The Devil’s Arrows, also known as the
Three Greyhounds or the Three Sisters, are a row of three colossal standing
stones near Boroughbridge in Yorkshire. The stones, which reach seven metres in
height with another three metres underground, are taller than the sarsens of
Stonehenge. They were probably raised in the early Bronze Age, around 2000BC.
Legend says the devil, sitting on How
Hill near Ripon, a strangely prominent and eerie-feeling hill with a ruined
church dedicated to St Michael, threw rocks at the town of Aldborough after it
offended him. They fell short and formed the Arrows.
The row of Arrows, looking uphill
The three stones are the survivors of
a larger row. One stone was pulled down in the 16th century; a fifth
one is reputed to have also been removed. Perhaps there were even more, forgotten
even by legend.
The stones, weighing 25 tonnes, are
millstone grit, probably originating from a location near Knaresborough, nine
miles away. It is possible they were carried by glacial action to a much nearer
point, making their transport much easier. The stones were then raised and slid
into their sockets, probably using levers and pulleys, and their holes packed
with cobbles. It was a phenomenal undertaking.
The stones were shaped and dressed to
give them a smooth finish, something which was rarely done in British stone monuments.
The sarsens of Stonehenge are the other best-known example of this, and may
suggest this monument was a rival or equal power base to Stonehenge. This area
of Yorkshire is believed to have once been equal in importance to the
Stonehenge monuments.
The uppermost stone.
The stones are on a 320º alignment, which roughly faces the midwinter sunrise and
midsummer sunset, but they are not quite in a straight line. They climb a shallow
slope leading from the River Ure – this link to water is reminiscent of Stonehenge
– and the final stone sits on the top of the hillside. Perhaps the destroyed
stones continued towards the river and the monument formed an elaborate
procession up the hillside towards the rising midwinter sun.
Interestingly, two now vanished
henges which stood on shallow hillsides near the village of Hutton to the
north, are also on the same alignment as the Arrows. Perhaps it was part of a
much greater monumental complex than is currently thought.
The River Ure at Boroughbridge
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