Home Page Skip Navigation

Explore Salisbury

Conferences in WiltshireVisitor Review

 Your Itinerary Planner

Welcome to the Itinerary Planner. Use this tool to build your own journey or choose from an exciting range of specially selected tours.

Stonehenge (Photo: SDC/Jon Stone)

Stonehenge - Britain's Best Historic Site

Stonehenge is a prehistoric monument without parallel. Stonehenge voted 'Britain's Best Historic Site' and 'UK's top wonder in a list of the country's unmissable attractions, the ancient site also topped a survey of the 'Seven Wonders of Britain'. Part of an ancient landscape, Stonehenge is one of the most thought-provoking and keenly debated ancient monment in the world.

Stonehenge was erected between 3,000 BC and 1,600 BC by no less than three different cultures and its orientation on the rising and setting sun has always been one of its remarkable features. Whether this was simply because the builders came from a sun worshipping culture, or because - as some scholars believe - the circle and its banks were part of a huge astronomical calendar, remains a mystery to this day.

 

Stonehenge from above (photo: English Heritage)Now designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, Stonehenge is surrounded by the remains of ceremonial and domestic structures, some older than the monument itself. Altogether, the site covers some 2,600 hectares and comprises over 400 scheduled monuments.

Thanks to Stonehenge's shaped stones, unique jointing and perfect geometry, this amazing feat of engineering is not only the most sophisticated stone circle in the world, it is also unique in that it is the only one to have lintels around the top. The name Stonehenge - literally 'hanging stones' - is thought to originate from Anglo-Saxon times.

Buy your Stonehenge Tour tickets at Salisbury TICThe Stones themselves came from two sources: the smaller bluestones from the Preseli Mountains in South Wales, and the larger Sarsen stones from the Marlborough Downs some twenty miles away. Interestingly, what we see today is only about half the original monument - some stones have fallen down, while others have been taken away to be used for building elsewhere.

Visiting Stonehenge

View a virtual tour of the World Heritage Site on the English Heritage website or find out more about visiting Stonehenge.

How to get to Stonehenge

Visiting Stonehenge is easy, it is located just off the A303 / A344 and near the A360 roads. Taxi fares to Stonehenge from Amesbury or Salisbury are competitive, and Wilts & Dorset bus company operate a Stonehenge Tour from Salisbury. 

There are a number of walking and cycling routes to take you to Stonehenge - crossing the very busy A303 is best avoided. Some of the best routes can be accessed from Amesbury where there is an inderpass under the A303 which will also lead you to Durrington and the other important archaeological sites of Durrington Walls and Woodhenge.

>>Download our recommended walking route to Stonehenge

 

 

 

Summer Solstice

Dawn at Stonehenge (photo: EH)Each year on the 21 June visitors from around the world gather at Stonehenge overnight to mark the summer solstice and to see the sunrise above the stones. At dawn the central Altar stone aligns with the Slaughter stone, Heel stone and the rising sun to the northeast.

English Heritage provides Managed Open Access to Stonehenge for the Summer Solstice and works closely with the many agencies, and people from all sectors of the community, in order to create a peaceful occasion - ensuring an event that can be safely enjoyed by all and protects Stonehenge and its surrounding Monuments. Further details on the entry conditions are available from English Heritage.

 

Stonehenge landscape

Stonehenge is part of a larger complex of monuments either side of the nearby River Avon. These include Durrington Walls (Britain's largest henge) and Woodhenge. Both of these cicular enclosures once contained timber circles which were standing at the same time as the sarsen stomes were placed at Stonehenge around 2,600 - 2,500 BC at the end of the Stone Age. Archaeologists have been digging in this area to find out more about these sites and their link with Stonehenge as part of a Stonehenge Riverside Project.

The National Trust cares for the landscape around Stonehenge, and provides open access on foot to Stonehenge Down. Join a guided walk to get the most from your visit - you can join a group to explore the landscape's pehistoric monuments and learn about downland wildlife and hidden histories.

 

Future plans

Stonehenge is one of the most important and most frequently visited monuments in Britain. It is also an international icon, and attracts visitors from all over the world. Learn more about the project to improve the visitor facilities and presentation of the site in the future.

 

Recent publications

Solving StonehengeSolving Stonehenge - The new Key to an Ancient Enigma

by Anthony Johnson, published by Thames & Hudson

Written by an archaeologist who challenges the modern myths.
The first comprehensive review of Stonehenge for a generation and absolutely essential reading for anyone intending to visit.

This new interpretation has "immense implications for
understanding the monument - and the people who built it" The Independent

"Solving Stonehenge is innovative and engaging, and refreshingly free from the lunacies of the past" New Scientist


Locally available in Salisbury from the Cross Keys Bookshop

 

Stonehenge-Rosemary-HillStonehenge - a new book By Rosemary Hill

"Rosemary Hill's book is a treasure: stylish, thoughtful, miraculously condensed, and as full of knowledge as a megalith is full of megalith" The Times

"Hill's Stonehenge surveys the endless speculations around this mysterious monument" The Independent

Rosemary Hill (author of the acclaimed God's Architect)'s forthcoming book Stonehenge, is published by Profile Books.