William Stukeley

William Stukeley
Portrait of Stukeley attributed to Richard Collins
Born (1687-11-07)7 November 1687
Holbeach, Lincolnshire
Died 3 March 1765(1765-03-03) (aged 77)
Nationality English and British
Alma mater Corpus Christi College, Cambridge
Known for Stonehenge
Avebury
Isaac Newton biography
Stukeley Plesiosaur
Scientific career
Fields Archaeology

William Stukeley (7 November 1687 – 3 March 1765) was an English antiquarian, physician, and Anglican clergyman. He pioneered the archaeological investigation of the prehistoric monuments of Stonehenge and Avebury.

Born in Holbeach, Lincolnshire as the son of a lawyer, Stukeley worked in his father's law business before attending Bene't College, Cambridge. In 1709 he began studying medicine at St Thomas's, Southwark, before working as a general practitioner in Boston, Lincolnshire. From 1710 till 1725 he embarked on annual tours of the countryside, seeking out archaeological monuments and other features that interested him; he wrote up and published several accounts of his travels. In 1717, he returned to London and established himself within the city's antiquarian circles. In 1718 he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society and became the first secretary of the Society of Antiquaries of London. In 1721 he became a Freemason and in 1722 co-founded the Society of Roman Knights, an organisation devoted to the study of Roman Britain. In the early 1720s, Stukeley developed a particular interest in Stonehenge and Avebury, two prehistoric stone circles in Wiltshire. He visited them repeatedly, undertaking archaeological fieldwork to determine their dimensions.

In 1726 Stukeley relocated to Grantham, Lincolnshire, where he married. In 1729 he was ordained as a cleric in the Church of England and appointed vicar of All Saints' Church in Stamford, Lincolnshire. He was a friend of the Archbishop of Canterbury William Wake, who encouraged him to use his antiquarian studies to combat the growth of deism and Freethought in Britain. To this end, Stukeley developed the belief that Britain's ancient druids had followed a monotheistic religion inherited from the Biblical Patriarchs; he called this druidic religion "Patriarchal Christianity". He further argued that the druids had erected the stone circles as part of serpentine monuments symbolising the Trinity. He was instrumental in British scholarship's acceptance of Charles Bertram's forged Description of Britain. A friend of Isaac Newton, he was also among Newton's first biographers. In 1747 he returned to London as rector of St George the Martyr, Holborn.

He has been described as "probably ... the most important of the early forerunners of the discipline of archaeology"[1] for his practice of personally visiting and examining ancient sites.

Biography

Childhood: 1687–1708

Stukeley was born in 1687 and grew up in Holbeach, Lincolnshire.[2] He was the eldest child in a family of four boys and one girl.[2] His paternal grandfather, John Stukeley (1623–1675), was a country gentleman who possessed a small estate at Uffington, Lincolnshire and who accrued a large number of debts by the time of his death.[2] John had two sons; the elder, Adlard, was apprenticed to the legal profession, while the younger, also called John, was initially trained as a farmer before joining Adlard in a family law firm.[2] John married, with his wife later giving birth to William.[2]

At the age of five, Stukeley began an education at Holbeach's Free School.[2] By the age of thirteen, he was the top-rated pupil at his school.[3] In 1700, he was taken out of school to work in his father's legal business.[3] He was nevertheless bored by his law activities, and when he requested that he be allowed to study at university, his father agreed.[4] He began studying at Cambridge University in 1703 as a pensioner at Bene't College.[5] Among the classes that he took during his studies were Classics, Ethics, Logic, Metaphysics, Divinity, Mathematics, and Philosophy.[5] In 1705 his father died, with his uncle also passing away three weeks later.[6] He returned home to sort out the family's financial affairs.[6] In 1707 his mother then died, leaving him in charge of his younger siblings; to pay off family debts, he sold off their furniture and let out their Holbeach home.[6] He also attracted local attention for dissecting a local who had committed suicide.[7] In 1708 he took his degree.[8] By this point he was taking a growing interest in architecture, producing careful pen-drawings of medieval buildings.[8]

Medical career: 1709–1716

In August 1709, Stukeley moved to London to further pursue medicine under doctor Richard Mead at St Thomas' Hospital.[9] In March 1710, he left the city to practice medicine in the countryside, establishing a practice in Boston, Lincolnshire.[10] Little is known of the time that he spent in the town,[11] although in 1713 he was accorded Freedom of the Town.[10] In 1715 he produced a print of Boston's St Botolph's Church, which he dedicated to the Marquis of Lindsey.[10] Many of his travels around Lincolnshire were written up in what appears to be his first book, Iter Domesticum, although the year of its publication is not known.[11]

