The tale of Stonehenge begins round 5,000 years in the past. However its well-known previous stones, a few of that have been transported the entire manner from south-west Wales to Wiltshire, are simply a part of the tale.
As regards to the start of its use, the web site used to be a cemetery, with dozens of folks laid to relaxation. That such a lot of adjustments had been made to the web site since – nearly all involving massive commitments of human labour and creativity – is testomony to Stonehenge’s importance to numerous generations of folks.
Its proceeding fascination used to be demonstrated through a 2022 British Museum exhibition that attracted 190,000 guests to its selection of prehistoric items from 36 Eu establishments. Now, that bodily exhibition has been delivered to digital lifestyles in a brand new collaboration between researchers on the College of Studying, together with myself, and the museum.
Customers of The Digital Global of Stonehenge – launched to coincide with the summer time solstice – can pass deep inside of Stonehenge and watch it exchange via time.
Video: College of Studying.
They are able to carefully read about one of the most bluestones that used to be very most likely delivered to Stonehenge from Wales, or an historical pounder device used to form the sarsen stones that have been excavated a lot nearer to the web site.
With the assistance of English Heritage, which manages Stonehenge, now we have additionally reconstructed how this megalithic construction would possibly have appeared via other levels of its life.
Customers too can shuttle additional afield to view the evolving panorama of formality monuments round England – as an example, to Neolithic flint mines at Grimes Graves in Norfolk. Listed below are some extra of the traditional puts and artefacts you’ll uncover nowadays with out leaving your armchair.
The Coneybury pit
The pottery, animal bones and flint gear on this show have been all excavated from a pit as regards to Stonehenge – however they pre-dated the stones through nearly 1000 years. It used to be a number of the much less impressive assemblages within the 2022 exhibition, but had an enchanting tale to inform.
The pit held the stays of a banquet loved through hunter-gatherers and the primary farmer communities some 5,900 years in the past. The ones accrued ate farmed red meat and hunted venison.
Chemical research of the stays presentations the farm animals and deer fed on got here from other puts – and that the beef used to be ready in numerous tactics. As a coming in combination of worldviews, languages, customs and traditions, the stays of this shared meal marked the tip of 1000’s of years of a hunter-gatherer way of living.
The digital revel in permits customers to observe an animated video telling the tale of this assembly, and explains how archaeologists pieced in combination its tale.
Seahenge
In 1998, a well-preserved bushes circle emerged from the shores of Holme-next-the-Sea, at the coast of Norfolk. It used to be quickly dubbed Seahenge owing to its similarity to bushes circles that had as soon as stood within the Stonehenge panorama.
The Holme circle used to be in the beginning constructed on a saltmarsh, between land and sea, and consisted of 55 huge oak posts. A slim entranceway used to be situated precisely to align at the Solar’s trail, in order that the midsummer emerging Solar illuminated the inner of the monument.
Seahenge show on the Global Of Stonehenge exhibition in 2022.
Neil Wilkin
From a learn about of the tree rings, it’s recognized that Seahenge used to be constructed within the spring or summer time of 2049 BC, at a time when stone gear and guns have been impulsively being changed through steel as the fabric of selection for social and financial lifestyles – and likewise for choices to supernatural forces.
All over that length, circles of picket and stone have been in decline. Seahenge used to be built close to the tip of a non secular custom that had lasted for just about a millennium.
Within the digital revel in, you’ll concentrate to the “Seahenge soundscape” created through the artists Rose Ferraby and Rob St John. Their paintings added a spine-tingling size to the British Museum’s show of those historical timbers.

The brand new digital exhibition is according to The Global of Stonehenge at Sainsbury Exhibitions Gallery, British Museum (2022).
© The Trustees of the British Museum
A 6,000-year-old leaf
A humble object that captured many of us’s creativeness all through the British Museum exhibition used to be a unmarried elm leaf. This refined specimen fell round 6,000 years in the past close to an early farming agreement at the coast of Lancashire.
Deforestation has performed a key function in Eu historical past ever since then. Onerous-won clearances may well be crammed through bushes in a human lifespan, whilst wooded area persevered to offer important assets to give a boost to the farming way of living.
Close to this historical leaf, we displayed a wall protecting 89 stone axes – each and every representing a technology of human lives all through the main length lined through the exhibition (circa 4000-1500 BC). Many would had been used to cut down bushes 1000’s of years in the past – clearing land for vegetation and monuments, in addition to offering picket for development.
Folkton chalk ‘drums’
Those 3 carefully-carved chalk treasures accompanied the frame of a small kid buried 5,000 years in the past in Folkton, North Yorkshire. The eyes peering out from above summary motifs at the greatest and smallest of the sculptures would possibly had been created with the destiny and coverage of a cherished and susceptible kid in thoughts.
This enigmatic staff of items used to be excavated within the 1860s. The drums, positioned intently alongside the road of the kid’s again, paintings properly as a collection: their dimension is incremental and all 3 have an identical ornamental schemes.

The 3 Folkton drums.
© The Trustees of the British Museum, Writer equipped (no reuse)
The patterns proportion the similar repertoire of concentric circles, lozenges, zigzags, chevrons and parallel strains discovered somewhere else throughout Britain and Eire. However intriguingly, two of the drums have a motif of eyes with eyebrows insinuated within the design – hinting at a bold, most likely bad, connection with an individual or spirit embodied inside.
In The Digital Global of Stonehenge, you’ll discover those interesting and intricately carved items in 3-D, together with a an identical drum discovered a lot more just lately at Burton Agnes. This one used to be positioned with 3 kids of various ages buried shut in combination, the 2 youngest poignantly protecting fingers.