Featured: Current Archaeology Book of the Year 2019!

Current Archaeology Book of the Year 2019!

Random Image


Wayland's Smithy

Art as Metaphor: The Prehistoric Rock-art of Britain

Art as Metaphor: The Prehistoric Rock-art of Britain

Who's Online

There are currently, 215 guests and 0 members online.

You are a guest. To join in, please register for free by clicking here

Sponsors

<< Our Photo Pages >> Devils Quoits - Stone Circle in England in Oxfordshire

Submitted by Celia_Haddon on Thursday, 03 August 2023  Page Views: 72878

Neolithic and Bronze AgeSite Name: Devils Quoits Alternative Name: Devil's Quoits
Country: England County: Oxfordshire Type: Stone Circle
Nearest Town: Oxford  Nearest Village: Stanton Harcourt
Map Ref: SP41120476  Landranger Map Number: 164
Latitude: 51.740043N  Longitude: 1.405884W
Condition:
5Perfect
4Almost Perfect
3Reasonable but with some damage
2Ruined but still recognisable as an ancient site
1Pretty much destroyed, possibly visible as crop marks
0No data.
-1Completely destroyed
5 Ambience:
5Superb
4Good
3Ordinary
2Not Good
1Awful
0No data.
3 Access:
5Can be driven to, probably with disabled access
4Short walk on a footpath
3Requiring a bit more of a walk
2A long walk
1In the middle of nowhere, a nightmare to find
0No data.
3 Accuracy:
5co-ordinates taken by GPS or official recorded co-ordinates
4co-ordinates scaled from a detailed map
3co-ordinates scaled from a bad map
2co-ordinates of the nearest village
1co-ordinates of the nearest town
0no data
5

Internal Links:
External Links:

I have visited· I would like to visit

woodini254 Nype X-Ice VJNewcomb ScottHK radrad schlemba whese001 jimstone Geojazz Brian_Eyes rrmoser cappy Swilliams would like to visit

NDM visited on 1st Feb 2023 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 2 Access: 4

Phillwhite visited on 16th Sep 2021 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 4 Restored circle and Henge but fantastic site.

Catrinm visited on 10th Nov 2019 - their rating: Cond: 2 Amb: 3 Access: 4 Although restored well done and still worth a trip if youre passing. It would be good if smeone on here identified the originals though its pretty obvious on colour and closer inspection. Still be good to know if they were in situ

Harmudge visited on 26th May 2019 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 4

NickyD visited on 16th Nov 2015 - their rating: Cond: 5 Amb: 3 Access: 3

graemefield visited on 5th Dec 2012 - their rating: Cond: 5 Amb: 4 Access: 4

StoneLee visited on 8th Sep 2012 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 3 Access: 4

MrG visited on 2nd Apr 2011 - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 4 Access: 3 The ambience is good as long as you ignore the fact the site is next to a giant rubbish dump

Richard13 visited on 1st Jul 2009 - their rating: Cond: 5 Amb: 3 Access: 4 An impressive circle-henge, this site is almost a total restoration. A few stones survived the plough until the early 20th century, when they were buried to make room for an airfield. This is turn became a quarry and a landfill site so that the site exists at all is something for which we should be very grateful! It was restored in the early 21st century by re-erecting the remaining stones and replacing others, and restoring the bank and ditch. When I first visited in 2009 the site still seemed quite raw and exposed to the surrounding industry, but now overlooking a lake. Since then the surrounding trees have grown and matured and the old landfill areas have been better landscaped, making for a much improved ambience although there is still some activity around the landfill. However it is a fine place to visit now (May 2020) and as the landscape continues to mature it will only continue to improve.

coin visited - their rating: Cond: 3 Amb: 3 Access: 3 A strange site accessed by walking through an abandoned airfield base and then next to a now covered landfill site. The circle itself is very impressive but when I visited there was a lot of damage being done by rabbits.

Lazulilou visited - their rating: Cond: -1 Amb: 1 Access: 3 Replica of destroyed stone circle. Stones are created from concrete and the nearby rubbish dump and polluted ground is unsightly. Worth a visit as it's a strange place

TwinFlamesKiss visited - their rating: Cond: 4 Amb: 3 Access: 4 surrounded on 2 sides by a covered over rubbish tip is the down side. The other side it a lovely lake. Lots of overgrowing weeds when we visited, but that was at the end of the lock down. Unable to access via Route 2. A new housing estate has been built in between the cemetery and circle.