The Rollright Stones, which Stukeley visited, describing it as "the greatest Antiquity we have yet seen... a very noble, rustic, sight" which could "strike an odd terror upon the spectators".[12]

From 1710 until 1725, Stukeley embarked on a horseback expedition through the countryside at least once a year, taking notes on the things that he observed.[9] At the time, his interests were not purely antiquarian, for he also took notes on landscape gardens and other more recent constructions that he encountered.[13] In 1712, Stukeley embarked on an extensive tour of western Britain, taking in Wales before returning to England to visit Grantham, Derby, Buxton, Chatsworth, and Manchester.[14] He later published an account of these travels in Western Britain as Iter Cimbricum.[11] Stukeley's later biographer Stuart Piggott related that this book was "not yet the characteristic product of a field archaeologist" but rather "differs little from that which could be written by any intelligent gentleman of the period".[11]

Stukeley befriended the antiquary Maurice Johnson and joined Johnson's learned society, the Spalding Gentlemen's Society, which was based in Spalding, Lincolnshire.[10] A 1714 letter indicates that Johnson recommended several books on British history to Stukeley, apparently at the latter's request; the suggested titles included Julius Caesar's De Bello Gallico, John Milton's The History of Britain, Robert Brady's An Introduction to the Old English History, Peter Heylin's Help to English History, and Richard Rowlands' A Restitution of Decayed Intelligence in Antiquities concerning the most noble and renowned English Nation.[15] Another letter to Johnson, this time from May 1714, reveals that Stukeley was assembling a series of chronological tables of all British kings since Brutus of Troy; following the medieval historian Geoffrey of Monmouth, Stukeley believed that the legendary Brutus was a real historical figure.[16]

In September 1716, he wrote an account of Richborough Castle, a Roman military fort in Kent.[10] That same year, he described having made a model of the Neolithic/Bronze Age stone circle of Stonehenge.[16]

Return to London: 1717–1725

An inward view of Stonehenge from August 1722[17]

By May 1717, Stukeley had returned to London, where he was living in Great Ormond Street.[18] The reasons for his return to the city are not known, although it is perhaps due to his desire to once again be among the London intelligentsia.[18] Once in the city he began to circulate within its antiquarian circles.[19] At Mead's nomination, in early 1718 he was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society, then under the presidency of the scientist Isaac Newton.[19] That same year he became a member of the newly founded Society of Antiquaries of London, becoming its first secretary.[20] He nevertheless appears to have taken little active part in the society's business.[20] In 1721–22 he was partly instrumental in setting up the society's committee on coins.[21] He also retained his interest in medical matters, and in October 1720 was one of the physicians who conducted an autopsy of a deceased elephant in Hans Sloane's Chelsea garden.[22]

In London, he developed a friendship with two brothers who shared many of his antiquarian interests, Roger and Samuel Gale.[23] From his father, the former Dean of York Thomas Gale, Roger had inherited a copy of the Monumenta Britannica, a work produced by seventeenth-century antiquarian John Aubrey. He showed it to Stukeley, who produced a transcription of Aubrey's document in either 1717 or 1718.[24] Piggott suggested that it was Aubrey's manuscript that first brought Avebury to Stukeley's attention.[25] Circa 1718, Stukeley first visited the site, accompanied by the Gale brothers.[26] In 1719, he visited again, also taking in Stonehenge before traveling to Oxford to meet Thomas Hearne, an antiquarian who was highly critical of Stukeley.[27] That summer, he spent time in Great Chesterford in Essex, where he identified a Romano-British temple from crop marks in a field.[28]

A 1776 line engraving of Stukeley, based on a 1727 illustration by I. Whood

Stukeley devoted much attention to Avebury during the 1720s. The records he produced of how the monument and its various features looked at the time has left later archaeologists "permanently in his debt" for by the early twentieth century—when the earliest sustained archaeological investigation of the site took place—many of these features had been lost.[29] He witnessed locals breaking up megaliths in the circle and although powerless to stop them it may have been this observation that led him to produce a detailed record of the site.[30]

