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Today's Paper | May 05, 2024

Published 22 Jun, 2022 06:59am

Misty sunrise for summer solstice at Stonehenge

STONEHENGE: The sun was long overdue on Tuesday but when it finally appeared, faces lit up and arms rose as one to greet the summer solstice at Britain’s most famous prehistoric monument.

The sun was scheduled to come up on the longest day of the year at 4:49am but was shy in a sky as hazy as the minds of many of the midsummer revellers who spent the night at the sacred site.

Around 6,000 people gathered for the sunrise and sunset at 9:27pm, according to the site’s manager and police, during the first public summer solstice at Stonehenge since the coronavirus pandemic wreaked havoc in 2020.

Stonehenge was built in stages, from around 3,000 BC to 2,300 BC, and the standing stones are aligned with the movements of the sun.

“We might see it at about 10 o’clock!” joked Jade Tetlon, who made a spur-of-the-moment decision to come with a friend and his daughter for her first solstice at Stonehenge.

Surrounded by soft melodies from flutes, drums, birds singing and sheep bleating but also the trucks rumbling on the main road nearby, Tetlon, 35, immersed herself in the site’s unique atmosphere.

The smell of incense and cannabis floated in the air, despite a ban across the country and a sign at the site’s entrance.

Yoga in togas

At 5:08am, the sun finally appeared, serenaded by whistling and cheers but also joined by a collective rise of mobile phones in the air to immortalise the moment.

Two women wearing artificial garlands of flowers in their hair, opened and closed their arms to welcome the summer sun’s “new energy” which one of them, Joanna Willman, said was so strong at Stonehenge. A short distance away, a handful of men in togas performed yoga facing the sun, surrounded by the rubbish of the crowds.

Another group, including some with earphones, held hands in concentric circles while gently swaying before hugging each other, moved by the moment and smiling.

“Stonehenge is the most architecturally sophisticated prehistoric stone circle in the world,” according to Unesco, which classified it a world heritage site in 1986.

A theory emerged in the 17th century that Stonehenge was constructed by Celtic Druids but that has since been dismissed by historians. Nevertheless, modern druids today celebrate solstices and equinoxes at Stonehenge.

The ancient stone circle remains an enigma. Academics and other experts debate over the site’s purpose, with some arguing it was a place of worship while others believe it may have been used by ancient astronomers for observation.

Published in Dawn, June 22nd, 2022

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