Humbucker neolithique02 PAB Bladup h_fenton have visited here

Average ratings for this site from all visit loggers: Condition: 3.58 Ambience: 3.08 Access: 3.67

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Bladup : A photo from 1882 showing the largest stone that was still standing before WW2 and the photographer Henry Taunt (Vote or comment on this photo)
Fully restored Stone Circle in Oxfordshire. The site is believed to be between 4000 and 5000 years old, and is a Scheduled Ancient Monument. The Quoits were restored between 2002 and 2008, with stones which had been knocked over or had fallen over being re-uprighted, and the surrouding earthworks re-built.

Access: Hamish Fenton writes: you can visit pretty much any time you want depending on where you park your vehicle. There are currently no signs saying "This way to the Devils Quoits".

Route 1. (c.450 metres from the car). Just outside Stanton Harcourt of the B4449 a "Recycling Centre" is signposted if you follow the signs to it, then continue just past it you will see a small parking area on your left next to the lake (almost opposite a weighbridge), I think this is where you are supposed to park. the parking area is at the southern end of the lake, there is a gravel path with a wire fence on either side leading off around the lake from the corner of the parking area, follow this path and it will take you around the lake to the Devils Quoits, there are some newly planted trees that you will walk past, when the trees on your right finish, turn sharply around the end of the trees and walk up the slope, you should be at the entrance to the Devils Quoits, there is an information board here.
note: the road to the recycling centre is gated and will be locked when the recycling centre is shut.

Route 2. (1100metres from the car) Go southwards out of Stanton Harcourt immediately as you leave the village there is a footpath sign on your right, continue a short distance along the road there is a cemetery on your left with some parking outside (also some parking on the other side of the road) park your car here. follow the footpath you just saw though the gate and follow the concrete roadway straight until it ends, at the end of the roadway there is a big fence with a path through it and the trackway bears round to the right, follow the trackway for a few metres and there is a stile with a 'permissive footpath' arrow, taker this route it will lead you to the lake, then walk southwards (to your left) down the side of the lake and you will come to the Devils Quoits.

If you walk in from Stanton Harcourt you could potentially visit pretty much anytime you like, there were plenty of people walking their dogs around the henge.

The rabbits are having a great time burrowing in the ditches and banks.

Description of the site prior to restoration, by Celia Haddon:
This is the site near Stanton Harcourt on land worked by Hanson Waste Management belonging to All Souls. Nothing much to see - a largish mound (landscaping thanks to Hanson rather than nature, I suspect), a vague outline of a henge, one huge stone on its side, two other big ones half buried, and some large boulders carefully preserved by the waste people, which are stacked up in case they might be needed for reconstruction. Group visits are possible, but by appointment only.

Note: Top photo is from 1882 showing the largest stone and the photographer Henry Taunt. This was the only stone still standing before WW2, when it was buried. More archive photos on our page
You may be viewing yesterday's version of this page. To see the most up to date information please register for a free account.


Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by h_fenton : The Devils Quoits, viewed from the south east. Kite Aerial Photograph 13 March 2011 (4 comments - Vote or comment on this photo)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by h_fenton : The Devils Quoits, viewed from the north. Kite Aerial Photograph 13 March 2011 (Vote or comment on this photo)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by h_fenton : The Devils Quoits 13 March 2011 (Vote or comment on this photo)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by TimPrevett : A really quality rebuild. Pick the right time to visit and it'll be good. The Devil's Quoits - a restored stone circle and henge in-situ. Quite how this escaped my radar for over a decade until the last month escapes me. So, a varied route across country on midsummer solstice-eve took me to this quite magnificent rebuild. The adjacent landfill tip is now moved so that it's more earth-intrusive o... (Vote or comment on this photo)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by h_fenton : One of the larger stones at the Devils Quoits. 13 March 2011 (Vote or comment on this photo)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by baz : The Devils Quoits (2 comments)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Richard13 : The Devil's Quoits, seen in May 2020

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Humbucker : Visited The Devils Quoits again the week before last. Love the way the newer stones glow in the late afternoon sun! (1 comment)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by NickyD : IMG_3809 The whole circle in sunshine (NickyD) Image copyright: stonesearcher, hosted on Flickr and displayed under the terms of their API.