In January 1721, Stukeley was initiated as a Freemason.[31] He suspected that Freemasonry was the "remains of the mysterys of the antients [sic]".[32] By 1723 he was the Master of the Masonic Lodge meeting at Fountain Tavern on London's Strand.[31] In July 1722, he and several friends formed the Society of Roman Knights, an organisation devoted to the study of Roman Britain.[33] The group began with sixteen members before attracting new recruits over the following two years. In admitting women as well as men, the Society was unprecedented within British society at the time; the Society of Antiquaries for instance would not admit female members for another two centuries.[34] Members of the Roman Knights each took a name from the Romano-British period;[33] Stukeley's was "Chyndonax", the name of a priest listed in a Greek inscription reputedly found in a glass cinerary urn in 1598.[33] Through the society he also became close friends with Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Marquess of Hertford and Heneage Finch, 5th Earl of Winchilsea; he encouraged the latter to carry out archaeological fieldwork, as at Julliberrie's Grave in Kent.[35]

In August 1721, Stukeley and Roger Gale set forth on another tour, visiting Avebury and Stonehenge before going to Gloucester, Hereford, Ludlow, Wolverhampton, Derby, and finally reaching Grantham in October.[36] He wrote up his notes of the journey as Iter Sabrinum.[36] He returned to Avebury in the summer of 1722—this time with the artists Gerard Vandergucht and John Pine, who had both become Roman Knights that year—before proceeding to Stonehenge and Silchester.[37] In September and October he embarked on another tour, this time taking in Cambridge, Boston, Lincoln, Dunstable, Leminster, and Rochester, largely following Roman roads.[38] He published a description of this tour as Iter Romanum.[38] In 1723, he travelled from London to Newbury and Marlborough before visiting Stanton Drew stone circles, and then heading back east to Bath, Exeter, and Dorchester.[39] These tours were written up as Iter Dumnoniense and Iter Septimum Antonini Aug.[40] He also wrote an account of Dorcehster's Maumbury Rings in October 1723 as Of the Roman Ampitheatre at Dorchester.[31]

Stukeley's drawings such as this 1722 prospect of Kit's Coty House have provided valuable information on monuments since damaged

It was while at Avebury in 1723 that he began a draft of the History of the Temples of the Ancient Celts.[27] This work drew upon his fieldwork at both Avebury and Stonehenge as well as his field-notes from other prehistoric sites and information obtained from the 'Templa Druidum' section of Aubrey's Monumenta Britannica.[41] The work also cited Biblical and Classical texts.[41] In the book, Stukeley discussed how prehistoric people might have erected such monuments using sledges, timber cradles, rollers, and leavers.[42] He devoted much space to refuting the suggestion, made by Inigo Jones and J. Webb, that Stonehenge had been erected by the Romans, instead attributing it to the prehistoric—or as he called it, "Celtic"—period.[41] The druids are mentioned only briefly in the book, when Stukeley suggested that they might be possible creators of the stone circles.[41]

In 1724, Stukeley returned to Avebury and Stonehenge, returning via Ringwood and Romsey before heading up to Lincoln and then back down to Kent later in the year.[32] This was the final year in which he conducted fieldwork at Avebury.[43] In 1725, Stukeley engaged in the last of his great tours, this time with Roger Gale.[44] This took him from Dunstable up into the Midlands, where he visited Coventry, Birmingham, Derby, and Buxton before heaving west to Chester and then north for Liverpool and the Lake District; there he visited stone circles like Long Meg and Her Daughters and Castlerigg stone circle. From there, Stukeley and Gale travelled further north to Whitehaven and then Hadrian's Wall, following it along to Newcastle before heading south back to London via Durham and Doncaster.[45]

Marriage and the clergy: 1726–46

In 1726, Stukeley left London and relocated to Grantham in Lincolnshire.[46] The reasons for his decision to do so are obscure.[46] It may be that he left the city due to frustration that his antiquarian research was not being financially supported by wealthier benefactors.[47] On his move to Grantham, Stukeley resigned as secretary of the Society of Antiquaries.[21] Towards the end of the year he married Frances Williamson, daughter of a gentleman from Allington.[48] The couple's attempts to conceive children met with failure, and Williamson suffered two miscarriages.[48] In October 1728, Stukeley buried the second of the two unborn infants in his garden, performing a funeral ceremony that drew upon his interest in ancient Roman practices.[49]

