Rollright stones - burial chamber, The Whispering Knights, Little Rollright, Long Compton, Warwickshire, England, UK, OX7 5QB

Rollright stones - burial chamber, The Whispering Knights, Little Rollright, Long Compton, Warwickshire, England, UK,  OX7 5QB Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Tony Smith / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

2JP9HTJ

File size:

52.7 MB (2.7 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

5183 x 3557 px | 43.9 x 30.1 cm | 17.3 x 11.9 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

31 July 2022

Location:

Little Rollright, Long Compton, Warwickshire, England, UK, OX7 5QB

More information:

The Whispering Knights is a 'portal dolmen' burial chamber that consists of four upright stones and a large fallen capstone. The so-called ‘portal’ facade is formed by three stones that look like a giant doorway facing down the hill and it was probably intended to be seen from that side. Originally there were two or three more uprights to support the capstone which would have been placed on top, possibly at a rakish angle, to form a table-like 'dolmen' structure. At one time it was believed to be part of a long barrow, but excavations in the 1980s suggested that it is more likely to have been free-standing and intended to impress. The very large pillar-like stone on the left of the portal is the largest of all the Rollright Stones, and with the capstone in place on top (as it was until the 18th century) the chamber would have been even more striking. It is estimated that using rollers, levers and sledges it may have taken over 60 people to move and erect the stones. It is thought that there would have been a low platform of small stones round the sides and back. By analogy with other such monuments, the Whispering Knights was probably one the earliest funerary monuments in Britain, perhaps built around 3, 800 BC and the c.2m square chamber would have contained the disarticulated bones of several individuals. Early Neolithic, Beaker and early Bronze Age pottery found in the immediate vicinity suggests that the tomb was venerated over many centuries and a piece of human bone washed out from the chamber was radiocarbon dated to c.1700BC. The monument got its name as part of the legend about the king and his army who were outwitted by a witch and turned to stone: because of the conspiratorial way in which the portal stones lean towards each other, the stones are said to be the treacherous knights conniving against the king, though others think they are praying. Intriguingly, although it looks as if the central slab of the portal should be supporting the pillars