Archive for the 'Inigo Jones Altar Stone' category

It has never been a problem to write for Eternal Idol, aside from finding the time to do so. Time is something that’s been in extremely short supply recently for a number of reasons, but I’m certainly not complaining. I’m extremely grateful to everyone for all the correspondence I receive, with suggestions, new material, new information, new ideas, photographs, diagrams, offers to investigate localities and so forth; as I’ve mentioned numerous times, I have a backlog of posts to complete and publish, while there are ongoing investigations such as that into the Spoils of Annwn, on a separate static page, but there are others still that keep my attention.
In addition to all this, I’ve been working non-stop on two separate projects and I’ll post something up about these as soon as I can. I’m always mindful of the observation “Men talk of killing time, while time quietly kills them”, so I couldn’t be happier that I have so many things to engage me, but back to the matter of writing. I’m generally satisfied with what I’ve posted here over the years, although I’m painfully aware that some pieces could be a great deal better. Every now and again, however, something comes along that makes me wonder why I bother with the keyboard at all, and one such occasion came about as a result of watching a video sent in by Red Raven, one of Eternal Idol’s many prolific and insightful contributors.
To cut a long and involved story short, the video was made to promote a song called “Roots” by a folk band called Show of Hands. This is turn led me to being contacted by another visitor, Yvonne, who informed me of a play in the West End of London called Jerusalem. She was kind enough to transcribe and send on the text in the programme, and I was so taken aback by what I read that I contacted the author, Paul Kingsnorth.
Paul very kindly allowed me to reproduce his words here, so I would urge you all to visit the various links I’ve supplied for Paul’s site and for the play, while you might also like to see this review in the Guardian, which echoes my thoughts on Paul’s writing. There are many reasons I’ve reproduced Paul’s brilliant essay, one being that I am of course intensely interested in the legends of Jesus visiting Britain, while I’m also fascinated by tales of supernatural creatures emerging from barrows. Paul’s work also reinforces an idea I’ve mentioned here several times before, where I’ve quoted the late Ralph Whitlock, from his wonderful book In Search of Lost Gods:
“Against the backdrop of human settlement in Britain, even the Celts were relative newcomers. As warlike invaders they started to arrive in Britain about the middle of the first millennium BC, but before that the island had an unwritten history of at least two thousand years. The Celts came in no great numbers, imposing themselves as an aristocracy on the older races, and it is unlikely that they initiated a great religious upheaval. Rather, their own beliefs were probably grafted on or merged with those of a much older religion.
Thus, in our search for the old gods, we may well find traces of those who had commanded the worship of men in the days when Stonehenge was young…”
Most of all, however, I’ve reproduced Paul’s words in the hope that anyone reading this will enjoy them one half as much as I did, so without further ado, here is the work in question:
[This article is taken from the programme of the play JERUSALEM and is followed by the words of William Blake's Jerusalem on a separate page]
OAK, ASH AND THORN
Paul Kingsnorth is the author of Real England, The Battle Against the Bland
Before the Normans arrive in 1066, and began to unravel the English sense of self at the tip of a sword, everyone in the country would have known the story of Wayland the Smith. Travelling storytellers – gleemen or scopmen as they were known – would have trawled his tale from village to town to port, embellishing it in the telling but keeping the basic spine of the story intact. The legend told of how Wayland, or Weland, a blacksmith whose works were the wonder of the world, was enslaved and crippled by a greed-blinded king and forced to work for him alone, and how he enacted his revenge in the most terrible way. The story of Wayland spoke to Old English society of themes at once specific and universal: power misused, leaders blinded by cupidity, ordinary men wronged and out for revenge. If we were searching for a foundation myth for the English people, the story of Wayland would be a strong contender.
Who in England knows the legend of Wayland today? The English, notoriously, have a blind spot when it comes to their myths, the legends of their past and their people, their folk tales and their origins. This is not something that could be said of any of the other peoples of the Biritsh Isles. The Scots and the Irish share Cuchulainn and the legends of Finn, and celebrate any number of ancient and modern folk heroes; the Welsh have the Mabinogion and the re-invented Druids, and lay claim (in rivalry with the Cornish) to Arthur and Merlin. Britain’s ethnic minorities bring stories, folk legends, songs and still-living religions from India, Africa, eastern Europe and elsewhere.
