The Full Wiki



More info on Devil's Arrows

Devil's Arrows: Wikis

  

Note: Many of our articles have direct quotes from sources you can cite, within the Wikipedia article! This article doesn't yet, but we're working on it! See more info or our list of citable articles.

Encyclopedia

Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 31, 2012 22:46 UTC (44 seconds ago)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Devil's Arrows
Devilsarrowsrow.jpg
Type: Standing Stones
Country: UK
County: North Yorkshire
Nearest Town: Harrogate
Nearest Village: Boroughbridge
OS grid reference: SE391665
Coordinates: 54°05′35″N 1°24′13″W / 54.092925°N 1.40368°W / 54.092925; -1.40368Coordinates: 54°05′35″N 1°24′13″W / 54.092925°N 1.40368°W / 54.092925; -1.40368
Condition (out of 5): 4
Access (out of 5): 4
References: Megalithic Portal
One of the Devil's Arrows.

The Devil's Arrows are three naturally-shaped stones or menhirs in an alignment erected near where the A1 road now crosses the River Ure at Boroughbridge in North Yorkshire, England (grid reference SE390666).

Erected in prehistoric times and distinctively grooved by millennia of rainfall, the tallest stone is 22 feet 6 inches in height making this the tallest menhir in the United Kingdom after the Rudston Monolith which is 25 feet tall.[1] The stones stand 150 feet from the A1 and it is thought that the alignment originally included up to five stones. One was apparently displaced during a failed 'treasure hunt' during the 1700s and later used as the base for a nearby bridge over a river. The stones are composed of millstone grit, the most likely source of which is Plumpton Rocks two miles south of Knaresborough and about nine miles from where the stones stand today.[2]

The outer stones are 200 and 370 feet away from the central stone and form an alignment that is almost straight, running NNW-SSE. It is thought that they may have been arranged to align with the southernmost summer moonrise. The stones are part of a wider religious complex on the Ure-Swale plateau which incorporates the Thornborough Henges.

The name comes from a legend, which goes back 1721, that says the Devil threw the stones, aiming at the next town of Aldborough. He stood on Howe Hill and shouted, "Borobrigg keep out o' way, for Aldborough town I will ding down!". However, the stones fell short and landed near Boroughbridge instead.[3]

External links

See also

References








Got something to say? Make a comment.
Your name
Your email address
Message
Please enter the solution to case below
70+12=