Home

ARCHIVES
(6223 articles):
 

EDITORIAL TEAM:
 
Clive Price-Jones 
Diego Meozzi 
Paola Arosio 
Philip Hansen 
Wolf Thandoy 


If you think our news service is a valuable resource, please consider a donation. Select your currency and click the PayPal button:



Main Index
Podcast


Archaeo News 

28 November 2001
Ancient standing stone recovered

An amateur historian has found a lost standing stone in his own "back garden" - 18 months after beginning a search for it.
      Stephen Davis and historian friend Clare Forbes used ancient documents to help track down The Horestone near Stroud, Gloucestershire (England), some 350 years after it was lost. Mr Davis learned of the stone when he began researching the history of his own house in 1987. He then started to swap notes with local historian Ms Forbes and this led to the pair agreeing to look for the stone together.
      The first known reference to the stone was in legal documents dated 1170, but it is believed to mark a Bronze Age burial site dating back to around 2,500 BCE. The area was declared common land after a law suit was fought over it in the 14th Century; its last official recording was in 1636 in a tax record.
      The land on which it stands, which is behind Mr Davis' house, was sold off 300 years ago and is now part of a housing estate. The two stone-hunters feared the ancient rock on Rodborough Common might have been smashed up or buried.
      Mr Davis said: "We had no reason to believe that we'd actually find it. These things are buried, ploughed over or they just fall over." They almost missed finding it because it was so overgrown with ivy it looked like a tree stump.
      On uncovering the stone, Mr Davis said: "It's curious to excavate a piece of history. It wasn't just stumbling across it, but just stumbling across it while we were looking for it. "It was the most astonishing of moments. It spoke immediately of lost time and still had all the atmosphere of a pagan shrine. I was certainly not expecting to have such a stunning moment in my own back garden."
      English Heritage is now expected to declare the six-feet-high stone a scheduled ancient monument.

Source: BBC News (23 November 2001)

Share this webpage:


Copyright Statement
Publishing system powered by Movable Type 2.63

HOMESHOPTOURSPREHISTORAMAFORUMSGLOSSARYMEGALINKSFEEDBACKFAQABOUT US TOP OF PAGE ^^^