From Cornwall to Orkney, stone circles are scattered throughout the length and breadth of the British Isles. Their history stretches more than 2 millennia, varying from the earlier huge stone circles such as Castlerigg, Avebury and the Ring of Brodgar to the smaller and more regional circles that emerged after c.2,000 BC. Their remains continue to attract great amounts of visitors right up to the present day.
To learn more about these extraordinary prehistoric structures, I'm chatting with Timothy Darvill OBE, a professor from the Department of Archaeology and Anthropology at Bournemouth University and the author of Prehistoric Britain.
March of the 10,000
The Rise and Fall of Roman London
The Real King Arthur: Ambrosius Aurelianus
Top Five Dinosaurs
Karnak: Egypt's Greatest Temple
Art of Neolithic Orkney
Neanderthals
Elizabeth II: The Making of The Queen
Treasures of Tutankhamun
Rise of the Persians
Prosthetics in Antiquity
Ancient Americas: the South American Stonehenge
Ancient Americas: The Moche
Ancient Americas: The Olmec Heads
The Origins of Jerusalem
Ancient Americas: Teotihuacan
The Oracle of Delphi
Ancient Americas: Debunking The Maya Apocalypse
Hannibal vs Rome: Hannibal's Greatest Victory
Hannibal vs Rome: The Road to Cannae
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Not Just the Tudors
Gone Medieval
American History Hit
After Dark: Myths, Misdeeds & the Paranormal
The History of Byzantium