The mystery of megaliths or a view from the other side. Neolithic and Chalcolithic Western (Atlantic) Europe

Through Mediterranean to the far North-West and northern Europe spread in Late Neolithic era and other population - it was associated with megalithic culture.

Megalithic culture is still rather poorly studied. Scattered over a wide area, religious buildings made of huge stones (up to 12 m in height), dolmens (stone tables) and cromlechs (rings lined with stone) invariably fired up the imagination of lovers. But the sheer breadth of their distribution from Spain, France (primarily Brittany), the British Isles and the north, right up to the White Sea (where to this day the sea tides reveal megalithic labyrinths, the nature of which local historians know nothing about), North Africa, the Black Sea region, southern India and even Japan made analysis much more difficult. And it was precisely the wide distribution of megaliths that forced many researchers to accept the version of staged development, and not of the settlement of related tribes and languages, moreover, the cult of stone is natural for Neolithic, and it did take different forms.

Some damage to serious research on the issue was caused by Nazi and racist German historiography, according to which the mixing of Corded Ware and Megalithic cultures led to the emergence of “Indo-Germans”, “true Aryans”, etc. This trend in science gave rise to a different position: the desire to prove that the population of the megalithic culture was generally non-Indo-European, and besides, it turned out that the culture spread from south to north, and not vice versa.

As with the Corded Ware cultures, most areas of the Megalithic culture have the same anthropological type of population: this Mediterranean-Atlantic Caucasian, characterized by tall, long-headed, but, unlike Corded Ware cultures, extremely narrow face. In Scandinavia, to this day, mainly the two named types are mixed (and they do not give intermediate options). But, importantly, the megalithic type has nothing to do with the Germans.

Some scientists sought to take the megalithic culture completely beyond the Indo-European language group. However, there are a large number of arguments in favor of them Indo-European accessories. The literature has discussed, for example, the origin of the suffix "itani" linked in areas of megalithic culture with the names of different tribes and peoples (“Mauritani”, “Britani”, etc.). IN Europe megalithic culture existed since III millennium BC before the beginning of the Iron Age (ca. 700 BC). On the territory of France, for example, under the layer of Celtic toponymy, a more ancient Indo-European layer is clearly visible.


The problem of the origins of megalithic culture based on archaeological material was most thoroughly posed by A.I. Markovich. He substantiated the hypothesis of some French and German scientists about Pyrenean, the “Iberian” ancestral home of this culture.

The origins of the Pyrenean megalithic culture go back to the culture grottos- burials in artificial caves (which, in turn, date back to the Upper Paleolithic culture of these areas). The oldest burials of this type date back to around the end V millennium BC This culture spreads along the coastal strip in areas rich in sandstone or other types of stone. IN III millennium BC the spread of culture begins northern Europe, and to the east by the Mediterranean Sea. Traces of this culture are found along the coast of North Africa, on the islands of Corsica and Sardinia, some coastal areas of southern Italy and further to the east of the Mediterranean. There is certain evidence of its connection with the Cretan-Mycenaean culture of the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC.

The population of the megalithic culture reached the Black Sea at a time when the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits did not yet exist, and the Black Sea was connected to the Mediterranean by a river flowing northwest through Thrace - it was along this former river that the first Black Sea dolmens. Further, the culture spreads to the territories of Bulgaria, southern Ukraine, Crimea, the Taman Peninsula and a narrow coastal strip to Abkhazia.

Western Caucasus accepted migrants from the Mediterranean already at the border III - II millennium BC, in the Chalcolithic era. Here the newcomer population naturally comes into contact with the local population. According to calculations by V.I. Markovina, “around 1400 - 1300.” BC. their (dolmens. - A.K.) stopped building, and the construction of dolmens first stopped on the territory of Abkhazia, and then in the Kuban region.”

