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قراءة كتاب Stonehenge, Today and Yesterday

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Stonehenge, Today and Yesterday

Stonehenge, Today and Yesterday

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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STONEHENGE:
TO-DAY AND YESTERDAY







Stonehenge as it probably was. Plan & Bird'seye View.

Stonehenge as it probably was. Plan & Bird'seye View.







STONEHENGE
TODAY & YESTERDAY


BY


FRANK STEVENS

Curator of the Salisbury Museum
with Plans and Illustrations by

HEYWOOD SUMNER. F.S.A.

decoration
LONDON:
Sampson Low, Marston & Co. Ltd
Price 1s net
1916.







FOREWORDToC


The interest that has always attached itself to Stonehenge has, without doubt, been in a great measure due to the mystery as to the origin of this unique monument of bygone time. But the careful investigations carried out by the modern school of archæologists, as instanced in the work of General Pitt Rivers, Mr. Gowland, and others, every excavation being carried out with great care and scientific accuracy, have had good results; little by little the history of Stonehenge has been unravelled; a fact that Mr. Stevens has clearly demonstrated in the present volume. We now know how, when, and who, built this remarkable temple. One point, however, still remains a mystery, viz. whence the so-called foreign stones were obtained? Clearly, as geology shows, from no spot in Wiltshire.

Amongst the many rude stone circles scattered over Great Britain, Stonehenge is unique, in the fact of having its sarsen stones carefully though roughly worked; and also in the introduction of the horseshoe within the circles, in the design or plan of the building. As in the present day, our churches, in their design, symbolise the Cross, so we may fairly infer that the horseshoe at Stonehenge had its own special meaning, as it still has in the East.

I would advise all interested in the subject, after reading Mr. Stevens' lucid and comprehensive account, to visit this weird monument and judge for themselves; take Omar's sound advice, "To-day" view the "Dead Yesterday," wait not for the "Unborn To-morrow."

H.P. BLACKMORE.

Salisbury.
March 1, 1916.







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