But the English are strangely quiet about their deep past; disconnected, embarrassed. It’s a curious thing, for the country is full of living reminders of its mythical history and prehistory, from the green men on the lintels of old churches to maypoles and even Christmas trees. But the English have nothing to rival the Mabinogion. They have no W.B. Yeats or Dylan Thomas, diverting old myths through new channels. What are the foundation myths of the English. Who are their folk heroes? When they look for a mystical past, why do they turn to the Celts? Where did they come from, who built their landscape? Why are the barrows silent and where have the faeries gone?
It’s not as if the stories aren’t there waiting to be found. The old English tales are as deep, as archetypal, as any other myth cycle. As well as Wayland, the Old English pantheon included one-eyed Woden, also known as Grim, god of the slain, who walked the high downs with his familiars – the raven and the wolf – looking down on the world of men. There was great Thunor with his hammer of fire and his sacred groves, and Frig, Woden’s consort, pagan matriarch and goddess of the green. There were Balder and Ing and others long-forgotten, whose swords and carved idols are still dragged up today from riverbeds and bogs. There were orcs and ents, dwarves and elves, demon hounds and giants in the landscapes and mindscapes of England long before they re-emerged in the pages of Tolkien.
These were the gods and the demons of the Old English; dead but not resurrected, unlike their Celtic forbears or Christian conquerors. But the myths of a nation are about more than gods; they are about the folk legends, the small stories, the culture that grows from season and place. In England this gives us, amongst others, the strange mystery of the green man, his foliate head carved on churches, over centuries, a heathen riposte on a Christian building. Who is he? If we once knew we have forgotten, like we have forgotten Jack in the Green and the origins of Robin Hood; like we have forgotten Hereward the Wake and Eadric the Wild and Jack Cade, like we have forgotten the craft of the village witch and the story of the wind smith, the meaning of the white horses and the ballads of the sea.
Times change and the world moves on. Perhaps the English have forgotten because they wanted to forget. Perhaps English is such a self-confident, forward-looking nation that it doesn’t need to bolster its self-image with half=remembered stories from a dead world. But it doesn’t seem that way to me. Rather the opposite: it seems as if, for some reason, the English are afraid of their myths – intimidated by their stories, maybe even by their past. For whatever political, sociological or historical reason – take your pick, according to your inclinations, from a ragbag of defendants that includes the Norman Conquest, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution, political correctness or the simple process of historical forgetting – we do not seem inclined to dig into the barrows and unearth the old hoards. Maybe we are afraid of seeing our faces in the reflection.
Over a century ago, in Puck of Pook’s Hill, Rudyard Kipling resurrected Puck, the impish faerie that Shakespeare had himself laid down from the collective memory centuries before. In Kipling’s tale, Puck is the last of the faeries, “the oldest Old Thing in England”, summoned accidentally from his barrow by theatrically-minded children. The first tale he tells them is the tale of Wayland the Smith.
And so the cycle continues. Because though we have forgotten much in England, we don’t have the option of leaving the past behind. No-one ever does. Weirdly, obtusely, at the margins and from the corners of your eyes, the old myths can still be seen. A hundred years on from Kipling, the long barrow on the Ridgeway near White Horse Hill is still known as Wayland’s Smith; the old smith, it is said, will shoe any horse left there overnight if a coin is placed on the stones. The third day of the week is still Woden’s Day, the green men on the cathedral ceilings receive coats of fresh paint, and every May Day, even now, the strange green dance goes on in crevices and byways while most of the nation is driving to the out-of-town retail park.