The cessation of the construction of megaliths in Abkhazia may be associated with the outflow of population to India, and two branches that appeared around this time - Iranian And Indo-Aryan,- reflect the heterogeneity of the Black Sea population itself. And this may not have been the first migration of Indo-Europeans to the territories of Iran and India. And, of course, it is significant that the Caucasian type of the population of India dates back mainly to the megalithic culture.

The interweaving of the descendants of Corded Ware cultures and megaliths is also visible in Western Europe: culture "funnel-shaped cups" ascending to megalithic, at the end III millennium BC advancing from the North Sea and the Baltic states to Transnistria. And on the north coast Black Sea migrants of the megalithic culture came into contact and mixed with the locals - the late Yamnaya and Catacombs, and such mixing took place quite easily thanks to related languages.

As already mentioned, the megalithic culture has nothing to do with German ethnogenesis. But Celtic ethnogenesis is closely connected with it. The megalithic culture is the most powerful sublayer of modern Celtic peoples: Bretons, Irish, Welsh, Scots. It is in these territories, as well as in some recently assimilated zones of the former Celtic settlement (Isle of Men, etc.), that the largest number of megalithic structures are preserved, they are of the most diverse nature and until recently were perceived as sacred religious buildings. However, anthropologically, the Celts mainly belong to other Indo-European types, in particular to the population of the culture bell-shaped cups, which spread at the beginning II millennium BC from the same Iberia one branch along the ocean coast to the north, the other to Central Europe, where it will become an element of Slavic ethnogenesis.

general name for a number of archaeological Chalcolithic and Bronze Age cultures. centuries, one of the essential elements of which is the construction of megalithic buildings. For a long time, there was a widespread assumption in science that the builders of the megaliths were related. tribes that originally lived on the Western sea coast. Europe, and then widely settled in different countries. Nationalistic German scientists claimed that the builders of the megaliths were “proto-Indo-Germans.” However, back in the end. 19th century it was found that megalithic. buildings erected various. tribes, sometimes very distant from each other (from Indonesia and Japan to England and Spain). Megalithic ceramics wears completely differently in different areas. character. Discoveries of recent years have finally refuted the assumption of a single people - the builder of megaliths. "Idea" megalithic. buildings, obviously, not only spread through the relocations of the department. tribes or thanks to connections between them, but also arose independently in similar social and geographical areas. conditions. So, apparently, regardless of the rest of the territory. Zap. Europe, a culture of megaliths arose on the Iberian Peninsula, in the Caucasus, as well as in the North. Africa, India. Farmer and pastoralist tribes that left behind megalithic. buildings in South England and France, differed in their culture from the tribes that inhabited the Southeast. Norway and northern districts of the GDR and the Federal Republic of Germany, which also erected megalithic. the buildings. In general, M. k. in northern Europe. direction from the Mediterranean, Scotland and Denmark become poorer in terms of archit. shapes, variety of equipment and amount of metal. In addition, south M. k. are more ancient, in Spain and the Caucasus they date back to 2500-2400 BC. e., and in the North. Europe - by 2000-1400 BC. e., which indicates that in Zap. Europe "idea" megalithic. buildings spread from the south to the north. A common feature of all M. k. is that their household. and societies. the structure was strongly influenced by cultic religions. representation. Despite the fact that in the dept. Countries have preserved a large number of megaliths (in France, for example, over 4000), the problem of megaliths is generally poorly studied.

Lit.: Ravdonikas V.I., History of primitive society, part 2, L., 1947; Child G. At the origins of European civilization, trans. from English, M., 1952; Daniel G., The Megalith builders of Western Europe, N.Y., (1958); Leisner G. und Leisner V., Die Megalithgräber der Iberischen Halbinsel, V., 1943; Sprockhoff E., Die nordische Megalithkultur, B.-Lpz., 1938; Nordman C. A., The Megalithic culture of Northern Europe, Hels., 1935.

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  • - a group of cultivated plants of the pumpkin family. Creeping or clinging plants. They come from tropical and subtropical countries - Asia, Africa and America...

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  • - the general name of a number of archaeological cultures of the Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages, an essential element of which was the construction of megalithic buildings...

