Maumbury Rings

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The interior of Maumbury Rings

Maumbury Rings are a Neolithic 'henge' earthwork in Dorset, to the south of Dorchester, which has been remodelled and reused over successive ages. The site is a large circular earthwork, 93 yards in diameter, with a single bank and an entrance to the north east.

The earthwork was modified during the Roman period: the Romans adapted it for use as an amphitheatre. The site was remodelled again during the Civil War when it was used as an artillery fort guarding the southern approach to Dorchester. The monument is now a public open space, and used for open-air concerts, festivals and re-enactments.

Description

Maumbury Rings is a roughly circular henge situated close to the centre of Dorchester.[1] It has an internal diameter of around 55 yards.[2] The bank has an average width of 13 feet, and is around 18 feet high internally and 13 feet high externally.[2] A bulge in the earthworks to the southwest marks the site of a gun emplacement built during the Civil War,[1] and the inner side of the bank was terraced on the east and west sides at this time.[2] There is no trace of the original internal ditch.[2]

Prehistory and history

Neolithic

The northern entrance to the Rings

Maumbury Rings were excavated by Harold St George Gray from 1908–1913.[2] The excavations showed that the site originated in the later Neolithic period.[2] The excavations revealed an internal ditch which comprised a series of deep shafts cut into the chalk. These number up to 45, and were up to 36 feet deep.[2] Eight shafts were fully excavated.[3] They contained various deposits including antler, animal and human bone, flints and carved chalk.[2]The latter represent human phalloi and may be evidence of a fertility cult among the builders,[4] or just crude jokes. A single Grooved ware pottery sherd was recovered from one pit, and a later Beaker sherd was recovered from the fill of another pit.[2] The henge had a single entrance on the north-east side. It is recorded that a large stone was discovered during cultivation in 1849 to the west of the entrance, but it was reburied and has not been seen since.[2]

Around a mile due east are the faint traces of a larger henge known as Mount Pleasant Henge,[5] and archaeology has revealed the presence of another Neolithic enclosure known as Flagstones near there.[6] In addition, when archaeologists were digging on the site of the Tudor Arcade/Waitrose development in the 1980s (around 875 yards north-east of Maumbury Rings) they discovered large timber postholes. The evidence suggests that they were part of a large Neolithic enclosure with a diameter of around 300 to 450 yards. Red markings, denoting sites of some of the timber posts, can be seen in the car park of Waitrose.[7]

Roman era

The western ramparts of the Ring

Maumbury Rings was remodelled in the Roman period: at this time it was adapted for use as an amphitheatre for the use of the citizens of the nearby Roman town of Durnovaria (Dorchester). The banks were lowered by around 10 feet with the material produced piled onto the banks.[3] The interior was modified by the excavation of an oval, level arena floor, and the cutting of seating into the scarp and bank which was revetted with either chalk or timber.[1] Chambers were cut into the bank to the south-west and one on each side of the centre.[1] Finds found during the excavations include an uninscribed British coin, Roman pottery, leg bones, coins, and a 2nd-century burial.[2] The amphitheatre may have been out of use by the mid-2nd century,[3] although objects found on the arena floor and elsewhere suggest activity in the 4th century.[1]

Civil War

The secondary entrance, on the southern end

Between 1642 and 1643 the henge was modified in response to the Civil War.[3] The site was used as an artillery fort by Parliamentarian supporters in order to guard the southern approach to Dorchester.[2] This involved the placing of a gun platform and a ramp on the southwest side, and the internal terrace was built.[2] An unfinished well near the northwest edge of the arena and finds of 160 lead pistol bullets on the east bank all date to this time, along with a ditch beyond the northern enclosure bank.[1]

Later use

The use of the Rings as an amphitheatre role was briefly revived in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, as a place of public execution. In 1685, at the close of the Monmouth Rebellion, Judge Jeffreys ordered eighty of the rebels to be executed here. In 1705 Mary Channing, a nineteen-year-old woman found guilty of poisoning her husband, was executed by strangulation and burning at the Rings.[8] Thomas Hardy used this event in his poem The Mock Wife and mentioned it in his 1886 novel The Mayor of Casterbridge, as well as recording some details of his research into the event in his personal writings.

By the later 18th century, the enclosure was being used as farmland.[1]

In 1846, the proposed alignment of the Southampton and Dorchester Railway was amended in order to protect the Rings.[9]

The site today

The monument is now a public open space, and used for open-air concerts, festivals and re-enactments. Finds from the excavations are in the Dorset County Museum.[3]

the Maumbury Rings viewed from northern end

Location

Outside links

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References