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HISTORICAL AND OTHER NOTICES OF STONEHENGE FROM HENRY OF
HUNTINGDON, TO THE DATE OF THE PUBLICATION OF SIR R. C.
HOARE'S" ANCIENT WILTS," i., (1812.)

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FLINT FLAKES FOUND WITHIN THE AREA OF STONEHENGE
DIGGINGS WITHIN THE PRECINCTS OF STONEHENGE, AND THEIR
RESULTS

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HOW WERE THESE STONES BROUGHT AND SET UP?...
FOR WHAT PURPOSE WERE THESE STONES SET UP?

PART IV.

SALISBURY PLAIN AND THE STONEHENGE BARROWS
APPEARANCE OF STONEHENGE FROM THE PLAIN

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THE BARROWS SURROUNDING STONEHENge and the GENERAL RESULTS

OF THEIR EXAMINATION.......

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THE CAMP AT AMESBURY, COMMONLY CALLED VESPASIAN'S CAMP....
PROGRESS OF DOWN-CULTIVATION AROUND STONEHENGE....

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APPENDIX, (containing a detailed account of the Investigation of the

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*Map of Stonehenge and its Environs, from Sir R. C. Hoare's "Ancient Wiltshire," vol. i.

To face Title.

Fac-simile of Aubrey's "Icknographie of Stoneheng" from his "Monumenta Britannica "

Sketches from the "Monumenta Britannica "

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Copy of the oldest engraving of Stonehenge, dated 1575, from that
made for Gough's edition of Camden's "Britannica"
Copy of the rude draught of Stonehenge in a MS. in Corpus Christi
College, Cambridge (from that in Gough's "Camden ")........
Chromolithographic Plans of Stonehenge in its original, and in its
present state (see page 233)....

*Ground Plan of Stonehenge, from "Ancient Wilts "
*Stonehenge, from "Ancient Wilts "

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Copy of sketch of the "Slaughtering Stone," made by Mr. Cunning-
ton, F.S.A., in 1802...
Copy of Mr. H. Browne's print, showing the manner in which the
transverse stones of Stonehenge were connected together
Map to illustrate the Belgic Inroads in the South of Britain (from
Dr. Guest's map in "Arch. Journal," viii.) ....
Long Barrow, from Hoare's "Tumuli Wiltunenses"

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**Disc-shaped Barrow..

**Section of Disc-shaped Barrow, at Winterbourn Stoke ....

Urn, with overhanging rim 16 inches high, 11 in diameter, (Hoare's
"Ancient Wilts," i., 237 and title page)..
The "Stonehenge" Urn

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Incense Cups. 1. "A very beautiful and perfect grape cup" (Sir R. Hoare "Ancient Wilts," p. 199) from barrow No. 133. 2. Of the "Contracted" form, from Woodyates. (See on this cup, Thurnam's British Barrows," Archæologia,” xliii., 373) Drinking Cup, from barrow No. 98, half-size

**Ivory Armlet, from Winterbourn Stoke **Amber Necklace, from Lake

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Gold Plate, from Bush Barrow (two-thirds of full size)...
The Bustard (vignette)

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For these illustrations from "Ancient Wilts," vol. i., the writer has to thank Mr. J. Bruce Nichols, who has most kindly allowed him to have these copies taken in Lithography, by transfer from impressions from the original copperplates.

** For these illustrations the writer has to thank the Council of the Society of Antiquaries. They form a portion of those which illustrate Dr. Thurnam's papers in the "Archeologia," xlii., xliii. The remaining illustrations, with the exception of the copies from Aubrey's "Monumenta Britannica," made at Oxford, and the map, were engraved for the writer by Mr. Bidgood, Curator of the Somersetshire Archæological Society's Museum, at Taunton. The urns and cups are copied from engravings in the "Tumuli Wiltunenses."

THE

WILTSHIRE MAGAZINE.

"MULTORUM MANIBUS GRANDE LEVATUR ONUS."- Ovid.

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Stonehenge and its Barrows.

By WM. LONG, Esq., M.A., F.S.A.

PON the mind of the thoughtful visitor of Stonehenge,1 two considerations can hardly fail to press, and with considerable force, as he recovers from his first astonishment; the one being the very sacred character of the place to those who had selected this spot,

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Spelt "Stanenges," "Stanhenges," by Henry of Huntingdon; "Senhange,' "Stahengues," "Estanges," "Estanhangues," by Wace; "Stanhenge," by Layamon; "Stanhenges," by Higden; "Stonhenge," in the "Eulogium Historiarum ; "Stonege," by Borde; "Stone Hengles," by Hardyng; "Stonage," by Bolton; the author of the " Fool's Bolt; 'Stoneheng," by Webb; Charlton; and Aubrey; "Stonendge," by Drayton.

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The Rev. Prebendary Earle, the well-known Saxon scholar, to whom the writer submitted the foregoing list of spellings, writes of them as follows: "In all these forms I only seem to see two states of mind, and these the two I have indicated. I. 'Stanenges,''Estanges,'' Stonege,' 'Stonage,' 'Stonendge,' all seem to me essentially adjectival, epithetical, only in a large and collective way, as if one were to imagine a Greek λiowμa, a mass of stones, after the pattern of σreþávwμμa rúруwv, a diadem of towers. II. All the others seem to me breathe the idea of 'hanging,' and the structure of the word is that of two substantives in compound state, whereof the former plays the adjective to the latter, as in Stonewall. So this seems to be Stonebanging, and then the only question is how is the hanging' to be understood? The more architectural and elegant view will readily occur to you, and I suppose I touched on it before; but there is one idea, not graceful certainly, which might have been present to the crude mind of our rough ancestors, and that is this, 'StoneGallows; for, I say it with reluctance, the Saxon word for Gallows was 'hengen.' But then on the other hand they used the word gracefully in 'hengeclif,' rupes dependens, or hanging cliff." Most Saxon scholars, as far as the writer is aware, look with disfavour upon the popular rendering of "Stonehenge" into "hanging stones," like Wace's "pierres pendues," and consider that the

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VOL. XVI.-NO. XLVI.

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