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by pab : Panoramic view - a complete surprise after the walk along the landfill site fence! Photo, 12 March 2014 (1 comment)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Bladup : The Devils Quoits Circle Henge.

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by liam : To the SE, this stone outlies the circle. Clive Ruggles advised the excavators it had no astronomical significance.

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Bladup : A Bicycle excursion to the Devils Quoits, 1910, Photo by A.D. Passmore

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Catrinm : One of the original stones at Devils Quoits (think so anyway)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Catrinm : Original stone

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Catrinm : 1940 image

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Andy B : Devil's Quoits with conglomorate outcrop in the foreground 24th Oct 2018

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by TimPrevett : Peeping over the henge bank and ditch to the stone circle. I thought this a magnificent visit and site. The Devil's Quoits - a restored stone circle and henge in-situ. Quite how this escaped my radar for over a decade until the last month escapes me. So, a varied route across country on midsummer solstice-eve took me to this quite magnificent rebuild. The adjacent landfill tip is now moved so th... (1 comment)

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by TimPrevett : So many wild flowers. The Devil's Quoits - a restored stone circle and henge in-situ. Quite how this escaped my radar for over a decade until the last month escapes me. So, a varied route across country on midsummer solstice-eve took me to this quite magnificent rebuild. The adjacent landfill tip is now moved so that it's more earth-intrusive operations are out of sight, the mound is greening ov...

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by neolithique02 : Devil's Quoits - Image copyright: Néolithique02, hosted on Flickr and displayed under the terms of their API.

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Bladup : Devils Quoits henge.

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Bladup

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by Bladup

Devils Quoits
Devils Quoits submitted by graemefield : Sunrise at the Devils Quoits, 0850am 05th December 2012

These are just the first 25 photos of Devils Quoits. If you log in with a free user account you will be able to see our entire collection.

Do not use the above information on other web sites or publications without permission of the contributor.
Click here to see more info for this site

Nearby sites

Click here to view sites on an interactive OS map

Key: Red: member's photo, Blue: 3rd party photo, Yellow: other image, Green: no photo - please go there and take one, Grey: site destroyed

Download sites to:
KML (Google Earth)
GPX (GPS waypoints)
CSV (Garmin/Navman)
CSV (Excel)

To unlock full downloads you need to sign up as a Contributory Member. Otherwise downloads are limited to 50 sites.


Turn off the page maps and other distractions

Nearby sites listing. In the following links * = Image available
 962m NW 312° Gravelly Guy Timber Circle (SP404054)
 1.0km NNE 30° Stanton Harcourt Church Cross* Ancient Cross (SP4164305666)
 2.8km W 269° Standlake 20 Timber Circle (SP383047)
 3.0km E 98° Physic Well (Cumnor)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SP4412604375)
 3.4km NNE 22° Deadman's Burial 1 Misc. Earthwork (SP42350795)
 3.4km SSW 193° Northmoor Linear Ditches* Barrow Cemetery (SP40390142)
 3.6km NNE 25° Deadman's Burial 2 Henge (SP42610807)
 4.1km NNE 20° Eynsham Timber Circle Timber Circle (SP425086)
 4.1km SE 143° Badger's Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SP4360201485)
 6.9km NNW 345° Eynsham Park Camp Hillfort (SP393114)
 8.1km ENE 67° St Margaret's Well (Binsey)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SP486080)
 9.1km SSE 161° Iron Age and Roman Complex at Frilford Ancient Village or Settlement (SU441962)
 9.2km SSW 204° Cherbury Camp* Hillfort (SU374963)
 9.3km NE 39° Yarnton* Ancient Village or Settlement (SP4712)
 9.7km ENE 75° Walton Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SP5047907312)
 9.9km NW 312° Churchill Plain Chambered Tomb (SP33711129)
 10.1km E 81° Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology* Museum (SP511065)
 10.2km ENE 77° Radcliffe Infirmary prehistoric monumental landscape Round Barrow(s) (SP5103607101)
 10.2km E 83° Museum of Oxford* Museum (SP513061)
 10.3km ENE 78° Kendrew Quadrangle* Henge (SP51200695)
 10.6km ENE 79° Pitt Rivers Museum* Museum (SP51510695)
 10.7km NNW 340° The Lady's Well (Oxfordshire)* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SP374148)
 10.8km N 353° North Leigh Roman Villa* Ancient Village or Settlement (SP39661547)
 11.7km SE 135° Abingdon Cursus Cursus (SU494965)
 12.0km NNE 13° Fair Rosamund's Well* Holy Well or Sacred Spring (SP43651646)
View more nearby sites and additional images