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  • - D "om cult"...

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Chapter 8 MEGALITHIC MONUMENTS OF SOUTH INDIA As a preliminary note to this chapter, I would like to recall that the term “megalithic” is derived from the Greek words “megas” (large) and “lithos” (stone). This term is used to refer to ancient

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The term “megaliths” comes from the Greek words μέγας - large, λίθος - stone. Megaliths are structures made of stone blocks or blocks, from different rocks, various modifications, sizes and shapes, combined and installed in such an order that these blocks/blocks constitute a single monumental structure.

Stone blocks in megalithic structures weigh from several kilograms to hundreds and even thousands of tons. Individual structures are so huge and unique that it is not at all clear how they were built. Also in the scientific world there is no consensus regarding the technologies of ancient builders.

Some megaliths seem to have been carved (processed) with some kind of tools, some objects seem to have been cast from liquid materials, and some objects have traces of clearly artificial processing by unknown technologies.

Megalithic culture is represented in absolutely all countries of the world, on land and under water (and...probably not only on our planet..). The age of megaliths is different, the main period of megalith construction is determined from the 8th to the 1st millennium BC, although some objects have a much more ancient origin, which is often denied by official science. Megalithic monuments of a later period are also widely represented - 1-2 millennia AD.

Classification and types of megaliths

According to their classification, megaliths are divided into separate categories:

  • megalithic complexes (ancient cities, settlements, temples, fortresses, ancient
  • observatories, palaces, towers, walls, etc.);
  • pyramids and pyramidal mountain complexes;
  • mounds, ziggurats, kofuns, cairns, tumuli, tombs, galleries, chambers, etc.;
  • dolmens, trilithons, etc.;
  • menhirs (standing stones, stone alleys, statues, etc.);
  • seids, Sin-stones, trail-stones, cup-stones, altar-stones, etc.;
  • stones/rock with ancient images - petroglyphs;
  • rock, cave and underground structures;
  • stone labyrinths (surads);
  • geoglyphs;
  • and etc.

There are many hypotheses about the purpose of megaliths, but there are some features that are characteristic of many megaliths of the world, regardless of their classification, modification, size, etc. - these are their external similarity, locations (geolocation), geophysical characteristics and belonging to certain highly developed civilizations. The study of megaliths using geophysics and dowsing began in the 20th century. During the study, it was absolutely established that the places for the construction of megaliths were not chosen by chance; very often megaliths are located in places (near) dowsing anomalies (in different-frequency geopathogenic zones - near or on a tectonic fault in the earth’s crust).

Thus, it can be assumed that the generator of these waves of different frequencies are tectonic faults, and stone structures in this case act as multifunctional acoustic devices that resonate with this frequency.

It turns out that megaliths can influence human bioenergy! This allows you to effectively correct a person’s biofield by influencing both his energy points of the body and individual systems.

In ancient times, dedicated priests engaged in similar practices, and this was practiced with the help of various rites and rituals.

With the help of stones, ancient priests, shamans, healers communicated with the spirits of departed ancestors, with the gods, received the answers they were interested in, treated diseases, etc., and also made offerings and demands (not sacrifices, which appeared later and most likely not by the creators of megaliths). Knowledge about this was first distorted, then completely erased.

Almost everywhere near the megaliths there was or is water (some kind of reservoir, stream, spring, etc.)! Often the orientation of megaliths is directed towards the water; this is especially clearly seen in the example of most of the dolmens in the Krasnodar region, which in turn, not without reason, are the standard in dolmen structure.

It is also worth mentioning the orientation of many megaliths to the cardinal points, taking into account some astronomical features.

Often, when studying megaliths, one gets the impression that over time the builders seemed to have lost the ability to erect stone structures and over time the megaliths became like only distant copies of the original structures.

Perhaps, for some reason, the ancients lost that knowledge and technology, and most importantly, over time, the need for megalith construction was lost.