Illustration of Stukeley

Stukeley was friendly with the Archbishop of Canterbury William Wake, who shared his interest in antiquarianism.[43] Stukeley asked his friend if he may become a cleric in the Church of England, a request which Wake granted in June 1729.[50] Wake ordained him as a deacon in Croydon on 20 July 1729.[51] Given his intellectual pursuits, Wake saw Stukeley as a welcome recruit in the Church of England's conflict with Freethought.[51] In October 1729, the Lord Chancellor Peter King granted Stukeley the living of All Saints in Stamford, Lincolnshire, taking up residence in the town in early 1730.[52] He enjoyed the town's medieval architecture,[53] and began to write a history of the settlement in the form of a dialogue.[54] He also enjoyed gardening while living in the town, in 1738 building a "Hermitage" in his garden, which featured niches, a stone arch, and a fountain.[55]

According to Piggott, Stukeley's ordination was "the essential turning-point in his whole life".[49] His reasons for joining the clergy are not known for certain. One possibility is that he sought the steady wage supplied by the Church of England, having for a while complained about how little he earned as a doctor. Alternately, he may have believed that becoming a cleric would be a secure position from which he could pursue the unorthodox ideas he was developing.[49] His decision to join the clergy concerned friends like Robert Gale.[52] To Piggott, Stukeley sought to use his fieldwork "as ammunition in a holy war against the Deists".[56] Stukeley would write that his purpose in becoming a cleric was "to combat the deists from an unexpected quarter", describing his "resentment of that deluge of profaneness and infidelity that prevails so much at present, and threatens an utter subversion of religion in general".[52]

In 1736, he co-founded a local antiquarian and literary society, The Brazen Nose, with six other founder-members. It held weekly meetings at which they discussed a varied range of subjects; the first meeting involved discussions of astronomy, lunar maps, a wasp's nest, a medieval seal, and a bladder stone the size of a walnut that had been retrieved from a small dog.[57] The society eventually lapsed, and Stukeley's attempt to revive it in 1746 proved unsuccessful.[58] He also remained interested in the local discovery of antiquities; he became aware of a large, silver Romano-British dish uncovered at Risley Park, Derbyshire in 1729 and read an account of it to the Society of Antiquaries in 1736.[53] In October 1742, Stukeley was alerted to the discovery of the Royston Cave by local politician William Goodhall.[59] He wrote about the site in his 1743 book, Palaeographia Britannica No. I', in which he argued that the cave's decorated chamber was established as a hermitage for a Lady Roisia de Vere circa 1170.[60] A 1744 pamphlet was then issued by the Reverend Charles Parkin, arguing that the carvings were Anglo-Saxon in origin. Stukeley was affronted by the suggestion, and wrote his 1746 Origines Roystonianae II in response to it.[60] In 1740, he was removed as a member of the Society of Antiquaries for not renewing his membership dues.[61]

In 1740, he published Stonehenge, a book that he described as being devoted to the subject of "Patriarchal Christianity".[62] He believed that learned people would read the book to learn about stone circles and druids, and that in doing so they would encounter the ancient proto-Christian of Britain and thus recognise how similar it was to modern Anglicanism. In doing so, he believed, they would reject the ideas promoted by deism and the freethinkers.[63]

In the winter of 1737, Stukeley's wife died at the age of forty.[58] By February 1737/38 he suggested to Samuel Gale that they live together, although this plan never came to fruition.[58] In 1739, Stukeley married the Gale brothers' sister, bringing her to live with him at Stamford.[58] Her marriage portion of £10,000 allowed Stukeley to maintain two houses from 1740 onward.[58] Summers were spent at Stamford while winters were spent in his home in Gloucester Street, London.[58]

When in London, he regularly attended meetings of the Royal Society.[64] In December 1741, he was appointed an associate member of the Egyptian Society, a group led by Lord Sandwich as its first president.[65] Through the society, Stukeley became friends with the Second Duke of Montagu, regularly visiting the latter's home at Boughton House, Northamptonshire.[66] Inspired by the medieval Gothic buildings, he began designing various Gothic plans of his own.[67] This included a Gothic bridge and a mausoleum designed for the Duke of Montagu's estate, although neither were ever built.[68]

In 1746, Stukeley drew up a very careful account of King Charles I's journey from Oxford to the Scottish camp at Newark in 1646.[69]