<< Hvolris Jernalderlandsby

Rastanlage Leubinger Fürstenhügel >>

Please add your thoughts on this site

Newgrange and the Bend of the Boyne

Newgrange and the Bend of the Boyne

Sponsors

Auto-Translation (Google)

Translate from English into:

"Devils Quoits" | Login/Create an Account | 26 News and Comments
  
Go back to top of page    Comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
Re: Devils Quoits by postvmvs on Thursday, 10 August 2023
(User Info | Send a Message)
It is good that the site has been reconstructed, was part of the team of about six working for Margret Grey back in the seventies it was bleak and hard work two of us digging a section of ditch and a worn out dumper. I was only used to urban sites supervising large groups of volunteers and having the comfort of wooden huts for shelter. I must look out any photographs I took at the time.
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by Richard13 on Monday, 05 April 2021
(User Info | Send a Message)
An impressive circle-henge, this site is almost a total restoration. A few stones survived the plough until the early 20th century, when they were buried to make room for an airfield. This is turn became a quarry and a landfill site so that the site exists at all is something for which we should be very grateful! It was restored in the early 21st century by re-erecting the remaining stones and replacing others, and restoring the bank and ditch to fine effect.

When I first visited in 2009 the site still seemed quite raw and exposed to the surrounding industry, but now nicely set overlooking a lake (once a gravel pit). Since then the surrounding trees have grown and matured and the old landfill areas have been better landscaped, making for a much improved ambience although there is still some activity around the landfill. However it is a fine place to visit now (May 2020) and as the landscape continues to mature it will only continue to improve.
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by TwinFlamesKiss on Friday, 12 June 2020
(User Info | Send a Message)
Note for others.... We visited on 12 Jun 2020. We weren't able to find the access described by others from the village side (opposite the cemetery). The bare ground between the village and circle on google maps now has a large new housing estate on it, with fences running behind. We looked but couldn't find any way through. Instead we drove through the recycling plant, if you look carefully about half way through, there is a small black and white sign saying 'Devils Quoits access -->' by a small car park. There is a narrow path through the trees that leads to the site.
[ Reply to This ]
    Re: Devils Quoits by Anonymous on Sunday, 20 September 2020
    It’s easy to find from the village side and a beautiful walk (20 mins) around the lake to the henge. Find the entrance to the new housing estate and opposite is the cemetery. There’s a couple of parking spaces on the roadside. Walk back towards the village 200 yards and just before where the road bends right you’ll see a driveway. Go along it and at the fork keep left. 5-10 mins to the lake between Heras fencing currently, put up by the new estate developer. Keep right after the first gate and when you see the lake choose clockwise or anti-clockwise. The henge is 1/3 of the way around clockwise. Turn left to it when you see a pipe crossing the path.
    [ Reply to This ]
      Re: Devils Quoits by Anonymous on Sunday, 20 September 2020
      The driveway is on the left.
      [ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by Anonymous on Tuesday, 05 February 2019
as a newcomer to Devils Quoits and yet to visit, how can a largely reconstructed site be rate "5" in "appearance"/ Also, how will I know what is original when I look at it?
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by Anonymous on Tuesday, 05 February 2019
putting aside the problematic destruction of the site in the mid 20th century, who/how was the reconstruction decided , in terms of re-erection of stones and making new ones?
[ Reply to This ]

Excavations at Stanton Harcourt, Oxon., 1940 by W. F. GRIMES by Andy B on Monday, 22 October 2018
(User Info | Send a Message)
Excavations at Stanton Harcourt, Oxon., 1940
By W. F. GRIMES
THE work here described was undertaken in the summer of 1940 in connexion with activities involving the mutilation if not the actual destruction of many of the ‘air-photography sites’ for which Stanton Harcourt has become famous as a result of the air-photography of the late Major G. W. G. Allen. The area concerned lay to the south of Stanton Harcourt itself, in the angle formed by the junction of the Stanton Harcourt-Bablockhythe and Stanton Harcourt-Stanlake roads, thence extending south-westwards almost to Linch Hill and the River Windrush. It included therefore the three standing-stones known as The Devil’s Quoits, which were Stanton Harcourt’s chief claim to archaeological distinction before the day of the aeroplane.

