The name of the site, "Nine Ladies," reflects a broader tendency in British folklore to identify such stones as women, a phenomenon also seen at sites called the "Nine Maidens" in
Devon and
Cornwall.
18th to 20th centuries The antiquarian
Hayman Rooke noted the existence of the Nine Ladies, which he considered "a Druid temple," in a 1782 article about the heritage of Stanton Moor published in the journal
Archaeologia. The idea that Britain's prehistoric monuments had been built by the
druids, ritual specialists present in parts of
Iron Age Western Europe, was one that had attracted broad support among antiquarians over the course of the 17th and 18th centuries, having been adopted by influential writers such as
John Aubrey and
William Stukeley. This idea was repeated by the antiquarian
Thomas Bateman in his 1848 book
Vestiges of the Antiquities of Derbyshire, where he described the Nine Ladies as a "druidical circle." He included an illustration of the monument, in which the surrounding landscape had been embellished. In 1883, the archaeologist
Augustus Pitt-Rivers visited the Nine Ladies, making a drawn record of it and measuring the dimensions of most of the stones. He recorded his belief that the centre of the circle had been dug into. The Nine Ladies were among the 28 archetypal monuments in England and Wales included in Pitt-Rivers' Schedule to the first Ancient Monuments Protection Act, which became law in 1882. It was taken into state care the following year. The Nine Ladies were subsequently referenced in J. Ward's contribution on "Early Man" in the
Victoria County History volume on Derbyshire, published in 1905, where he noted that the site was "well known." A description of the site then appeared in W. J. Andrew's chapter on "The Prehistoric Stone Circles of Derbyshire" in the Reverend J. Charles Cox's 1907 edited volume
Memorials of Old Derbyshire. By the 1870s, a stone wall had been erected around the circle, with another around the King Stone. Guilbert and Garton noted that "for decades, they must have been as familiar a feature of Stanton Moor as the orthostats themselves." These walls were in a state of disrepair by the 1980s and were demolished in 1985. In 1977, a tenth stone was unearthed at the east of the circle, in an area where prior commentators had suggested a stone had once stood. This stone was initially exposed by a combination of soil erosion and the drought of 1976, before being fully unearthed by persons unknown in August 1977. The local archaeologist J. P. Heathcote reported on this development in the
Derbyshire Archaeological Journal.
Late 20th and early 21st centuries In 2010, it was noted that the Nine Ladies were one of the most visited prehistoric sites in the Peak District. Among those visitors were
modern Pagans, whose presence there had been recorded from at least 1980. In the latter part of the 20th century, the site became well known among Britain's modern Pagan community, especially those in the Midlands. For many Pagans, Nine Ladies was regarded as a
sacred site, with Stanton Moor often seen as a sacred landscape. They regarded the stone circle as a place to engage with spirits, deities, or ancestors, with some believing it was on a
ley line or spirit-track. Different types of Pagan have conducted rituals there, including
Wiccans,
Druids, and
Heathens. These rituals were sometimes designed to celebrate the seasons in accordance with the
Wheel of the Year, although also for special events, such as wedding ceremonies known as
handfastings. The
summer solstice has become a popular time for visitors, especially Pagans; hundreds of people assembled at the Nine Ladies for the summer solstice in 2020, attracting press attention given that this contravened government advice for preventing the spread of
the COVID-19 virus. Pagan rituals at the site have involved chanting, singing, dancing, as well as the pouring of libations. Pagans also sometimes leave material traces, such as tea lights, flowers, or coins, around the monument. Material found buried in the circle in modern times has included crystals, polished pebbles, a plastic comb, and a cigarette packet. Human ashes have also been scattered at the Nine Ladies. An oak tree near to the circle has been used as a
rag tree, with visitors affixing rags, ribbons, and a range of other material to it; they have also etched carvings into a natural rocky outcrop nearby. Much of this activity contributed to the erosion of the ground at the site, especially where fires had been lit within the circle – sometimes close to the orthostats themselves, although mainly in the centre, where a hollow had formed through the repeated lighting of fires. In many cases, visitors touched and sat on the stones, contributing to their erosion. At the summer solstice in 1990, revels at the site led to the King Stone being broken off at ground level; it was propped up by additional stones before being repaired in 2000. In response to the degradation of the site, in the 1980s English Heritage set about measures to preserve it. First, they removed the dilapidated 19th century walls in 1985, after which they commissioned a contractor to undertake cosmetic changes by filling in patches in the ground around the site. In 1987, the contractor used quarry waste to do this, compromising the archaeological integrity of the site; the added material was then removed under the supervision of archaeologists. Aware that erosion and degradation was likely to continue at the Nine Ladies, in 1988 English Heritage hired
Trent and Peak Archaeological Trust to conduct surveys of the site. The Trust oversaw a project of spot-height surveys at intervals over nine and a half years, in May 1988, January 1990, November 1990, November 1991, November 1992, August 1994 and November 1997. Concerned at the growing damage, English Heritage organised an
excavation of the site in the autumn of 2000. Six trenches were opened, one directly linking to the stone circle, another to the King Stone, and the other four to examine anomalies identified in a
geophysical survey. The excavations only recovered a single find believed to be of probable prehistoric origin, a calcined flint from a retouched artefact, perhaps a long side-scraper or knife. This was found in a
disturbance near the King Stone probably caused by animal burrowing. During the excavation, the Nine Ladies were decorated with a
pentacle, with Jenny Blain and Robert Wallis suggesting that this was produced by Pagans either to protect the land or to bless the excavation.
Nine Ladies Anti-Quarry Campaign Parts of Stanton Moor have been used for quarrying and at Nine Ladies, the noise from the quarrying operation at Dale View Quarry is audible. In 1999, a quarrying company launched an application to re-open two abandoned quarries nearby, at Lees Cross and Endcliffe, with the intent of extracting 2.18 million tonnes of block sandstone over a 42-year period. This quarrying would prove financially lucrative to the landowner, Lord Edward Mannes of
Haddon Estates; in 2004, anti-quarrying protesters estimated that he could receive around £100 million from the operation. Concerns were raised by local people, heritage management, and Pagans that quarrying would increase
sound pollution, destroy wildlife habitat, and damage the archaeologically sensitive environment of the moor. In October 1999, five anti-quarry campaigners established a protest camp near the site, adopting the name of the Nine Ladies Anti-Quarry Campaign. By 2000, there were around 20 to 30 protesters at the camp at any one time, a population that sometimes temporarily increased in response to rumours that the camp was to be forcibly disbanded by the authorities. In both 2003 and 2005, unsuccessful attempts were made to evict the protesters using planning regulations. Views of the protest camp among the local settled community were mixed; some supported the protesters and brought them food, while others regarded them as a nuisance and wished to see the new quarrying projects go ahead. Although not all of the protesters were Pagan, according to Blain and Wallis the region's Pagan community began "claiming the conflict as theirs". Amid the threats caused by quarrying, the Nine Ladies' popularity as a ritual site increased among Pagans. In September 2001, many Pagans from
Birmingham, accompanied by a Druid group from
Dorset and the prominent Druid activist
King Arthur Pendragon, visited the stone circle and conducted a ritual to "raise energy" so as to "protect the stones." Others, associated with a group called the Dragon Network, placed images of the "Dragon bind-rune" near the site in an attempt to protect it from the quarrying. In 2004 the
High Court classified the two quarries as dormant. There was an appeal against the decision, but the classification was upheld in June 2005. This meant that the quarries could not re-open until the Peak District National Park Authority agreed on a set of working conditions for them. In 2008 permission to quarry near the circle was finally revoked. In 2010, the protest camp disbanded. ==References==