Final years: 1747–1765

In late 1747, Stukeley became the rector for St George the Martyr, Queen Square, a parish in Bloomsbury, London.[70][71] He moved permanently to the city in February 1748.[72] In June 1747, Stukeley had received a letter from Charles Bertram, an Englishman living in Denmark. In their ensuing correspondence, Bertram claimed to possess a copy of a manuscript produced by a 14th century monk from Winchester known as Richard of Cirencester, which in turn contained an account and map of Roman Britain.[73] Stukeley expressed caution regarding Bertram's claims, asking for detailed information regarding the original manuscript's provenance, with Bertram responding that he could not provide any because he had been sworn to secrecy by the man who supplied him with it.[74] Stukeley unsuccessfully attempted to buy the manuscript from Bertram, stating that he would deposit it in the library of the British Museum.[75] In March and again in April 1756, Stukeley read papers on Bertram's manuscript to the Society of Antiquaries of London.[76] He published these in 1757 as An Account of Richard of Cirencester, Monk of Westminster, and of his Works, which reproduced the map but not the text of the original manuscript, instead consisting of Stukeley's own commentary.[77] In 1795, Thomas Reynolds declared that Bertram's document was a forgery, although this would only be widely recognised in the 19th century.[78]

Stukeley was a friend of Isaac Newton and wrote a memoir of his life in 1752. This is one of the earliest sources for the story of the falling apple that inspired Newton's formulation of the theory of gravitation.[79]

Stukeley also displayed a growing interest in the Roman Emperor Carausius and his coinage.[80] In 1750, he and John Kennedy saw a sketch of a silver coin that had been discovered at Silchester and donated to the King of France.[81] Both of them misread the legend on the reverse of the coin, believing that it read "ORIVNA"; it had actually read "FORTVNA", but with the "F" largely eroded.[81] In 1751, Kennedy published his Dissertation on Oriuna, in which he claimed that Oriuna was the guardian goddess of Carausius. Stukeley disagreed, believing that Oriuna was Carausius' wife; he published this argument as Palaeographia Britannica No. III in 1752.[81]

A 1721 view of Gloucester Blackfriars by Stukeley.

In 1753, a Late Bronze Age tool hoard was uncovered during landscaping at Kew Gardens; Stukeley was invited to come and inspect the discovery the following year, at which point he met with the Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, who had an interest in antiquarian matters.[82] In 1754, he was re-admitted to the Society of Antiquaries.[83] That same year, one of Stukeley's parishioners died, leaving his book collection to the Bodleian Library and Lincoln College, Oxford. Stukeley was left as one of his executors, and in May 1755 transported the book collection to Oxford.[84] Following the 1755 Lisbon earthquake, Stukeley developed an active interest in the subject, presenting papers on earthquakes to the Royal Society and in 1750 publishing Philosophy of Earthquakes, Natural and Religious.[85]

The last decade of Stukeley's life was—according to Piggott—"relatively uneventful".[84] He had re-joined the Society of Antiquaries but the papers presented there were increasingly treated in-seriously, while at the Royal Society, his papers were turned down and not published in its Transactions.[61] He retained his concern with the destruction of ancient monuments, in particular the pillaging of Hadrian's Wall for stone, imploring Princess Augusta to intervene and raising the issue in a November 1757 report for the Society of Antiquaries.[86] He also raised concerns about the sturdiness of the Eleanor cross at Waltham Cross and ensured it was renovated.[87]

In 1757, Stukeley's second wife died.[84] In 1759, Stukeley purchased a cottage in the (then largely rural) area of Kentish Town.[88] In 1763 he published Paleographia Sacra, or Discourses on Sacred Subject as a collection of some of his Sunday sermons.[89] In early 1765, Stukeley fell into a coma and remained in this state for three days before dying in his bed on 3 March.[90][71] He was buried without a monument in the churchyard of St Mary Magdalene's Church, East Ham, which he is said to have selected as his resting-place on a visit there during his lifetime.[91]

Stukeley's ideas

Serpent design of the megaliths

Hutton noted that Stukeley "always had a strong streak of mysticism and interpreted ancient remains in accordance with set notions concerning the nature of primeval religion."[92] He had a strong belief in immanent divinity.[93] His belief in an immanent and interconnected divinity led him to adopt ideas from Pythagoreanism and Neoplatonism: from the former he adopted the belief that music and numbers expressed the divine order while from the latter he adopted the notion of hidden correspondences between various parts of the natural world.[93]

Few of Stukeley's ideas were not wholly original, being based on earlier sources.[94] His general framework for understanding Britain's prehistoric past derived from his belief in the literal truth of Biblical mythology, including the creation of the world in 4004 BC and events like the Genesis flood narrative.[94] There is no evidence that when he started investigating Avebury and Stonehenge in 1719 that he regarded them as having been erected by the druids.[95] At the time, many antiquarians believed that they had been created in more recent periods; Inigo Jones believed Stonehenge had been built by Romans, Walter Charleton by Danish invaders in the Anglo-Saxon period, while Edmund Bolton attributed it to the ancient British but not specifically the druids.[96] In adopting the idea that the druids had erected these monuments, he was following the ideas of Aubrey, which he had read in unpublished manuscript form.[97]

