A visit to London, England, is always filled with history, art and culture. Equally delightful are the numerous day trips that a visitor can embark on from London, with palaces, castles, gardens, scenic wonders and more, all merely a short train or bus ride away.
On one such day trip from London, I too came away with memories that will last me a lifetime.
My husband and I boarded a tour bus from Central London one cold December morning, ready to spend a history-soaked day in Stonehenge. The bus quickly filled up with eager tourists and after a short introductory speech by the tour guide, off we went.
A VISIT TO STONEHENGE
Stonehenge, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, lies in Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire County in England and is one of the most popular day trip destinations from London. After about a two-hour drive, as the bus approached the hallowed site, I got the first distant glimpse of the timeless megaliths.
The tour started at the sleek visitors center where after getting our tickets, we entered a museum of exhibits. The Stonehenge Exhibition displays artifacts such as jewelry, pottery, and tools discovered at the site.
But most people, including us, crowded around to see the reconstruction of a 5000-year-old human face assembled from bones found at the site.
Outside, the reconstructed Neolithic dwellings were another attraction. The huts recreate the prehistoric homes found at Durrington Walls, about a mile away from Stonehenge.
Inside, the space was laid out with seats, a sleeping area, a fireplace and household items, bringing to life the everyday activities of people who lived here around 2500 BC.
THE MYSTERY AND HISTORY OF STONEHENGE
No one really knows why Stonehenge was built, but theories abound. Some say it was a religious site while others speculate it was used as a calendar. According to scientists, it was probably an astronomical observatory.
There is one certainty that prevails amidst the mystery – Stonehenge was built in three phases, starting in the fourth millennium BC much before the construction of the Pyramids of Egypt.
And when the final phase was completed, the Neolithic Age had given way to the Bronze Age, and a total of about 4500 years had passed by.
Around 3100 BCE, a mammoth circular ditch, about six feet deep, was dug here with a 360-foot wide bank, heralding the First Phase. This megastructure, known as a henge, had a large entrance on the northeast with a smaller entry point to the south.
Inside the henge, 56 pits were found, each three feet in diameter. They were subsequently called Aubrey Holes after the 17th-century archeologist John Aubrey who discovered them.
Were the pits filled with upright wooden beams or upright bluestones? No one knows; except that it would be a feat if it were bluestones, as they weigh 2 to 4 tons each and were mined 250 miles away in Wales.
During the Second Phase which commenced about 200 years later, upright wooden posts were erected in the center and near the two entrances to the henge. At this time, the entire structure also functioned as a cremation ground as evidenced by the many human remains found here.
The Third Phase is surely the most spectacular and this is what tourists come to see today.
About 500 years after the second phase, the wooden beams or perhaps the massive bluestones were removed and somehow 30 gigantic sarsen stones, quarried from nearby Marlborough Downs, were placed upright in the henge forming a 108 feet diameter circle.
These stones were then connected by 30 similarly massive lintel stones.