The three large henges found adjacent to the village of Thornborough,
near Ripon in North Yorkshire, lie at the heart of one of the most
important Neolithic landscapes in the British Isles. While the henges
were first recorded in the eighteenth century, recent fieldwork has
shown them to be part of a much larger 'sacred landscape' of the later
Neolithic and Bronze Age which includes barrows, pit alignments and a
cursus. Surrounding fields have yielded a rich collection of prehistoric
flint artefacts. While the henges have all been damaged, either by
agriculture or quarrying, they remain major upstanding features in the
modern landscape.
This volume considers first the history of investigations and changing
attitudes towards the monuments before describing the detailed
geophysical surveys, excavations and fieldwalking programmes that have
been carried out across this landscape in the past twenty years.
The author concludes that this was an intensely religious landscape,
situated on an important routeway across the Pennines. He considers how
people, both those who lived locally and those who travelled long
distances to visit the site as a place of pilgrimage, would have
experienced and interacted with the monuments.