Stukeley believed that the druids were part of "an oriental colony" of Phoenicians who had settled in Britain between the end of Noah's flood and the time of Abraham.[98] He stated that the druids were "of Abraham's religion intirely [sic]" and that, although never having encountered divine revelation, had concluded through their own reasoning that God existed as a Trinity.[98] He also stated that their religion was "so extremely like Christianity, that in effect in differ'd from it only in this; they believed in a Messiah who was to come into this world, as we believe in him that is come."[94]

Stukeley believed that the Boscawen-Un stone circle in Cornwall was built by Hercules, whom he regarded as a Phoenician druid

He believed that the leader of these Phoenician druids had been Hercules, who had landed in western Britain and created the Boscawen-Un circle in Cornwall.[94] The idea that Hercules had arrived in southwest Britain was not original to Stukeley, having been adopted from Aylett Sammes' Britannia Antiqua Illustrata from 1676.[99] Stukeley also believed that, because of Britain's isolated location, the druids had preserved this ancient monotheistic religion, and that "the true religion has chiefly, since the repeopling of mankind after the flood, subsisted in our land".[98]

His idea that the druids once formed a monotheistic priesthood akin to those of modern Christians also owed an influence from older sources.[100] Michael Drayton's 1612 poem Poly-Olbion had for instance portrayed them as wise, monotheistic sages and philosophers.[100]

By the time he became a cleric, he believed that the ancient Egyptians, Plato, and the druids all accepted the existence of the Trinity.[51] By June 1730, he was claiming that Avebury was a symbolic depiction of the Trinity.[56] He believed that ancient humans had venerated the components of the cosmos, such as the heavenly bodies and the four elements, and that they recognized the numbers and musical harmonies from which the cosmos had been created.[97]

Personal life

Blue plaque devoted to Stukeley erected in 2010

Piggott described Stukeley as "a gregarious creature" who enjoyed conversation and being flattered.[18] Piggott also highlighted "an immensely likeable quality" to Stukeley's personality, as evidence highlighting that when the reverend was laid up in bed in Queens Square on one occasion, over 120 friends and parishioners either visited him or sent him a message of sympathy.[101] He also regarded the antiquary as displaying a "charm and pleasant oddness" as well as a "cheerfulness and disarming ingenuousness".[18] Piggott also noted that in later life, Stukeley became "self-opinionated" and "dogmatic".[18]

After the antiquarian's death, Bishop Warburton stated that in Stukeley displayed "a mixture of simplicity, drollery, absurdity, ingenuity, superstition and antiquarianism, that he afforded me that kind of well-seasoned repast, which the French call an Ambigu, I suppose from a compound of things never meant to meet together."[101]

According to Hutton, Stukeley had "a profound and lifelong love of structure, form and design" that was reflected in his interest in the medieval profession as well as antiquities.[93] He had an enthusiasm for gardening,[46] and according to Piggott took "delight in the English countryside".[102] Fond of pets, he reported feeling great grief following the death of his cat, Tit, in the 1740s.[103]

Stukeley's decision, in 1722, to adopt the pseudonym of Chyndonax reflected his inclinations towards identifying with the druids in a personal capacity.[97] This was bolstered by the tendency of friends in the Society of Roman Knights to refer to him, both in conversation and correspondence, as "the Druid".[97]

Reception

In Stukeley we see, thanks to a remarkable volume of evidence, the eighteenth-century antiquary larger than life-size. He is unrepresentative and yet representative: individual, eccentric, an 'original' but with all his characteristics no more than a slight exaggeration of those of his fellow antiquaries. He is almost a corporate sum of his contemporaries, with all their achievements and their intellectual crotchets concentrated and magnified in one man.

