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Tregeseal East stone circle

Tregeseal East (Cornish: Meyn an Dons, meaning "Stones of the Dance";[1] grid reference SW386323) is a heavily restored prehistoric stone circle around one mile northeast of the town of St Just in Cornwall, United Kingdom. The nineteen granite stones are also known as The Dancing Stones. It is the one surviving circle of three that once stood aligned along an east–west axis on the hillside to the south of Carn Kenidjack.

Tregeseal East Stone Circle
Tregeseal East stone circle with Carn Kenidjack beyond
Shown within Southwest Cornwall
Locationnear St Just
RegionCornwall,
Coordinates50°8′1.39″N 5°39′30.67″W / 50.1337194°N 5.6585194°W / 50.1337194; -5.6585194
TypeStone circle
Site notes
Conditionlargely intact
Public accessYes
Websitehttps://www.cornishancientsites.com/ancient-sites/tregeseal-stone-circle/

Location edit

The stone circle is in west Cornwall north of the road from Penzance to St Just in Penwith and is approximately one kilometre east of the hamlet of Tregeseal.[2]

Construction edit

The stone circle consists of 19 granite blocks with a height between 1.0–1.4 m (3 ft 3 in – 4 ft 7 in), which describe an approximate circle with a diameter of around 21 m (69 ft). Two stones are probably missing, since the circle consisted of 21 stones in earlier times.[3] The stone circle was subjected over the centuries to substantial rebuilding and restoration work, so that today only the stones in the eastern half of the circle may be in their original positions.[4]

The stone circle was part of a larger ritual area, similar to the area around The Merry Maidens, It consisted of a possible three stone circles in a general east–west alignment. The other two stone circles were to the west of the existing stone circle. The proposed westernmost of the three circles was detected on RAF aerial photographs from 1947; if a circle, it is much smaller in diameter than the other two and could possibly depict a hut circle instead. The middle stone circle, which originally had the largest diameter and contained ten stones in 1885, today only a single stone is to be found standing.[4]

History edit

 
Illustration by W. C. Borlase 1872
 
Tregeseal East stone circle from the east
 
Illustration by William Cotton 1827

Stone circles such as that at Tregeseal, were erected in the late Neolithic or in the early Bronze Age by representatives of a Megalithic culture. The first mention of the stone circle in the modern times is found in the 1754 work Antiquities, historical and monumental, of the County of Cornwall by William Borlase, who reported 17 upright standing stones.

An early drawing, by William Cotton in 1827, can be found in his book Illustrations of Stone Circles, Cromlehs and other remains of the Aboriginal Britons in the West of Cornwall. At that time some of the standing stones in the other stone circles were still visible. William Copeland Borlase reported 15 stones in his work Naenia Cornubia of 1872, and showed the exact location of the stones.

See also edit

Other prehistoric stone circles in the Penwith district

References edit

  1. ^ Craig Weatherhill (2017). The Place-Names of the Land's End Peninsula. Penwith Press. p. 132. ISBN 9781999777500.
  2. ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 203 Land's End ISBN 978-0-319-23148-7
  3. ^ Tregeseal (East) Stone Circle 2012-10-18 at the Wayback Machine at Megalithic Walks
  4. ^ a b Tregeseal stone circle at historic-cornwall.org.uk

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Tregeseal East stone circle site page on The Megalithic Portal
  • Tregeseal Dancing Stones & Carn Kenidjack site page on The Modern Antiquarian

