Iron Age and Roman periods During the
British Iron Age, it appears that the Avebury monument had ceased to be used for its original purpose, and was instead largely ignored, with little archaeological evidence that many people visited the site at this time. Archaeologist
Aubrey Burl believed that the Iron Age Britons living in the region would not have known when, why or by whom the monument had been constructed, perhaps having some vague understanding that it had been built by an earlier society or considering it to be the dwelling of a supernatural entity. In 43 AD, the
Roman Empire invaded southern Britain, making alliances with certain local monarchs and subsuming the Britons under their own political control. Southern and central Britain would remain a part of the Empire until the early 5th century, in a period now known as
Roman Britain or the Roman Iron Age. It was during this Roman period that tourists came from the nearby towns of
Cunetio,
Durocornovium and the villas and farms around
Devizes and visited Avebury and its surrounding prehistoric monuments via a newly constructed road.
Early Mediaeval period In the
Early Middle Ages, which began in the 5th century, following the collapse of Roman rule,
Anglo-Saxon tribes from continental Europe
migrated to southern Britain, where they may have come into conflict with the Britons already settled there. Aubrey Burl suggested the possibility that a small group of British warriors may have used Avebury as a fortified site to defend themselves from Anglo-Saxon attack. He gained this idea from etymological evidence, suggesting that the site may have been called
weala-dic, meaning "moat of the Britons", in
Old English, the language of the Anglo-Saxons. The early Anglo-Saxon settlers followed
their own pagan religion which venerated a selection of deities, the most notable of whom were apparently
Woden and
Thunor. It is known from etymological sources that they associated many prehistoric sites in the Wiltshire area with their gods, for instance within a ten-mile of radius of Avebury there are four sites that were apparently named after Woden:
Wansdyke ("Wodin's ditch"),
Wodin's Barrow, Waden Hill ("Wodin's Hill)" and perhaps Wanborough (also "Woden's Hill"). It is not known if they placed any special religious associations with the Avebury monument, but it remains possible. Only a few farmers appeared to have inhabited the area at the time, and they left the Avebury monument largely untouched. At some point in the early 14th century, villagers began to demolish the monument by pulling down the large standing stones and burying them in ready-dug pits at the side, presumably because they were seen as having been erected by the Devil and thereby being in opposition to the village's Christian beliefs. Although it is unknown how this situation came about, archaeologist Aubrey Burl suggests that it might have been at the prompting of the local Christian priest, with the likely contenders being either Thomas Mayn (who served in the village from 1298 to 1319), or John de Hoby (who served from 1319 to 1324). Archaeologists found
a man's body under one of the toppled stones in 1938. He had been carrying a leather pouch, in which were three silver coins dated to around 1320–25, as well as a pair of iron scissors and a lancet. From these latter two items, the archaeologists surmised that he had probably been a travelling
barber-surgeon who journeyed between market towns offering his services. It appears that the death of the barber-surgeon prevented the locals from pulling down further stones, perhaps fearing that it had in some way been retribution for toppling them in the first place, enacted by a
vengeful spirit or even the Devil himself. The event appears to have left a significant influence on the minds of the local villagers, for records show that in the 18th and 19th centuries there were still legends being told in the community about a man being crushed by a falling stone.
