Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Stonehenge through the ages

Exhibit at British Museum brings builders to life

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — For a monument that has been drawing crowds for thousands of years, Stonehenge still holds many secrets.

The stone circle, whose giant pillars each took 1,000 people to move, was erected between 5,000 and 3,500 years ago on a windswept plain in southwest England. Its purpose is still debated: Was it a solar calculator, a cemetery, a shrine?

A new exhibition at the British Museum in London unravels some of the mystery — Stonehenge was, at times, all those things. But the exhibition’s bigger goal is bringing to life the sun-worshippin­g and surprising­ly sophistica­ted people who built it.

“We all feel we know Stonehenge,” lead curator Neil Wilkin said Tuesday. “We drive past it on A303 (the highway), and we visit as schoolchil­dren or bring our kids to see it. But often we don’t know much, or feel like we don’t know much, about the world, the people who built the monument and who came to worship at the monument.”

“The World of Stonehenge” exhibition assembles more than 430 objects from across Europe to explore the monument’s creators and their world. It was a time of radical change that saw technologi­cal advances, largescale migration and social transforma­tion.

The objects explore successive groups of people who lived in the area, 80 miles southwest of modern-day London. The semi-nomadic Neolithic farmers who built the first phase of Stonehenge — with stones hauled 150 miles from Wales — were followed by Bronze Age farmers, traders and warriors who were deeply intertwine­d with continenta­l Europe.

The evolving uses of Stonehenge reflect that changing society.

At first it was a cemetery, where the cremated remains of 150 to 200 men, women and children, a seeming cross-section of society, were interred.

“People often ask, is it like the Pyramids? But there’s no pharaoh in the middle of this monument,” said Wilkin. “It’s more of a communal enterprise.”

Later, the original bluestones were encircled in a ring of 13-foot standing stones capped with lintels, much of which still stands. Wilkin said the monument became a site for “ancestral veneration and for ceremonies” that drew visitors from far afield.

Its fame is reflected playfully in the very first object displayed in the show, an ancient cup whose shape mimics that of Stonehenge.

“It’s almost like a prehistori­c souvenir,” said project curator Jennifer Wexler.

There are many other arresting images in the exhibition, from a wall covered in scores of Neolithic stone axes to finely wrought gold hats and jewelry that look medieval but are many centuries older.

Stonehenge was not the only circular “henge” monument built in ancient Britain. The exhibition includes Seahenge, a circle of oak posts made 4,000 years ago and near-miraculous­ly uncovered by the waves on an English beach in 1998.

Like Stonehenge, it’s believed to have been aligned with the sun, which was central to the lives and beliefs of these ancient societies. Stonehenge is aligned with sunrise and sunset, respective­ly, at the summer and winter solstices, the key dates in the calendar for ancient farmers.

The exhibition’s star item is the 3,600-year-old Nebra Sky Disc, a bronze disc inlaid with gold symbols representi­ng the sun, moon and stars, believed to be the oldest surviving map of the cosmos. The disc was found in 1999 in eastern Germany, but the gold comes from Cornwall in southwest England — evidence that ancient Britons were more connected than we might think.

“People were inquisitiv­e and adventurou­s, despite having relatively short lives compared to us,” Wilkin said. “There is a really large amount of mobility and migration at this time.”

That mobility eventually swept away the Stone Age culture that built Stonehenge, as metalworki­ng immigrants from Europe brought social, technologi­cal and demographi­c transforma­tion.

Wexler said metal brought a more unequal society “because people are getting access to these blingy materials and making these beautiful objects.”

As a visitor walks though the exhibition, Neolithic stone carvings give way to elaboratel­y wrought gold objects.

Metal meant people could carry important symbols with them, perhaps lessening the need for stone monuments like Stonehenge. In its final phase of use, Stonehenge became something of a status symbol, surrounded by burial mounds as society’s elite sought a prime resting place.

Wilkin said the exhibition aims to underline the human side of the shift from Neolithic era to Bronze Age.

“We’ve known about that as a technologi­cal change,” he said. “But what we’ve been able to do in the show, I think, is to show that it had a big impact on people’s beliefs, and how they saw their identities.”

“The World of Stonehenge” opens Thursday and runs to July 17.

 ?? (AP/Alastair Grant) ?? A staff member dusts 4,000-year-old Bronze Age logs from the timber circle known as Seahenge, from Norfolk, England, on display Monday at the British Museum in London. The exhibition which displays objects and artifacts from the era of Stonehenge opens on Feb. 17 and runs until July 17.
(AP/Alastair Grant) A staff member dusts 4,000-year-old Bronze Age logs from the timber circle known as Seahenge, from Norfolk, England, on display Monday at the British Museum in London. The exhibition which displays objects and artifacts from the era of Stonehenge opens on Feb. 17 and runs until July 17.
 ?? ?? The “Nebra Sky Disc” is dated from around 1600 BCE and is the oldest surviving representa­tion of the cosmos.
The “Nebra Sky Disc” is dated from around 1600 BCE and is the oldest surviving representa­tion of the cosmos.
 ?? ?? A gold brooch from Shropshire, England, 1000 BCE, is admired by a staff member.
A gold brooch from Shropshire, England, 1000 BCE, is admired by a staff member.
 ?? ?? A staff member poses Monday next to a gold cape found in Mold in Wales and dated around 1600-1900 BCE.
A staff member poses Monday next to a gold cape found in Mold in Wales and dated around 1600-1900 BCE.
 ?? ?? Animal bones in the form of a necklace that were found on Salisbury Plain and are dated around 2100-1900 BCE are on display.
Animal bones in the form of a necklace that were found on Salisbury Plain and are dated around 2100-1900 BCE are on display.
 ?? ?? The Burton Agnes chalk drum, which was found in a grave and is dated around 3000 BCE, is on display Monday at the British Museum in London. The exact use of the drum is yet to be explained.
The Burton Agnes chalk drum, which was found in a grave and is dated around 3000 BCE, is on display Monday at the British Museum in London. The exact use of the drum is yet to be explained.

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