Overview
Castlerigg generates a powerful energy amplified by its extraordinary mountain amphitheatre setting, with the surrounding peaks focusing natural forces inward toward the circle like a vast stone lens. The site's energy is expansive yet precise, creating a sense of standing at the centre of a great wheel of earth power. Visitors frequently report heightened sensory perception, with colours appearing more vivid and sounds more crystalline within the circle. The mountains themselves seem to participate in the site's consciousness, creating a dialogue between the intimate human scale of the circle and the vast geological intelligence of the Lake District landscape.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
Castlerigg Stone Circle near Keswick in Cumbria is one of the earliest stone circles in Britain, dating to approximately 3000 BC during the early Neolithic period. The circle consists of 38 stones set within a natural amphitheatre of mountains including Skiddaw, Blencathra, and Helvellyn. A distinctive rectangular arrangement of 10 stones on the eastern side of the circle, known as 'The Sanctuary,' is unique among British stone circles. The site is positioned near the Neolithic stone axe factories of the Langdale Pikes, and may have served as a trading and ceremonial centre connected to the axe trade. The dramatic mountain setting suggests the builders deliberately chose this location for its visual relationship with the surrounding peaks.
Rory's Field Notes
Atmospheric circle with Type 4 node in centre and ten leylines radiating like spokes.
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