However, despite the time, megalith building continues to exist in the world. Even today in Sumatra (Indonesia), people continue to create funerary stone monuments that are similar in appearance to ancient megaliths, thus preserving the memory and customs of their ancestors.

In many places around the world, traditions, legends and stories have been preserved that many megaliths are associated with the reincarnation of dead people.

Many megaliths are closely related to astrology, in connection with this, a new direction in antiquity researchers has emerged - archaeoastronomy. It is archaeoastronomers who study the astronomical aspect in megalith construction. It was archaeoastronomers who proved many hypotheses regarding the purpose of many ancient stone structures.

Some megalithic structures were created to determine the main solar and lunar cycles of the year. These objects served as calendars and observatories for observing celestial bodies.

Megaliths - the legacy of ancient civilizations

Unfortunately, in our time, in all corners of the world, for various reasons, the tendency to destroy ancient monuments continues, but new finds of ancient structures also continue to be discovered all over the world.

Many studies and the objects themselves are stubbornly hushed up by official departments, or dates are deliberately incorrectly determined and reports and conclusions of scientists are falsified, because many objects simply do not fit into the generally accepted chronology of our civilization.

Megaliths are the very objects that connect us with the distant past, with the deep past, and it can definitely be said that they have not yet revealed all their secrets to people...

One of the features of the Neolithic is that the people of that time, living in adobe-wattle and wattle houses, dugouts or even caves, created giant monuments and mausoleums for the dead, colossal architectural structures.

Megaliths (from the Greek “megas” - large and “lithos” - stone, i.e. large stones), structures made of large blocks of roughly processed stone. These include dolmens, menhirs, cromlechs, stone boxes, and covered galleries. Megaliths are distributed throughout the world except Australia, mainly in coastal areas. The purpose of megaliths cannot always be determined. For the most part they served for burials or were associated with the funeral cult. The mechanism of their construction has not yet been studied; for primitive technology, their construction was a very difficult task and required the unification of large masses of people.

Huge stone buildings erected by primitive man are found in Syria, Palestine, North Africa, Spain, southern Scandinavia Denmark, on the coast of France and England, Iran, India, and Southeast Asia. We find them in the Caucasus, Crimea, and Siberia. Megaliths are diverse. Some of them are individual vertical stone pillars, long and narrow, sometimes roughly processed. These are menhirs. The largest menhir is located in Lochmarian in Brittany. It is truly enormous - about 21 m long, weighing close to 300 tons. Menhirs, as a rule, are associated with necropolises; they apparently played a large role in the cult of the dead.

Menhirs are found not only in the form of individual monuments, sometimes they are collected in groups. The most famous row of stones is at Carnac in Brittany. It stretches for 3900 m and consists of 2813 menhirs.

Some megaliths form circular stone fences, on top of which lie huge slabs (cromlechs). Another group of megaliths are burial houses made of stone slabs with a flat roof (dolmens). According to their purpose, dolmens were monumental tombs of the prehistoric era. They usually contain several burials.

Stonehenge, one of the largest megalithic structures, is located on a spacious plain in the outskirts of Salisbury, three kilometers west of Amesbury.

Stonehenge is so ancient that its history was forgotten already in ancient times. Neither Greek nor Roman authors write anything about him. Probably, the Romans were not impressed by these stones at all, because they saw the ancient Egyptian pyramids, and they themselves built majestic temples. Today it is no longer possible to establish who was the first biographer of Stonehenge. By the 12th century, all information about its origin had disappeared into myth.

Fig No. 1. Stonehenge

The meaning and purpose of Stonehenge remains a mystery to this day. Many hypotheses have been put forward on this score, from the most primitive to the completely incredible, to support which a variety of, often unimaginably abstruse, arguments were used.

Inigo Jones, an English architect of the 17th century, compared this structure with examples of ancient architecture and argued that it was a Roman temple. And these days, the idea has been expressed more than once that aliens had a hand in these stones, who once created a landing pad here for their earthly expeditions.

