Thank you for the information. I appreciate it very much. Took our three children to Castlerigg yesterday, and had to tear them away - what a beautiful place.
cheers man, love this place. Will enjoy watching this. I will be there again in the Spring. we camp at Castlerigg farm. a smashing campsite, recommend.
Castlerigg is still in my top 5 sites I'm yet to visit! Thinking about the proximity to Langdale, do any of the stones have any evidence of axe polishing on them?
I wonder if Castlerigg is one of the stone circles built as a marketplace rather than a religious site, or built to be both as needed. The area certainly fits as a centralized location of trade routes for that time period. That might explain the rectangular area as well - kind of like a "royal box" where the local chieftain, laird, or king would sit for the people to have an audience with them, maybe even a station for soldiers to keep the peace. I'd love to see what GPR or Lidar could see underneath the circle.
We have learnt that Castle Rigg Stone Circle could have once been a market place so it is interesting to see that you have this similar point of view too. I'm sure there's many a tale that could be unearthed and said about the wonders of the stone circle for sure. Very interesting. 😀
@@Archaeos0up neolithic inhabitants and who might they be? Find out about the Khasi people who are the only tribe that claims and are still building monoliths to this day, wherever they settled, monoliths were build and these were one of them. And maybe this could be your next content on this channel. ;)
Thank you for the information. I appreciate it very much. Took our three children to Castlerigg yesterday, and had to tear them away - what a beautiful place.
What were they thinking?..... such a good mystery! Thank you for the tour👍
Wonderful video. Thank you for sharing.
cheers man, love this place. Will enjoy watching this. I will be there again in the Spring. we camp at Castlerigg farm. a smashing campsite, recommend.
Me and my friends visited Long Meg and Castlerigg in July last year. I loved both sites. it was a really cool experience
Castlerigg is still in my top 5 sites I'm yet to visit! Thinking about the proximity to Langdale, do any of the stones have any evidence of axe polishing on them?
Totally love the way you pronounce schedule. 😍
Amazing different sizes of stones
One of my fave' stone circles & a very fine one it is too.
Skara Brae in Scotland is like 7000 years old.
Yes.
The Rigg - tis a joy. Magic beyond knowledge...
You can check out in khasi we called it mawbyna in English Stonehenge.
I wonder if Castlerigg is one of the stone circles built as a marketplace rather than a religious site, or built to be both as needed. The area certainly fits as a centralized location of trade routes for that time period. That might explain the rectangular area as well - kind of like a "royal box" where the local chieftain, laird, or king would sit for the people to have an audience with them, maybe even a station for soldiers to keep the peace. I'd love to see what GPR or Lidar could see underneath the circle.
We have learnt that Castle Rigg Stone Circle could have once been a market place so it is interesting to see that you have this similar point of view too. I'm sure there's many a tale that could be unearthed and said about the wonders of the stone circle for sure. Very interesting. 😀
I honestly think the most impressive stone circle in the UK is the calanais standing stones.
Dónde puedo buscar esta información en español
Why no further archaeological investigation?
It's a khasi tribe who build this. Its from meghalaya, india
Phi la sngew long tikna bha?
yes good vid i spent the 21st of june there last year think i may hav 2 go back this year happy days
ridge and furrow in evidence
Instead of finding out why they made the circle, you should find out who?
Late Neolithic inhabitants of what is now Cumbria built Castlerigg :)
@@Archaeos0up neolithic inhabitants and who might they be? Find out about the Khasi people who are the only tribe that claims and are still building monoliths to this day, wherever they settled, monoliths were build and these were one of them. And maybe this could be your next content on this channel. ;)
@@knock01 👍
its seem like the same that khasi tribe called mawbynna that our forefather built it
Interesting. Evidence?
@@Archaeos0up where can I send you the evidence?
@@knock01 Email available on the channel home page.
It's all make by khasi worrier.