The Megalithic Monuments of Britain and Ireland Chris Scarre
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| ‘An informative and stimulating overview of a complex subject’ | | – Minerva |
From Stonehenge to Newgrange, one of the richest arrays of megalithic monuments in Europe is found in Britain and Ireland.
Using massive stone blocks (megaliths), timber posts and mounds of earth or chalk, great monuments were built from the beginning of the Neolithic some 6000 years ago down into the Bronze Age.
The number and sheer diversity of these structures is astonishing. Stone circles and chambered tombs, burial mounds and earthwork enclosures, henges and cursus monuments, all belong to the same general category of monumental prehistoric architecture.
Tombs, sanctuaries, places of cult and of memory: these Neolithic monuments had numerous functions in prehistoric societies. Transforming the landscape, such grand structures must have represented for their communities a particular way of responding to changing social and symbolic needs, whether processing the dead, gathering for ceremonies or embellishing locations that were of sacred significance.
Organized by geographical area, this authoritative overview is ideal for traveller and student alike.
Chris Scarre is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Durham and a specialist in the prehistory of Western Europe. He is the editor of the leading textbook on world prehistory The Human Past (Thames & Hudson, 2005).
Also of interest: Stonehenge Complete
The Henge Monuments: Ceremony and Society in Prehistoric Britain Solving Stonehenge: The New Key to an Ancient Enigma |
|  |  |  |  |  | ISBN 0500286663 |  | ISBN-13 978-0500286661 |  |  |  | 24.0 x 16.0 cm |  | Paperback |  | 160pp |  | 175 illustrations, 20 in colour |  | First published 2007 |  |  |  | £12.95 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |
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