English scientists Hawkens and White proved that Stonehenge can be used as an astronomical observatory, which makes it possible to determine with amazing accuracy the azimuths of all the most important positions of the Sun and Moon and predict the dates of eclipses. The arrangement of stones made it possible in the distant past to predict the ebb and flow of tides, and the location of individual elements of the complex corresponded to the rising and setting points of the ten main stars 12 thousand years ago. Finally, all the proportions of Stonehenge fit into the ratio of the numbers 9, 11 and 60, two of which are already known from the phenomenon of Indian “flying” stones... What does the number 60 add? It turns out that it makes it possible to obtain two series of numbers that reflect the distribution of planets in the solar system! And, if you believe the complex, there should be more of them than is known to modern science: not 10, but 12. One is at a distance of 50 astronomical units from the Sun with a diameter of 1800 km, the second is about 60 with a diameter of 1700 km.

The original meaning and purpose of Stonehenge remains the subject of fierce debate to this day. There is something inexplicable and attractive about the whole atmosphere of Stonehenge. The likelihood of ever unraveling the mystery is negligible, but for those who are once and for all enchanted by the beauty of this historical monument and the amazing atmosphere of the surrounding landscape, this no longer matters.

Who built the megaliths? The ancient manuscript "Book of Conquests" mentions three waves of early newcomers - the Fomorians, the sons of Portolan and the Nemedians. The first were “gloomy sea giants”, and they also built towers. Maybe they are? The Fomorians acquired their building skills in Africa. Two other peoples came from Europe and brought with them the art of politics." After them, the "fir bolg" people appeared - hardworking, skilled farmers. "Fir bolg" translates as "leather bags" - they sailed to Ireland on them. also the Tuatha de Danani, the Milesians, the Dravidians from India... This is all that could be extracted from the ancient legends that survived despite the attempts of the Romans to impose their ideas about the past on the local tribes.

In the past of Stonehenge, several stages of construction are clearly distinguishable, some separated from each other by a distance of more than one millennium. At the earliest stage, which dates back to about 3100 BC, a ditch and an internal rampart arose in the shape of a circle with a diameter of 97.5 m. Outside this circle was the so-called Heel Stone.

“Friar's Heelstone” - “the heel of a running monk”, and inside there are holes located in a circle at an equal distance from each other with traces of corpse burning. Later, in the space inside the ditch, the so-called blue stones (hewn blocks of greenish dolerite) were installed in two concentric circles -blue tint). But then they were rearranged again, and around 1800 BC Stonehenge acquired the appearance familiar to us today: a majestic stone ring arose, formed by huge hewn blocks of gray sandstone up to 8.5 m high, covered with slabs on top made of stone. Inside this ring there was another horseshoe-shaped structure, composed of larger blocks, grouped in pairs and covered with a third - the so-called trilithons. It seems that the blue stones during the existence of Stonehenge were more than once rearranged by different generations of builders from place to place. Now some of them form, as it were, a small independent horseshoe inside a large horseshoe of gray sandstone blocks, while others are located in a circle inside a large stone ring.

A legitimate question arises: how did our prehistoric ancestors manage to drag heavy boulders over such a huge distance, and, in fact, why? There are a great many answers. Or rather, not even answers, but rather assumptions.

According to an ancient Celtic legend, Stonehenge was created by the wizard Merlin. It was he, the great magician, who personally transported bulky blocks of stone from Ireland and the extreme south of England to the town of Stonehenge, north of the town of Salisbury, in the county of Wiltshire, and erected there a sanctuary that has survived centuries - the most famous in the British Isles, and throughout the world , megalith.

Stonehenge, let us remind you, is a double circular fence made of large stones installed vertically. Archaeologists call this fence a cromlech. And it was built, in their opinion, between the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC - in five long stages.

