Callanish stone circle

From The Book of THoTH (Leaves of Wisdom)

The stone circle at the centre of the Standing Stones of Callanish ("Callanish I")
Enlarge
The stone circle at the centre of the Standing Stones of Callanish ("Callanish I")
A distant view of the circle, stone rows and part of the northern avenue
Enlarge
A distant view of the circle, stone rows and part of the northern avenue

The Callanish stone circle (or "Callanish I"), Tursachan Chalanais in Gaelic, is situated near the village of Callanish (Gaelic: Calanais) on the west coast of the isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides (Western Isles), Scotland (58.197° N 6.734° W).

Dating from around 2000 BC, the 13 primary stones form a circle about 13 m in diameter, with a long approach avenue of stones to the north, and shorter stone rows to the east, south, and west (possibly incomplete avenues). The overall layout of the monument recalls a distorted Celtic cross (although of course it predates Christianity by thousands of years). The individual stones vary from around 1 m to 5 m in height, with an average of 4 m, and are of the local Lewisian gneiss.

The first written reference to the stones is John Morisone, a Lewis native, who in c. 1680 wrote that "great stones standing up in ranks [...] were sett up in place for devotione".

The tallest of the stones marks the entrance to a burial cairn where human remains have been discovered. An excavation campaign in 1980 and 1981 showed that the burial chamber was a late addition to the site, and that it had been modified a number of times. Pottery finds suggested a date of 2200 BC for the erection of the circle. It has been speculated, among other theories, that the stones form a calendar system based on the position of the moon. Professor Alexander Thom suggested that the alignment of the stone avenue (when looking southward) pointed to the setting of midsummer full moon behind a distant hill called Clisham.

The stones in folklore

Local tradition says that giants who lived on the island refused to be converted to Christianity by Saint Kieran, who turned them to stone as a punishment. Another local belief says that at sunrise on midsummer morning, the "shining one" walked along the stone avenue, "his arrival heralded by the cuckoo's call." This legend could be a folk memory recalling the astronomical significance of the stones.

Other nearby sites

Archaeologists usually refer to the main monument as "Callanish I", because there are several other megalithic sites in the vicinity:

  • "Cnoc Ceann a'Gharaidh" (Callanish II) – stone circle
  • "Cnoc Filibhir Bheag" (Callanish III) – stone circle
  • "Ceann Hulavig" (Callanish IV) – stone circle
  • "Airigh nam Bidearan" (Callanish V) – stone alignment
  • "Cul a'Chleit" (Callanish VI) – stone circle
  • "Cnoc Dubh" (Callanish VII) – ancient settlement or "shieling" (stone dwelling used while tending cattle on summer pastures)
  • "Tursachan" (Callanish VIII) – unique semicircular monument at the edge of a sheer cliff on the nearby island of Great Bernera
  • "Na Dromannan" ("Druim Nan Eum") – Excavations in August 2003 revealed a collapsed 15-stone circle (with a smaller inner setting of 5 stones), on the nearby hilltop, overlooking Callanish, where the stones for the other monuments may also have been quarried
  • There are many other sites nearby; not all are now visible. There was, for instance, a timber circle 0.5 km south at Loch Roag

External links

Two-page description of the site at the first of these URLs :