— Stuart Piggott, 1985[104]

According to his biographer, Stuart Piggott, Stukeley was the "central figure of early eighteenth-century archaeology".[105] The historian Ronald Hutton called him "perhaps the most important forefather of the discipline of archaeology".[106]

The first edition of Piggott's biography of Stukeley was published in 1950, with a revised edition released in 1985.[92]

Piggott thought him "one of the most curious and complex of the English eccentrics, pathetic, charming, admirable, and laughable by turns."[107] Piggott believed that Stukeley's folios of Avebury and Stonehenge were his "most important contributions to archaeology".[108] He noted that the antiquarian's plan of Avebury, "though failing by modern standards of accuracy, was nevertheless a very much better achievement than anything that had been produced before".[109] Piggott's ultimate assessment was that Stukeley "was not a good scholar: he was uncritical of his literary sources and his reading was discursive rather than profound. His value to archaeology in his own day and now lies in his capacity to observe and record facts in the open air."[110] He situated Stukeley's intellectual failings within the wider context of British intellectual decline in the years following 1730.[111]

Piggott referred to the "varying quality" of Stukeley's work, believing there to have been a "lamentable decline in his later life".[112] He believed that Stukeley had moved from a "neutral empiricism to an often wildly speculative religious interpretation" of prehistoric archaeology.[113] In 2005, Hutton noted that there had been "a considerable change of attitude" to Stukeley among scholars over the previous few years, as they had rejected the division into two halves of his life which Piggott had constructed.[106]

Stukeley was the first person to identify the Stonehenge Avenue and Stonehenge Cursus, giving these featured the names by which they are now known.[114]

By the early 1720s, Stukeley had a growing reputation as the country's main authority on druids and ancient monuments, having no obvious competitor given the comparative novelty of studying stone circles.[28] By the 1750s, some of Stukeley's contemporaries were criticising the accuracy of some of his plans.[115] By 1740, he was beginning to depict the stone circles at Avebury—which are perfectly circular—as ovals in his illustrations so that they better fitted the shape of a serpent's head, which he believed they symbolised.[116]

Piggott noted that Stukeley's speculations on druids, "which seem to us so childishly fantastic", shaped the literary mood of the romantic revival.[117]

References

Footnotes

  1. Hutton, Ronald (2009). Blood and Mistletoe: The History of the Druids in Britain. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0300144857 p. 86.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Piggott 1985, p. 27.
  3. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 28.
  4. Piggott 1985, pp. 28–29.
  5. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 29.
  6. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 30.
  7. Piggott 1985, pp. 30-31.
  8. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 31.
  9. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 32.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 Piggott 1985, p. 34.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Piggott 1985, p. 39.
  12. Piggott 1985, p. 38.
  13. Piggott 1985, p. 37.
  14. Piggott 1985, pp. 38–39.
  15. Piggott 1985, p. 35.
  16. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 40.
  17. Stukeley, William (1740). Stonehenge, A Temple Restor'd to the British Druids. London: W. Innys and R. Manby. ISBN 9781605064277. Retrieved 9 April 2008.
  18. 1 2 3 4 5 Piggott 1985, p. 41.
  19. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 42.
  20. 1 2 Piggott 1985, pp. 42–43.
  21. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 44.
  22. Piggott 1985, p. 60.
  23. Piggott 1985, pp. 41–42.
  24. Piggott 1985, p. 45; Hutton 2005, p. 384.
  25. Piggott 1985, p. 46.
  26. Piggott 1985, p. 45.
  27. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 51.
  28. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 52.
  29. Piggott 1985, p. 49.
  30. Piggott 1985, p. 50.
  31. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 70.
  32. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 71.
  33. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 53; Hutton 2005, p. 385.
  34. Piggott 1985, pp. 53, 55.
  35. Piggott 1985, pp. 56–57.
  36. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 61.
  37. Piggott 1985, pp. 61–63.
  38. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 64.
  39. Piggott 1985, pp. 66, 70.
  40. Piggott 1985, p. 65.
  41. 1 2 3 4 Piggott 1985, p. 88.
  42. Piggott 1985, pp. 88–89.
  43. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 96.
  44. Piggott 1985, p. 73.
  45. Piggott 1985, p. 74.
  46. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 75.
  47. Piggott 1985, pp. 107–108.
  48. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 76.
  49. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 77.
  50. Piggott 1985, p. 78.
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  52. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 98.
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  67. Piggott 1985, pp. 121–122.
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  69. Brown 1904, p. 110.
  70. Piggott 1985, pp. 124–125.
  71. 1 2 Haycock 2004.
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  79. "Newton's apple: The real story". New Scientist. 18 January 2010. Archived from the original on 21 January 2010. Retrieved 30 November 2012.
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  91. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/essex/vol6/pp25-31
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  96. Piggott 1985, p. 86.
  97. 1 2 3 4 Hutton 2005, p. 385.
  98. 1 2 3 Piggott 1985, p. 99.
  99. Piggott 1985, p. 101.
  100. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 103.
  101. 1 2 Piggott 1985, p. 152.
  102. Piggott 1985, p. 153.
  103. Piggott 1985, p. 124.
  104. Piggott 1985, p. 11.
  105. Piggott 1985, p. 13.
  106. 1 2 Hutton 2005, pp. 381–382.
  107. Piggott 1985, p. 10.
  108. Piggott 1985, p. 79.
  109. Piggott 1985, pp. 91–92.
  110. Piggott 1985, pp. 152–153.
  111. Piggott 1985, pp. 154–155.
  112. Piggott 1985, p. 9.
  113. Piggott 1985, p. 108.
  114. Piggott 1985, pp. 92–93.
  115. Piggott 1985, p. 72.
  116. Piggott 1985, p. 107.
  117. Piggott 1985, p. 12.