Back in 1136, the English chronicler Geoffrey of Monmouth testified that “these stones were brought from afar.” You and I, relying on the data of modern geology, can completely agree with him on one thing: part of the blocks for the construction of the megalith were indeed somehow delivered from the west, but not from the quarries closest to Stonehenge. In addition, 80 tons of menhirs, or processed stone blocks, which were then installed in a vertical position, were brought from the southern regions of Wales, located in the western part of England (in particular, from Pembrokeshire). And this was already at the second stage of construction, that is, in the second half of the 3rd millennium. From the Prezelian quarries, in southwest Wales, the so-called blue stones were transported to Stonehenge by water - at least, this is what the famous English archaeologist, Professor Richard Atkinson suggests. And more precisely - along the sea and rivers into the interior of the country. And finally - the final section of the route, which several centuries later, in 1265, received a name that has survived to this day, albeit with a slightly different meaning: “avenue”. And here it’s really time to admire the strength and long-suffering of the ancients.

The skill of the stonemasons is no less admirable. After all, most of the roofing slabs of the famous dolmen, as megalithic structures such as Stonehenge are also called, weigh several tons, and the weight of many supports is about several centners. But it was still necessary to find suitable blocks, transport them to the site of future construction and install them in a strictly defined order. In short, the construction of Stonehenge, in modern terms, was tantamount to a feat of labor.

During the construction of Stonehenge, two types of stones were used: strong boulders - the so-called aeolian pillars - from Avebury sandstone, from which trilithes were made - the same dolmens, or vertical stone blocks with transverse stone slabs on top, forming the outer circle of the entire structure; and softer dolerites that are part of ore and coal beds. Dolerite is a basalt-like igneous rock with a bluish-gray hue. Hence its other name - blue stone. Two-meter-high dolerites form the inner circle of the megalithic structure. Although the blue stones of Stonehenge are not very high, archaeologists believe that they contain the secret meaning of the entire structure.

The first thing that archaeologists unanimously agreed on was the geological origin of dolerites: their homeland is the Preselian Mountains. But as to why the ancient ancestors of the Celts needed to move dolerite boulders, scientists have differing opinions. The main controversy was caused by this question: did people from the New Stone Age actually drag the blocks with their own hands to the site of the megalith construction, or did the stones mix on their own - as the glaciers shifted in the Quaternary period, that is, long before the appearance of man? The controversy was only recently put to an end. At an international conference, glaciologists announced the results of their many years of research, which boiled down to the fact that there had never been any major glacial movements in the Stonehenge area.

So archaeologists could already conduct excavations in full confidence that the movement of megalithic blocks was a consequence of enormous human activity. But many other questions related to “how” and “why” have not yet been answered.

From the Prezelian Mountains to Stonehenge in a straight line - two hundred and twenty kilometers. But, as you know, the direct path is not always the shortest. So in our case: taking into account the exorbitant weight of the “cargo,” we had to choose not the shortest, but the most convenient path.

In addition, it was necessary to build appropriate vehicles. It is known that in the new Stone Age people knew how to hollow out canoes from tree trunks; they were the main means of transport. Indeed, recently archaeologists discovered the remains of an ancient trimaran, which consisted of three seven-meter-long dugout canoes, fastened with crossbars. Such a trimaran could easily be controlled by six people using poles. As for the four-ton stone blocks, the same six oarsmen were able to load them onto the trimaran using levers. The sea route along the gentle coast of Wales was the most convenient, and there were plenty of secluded bays in case of bad weather.

However, part of the journey had to be covered overland. And here hundreds of pairs of hands were required. The first step was to transfer the “load” onto a sled and pull it along tree trunks cleared of branches, laid across the path, like rollers. Each block was dragged by at least two dozen people.

And one more important detail: in order to avoid autumn and spring storms, the stones were transported from the beginning of May to the end of August. This required not only a huge number of workers, but also skill, since the only tools in those distant times were wooden poles, stone axes and levers, not counting wooden rollers and canoes. In addition, belts - leather, linen or hemp - served as an indispensable aid. The wheel was not yet known. People also have not yet learned to tame horses. This means that there were no carts - they appeared much later, in the Bronze Age. Meanwhile, people of the New Stone Age already widely used bulls as draft power. And the people themselves were united into a well-organized community.

