Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. The Stonehenge World Heritage Site is famous throughout the world and is one of the most important prehistoric landscapes in Europe. Today this landscape is split in two by a major road - the A303 - which acts as a barrier to people enjoying, exploring and understanding the World Heritage Site.

    • Things to See and Do

      things to see and do. There’s so much more to a day out at...

    • School Visits

      STONEHENGE: The stone circle, exhibition and visitor centre...

    • Events

      Walk in the footsteps of your Neolithic ancestors at...

    • History and Stories

      History and Stories: Stonehenge. A World Heritage Site,...

    • Itineraries

      Itineraries. We’ve developed some itineraries to help you...

    • Access

      Stonehenge Access. The visitor facilities at Stonehenge have...

    • Food & Drink

      The café serves soup, hotpots, vegan and traditional...

    • Prices and Opening Times

      You can book online until 8.45am on the day of your visit....

    • Archaeology
    • Wildlife
    • Construction
    • Activities
    • Early history
    • Military
    • Trivia
    • Ownership
    • Preservation

    The earliest structures known in the immediate area are four or five pits, three of which appear to have held large pine totem-pole like posts erected in the Mesolithic period, between 8500 and 7000 BC.[1] It is not known how these posts relate to the later monument of Stonehenge. Within the bank and ditch were possibly some timber structures and s...

    At this time, when much of the rest of southern England was largely covered by woodland, the chalk downland in the area of Stonehenge may have been an unusually open landscape.[2] It is possible that this is why it became the site of an early Neolithic monument complex.

    In about 2500 BC the stones were set up in the centre of the monument. Two types of stone are used at Stonehenge the larger sarsens and the smaller bluestones. The sarsens were erected in two concentric arrangements an inner horseshoe and an outer circle and the bluestones were set up between them in a double arc.[7]

    One of the last prehistoric activities at Stonehenge was the digging around the stone settings of two rings of concentric pits, the so-called Y and Z holes, radiocarbon dated by antlers within them to between 1800 and 1500 BC. They may have been intended for a rearrangement of the stones that was never completed.[8]

    The small town of Amesbury is likely to have been established around the 6th century AD at a crossing point over the Avon. A decapitated man, possibly a criminal, was buried at Stonehenge in the Saxon period.[15] From this time on, sheep husbandry dominated the open downland around Stonehenge.[16] The earliest surviving written references to Stoneh...

    Since 1897, when the Ministry of Defence bought a vast tract of land on Salisbury Plain for army training exercises, the activities of the military have had an impact on the area. Barracks, firing ranges, field hospitals, airfields and light railways were established.[17] Some of these, such as the First World War Stonehenge airfield, have long sin...

    This was the start of a sequence of campaigns to conserve and restore Stonehenge the last stones were consolidated in 1964.[19]

    The monument remained in private ownership until 1918 when Cecil Chubb, a local man who had purchased Stonehenge from the Atrobus family at an auction three years previously, gave it to the nation.[20] Thereafter, the duty to conserve the monument fell to the state, today a role performed on its behalf by English Heritage.

    From 1927, the National Trust began to acquire the land around Stonehenge to preserve it and restore it to grassland. Large areas of the Stonehenge landscape are now in their ownership. More recent improvements to the landscape including the removal of the old visitor facilities and the closure of the section of the old A344 that ran close to the ...

  2. www.english-heritage.org.uk › visit › inspire-meStonehenge | English Heritage

    Over 5,000 years ago, our ancestors built what would become one of the world's most iconic monuments. Stonehenge's mysteries are still the focus of speculation, celebration and intense research today. Discover what we know - and what we don't - on a day out at this incredible place.

  3. Stonehenge is the world’s best-known ancient stone circle, lying at the heart of one of the richest archaeological landscapes in Europe. Built around the same time as the Great Pyramid in Egypt, 4,500 years ago, the finished monument of massive and finely dressed sarsen stone was unlike anything ever seen across Europe.

  4. Hace 5 días · Description of Stonehenge. The Stonehenge we see today is the end result of several episodes of construction, after an intervening 4,000 years of destruction and decay. Various stones are fallen or missing, making the original plan difficult to understand. This page briefly describes the different elements of the monument.

  5. Stonehenge has inspired people to study and interpret it for centuries, yet many questions remain to be answered – about who built it, when, and why. Find out about its archaeology and history here.

  6. ***TOO LONG***Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, England, two miles (3 km) west of Amesbury. It consists of an outer ring of vertical sarsen standing stones, each around 13 feet (4.0 m) high, seven feet (2.1 m) wide, and weighing around 25 tons, topped by connecting horizontal lintel stones.