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A Guide to the Stone Circles of Cumbria Robert Farrah THIS attractive guide is the first overview of its kind to be published for many years and benefits from previously unpublished research. The guide will take the reader on an exciting journey of discovery into these enigmatic monuments and their incomparable landscapes so beloved by the Romantics. Robert Farrah's main interests are hill walking, mountaineering and prehistory, which have combined to provide an unique insight and understanding of these mysterious monuments - the stone circles. His special interest is archaeoastronomy and he published his first article on the subject The Megalithic Astronomy of Lundy in the early 1990s, the result of research with the late Professor Gerald S. Hawkins. His articles have contributed significant original research and have appeared in various journals worldwide. More locally, in 2002, he helped present an exhibition 'Stone Circles and Standing Stones of Eden' for Penrith Museum. He has lived in the Eden Valley since 1984 and is a member of the Eden Archaeological Action Committee and has acted as a guide to the stone circles for various local authorities. Reviews: In this, the first comprehensive gazetteer of Cumbrian stone circles to be published for many years, Robert Farrah reveals that these enigmatic places are not only the province of archaeology or the imagination. Stone circles are out there in the landscape to be visited and experienced first hand, and this guide is an invaluable resource for anyone wishing to make their own journeys to these remarkable monuments. Aaron Watson, 2006 Mixing evocative description, excellent photographs and antiquarian plates with objective detail, Robert Farrah has produced an attractive book on a subject not published in a single volume for 23 years. Long Meg and Her Daughters is the largest stone circle in Cumbria and the sixth largest in the country. This enigmatic disposition of rocks, 69 standing stones arranged in an approximate circle, has been a source of wonder to people throughout the ages, no doubt from the days that it was first assembled in Neolithic times... |
Winner of the Bill Rollinson Prize for Landscape & Tradition at the 2009 Lakeland Book of the Year Awards
ABOUT THE BOOK:
TO ORDER: To order one copy of this book, for delivery to a UK address only, with payment via Worldpay's secure credit card website, click * If you don't live in the UK, or if you wish to order several books, then please email books@hayloft.eu and your order will be dealt with personally. If you prefer to pay by cheque or to order by post or fax, then please print out and complete the order form on the order page. Reviews: The success of a display held in Penrith Museum a few years ago, is said to have been the inspiration for an attractive new book which provides a unique insight into Cumbria's most ancient monuments - stone circles, dating back some 6,000 years.... Castlerigg, near Keswick, is said to be 'the most visited' of Cumbria's circles and, also, one of the earliest, dating back to the late Neolithic period, around 3200BC.... The 166-page book is rich in illustrations, many of them in colour. John Hurst, Cumberland & Westmorland Herald, September 2008. |
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