This is the England of Johnny Byron, a post-modern Puck, a dangerous spirit of the old world and the new, leading the children astray, telling them stories, a story himself. The old gods are still with us, and the myths. Not because we have held onto them, but because they have held onto us. We tried to banish them, like the council tries to banish Johnny from his wood and the developers try to banish the woods themselves. But like Puck, they linger in the barrows long after they were supposed to be gone. “I came into England with Oak, Ash and Thorn” says Puck in Kipling’s tale, “and when Oak, Ash and Thorn are gone I shall go too.” Perhaps when climate change comes to England it will banish the oak and the ash and the thorn, but more likely they will cling on, like Puck and Jonny and Wayland and Grim, like lichen on bark or moss on stone, impossible to shift, so common as to go unnoticed unless we go out and search for them.
Categories: 'Magicians', AD 12 - 30, Amesbury Archer, Berwick St James stones, Bluehenge, Colin Wilson, Cuckoo Stone, Cursus, Durrington Walls, Hauntings and the supernatural, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Lost City of Apollo, Memorable Quotes, Pytheas of Massilia, Silbury Hill, Stonehenge, Stonehenge Sentinel, Tanith, The Druids, The Ruin, Woodhenge
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Celebration of the Lizard
2:16 am
When I first set up Eternal Idol, I intended it to be a repository of original information on Stonehenge; thus it has remained, by and large, despite a few meanderings into broadly related territory, while it’s also survived being shut down in its infancy, it has prospered despite being ransacked in a furtive fashion one night by an embittered ex-associate and it’s been directly responsible for the publication of my book “The Missing Years of Jesus.”
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Categories: AD 12 - 30, Archaeological discoveries 2009, Berwick St James stones, Bluestone, Hauntings and the supernatural, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Lost City of Apollo, Pytheas of Massilia, Stonehenge, Stonehenge Sentinel, Tanith, The Ruin
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A Lonely Impulse of Delight
1:20 am
It’s my birthday today (the 26th) so by way of celebration, I’ve put aside a number of otherwise pressing matters I really should be attending to so that I can compose something purely for the pleasure of it. It’s perhaps understandable that I feel in the mood to reflect and cast my eye over “what’s gone before”, but at the same time, I like to think that I can do something to uplift, encourage and possibly enlighten others in the process….we’ll see.
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Categories: Berwick St James stones, Bluestone, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Lost City of Apollo, Pytheas of Massilia, Silbury Hill, Stonehenge, Stonehenge Sentinel, The Druids, The Ruin
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Pete Glastonbury’s photograph of a contemplative Professor Mike Parker-Pearson studying a feature just to the north-east of Stonehenge is one of the most striking and thought-provoking images of Stonehenge I’ve ever seen. The excavated section is just down the hill from the Heel Stone and from what I gather, the archaeologists from the Stonehenge Riverside Project dug there after the spot was located by a geophysics survey. The eighteenth century antiquary William Stukeley wrote that he’d seen ‘manifest hollows’ just outside Stonehenge along the course of the Avenue and it seems that the photograph above shows where one of these hollows was located.
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Categories: Archaeological discoveries 2008, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Stonehenge, Stonehenge Sentinel
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I’m extremely grateful to John Witts for pointing out something that’s been staring me and everyone else in the face, while he also brought to mind something else I’d forgotten about. All I can say in my defence is that I’m not all-knowledgable, I’m just as prone to error as anyone else without a Degree in Archaeology and I’m working full time on what looks like being the longest and most detailed post I’ve yet put together.
Be all that as it may, if you look on this link, you’ll see a page dealing with palisades, while there’s a fascinating piece about the way in which certain structures such as Stonehenge and also the Priddy Circles, which aren’t mentioned in the piece, were constructed so as to keep the rituals and ceremonies taking place inside these monuments a secret, or as Virgil put it “Procul, O procul este, profani!”
The relevant part, under the heading Interpretation, reads “At Mount Pleasant in Dorset and at Hindwell, for example, the entrances were narrow and were marked by massive posts. Again, they would have forced the would-be entrants into single file and orderly procession. Neolithic society can therefore immediately be seen to have at least three tiers with regard to these sites: those who were excluded, those who were admitted (if only at certain times of the year) and those who controlled the right of entry.”