Early Modern period It was in the
Early modern period that Avebury was first recognised as an
antiquity that warranted investigation. Around 1541,
John Leland, the librarian and chaplain to King
Henry VIII travelled through Wiltshire and made note of the existence of Avebury and its neighbouring prehistoric monuments. Despite this, Avebury remained relatively unknown to anyone but locals and when the antiquarian
William Camden published his Latin language guide to British antiquities,
Britannia, in 1586, he made no mention of it. He rectified this for his English language version in 1610, but even in this he only included a fleeting reference to the monument at "Abury", believing it to have been "an old camp". In 1634, it was once more referenced, this time in
Sir John Harington's notes to the
Orlando Furioso opera; Hearing of Avebury and taking an interest in it,
King Charles II commanded Aubrey to come to him and describe the site, which he did in July 1663. The two subsequently travelled to visit it together on the monarch's trip to
Bath, Somerset, a fortnight later, and the site further captivated the king's interest, who commanded Aubrey to dig underneath the stones in search of any human burials. Aubrey, however, never undertook the king's order. In the latter part of the 17th and then the 18th centuries, destruction at Avebury reached its peak, possibly influenced by the rise of
Puritanism in the village, a fundamentalist form of
Protestant Christianity that vehemently denounced things considered to be "pagan", which would have included pre-Christian monuments like Avebury. The majority of the standing stones that had been a part of the monument for thousands of years were smashed up to be used as building material for the local area. This was achieved by lighting a fire to heat the sarsen, then pouring cold water on it to create weaknesses in the rock, and finally smashing at the
fire-cracked rock with a
sledgehammer. In 1719, the antiquarian
William Stukeley visited the site, where he witnessed the destruction being undertaken by the local people. Between then and 1724 he visited the village and its monument six times, sometimes staying for two or three weeks at the Catherine Wheel Inn. In this time, he made meticulous plans of the site, considering it to be a "British Temple", and believing it to having been fashioned by the
druids, the Iron Age priests of north-western Europe, in the year 1859 BC. He developed the idea that the two Inner Circles were a temple to the moon and to the sun, respectively, and eventually came to believe that Avebury and its surrounding monuments were a landscaped portrayal of the
Trinity, thereby backing up his erroneous ideas that the ancient druids had been followers of a religion very much like Christianity. Stukeley was disgusted by the destruction of the sarsen stones in the monument, and named those local farmers and builders who were responsible. He remarked that "this stupendous fabric, which for some thousands of years, had brav'd the continual assaults of weather, and by the nature of it, when left to itself, like the
pyramids of
Egypt, would have lasted as long as the
globe, hath fallen a sacrifice to the wretched ignorance and avarice of a little village unluckily plac'd within it." Stukeley published his findings and theories in a book,
Abury, a Temple of the British Druids (1743), in which he intentionally falsified some of the measurements he had made of the site to better fit his theories about its design and purpose. Meanwhile, the Reverend Thomas Twining had also published a book about the monument,
Avebury in Wiltshire, the Remains of a Roman Work, which had been published in 1723. Whereas Stukeley claimed that Avebury and related prehistoric monuments were the creations of the druids, Twining thought that they had been constructed by the later Romans, justifying his conclusion on the fact that Roman writers like
Julius Caesar and
Tacitus had not referred to stone circles when discussing the Iron Age Britons, whereas Late Mediaeval historians like
Geoffrey of Monmouth and
Henry of Huntingdon had described these megaliths in their works, and that such monuments must have therefore been constructed between the two sets of accounts.
Victorian period and early 20th century By the beginning of the
Victorian era in 1837, the majority of Neolithic standing stones at Avebury had gone, having been either buried by pious locals in the 14th century or broken up for building materials in the 17th and 18th. Meanwhile, the population of Avebury village was rapidly increasing, leading to further housing being built inside the henge. In the 1870s, to prevent further construction on the site, the wealthy politician and archaeologist
Sir John Lubbock (later created
Baron Avebury) purchased much of the available land in the monument, and encouraged other buyers to build their houses outside rather than within the henge. Archaeologist
Alexander Keiller developed an interest in Avebury and West Kennet Avenue while conducting excavations at nearby Windmill Hill. Keiller decided that the best way to preserve Avebury was to purchase it in its entirety. Keiller was heir to the
James Keiller and Son marmalade business and was able to use his wealth to acquire much of the site between 1924 and 1939.
Post World War II Keiller sold some of his property to the
National Trust in 1943, and they went on to acquire further farmland in the area. The National Trust had a policy to demolish houses within the circle as they fell vacant, but by 1976, those remaining were allowed to stand. The question of access to the site at certain times of the year has been controversial and the National Trust, who steward and protect the site, have held discussions with a number of groups. The National Trust have discouraged
commercialism around the site, preventing many souvenir shops from opening up in an attempt to keep the area free from the "customary gaudiness that infiltrates most famous places" in the United Kingdom. Two shops have been opened in the village catering to the tourist market, one of which is the National Trust's own shop. The other, known as The Henge Shop, focuses on selling
New Age paraphernalia and books. By the late 1970s the site was being visited by around a quarter of a million visitors annually. On 1 April 2014, as part of an
April Fools' Day prank, the
National Trust claimed through social media and a press release that their rangers were moving one of the stones in order to realign the circle with
British Summer Time. The story was picked up by local media and
The Guardians "Best of the Web". == Contemporary Paganism and the New Age movement ==