Megalithic monuments are found in especially great number on the European
Atlantic fringe and in the British Isles.
Great Britain and Ireland , County Cork, Ireland complex, County Cork, Ireland There are approximately 1300 stone circles in Britain and Ireland. Experts disagree on whether the construction of megaliths in Britain developed independently or was imported from mainland Europe. A 2019 comprehensive radiocarbon dating study of megalithic structures across Europe and the British Isles concluded that construction techniques were spread to other communities via sea routes, starting from north-western France. Although stone circles are widely distributed across the island, Ireland has two main concentrations: in the
Cork/
Kerry area and in mid-
Ulster. The latter typically consist of a greater number of small stones, usually high, and are often found in upland areas and on sites that also contain a
stone alignment. The
Cork–Kerry stone circles tend to be more irregular in shape with larger but fewer and more widely-spaced
orthostats around the axial stone.
Continental Europe Examples can be found throughout Continental Europe, from the
Black Sea to
Brittany. Locations in France include several in Brittany (two on the island of
Er Lannic and two more suggested at
Carnac), several in the south of France on the
Causse de Blandas in the
Cevennes, in the
Pyrenees, and in the Alps (e.g. the
Petit Saint Bernard). One notable stone circle is in the Italian Alps. As early as 1579, scholars in Germany described large erect stone circles near
Ballenstedt. In 2001, a stone circle (
Beglik Tash) was discovered in Bulgaria near the Black Sea. There are several examples in the
Alentejo region of Portugal, the oldest and most complete being the
Almendres Cromlech near the regional capital of
Évora and within its municipality. Remains of many others consist only of the central
anta (as they are known in Portugal). This sometimes appears to have been used as an altar but more often as a central burial structure, originally surrounded by megaliths that show only sparsely survived erosion and human activities. These circles are also known as
harrespil in the
Basque country, where villagers call them
mairu-baratz or
jentil-baratz, meaning "pagan garden (cemetery)". They refer to
mythological giants of the pre-Christian era. No example has survived in a good state of preservation, but, like the Alentejo, the Basque Country is dotted with eroded and vandalized examples of many such structures.
Africa Ancient stone circles are found throughout the
Horn of Africa.
Booco in northeastern
Somalia contains a number of such old structures. Small stone circles here surround two enclosed platform monuments, which are set together. The circles of stone are believed to mark associated graves. At
Emba Derho in the
Ethiopian Highlands and
Eritrean Highlands, two kinds of megalithic circles are found. The first type consists of single stone circles, whereas the second type comprises an inner circle enclosed within a larger circle (i.e. double stone circles). . The
Senegambian stone circles are found on the western side of the continent. The individual groups are dated from 700 A.D. to 1350 A.D, and 1145 sites were mapped in a 1982 study. Unlike the European stone megaliths, stone circles in Japan were circular arrangements of stone settings inlaid in the ground. Each stone weighed between a few pounds to over 220 pounds. Both Japanese and European stone circles, however, shared similar purposes, including marking astrological alignments, seasonal ceremonies, burial rituals, and ancestral communications. == See also ==