs and culture of their builders? Riddles in
Stone is a history of the extraordinary variety of answers that have
been given to these questions, by amateurs and professionals, archaeologists
and astronomers, mystics and systems theorists. The puzzles that intrigued
the antiquaries John Aubrey and William Stukeley, and the gentlemen barrow
diggers of the nineteenth century, are in some ways still as elusive today
as they were in the seventeenth century.
While modern excavation and radiocarbon dating
has undoubtedly advanced our knowledge of the sequence and date of the
monuments, their purpose and meaning is still hotly debated. Indeed no
previous century has changed its mind so often as the twentieth - or provided
such a welter of differing opinions. Each theory has as much to say about
its own time as it has about prehistory. The stones have been used to enhance
the authority of the Bible, to endorse the civilising mission of the British
Empire - and to argue that the Ancient Britons could work a computer. In
a reaction to modern industrial society, they have been credited with spiritual
powers and natural energies.
Even the views of modern archaeologists often
seem to reflect the latest academic fad, rather than a lasting solution.
Riddles
in Stone is an entertaining and instructive account of a debate on
a subject of endless fascination.
336 pages 134 illustrations, 255 x 176 mm.
1997
1 85285 139 2 Cased £25.00
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