As John pointed out, this immediately brings a Sentinel of sorts to mind, or a gatekeeper or whatever other word you care to employ for someone who controls the right of entry, but we can make of this what we will. When I wrote the Sentinel piece, it wasn’t wishful thinking, but simply a logical result of putting the information together, so it’s interesting to see this notion reinforced, although now I think of it, I’m sure I’ve read similar conclusions elsewhere in other scholarly documents.
Another thing of great interest in the link that John sent me was the diagram of the palisade ditch at Stonehenge. I don’t have any information on this structure to hand and I last read about it in detail a long time ago, but it looks as if it was placed to the northwest of Stonehenge. As I pointed out some time ago, there are many features of note that are aligned to the northwest of Stonehenge, but I won’t go into it again as you can read it for yourselves on the Tanith entry. However, it now seems as if we can add another major structure to the original list.
Otherwise, if you look on this English Heritage link, you’ll see a photograph of an Iron Age burial, although I must admit that I have no information to hand on the remains of this otherwise anonymous young man who seems to be yet another “body in the ditch” at Stonehenge.
The Iron Age, of course, was the Time of the Druids, who had nothing to do with Stonehenge, notwithstanding Iron Age pottery found in the Y and Z holes, a colossal Iron Age hill fort in the shape of Vespasian’s Camp just over the brow of the hill and the body of a young man buried closeby. Yet again, I’m afraid I don’t have any reliable information on it as I write this in a place far away from my study, but I remember reading of the Battle of Culdrumne in Ireland in 561 where the Druids or a Druid was supposed to have made a ‘fence of protection’, so when I read of a palisade and an Iron Age burial near such a unique monument, it makes me wonder…
Forgive the rushed article, but I wanted to give John his due before a longer post on a different aspect of Stonehenge goes up, hopefully soon.
Categories: Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Stonehenge, Stonehenge Sentinel, Tanith, The Druids
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When I was a young boy, my mother bought me Gods, Graves and Scholars, C.W Ceram’s wonderful history of archaeological excavations, and I was immediately transfixed by the story of how, in 1871, Heinrich Schliemann discovered the ruins of Troy, a supposedly legendary city whose walls were said to have been built by the god Apollo himself.
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Categories: Archaeological discoveries 2007, Berwick St James stones, Cursus, Durrington Walls, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Lost City of Apollo, Pytheas of Massilia, Silbury Hill, Stonehenge, The Druids
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When I first published the original story on Inigo Jones’ lost Altar Stone from Stonehenge, I presented what I thought at the time was the bulk of the evidence for a convincing case. I did not seriously expect further evidence in favour of what I had to say to come in, but to my surprise, it has continued to do so at a surprising rate.
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Categories: Archaeological discoveries 2007, Berwick St James stones, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Related discoveries, Stonehenge
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As well as digging up the original illustration of a stone being chiselled in two at Stonehenge, Pete Glastonbury has now located this fascinating section of Andrew’s and Dury’s Map of Wiltshire, 1772. Yes, we all know that a picture’s worth a thousand words, but I’d suggest that this particular illustration was worth quite a few more, especially when we study the fine detail and wording in the centre of the picture and when we bear in mind the following:
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Categories: Archaeological discoveries 2007, Berwick St James stones, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Stonehenge
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Millions of us watched the stunning lunar eclipse a few days ago, either as it was happening or else later on the news. Our ancestors went to the most enormous pains to construct certain elements of Stonehenge so that these arrangements in stone would capture at least two events related to the sun – the midsummer sunrise and the midwinter sunset. As they clearly devoted so much time to observing the comparatively slow changes in the sun’s position, it is impossible to imagine that they did not follow the movements of the Moon with equal intensity.
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Categories: Berwick St James stones, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Stonehenge
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If there is a faint but not inconsiderable chance that the stones at Berwick St James once stood at Stonehenge, then in my opinion, they deserve to be investigated to the fullest possible extent, using any and every means at our disposal. If there is a faint but not inconsiderable chance that they once constituted a single stone described by Inigo Jones in the seventeenth century as an “Altar Stone”, then it is difficult to overestimate their importance to us all.
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Categories: Archaeological discoveries 2007, Berwick St James stones, Inigo Jones Altar Stone, Related discoveries, Stonehenge
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