The people who went to mine stone were certainly guided by some great impulse: the stone miners knew that if they returned not empty-handed, then honor and glory awaited them, since they too were making their contribution to the construction of the sanctuary. And this, in turn, meant that they were fulfilling a sacred mission. For young men, for example, such a trip was a kind of test preceding their initiation into men.

It is not difficult to guess that the path of the stone miners was long and difficult. And it was no coincidence that some of them died along the way. The waterway was especially dangerous - mainly due to storms, headwinds and currents. Moreover, the canoes moved forward very slowly: after all, they were controlled, as we remember, with the help of poles or primitive rows. However, the land route also required enormous effort. This is understandable: moving multi-ton blocks of stone on land is much more difficult than on water.

In the fall, the blue stones were finally delivered along the river to a place located three kilometers from Stonehenge, and the stone miners returned home. And the “cargo” remained on the shore until the next summer: the stones were installed invariably on the day of the summer solstice. It was then, in fact, that the long “sacred path” ended.

On the day of the ceremony, before sunrise, the last stage was completed: a solemn procession headed towards Stonehenge along a special threshold - the “Avenue”. This road, fourteen meters wide, was bordered on both sides by ditches and embankments. It stretched upward in an arc, making it easier to climb the sacred hill, and led strictly to the east - to where the sun rises.

Some stones at Stonehenge form straight rows pointing towards the rising and setting of the sun and moon. This was probably of vital importance for the ancients: they had to know exactly the days when they should worship the spirits of their departed ancestors.

As we already know, dolerites transported to Stonehenge were used in the construction of the first fence - it was erected around 2500 BC. By that time, Stonehenge was already considered an ancient monument. Five centuries earlier, the sanctuary was surrounded by a moat, fencing it on the outside with an earthen rampart about a hundred meters wide.

During the third phase of construction - around 2000 BC. - Huge trilithons were installed at Stonehenge. At the same time, 30-ton aeolian pillars were delivered to the construction site - they had to be dragged thirty kilometers from Stonehenge.

The most ambitious stage of construction began with the delivery of blue menhirs. By that time, the dolerite belt, never completed, had been destroyed, probably to make way for a much more magnificent structure, the construction of which required much more effort.

So, in just four hundred years, the blue stones disappeared completely. However, around 2000 BC. they ended up in the same place. And today it is precisely by these that we can judge what Stonehenge was like in its original form.

However, not all archaeologists believe that dolerites, as a building material, disappeared for four hundred years. Their traces were found in other monumental structures of the time: for example, on Mount Silbury, the highest artificial hill of the New Stone Age, rising 40 kilometers north of Stonehenge. At its top, a fragment of dolerite was discovered, which, apparently, was once part of a cromlech.

Although we do not have complete knowledge of that distant era, we nevertheless have every reason to assume that the cromlechs are, among other things, cultural monuments of the Left Stone Age, when man had just begun to engage in productive activities. It was during that period that man had his first experience in agriculture and animal husbandry. At the same time, people began to get used to a sedentary lifestyle and build settlements.

So, whatever the true reasons that prompted the Stone Age people to build the Stonehenge cromlech, in our minds it will forever remain the most remarkable megalithic monument.

The design principles by which Stonehenge was created cannot be called either primitive or random, for the arrangement of the stones clearly reveals an understanding of the laws of perspective. From any angle, in any lighting, these stone pillars stand out clearly against the sky. In this regard, the idea has been repeatedly expressed that the builders of Stonehenge had extraordinary knowledge of mathematics

Nowadays, Stonehenge turns into an object of mass pilgrimage for tourists at the time of the summer solstice, since the main axis of the entire structure points to the northeast, exactly where the sun rises on the longest days, and this fact seems to strengthen speculation about the mystical significance of the monument.

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