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AVEBURY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 52 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AVEBURY  , a

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village in the
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Devizes
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parliamentary division of Wiltshire, England, on the
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river Kennet, 8 m. by road from Marlborough . The
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fine church of St James contains an early font with Norman
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carving, a rich Norman doorway, a painted reredos, and a beautiful old roodstone in good preservation . Avebury House is Elizabethan, with a curious stone dovecot . The village has encroached upon the remains of a huge stone circle (not quite circular), surrounded by a ditch and rampart of earth, and once approached by two avenues of monoliths . Within the larger circle were two smaller ones, placed not in the axis of the
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great one but on its north-eastern side, each of which consisted of a double concentric ring of stones; the centre being in one case a menhir or pillar, in the other a dolmen or tablestone resting on two uprights . Few traces remain, as the monoliths have been largely broken up for
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building purposes . The circle is the largest specimen of
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primitive stone monuments in Britain, measuring on the
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average 1200 ft. in diameter . The stones are all the native Sarsens which occur everywhere in the
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district, and show no evidence of having been hewn . Those still remaining vary in
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size from 5 to 20 ft. in height above ground, and from 3 to 12 ft. in breadth . As in the case of Stonehenge,the purpose for which the Avebury monument was erected has been the source of much difference of opinion among antiquaries, Dr Stukely (Stonehenge a Temple restored to the
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British Druids, 1740) regarding it as a Druidical temple, while Fergusson (Rude Stone Monuments, 1872) believed that it, as well as Silbury Hill, marks the site of the graves of those who fell in the last Arthurian
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battle at Badon Hill (A.D . 520) . The majority of antiquaries, however, see no reason for dissociating its
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chronological horizon from that of the numerous other analogous monuments found in Great Britain, many of which have been shown to be
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burial places of the
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Bronze Age .

Excavations were carried out here in 1908, but without throwing any important new

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light on the monument . There are many barrows on the neighbouring
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downs, besides traces of a double oval of monoliths on Hackpen hill, and the huge
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mound of Silbury Hill . Waden Hill, to the south, has been, like Badbury, identified with Badon Hill, which was the traditional scene of the twelfth and last great battle of King Arthur in 520 . The
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Roman road from Winchester to Bath skirts the south side of Silbury Hill . At the time of the Domesday Survey, the church of Avebury (Avreberie, Abury), with two hides attached, was held in chief by Rainbold, a priest, and was bestowed by Henry III. on the abbot and monks of Cirencester, who continued to hold it until the reign of Henry VIII . The
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manor of Avebury was granted in the reign of Henry I. to the
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Benedictine monks of St George of Boucherville in
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Normandy, and a cell from that abbey was subsequently established here . In consequence of the war with France in the reign of
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Edward III., this manor was annexed by the
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crown, and was conferred on the newly founded college of New College, Oxford, together with all the possessions, spiritual and temporal, of the priory .

End of Article: AVEBURY
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1ST BARON JOHN LUBBOCK AVEBURY (1834– )

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