tregeseal, east, stone, circle, tregeseal, east, cornish, meyn, dons, meaning, stones, dance, grid, reference, sw386323, heavily, restored, prehistoric, stone, circle, around, mile, northeast, town, just, cornwall, united, kingdom, nineteen, granite, stones, a. Tregeseal East Cornish Meyn an Dons meaning Stones of the Dance 1 grid reference SW386323 is a heavily restored prehistoric stone circle around one mile northeast of the town of St Just in Cornwall United Kingdom The nineteen granite stones are also known as The Dancing Stones It is the one surviving circle of three that once stood aligned along an east west axis on the hillside to the south of Carn Kenidjack Tregeseal East Stone CircleTregeseal East stone circle with Carn Kenidjack beyondShown within Southwest CornwallLocationnear St JustRegionCornwall Coordinates50 8 1 39 N 5 39 30 67 W 50 1337194 N 5 6585194 W 50 1337194 5 6585194TypeStone circleSite notesConditionlargely intactPublic accessYesWebsitehttps www cornishancientsites com ancient sites tregeseal stone circle Contents 1 Location 2 Construction 3 History 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksLocation editThe stone circle is in west Cornwall north of the road from Penzance to St Just in Penwith and is approximately one kilometre east of the hamlet of Tregeseal 2 Construction editThe stone circle consists of 19 granite blocks with a height between 1 0 1 4 m 3 ft 3 in 4 ft 7 in which describe an approximate circle with a diameter of around 21 m 69 ft Two stones are probably missing since the circle consisted of 21 stones in earlier times 3 The stone circle was subjected over the centuries to substantial rebuilding and restoration work so that today only the stones in the eastern half of the circle may be in their original positions 4 The stone circle was part of a larger ritual area similar to the area around The Merry Maidens It consisted of a possible three stone circles in a general east west alignment The other two stone circles were to the west of the existing stone circle The proposed westernmost of the three circles was detected on RAF aerial photographs from 1947 if a circle it is much smaller in diameter than the other two and could possibly depict a hut circle instead The middle stone circle which originally had the largest diameter and contained ten stones in 1885 today only a single stone is to be found standing 4 History edit nbsp Illustration by W C Borlase 1872 nbsp Tregeseal East stone circle from the east nbsp Illustration by William Cotton 1827Stone circles such as that at Tregeseal were erected in the late Neolithic or in the early Bronze Age by representatives of a Megalithic culture The first mention of the stone circle in the modern times is found in the 1754 work Antiquities historical and monumental of the County of Cornwall by William Borlase who reported 17 upright standing stones An early drawing by William Cotton in 1827 can be found in his book Illustrations of Stone Circles Cromlehs and other remains of the Aboriginal Britons in the West of Cornwall At that time some of the standing stones in the other stone circles were still visible William Copeland Borlase reported 15 stones in his work Naenia Cornubia of 1872 and showed the exact location of the stones See also edit nbsp Cornwall portalOther prehistoric stone circles in the Penwith district Boscawen Un The Merry Maidens also known as Dans Maen Boskednan also known as the Nine Maidens of BoskednanReferences edit Craig Weatherhill 2017 The Place Names of the Land s End Peninsula Penwith Press p 132 ISBN 9781999777500 Ordnance Survey Landranger map sheet 203 Land s End ISBN 978 0 319 23148 7 Tregeseal East Stone Circle Archived 2012 10 18 at the Wayback Machine at Megalithic Walks a b Tregeseal stone circle at historic cornwall org ukFurther reading editJohn Barnatt Prehistoric Cornwall The Ceremonial Monuments Turnstone Press Limited Wellingborough 1982 ISBN 0 85500 129 1 Ian McNeil Cooke Standing Stones of the Land s End Men an Tol Studio Cornwall 1998 ISBN 0 9512371 9 5 Robin Payne The Romance of the Stones Alexander Associates Fowey 1999 ISBN 1 899526 21 8 Burl Aubrey 2000 The Stone Circles of Britain Ireland and Brittany New Haven CT Yale University Press Chapter 9 ISBN 0 300 08347 5 Cope Julian 1998 The Modern Antiquarian a pre millennial odyssey through megalithic Britain London Thorsons p 168 ISBN 0 7225 3599 6 Tregeseal East stone circle Megalithic Portal External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tregeseal Stone Circle Tregeseal East stone circle site page on The Megalithic Portal Tregeseal Dancing Stones amp Carn Kenidjack site page on The Modern Antiquarian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tregeseal East stone circle amp oldid 1182472915, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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