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Henge
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==Origin and distribution== [[Image:Ring of Brodgar 3.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Ring of Brodgar]], [[Orkney]], is a possible area of origin for henges]] Efforts to delineate a direct lineage for the henge from earlier enclosures have not been conclusive. Their chronological overlap with older structures makes it difficult to classify them as a coherent tradition. They seem to take the concept of creating a space separate from the outside world one step further than the [[causewayed enclosure]], and they focus attention on an internal point. In some cases, the construction of the bank and ditch was a stage that followed other activity on the site. At [[Balfarg]], [[North Mains]], and [[Cairnpapple]], for example, earlier [[cremation]]s and deliberate smashing of pottery predate the enclosure. Concentrations of henges occur over much of Britain. [[Orkney]] (Cunliffe 2001) and [[Wessex]] (Burl 1969) have both been suggested as the original [[provenance]] of the monument type; however, others remain unconvinced (Barclay 2005). Unlike earlier enclosure monuments, henges were not usually built on hilltops but on low-lying ground, often close to watercourses and good agricultural land. Some scholars, such as the editors of the 1982 edition of the ''Penguin Dictionary of Archaeology'' (Bray and Trump, 1982), have claimed that henges are unique to the [[British Isles]]. They state that similar, much earlier, circles on the European continent, such as [[Goseck circle]] (which has no bank), and later ones such as [[Goloring]] are not proper "henges". But ''The Penguin Archaeological Guide'' (Bahn, 2001) does not comment on geographical locations for henges. [[Image:Wyke down henge ditch pits dorset.jpg|thumb|right|Excavated henge ditch on Wyke Down (Dorset). The ditch was originally dug as a [[causewayed enclosure]] and may therefore not be a henge.]] [[Julian Cope]], in ''The Megalithic European'',<ref>{{cite book|last=Cope|first=Julian|title=The Megalithic European: The 21st Century Traveller in Prehistoric Europe|publisher=Harper Collins|year=2004|isbn=978-0-00-713802-9|url=http://marketing.harpercollins.co.uk/Contents/Title/Pages/default.aspx?objId=24513|access-date=4 September 2009}}</ref> proposes that the henge was a regional development from the Europe-wide [[causewayed enclosure]]. He notes it appeared following a cultural upheaval in around 3000 BC, which inspired the peoples of Neolithic Europe to develop more independently. He notes the [[rondel enclosure]]s of [[Bavaria]]'s [[Isar Valley]], which according to investigations by the German archaeologist R. A. Maier, "drew comparisons with the henge monuments and causewayed enclosures of the British Isles." Although still with a multiple-causewayed ditch and entrances at cardinal points, the roundels are described by John Hodgson (2003) as not being positioned with defensive aims in mind. The largest, at Kothingeichendorf, appeared to be "midway between a henge and a causewayed enclosure". [[Alasdair Whittle]] (2005) also views the development of the henge as a regional variation within a European tradition that included a variety of ditched enclosures. He notes that henges and the [[grooved ware]] pottery often found at them are two examples of the British Neolithic not found on the Continent. [[Caroline Malone]] (2001) also says that henges were not built in the rest of Western Europe, but they developed from a broader tradition of enclosure to become "a phenomenon of the British Isles, a native tradition with sophisticated architecture and calendrical functions."
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