The 1940 paper is available here as a Word document
http://oxoniensia.org/vol%208-9/Grimes.doc
and PDF
http://oxoniensia.org/volumes/1943-4/grimes.pdf

The more recent excavation report is viewable (just) on Google books:
Excavations at the Devil's Quoits, Stanton Harcourt - Alistair Barclay, Margaret Gray, George Lambrick, Paperback, 140 pages, Oxford University, 1995
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=0NwWwmEdBD8C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by rogerkread on Saturday, 30 June 2018
(User Info | Send a Message)
A very strange site with, to me, no sense of archaeological authenticity at all. But access very straightforward now along 'route 2', after the initial farm track and a field or two pleasant paths (several alternatives) meander through woods near the lake. Various waymarks and footpath signs. Easy parking by the roadside at the end of the track.
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by NickyD on Monday, 16 November 2015
(User Info | Send a Message)
Obviously a huge amount of effort has gone into restoring this site and I'm grateful to them for giving me the opportunity to see it. However it's surrounded by a noisy recycling centre and tractors turning over/hiding our waste in the fields next to it. It does have a lovely lake on one side with good wildlife and lots of young trees have been planted too. I'm sure in years to come when the area around it is wooded and when there’s little trace of the once landfill site, then this will be a magical place (with still maybe the distance hum of the recycling centre to contend with!!).

It would have taken me much longer to find the site if I hadn't had Hamish's route descriptions (thanks for that). I initially went for route 1 (as it looked the quickest!) but the parking area had a big sign up saying 'private' (there were also lots of people milling around so I couldn't really be discrete!!). I resigned myself to route 2 and parked fine. I was quite anxious going that way though (hence walking very briskly and sweating a little!!). The area that the concrete drive is on is very dodgy (for a woman walking on her own) as there's lots of derelict buildings for strange people to hide in (maybe I have an over active imagination!!). This would be fine if there's two of you but I think if I'd known this about route 2 then, I would have gone with my first choice and parked next to the recycling centre.

It's definitely an impressive site though and worth a visit.
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by PAB on Wednesday, 12 March 2014
(User Info | Send a Message)
The kite photos from Hamish Fenton looked so interesting that we visited the Devil’s Quoits today – a very odd visit!

Luckily, I had remembered Hamish’s clear access description, or I would never have persisted. The high fence he mentions encloses an active landfill site – you will know you are getting near to the circle when you can hear the machinery and see the gulls.

Perhaps there is a better ambiance when the tractors aren’t moving the refuse next to the henge, with other lorries deading for the refuse treatment centre on the other side. When we visited, there was a fair amount of traffic bringing refuse in on 2 sides of the henge – to get a good picture, imagine Toy Story 2! OK – that’s possibly a bit strong...but until this phase of landfill ends, the site won’t score highly on Ambiance...but I don't want to be too critical, as many people will have put a lot of time & effort into rescuing this site.

I am not sure whether access option 1 as described by Hamish is still viable, but his route 2 is the one we followed – still no direction signs en route to indicate that the circle is there. Perhaps they are planned for when the circle can be enjoyed to the full - perfectly legitimate aim, so perhaps merely delay your visit until someone can report a more welcoming & less fragrant experience?


[ Reply to This ]
    Re: Devils Quoits by Runemage on Sunday, 04 January 2015
    (User Info | Send a Message)
    Photo taken 1880 penultimate one on this page http://www.bint-family.com/history.htm
    [ Reply to This ]
      Re: Devils Quoits by Andy B on Monday, 22 October 2018
      (User Info | Send a Message)
      Text from that page:

      In prehistoric times one of Britain's most important religious sites was only one and a half miles to the west of Bablock Hythe Ferry.

      This was the Devil's Quoits, a large henge with many standing stones. It had gradually deteriorated and was down to three stones in Victorian times.

