Stonehenge, the most famous Neolithic monument, had a great significance to the ancient people of England. The monument, which is located in the Salisbury Plain, was built and reconstructed many times starting in about 3200 BC to about 1650 BC. The stones that were used to construct the monument weighed anywhere from 25 to 50 tons apiece, in some cases the stones had to be dragged to the plain from up to 20 miles away. (Marvin Perry, 19) Stonehenge went through three major phases, the first of which was when the ancient people created a bank of chalk and a ditch, inside the bank there was 56 pits. The second phase was when 82 blocks of bluestone, about 4 tons each, were brought to the site.
Using the bluestone the ancient people made a double circle in the bank and they formed an avenue leading to the River Avon. The third phase was the ancient people removed the bluestone and replaced it with sandstone, weighing 25 to 50 tons each. (Stonehenge, 1) The main reason for Stonehenge being built by the ancient people of England was as a calendar because they needed a way of keeping track of important dates. The ancient people of England didn’t have a formal calendar like today’s society does.
For this reason they had to rely on other ways of keeping track of the time during the year. In this particular case the ancient people of England used the Stonehenge for record keeping. ‘In 1964 the American astronomer Gerald S. Hawkins reported findings obtained by supplying a computer with measurements taken at Stonehenge together with astronomical information based on celestial positions in 1500 BC when Stonehenge was in use.’ (Encarta, 1) Hawkins believed that the ancient people were able to gather information about the sun and the moon, with accuracy. He believed that Stonehenge was used to predict the seasons by examining the position of the sun and moon to the earth.
The Essay on Built Stone Stonehenge People Web
Author's Note: Since history first started recording Stonehenge, Stonehenge has been a mystery. The three biggest questions being who built Stonehenge, how did those people build Stonehenge, and why? This essay is only meant to be on when, who and why, not how, but because there are so many stories and theories in answer to "who built Stonehenge" that include "how was Stonehenge built", these will ...
Stonehenge’s axis is pointed in the direction of the sunrise at the summer and winter solstices, for this reason some scientists believed that ancient people were able to predict eclipses of the sun and moon by their position in relation to the monument. The ancient people of England had many religious beliefs that they followed and believed in. They also probably had religious holidays that they had some kind of ceremony for. Some people believe that they used Stonehenge to determine what time of the year it was and to figure out what religious ceremonies were coming up.
It is then believed that the ancient people held their rituals and religious ceremonies around the site of Stonehenge. The main reason for Stonehenge being built by the ancient people of England was as a calendar because they needed a way of keeping track of important dates. Today Americans use a similar system to remember important dates and holidays, the system differs than that of ancient people of England. Rather than using signals from the position of the sun Americans write their information on paper which later is turned into calendars. Americans still study and connect the position of the sun and moon to the calendar by examining how the earth rotates.
The ancient people of England made it easier on Americans to keep track of dates. They used a harder system which enabled the centuries following them to rectify their ways and make it easier to remember and keep track of important dates. Works Cited Mr. Lamperelli. Stonehenge.’s stonehenge,’ Microsoft (R) Encarta.
1994 Perry, Marvin. History of the World. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1992.