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Long Meg
Location
Cumbria, Near Little Salked, England.
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Long Meg and her daughters - (Stone circle)
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Description
- Long Meg and Her Daughters is the third largest English stone
circle (the other two being the outer circle at
Avebury,
in Wiltshire and
Stanton Drew,
in Avon). The monument
dates from the Bronze Age, it consists of a huge ring (the Daughters)
of almost 60 local porphyritic stones and a tall outlier (Long Meg).
The circle measures 109.4 x 93m (359 x 305ft). It lies on a slight slope,
with the east and west cardinal points marked by two massive blocks, and an
entrance at the south-west defined by two large boulders and two further stones
lying outside the ring.

In the 18th century there was an attempt to destroy the stones, but a tremendous thunderstorm and superstitions stopped the project. For the local tradition, Long Meg and her daughters were a coven of witches turned into stones by a saint (or a powerful wizard) during their sabbath. As with many other megalithic monuments, these stones are said to be uncountable: it is impossible to get the same total, but if anyone can do it twice, the spell will be broken. Another story says that Long Meg would bleed if broken down.
The decorated side of Long Meg doesn't face the circle, so the outlier and the ring may not be contemporary. Aerial photographs of the site reveal that the circle is enclosed in a bank, not visible from the ground.
Alignments - Long Meg is a 3.6m (12ft) high block of red sandstone 72.6m (238ft) south-west from the circle centre: this is the alignment of the midwinter sunset. On its north-east face are some ring and spiral carvings, perhaps reflecting its astronomical alignment.