A blog on cemeteries all over the world and preservation and restoration projects, mainly focusing on forgotten or abandoned cemeteries. Here you will also find focus on graves of forgotten or unsung heroes and pioneers, as well as interesting tombstones or graveyards and the history behind them.
Thursday, May 29, 2008
Stonehenge Was Cemetery First and Foremost, Study Says
James Owen in London for National Geographic News
The site appears to have been intended as a cemetery from the very start, around 5,000 years ago—centuries before the giant sandstone blocks were erected—the new study says. New analysis of ancient human remains show that people were buried at the southern England site from about 3000 B.C. until after the first large stones were raised around 2500 B.C.
"This is really exciting, because it shows that Stonehenge, from its beginning to its zenith, is being used as a place to physically put the remains of the dead," said Mike Parker Pearson of England's University of Sheffield. "It's something that we just didn't appreciate until now."
The new finding supports the theory that Stonehenge represented the "domain of the dead" to ancestor-worshiping ancient Britons, Parker Pearson said. Previously it was believed that Stonehenge was a place of burial only between about 2700 and 2600 B.C., the new report says. But new radiocarbon dates spanning 500 years were obtained for three cremated humans unearthed in 1950s at Stonehenge and kept at the nearby Salisbury and SouthWiltshireMuseum. The earliest cremation, a pile of burned bones and teeth, came from one of 56 pits called the Aubrey Holes Continue here
Genealogy research, visiting old forgotten cemeteries and taking photographs of headstones are my favorite hobbies- equally. If you browse around you’ll find the much covered here revolves around my own ancestral burials and regions.
Over the years I have lectured and assisted in family history under the guise of Danny Cassidy-Professor, film maker and award winning Author (How the Irish Invented Slang The Secret Language of the Crossroads). I am also currently studying to become a board certified Genealogist (BCG). Aside from my love of genealogy, I have also worked as a counselor for numerous non profit agencies and counseled and lectured at workshops at on various college campuses. In edition, I was one of only 500 college students chosen to have their bio published in the Nat'l Dean’s List to honor outstanding college students - I am proud to say my Daughter has carried on this tradition as a national award winner of the prestigious United States Academic Achievement Academy, which recognizes fewer than 10% of all students.
In 2010 I will (finally!) be pursuing my doctoral studies in Clinical Neurophsychology. I also own a completely superficial bath and body business.
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