The tallest prehistoric monolith in Britain. It stands around 25 feet high, is made of millstone grit and has been in place for something like 4,000 years.
Rudston is probably a contraction of Rood-stone- which suggests the medievals employed the monolith as a preaching cross. That continuity of use is probably what preserved it.
According to Wikipedia the nearest outcrop of millstone grit is over nine miles from Rudston. I'd love to what technology was used to transport the monolith over such a distance.
This means that this site has been in continual use as a sacred site for 4000 years. In my field, we call this a "site of the hierophany." We don't remember what the original event was, but the site itself has been preserved all this time.
Another place we visited was the Saxon church at Appleton-le-Street. It's built on Roman cemetery which may well- in its turn- have been located at a prehistoric sacred site.
We see this a lot... a modern church built on the site of a medieval church but on the site of a prehistoric mound or something like it. We will never know what most of these hierophanies were, only that someone thought they were important enough to preserve.
Very beautiful and sort of sad picture. It's a place where I would probably want to sit and just think about all the feet of all the people who've walked across that ground and what impact they made on the world around them during their time.
I wish I was a wealthy woman. I'd come over and we'd put circles all over your booklet. :D
As a resident of Lancashire I'm not supposed to say this but I'm inclined to think that- take it all in all- Yorkshire is the greatest and loveliest of the English counties.
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It's amazing that monument has stood so long, without being toppled by nature or man.
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I have images of the Orkney standing stones- Brodgar, Stenness and such on here and more recently over on DW.
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http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2011/12/111222-stonehenge-bluestones-wales-match-glacier-ixer-ancient-science/
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Another place we visited was the Saxon church at Appleton-le-Street. It's built on Roman cemetery which may well- in its turn- have been located at a prehistoric sacred site.
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I wish I was a wealthy woman. I'd come over and we'd put circles all over your booklet. :D
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Intersting to see other parts of the world.
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