      Once the centre of considerable Bronze Age activity and surrounded by a number of barrows (records show this to rival Avebury , as a prehistoric cultural centre) it was finally lost with the building of Stanton Harcourt Airfield in World War 2.

      Archaeological excavations were carried out in 1972-3 and then again in 1988 and these showed that once there were more than 30 stones in a 75 metre diameter circle with a two metre ditch and outer henge bank surrounding them.

      The stone circle is now thought to be between 4000 and 5000 years old and is partly a Scheduled Ancient Monument.

      The stones were formed from a local conglomerate stone.

      In a most unusual plan, the Devil's Quoit henge has recently been reconstructed as accurately as available plans and materials permit.

      The massive henge earthwork was rebuilt in March 2002.

      In 2005 eight of the original stones were erected and twenty-one new stones, sourced from a local quarry, were placed in the most likely locations of those missing.

      In September 2008 it was opened as a fully restored monument thanks to the painstaking excavations and enthusiasm of Oxford Archaeology and the cooperation of site owner Hanson.

      http://www.bint-family.com/history.htm
      [ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by Runemage on Tuesday, 19 July 2011
(User Info | Send a Message)
No idea about marriage or a ceremony like a register-office but at a site, you'd be better asking a Registrar, they deal with ceremony as an official legal process which can't be held just anywhere. Handfastings are a form of legal marriage legal in Scotland, check with the PF for details.

However, Handfastings aren't a legal ceremony in England and Wales, so there's a lot of flexibility. I've seen them done at many ancient sites and they can be beautiful celebrations.

Do you follow any particular Path? There's usually someone in each community who is willing to officiate and organise handfastings, or at the very least give guidance, not just on the ceremony but how to respect the site as well.
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by Anonymous on Tuesday, 19 July 2011
hello I was wondering if there is any chance that marriage/ handIasting ceremonies can be held at this venue? =) zara and squig.
[ Reply to This ]

Devils Quoits Stone Circle Video by Andy B on Sunday, 13 March 2011
(User Info | Send a Message)
[ Reply to This ]

British Archaeology Magazine July/August 2009 - The Devil's Work by Andy B on Friday, 04 December 2009
(User Info | Send a Message)
There were once striking prehistoric ritual monuments beside the Thames in Oxfordshire. But quarrying, an airfield and centuries of farming all but wiped them from the map. Then archaeologists decided to rebuild the most impressive. Could it be done? Gill Hey reports.

"Few areas in Britain", wrote Don Benson and David Miles in their archaeological survey of the upper Thames in 1972, "present a more dramatic saga of discovery and destruction" than that to the south and west of the village of Stanton Harcourt, 10km west of Oxford. The late neolithic stone circle and henge monument known as the Devil's Quoits has had a particularly chequered history.

More at
http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba107/feat2.shtml (Link fixed from Archive.org)
[ Reply to This ]

Re: British Archaeology Magazine July/August 2009 by Anonymous on Wednesday, 01 July 2009
Hurrah - more mighty stones to venerate and more publicity for ancient monuments. There will be several people coming from Derbyshire to show our support and give thanks for all the hard work.

Keep rockin'
[ Reply to This ]

British Archaeology Magazine July/August 2009 by coldrum on Tuesday, 30 June 2009
(User Info | Send a Message)
There is an article about The Devils Quoits in the July/August edition of British Archaeology.
Entitled the Devil's Work it describes the sorry history of the site and the recent reconstruction.
Also in this edition, Crathes Warren Field: A Neolithic complex in Scotland, Finding Lindow Man: Bog body from Cheshire found 25 years ago, Hambledon Hill: Neolithic excavations at the Hillfort plus other archaeology news and articles.

http://www.britarch.ac.uk/ba/ba107/feat2.shtml (Archive link)
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by Anonymous on Friday, 12 September 2008
News on this re-erected stone circle, borrowed from elsewhere.

Word has just been heard about the Devils Quoit's Re-Opening Day which is Saturday, 13 September, at the Quoits, Stanton Harcourt, Oxfordshire. (Follow the signs to Dix's Pit Waste Disposal Centre at the west of the village).

Opening is at 12noon and events continue until 4pm.

