Contributed by Bernie Bell

The Orkney News  previously featured  a piece by Duncan Lunan (the man himself) about Sighthill Stone Circle, past and present………….. https://theorkneynews.scot/2019/08/15/ancient-astronomy-and-the-sighthill-stone-circle/ .  The most recent post on Kenny Brophy’s Urban Pre-historian blog, was an update on the progress of the ‘new’ stone circle.  On reading this, I thought  it would be good to keep the interest alive, and asked Kenny would it be OK to re-post his blog on TON – Kenny – he said yes! So, here it is folks, with lots of pictures!

Great crown of stone

By Kenny Brophy

Exactly a year ago, 20th March 2019. the new Sighthill stone circle was officially revealed to the media. Designed, as was the first iteration, by Duncan Lunan, this astronomically aligned stone circle has been constructed as a permanent and unique resource within the emerging new Sighthill just to the north-east of Glasgow city centre.

At the time when this new megalith began to emerge, it sat on a raised island amidst a giant muddy building site. Sighthill itself was yet to be reborn, the old variant having been more or less completely bulldozed and remediated as part of a £250 million redevelopment. The standing stones stood resplendent like teeth, their concrete foundations exposed like white gums. At the time they sat in a noisy landscape of construction, with the closest neighbour being a Mercedes car dealership, a Ballardian crash of epic proportions.

A year on, residential Sighthill is now growing slowly, although the stone circle remains (just) in glorious isolation. It still sits in a brownscape of mud amidst machines of construction, but it is slowly visually and metaphorically being lost in an urban skyline. Yet even now, driving west along the M8 into the city centre, the Sighthill’s second stone circle is a fantastic site / sight, emerging as it does on the horizon off to the left. A similar and wonderful view can be gained by the pedestrian by standing on Baird Street bridge over the motorway.

The stone circle is surely Glasgow’s Angel of the North, a great crown of stone on the horizon.

This photo essay (my rather grand description of what is basically a series of photographs) documents the time I was privileged to spend in and around the stone circle on 20th March 2019 thanks to a kind invitation from Duncan.

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8 responses to “Sighthill Stone Circle – An Update By Kenny Brophy – Urban Pre-historian.”

  1. […] Link:  Sighthill Stone Circle – An Update By Kenny Brophy – Urban Pre-historian. […]

  2. […] Sighthill Stone Circle – An Update By Kenny Brophy – Urban Pre-historian. […]

  3. […] object in their new ‘Interactive Sky Chart’, which I used in the calculations for the recreated Sighthill stone circle in Glasgow, it will give you the co-ordinates of that object at that time, and you can set it for any time, […]

  4. […] Whether that part of the Avenue was the beginning or the end of the processions isn’t crucial:  it may well have been both, at different times of the year, or even in different centuries.   But the Avenue does have the important feature of the Heelstone, over which the midsummer sun now rises.  The tilt of the Earth’s axis varies between 22 and 24 degrees on a 40,000-cycle, and when Stonehenge was built it was near maximum.  At that time, the midsummer Sun didn’t rise over the Heelstone as it does now, but beside it.  That gave me an important guide when I was planning the first astronomically aligned stone circle for over 3000 years, in Sighthill Park in Glasgow, in the Glasgow Parks Department Astronomy Project of 1978-79. Sighthill Stone Circle – An Update By Kenny Brophy – Urban Pre-historian. […]

  5. […] designing the stone circle at Sighthill in Glasgow, the first astronomically aligned one for over 3000 years, one of the problems was there was too […]

  6. […] Orkney News astronomy column and beginner’s guides is also the man behind the building of the Sighthill Stone Circle. You can read about it in The Orkney News and on his […]

  7. […] The first Sighthill Stone circle was constructed in Sighthill Park in 1979, realising the vision of Duncan Lunan and John Braithwaite. Sighthill Stone Circle – An Update By Kenny Brophy – Urban Pre-historian. […]

  8. […] and Mars on the summer solstice, June 21st.  More than four years after the re-erection of the Sighthill stone circle at its new site in Glasgow, on the spring equinox of 2019, the security fencing around it has at […]

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