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Shifting Perceptions: Spatial Order, Cosmology, and Patterns of Deposition at Stonehenge

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2001

Joshua Pollard
Affiliation:
Department of Humanities and Science, UWCN, Caerlon Campus, PO Box 179, Newport, NP18 3YG, UK.
Clive Ruggles
Affiliation:
School of Archaeological Studies, University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK.

Abstract

The changing cosmological symbolism incorporated in Phases 1 and 2 at Stonehenge is reviewed in the light of new evidence from patterns of deposition prior to the construction of the bluestone and sarsen stone settings. The early structure of the monument and attendant depositional practices embodied a scheme of radial division, including a symbolic quartering primarily demarcated by solstitial rising and setting points. Through sustained ritual practice, however, the motions of the moon came increasingly to be referenced through deposition, particularly of cremations. This evidence seems to contradict earlier claims of a sudden shift in and around Wessex during the mid-third millennium BC from a predominantly lunar to a predominantly solar cosmology. It suggests instead that interest in solar and lunar events did not necessarily preclude each other and that over the centuries there was a process of subtle change involving the continual reworking of symbolic schemes emphasizing a sense of ‘timelessness’ and the unchanging order of the universe.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
2001 The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

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