comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Allen environmental archaeology - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Age of Cerne Abbas Giant in Dorset revealed

THE likely age of Dorset s Cerne Abbas Giant has been revealed for the first time - and it has come as a surprise to historians. Archaeologists at the National Trust have been analysing sediment taken from the carving - considered to be Britain’s largest and perhaps best-known chalk hill figure. Generations have speculated about the age and meaning of the club-brandishing giant hewn into a Dorset hillside with some theories including it being a depiction of the legendary demi-god Hercules, an ancient fertility symbol, or even the soldier and statesman Oliver Cromwell. Another theory is that the figure was carved around the body of a giant who was slain by local people after he terrorised the countryside.

Cerne Abbas Giant may have been carved into hill over 1000 years ago

Cerne Abbas Giant—Dorset s enormous chalk figure—was Saxon, new study finds

Cerne Abbas from the air Photo: National Trust Images. © Mike Calnan, James Dobson One of the most famous hill chalk figures in England, the 180-foot-tall Cerne Abbas giant, rearing magnificently endowed and club in hand above a village in West Dorset, has been dated for the first time to the late Saxon period. The results of the year-long study overturns earlier suggestions that the figure was prehistoric or a Roman image of Hercules with his club and also the theory that the giant is relatively modern, a 17th-century rude joke, more than two fingers raised to Oliver Cromwell. The research by scientists working with National Trust archaeologists, jointly funded by the trust, the University of Gloucestershire, Allen Environmental Archaeology and the Pratt Bequest, used Optically Stimulated Luminescence (OSL) on grains of sand from the deepest layer of the sediment, which can reveal when they were last exposed to sunlight. It suggests a date of between 70

Rebel baron undressed the Cerne Abbas giant to get a rise out of Oliver Cromwell

Rebel baron undressed the Cerne Abbas giant to get a rise out of Oliver Cromwell Hillside figure wore trousers for 700 years, says National Trust, before they were removed and a phallus added as parody of Civil War leader The National Trust has revealed the giant figure on a hillside in Dorset dates from Saxon times The origins of the Cerne Abbas giant have long been cloaked in mystery, and its vast anatomy has long caused shock by being cloaked in nothing at all. But the National Trust has revealed that the hill figure is Saxon and actually had trousers for 700 years before a phallus was added in the 17th century as a possible parody of Oliver Cromwell, made on the orders of a disgruntled baron.

How old is Dorset s Cerne Giant? It could be Saxon

THE likely age of Dorset s Cerne Giant has been revealed for the first time - and it has come as a surprise to historians. Archaeologists at the National Trust have been analysing sediment taken from the carving - considered to be Britain’s largest and perhaps best-known chalk hill figure. Generations have speculated about the age and meaning of the club-brandishing giant hewn into a Dorset hillside with some theories including it being a depiction of the legendary demi-god Hercules, an ancient fertility symbol, or even the soldier and statesman Oliver Cromwell. Another theory is that the figure was carved around the body of a giant who was slain by local people after he terrorised the countryside.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.