Bibliography

Allen, D. F. (1970). "William Stukeley as a Numismatist". The Numismatic Chronicle. 10. pp. 117–132. JSTOR 42681904.
Boehm, Katharina (2017). "Empiricism, Antiquarian Fieldwork and the (In)visibilization of the Past in the early Eighteenth Century". Word & Image. 33 (3). pp. 257–266. doi:10.1080/02666286.2017.1294928.
Fraser, Kevin J. (1992). "William Stukeley and the Gout". Medical History. 36. pp. 160–186. doi:10.1017/S0025727300054995.
Haycock, D. B. (2002). William Stukeley: Science, Religion and Archaeology in Eighteenth-century England. Woodbridge: Boydell.
Haycock, D. B. (2009). ""A Small Journey into the ountry": William Stukeley and the formal landscapes of Avebury and Stonehenge". In M Aldrich and R J Wallis. Antiquaries and Archaists: The Past in the Past; the Past in the Present. Reading: Spire. pp. 46–61.
Hutton, Ronald (2005). "The Religion of William Stukeley". The Antiquaries Journal. 85. pp. 381–394.
Klein, Lawrence (2016). "Kissing for Virtuosi: William Stukeley's Philosophy of Pleasure (1757)". The English Historical Review. 131 (549). pp. 324–352. doi:10.1093/ehr/cew118.
Millburn, John R. (1974). "William Stukeley and the Early History of the Orrery". Annals of Science. 31 (6). pp. 511–528. doi:10.1080/00033797400200431.
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Piggott, Stuart (1985). William Stukeley: An Eighteenth-Century Antiquary (second ed.). London: Thames & Hudson.
Piggott, Stuart (1986). "William Stukeley: New Facts and an Old Forgery". Antiquity. 60 (229). pp. 115–122. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00058518.
Reeve, Matthew M. (2012). "Of Druids, the Gothic, and the Origins of Architecture: The Garden Designs of William Stukeley (1687-1765)". The British Art Journal. 13 (3). pp. 9–18.
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Smith, John F. H. (2013). "William Stukeley in Stamford: His Houses, Gardens and a Project for a Palladian Triumphal Arch Over Barn Hill". The Antiquaries Journal. 93. pp. 353–400. doi:10.1017/S0003581513000267.

Sources

  • Brown, Cornelius (1904). History of Newark-on-Trent; being the life story of an ancient town. II. Newark: Whiles.
  • Haycock, David Boyd (2004). "Stukeley, William (1687–1765)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/26743. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.) The first edition of this text is available at Wikisource:  Lee, Sidney, ed. (1898). "Stukeley, William". Dictionary of National Biography. 55. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Attribution:

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Stukeley, William". Encyclopædia Britannica. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 1051.

Further reading

  • Burl, Aubrey; Mortimer, Neil, eds. (2005). Stukeley's Stonehenge: An Unpublished Manuscript 1721–1724. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-09895-2.
  • Gjertsen, Derek (1986). The Newton Handbook. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-7102-0279-6. – for details of Stukeley and Isaac Newton
  • Haycock, David Boyd (2002). William Stukeley: Science, Religion and Archaeology in Eighteenth-century England. Woodbridge: Boydell Press. ISBN 978-0-85115-864-8.
  • Mortimer, Neil (2003). Stukeley Illustrated: William Stukeley's Rediscovery of Britain's Ancient Sites. Green Magic. ISBN 978-0-9542963-3-9.
  • Piggot, Stuart (1985). William Stukeley: An Eighteenth-Century Antiquary. New York: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-01360-1.
  • Stukeley, William; Gale, Roger; Gale, Samuel (1887). The Family Memoirs of the Rev. William Stukeley, M.D. 3. London: Andrews and Company.
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