Granville Laws (who excavated the site) states that engineers and archaeologists who worked on the project will attend, and will talk about how they managed to pull off this reconstruction, and what they found.
[ Reply to This ]

Reconstructing the Devil's Quoits by Andy B on Tuesday, 08 July 2008
(User Info | Send a Message)
Reconstructing the Devil's Quoits
By Liam Rogers
Place 7/8, Winter 2001

About six miles west of Oxford is a ruined circle-henge known as the Devil's Quoits at Stanton Harcourt (OS reference SP 411 048). Within a bank once around two metres high and around one hundred and fifty metres in diameter was a ditch and a circle of around thirty-five megaliths. The stone circle was around eighty metres in diameter. Assays from the ditch have yielded radiocarbon dates of 2060 +/-120 B.C.E. and 1640 +/-70 B.C.E., and suggest use from the later Neolithic until well into the Bronze Age. Late Neolithic grooved ware was found in a posthole[1].

The site has been largely destroyed, from Romano-British agricultural use, the construction of an airbase runway in 1940 and extensive gravel quarrying ever since. Now only part of the ditch fill remains, along with two buried stones and fragments of another.

The Reconstruction Plan

In 1940, Grimes excavated the site, leading to the scheduling of one of the three remaining stones which he left buried for safety. Further excavations in the early seventies and late eighties enabled the plan of the monument to be ascertained "with sufficient detail to allow a reconstruction of the stone circle and associated earthworks". Further stones were recovered during the investigations, although most have been lost during quarrying[2].

The Brief for Reconstruction Works[2] submitted by the waste company Greenways (now Hanson), which operates the site, to Oxfordshire County Council was approved in October 1998. Three specific aims were stated:

1. Restoration of the monument to a state of visual attractiveness;
2. Re-establishment of the setting and features of the monument;
3. Presentation of the monument to the public in an informed and meaningful way.

More at:
http://www.the-cutting-edge.freeserve.co.uk/place/quoits.htm (Archive link)
[ Reply to This ]

Excavations at the Devil's Quoits report by Andy B on Tuesday, 08 July 2008
(User Info | Send a Message)
This volume reports on three seasons of excavation conducted in advance of gravel extraction in 1972, 1973 and 1988 at the Devil's Quoits circle-henge monument near Stanton Harcourt in Oxfordshire. While the stones have gone, evidence has been uncovered for the complete plan. The stratigraphy of the henge ditch (including analysis of sediments and soils) is described.

Investigations in the interior uncovered very little pottery, but struck flint and animal bone was found. The construction and significance of the monument is discussed. A gazetteer and review of local pre-Iron Age sites places it in its ancient context, while proposals for its preservation and partial reconstruction as a cultural amenity look to its future.

Excavations at the Devil's Quoits, Stanton Harcourt - Alistair Barclay, Margaret Gray, George Lambrick, Paperback, 140 pages, Oxford University, 1995
http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=0NwWwmEdBD8C&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false
[ Reply to This ]

Re: Devils Quoits by TheCaptain on Saturday, 05 July 2008
(User Info | Send a Message)
This henge and stone circle has now been completely reconstructed using original stones and original sockets where possible. A full "re-opening" is to be held sometime in August, I believe.

Time for some nice new pictures and descriptions of this re-born circle.
[ Reply to This ]

Your Name: Anonymous [ Register Now ]
Subject:


Add your comment or contribution to this page. Spam or offensive posts are deleted immediately, don't even bother

<<< What is five plus one as a number? (Please type the answer to this question in the little box on the left)
You can also embed videos and other things. For Youtube please copy and paste the 'embed code'.
For Google Street View please include Street View in the text.
Create a web link like this: <a href="https://www.megalithic.co.uk">This is a link</a>  

Allowed HTML is:
<p> <b> <i> <a> <img> <em> <br> <strong> <blockquote> <tt> <li> <ol> <ul> <object> <param> <embed> <iframe>

We would like to know more about this location. Please feel free to add a brief description and any relevant information in your own language.
Wir möchten mehr über diese Stätte erfahren. Bitte zögern Sie nicht, eine kurze Beschreibung und relevante Informationen in Deutsch hinzuzufügen.
Nous aimerions en savoir encore un peu sur les lieux. S'il vous plaît n'hesitez pas à ajouter une courte description et tous les renseignements pertinents dans votre propre langue.
Quisieramos informarnos un poco más de las lugares. No dude en añadir una breve descripción y otros datos relevantes en su propio idioma.