Stonehenge Celebration and Subversion

Andy Worthington

This innovative social history looks in detail at how the summer solstice celebrations at Stonehenge have brought together different aspects of British counter-culture to make the monument a ‘living temple’ and an icon of alternative Britain. The history of the celebrants and counter-cultural leaders is interwoven with the viewpoints of the land-owners, custodians and archaeologists who have generally attempted to impose order on the shifting patterns of these modern-day mythologies.

The story of the Stonehenge summer solstice celebrations begins with the Druid revival of the 18th century and the earliest public gatherings of the 19th and early 20th centuries. In the social upheavals of the 1960s and early 70s, these trailblazers were superseded by the Stonehenge Free Festival. This evolved from a small gathering to an anarchic free state the size of a small city, before its brutal suppression at the Battle of the Beanfield in 1985.

In the aftermath of the Beanfield, the author examines how the political and spiritual aspirations of the free festivals evolved into both the rave scene and the road protest movement, and how the prevailing trends in the counter-culture provided a fertile breeding ground for the development of new Druid groups, the growth of paganism in general, and the adoption of other sacred sites, in particular Stonehenge’s gargantuan neighbour at Avebury.

The account is brought up to date with the reopening of Stonehenge on the summer solstice in 2000, the unprecedented crowds drawn by the new access arrangements, and the latest source of conflict, centred on a bitterly-contested road improvement scheme.

“The strange events that swirled around Stonehenge in the last couple of decades the Festival, the Convoy, the annual summer solstice ritual of confrontation between forces of order and of disorder were so bizarre there needs to be record of them. In his wonderful and often funny book, Andy Worthington tells this, the oddest tale ever told about the most famous ancient place of them all.”

Christopher Chippindale, Reader in Archaeology at Cambridge University and author of Stonehenge Complete

Published by Alternative Albion, an imprint of Heart of Albion Press.

ISBN 1 872883 76 1. June 2004.

415 x 175 mm, 281 + xviii pages, 147 illustrations, paperback £14.95

http://www.hoap.co.uk/alternative.htm#SCAS

This entry was posted in .. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *