How much sun is actually built into Woodhenge? The short answer is: a real orientation, an unreliable line, and a very short working life. The longer answer is more interesting, and rather less than the signage promises.
The claim, and its pedigree
The standard story is easy to tell. Woodhenge is a Late Neolithic timber monument two miles north-east of Stonehenge: six concentric oval rings of posts (Maud Cunnington's rings A–F), later wrapped in a bank-and-ditch henge with a single causewayed entrance. The long axis of those ovals runs broadly north-east to south-west — the same axis as Stonehenge — and is said to point at the midsummer sunrise in one direction and the midwinter sunset in the other. Hence the tidy textbook line, repeated on the English Heritage signboards, that the monument was “built to align with the summer solstice sunrise.”
The pedigree is respectable. Cunnington herself drew the comparison with Stonehenge in her 1929 excavation report, and noticed that a clear sightline ran between the posts in the solstitial direction. Alexander Thom surveyed the site in the late 1950s and reached broadly the same conclusion. And the most authoritative modern treatment — Clive Ruggles and Amanda Chadburn's Stonehenge: Sighting the Sun (Historic England / Liverpool University Press, 2024) — accepts a deliberate solstitial orientation of the timber rings as part of a genuine mid-third-millennium practice across the Stonehenge landscape.
So this is not a fringe claim to be knocked down. It is a mainstream one, endorsed by the people who have spent their careers being sceptical about exactly this sort of thing. Which makes it worth asking, precisely, what survives once the scepticism is applied evenly — including to Woodhenge.
What “aligned” is allowed to mean
Ruggles and Chadburn draw a distinction that does most of the useful work here. They separate three grades of solar orientation: monuments that are broadly solstitial (precision of the order of 5°, e.g. Maes Howe); monuments that pinpoint the solstice in space (around 0.5°, as the Stonehenge axis does); and monuments that could in principle pinpoint the solstice in time (of the order of 0.01° — the kind of precision Thom once imagined at Kintraw, and which has not survived scrutiny).
The crucial point is that even Stonehenge, the precise end of the credible range, fixes the solstice in space but not in time. For several days either side of the actual solstice the sun rises and sets in sensibly the same place on the horizon, so an alignment of this precision tells you where on the skyline to look, but cannot tell you which day is the solstice. Stonehenge could flag a window of days for ceremony; it could not function as a calendrical instrument. That is the ceiling. Any claim that Woodhenge did better than Stonehenge would need extraordinary evidence, and there is none.
The line that will not stay still
Here is the first genuinely sceptical difficulty, and it is one Cunnington flagged herself: an oval has a long axis, but Woodhenge's posts are irregularly spaced, and the exact azimuth of the axis is correspondingly hard to fix. This is not a quibble. The whole claim rests on a single line drawn through a slightly lopsided arrangement of postholes, and where you put that line depends on choices.
It depends, first, on which rings you trust. Cunnington noticed that rings A and B appeared to share an entrance orientation closer to that of the henge than to the inner rings. Chadburn (2010) and Chadburn and Ruggles (2017) accordingly suggested that perhaps only part of the monument — plausibly rings C, D, E and F — followed the “astronomical” axis at all. The monument may not be a single aligned object so much as an aligned core inside a less-aligned shell.
It depends, second, on whose survey you use. Cunnington and Thom arrived at slightly different azimuths (Ruggles 2006 discusses the discrepancy), and Thom's figure has the additional weakness that he was surveying the modern concrete marker posts, set in the 1920s to indicate the holes, rather than the excavated holes themselves. A survey of markers is a survey of an interpretation. None of this is fatal, but it means the “alignment” comes with error bars wide enough to matter, and that the often-quoted single azimuth is more confident than the underlying geometry warrants.
The entrance, and the awkward dates
If Woodhenge were straightforwardly a solar monument, you would expect its most prominent architectural feature — the henge entrance — to honour the same axis. It does not. The bank-and-ditch entrance sits on a noticeably different alignment from the timber rings, and that mismatch is the loose thread that the recent dating programme has pulled.
Funded by Historic England for Sighting the Sun, and reported in detail by Chadburn and Marshall (Historic England Research Report 94/2024), radiocarbon dating and Bayesian modelling of Cunnington's curated charcoal and of antler picks from the 1970 ditch section produced two distinct events. The timber rings were raised in roughly 2635–2575 cal BC (95% probability) — close in time to the sarsen settings at Stonehenge. The enclosing ditch and bank came significantly later, most probably in the range 2465–2345 cal BC: on the order of two centuries afterwards. (This supersedes the older single-phase reading of about 2300 BC derived from the 1970 Evans and Wainwright trench.)
That gap reframes the entrance problem rather neatly. The henge builders, two centuries on, did not align their entrance on the sun because by then there was probably nothing solar left to align with: the timber rings, the actual carriers of the orientation, would have rotted or been removed. The solstitial sightline, in other words, appears to have been a feature of the early timber monument and to have lapsed long before the earthwork that now defines the site to visitors.
A short working life
This is the conclusion Ruggles and Chadburn themselves emphasise, and it deserves more prominence than it usually gets. The solstitial alignments at both Woodhenge and the Durrington Walls Southern Circle appear to have been short-lived: at Woodhenge the timbers decayed; at Durrington the circle was buried inside a vast henge. Within perhaps a century of construction, the sightlines at both had ceased to be usable for actual observation (Ruggles & Chadburn 2024, 109–111; Chadburn & Marshall, forthcoming).
A monument that can be observed along for a century or so is a real thing, but it is not the timeless solar observatory of popular imagination. It also sits awkwardly with the more romantic processional narratives — crowds walking between aligned monuments at the turning points of the year — if the alignments at the different sites were not all operational at the same time. That is precisely the open question the authors flag rather than answer.
The landscape did some of the aligning
The deepest sceptical point is one the leading researchers raise against themselves. How much of the “alignment” is astronomy, and how much is geography that happened to run the right way?
It has been argued for Stonehenge that the site was chosen partly because natural periglacial striations in the chalk already ran in an approximately solstitial direction (Parker Pearson 2012). The Durrington Southern Circle and the Lark Hill posthole alignment both face down dry valleys that lead off in broadly solstitial directions. If a builder erects a monument facing down a valley whose natural axis is already near the solstice, the resulting “alignment” is real but partly inherited from the ground, not computed from the sky. The intention may have been to monumentalise a place already felt to be charged, with the solar coincidence read as confirmation rather than designed from scratch. Woodhenge, on its low rise above the Avon, is at least a candidate for the same reading. Distinguishing deliberate astronomical design from appropriated topography is genuinely hard, and the honest position is that we have not done it.
It is worth remembering, too, that broadly sun-facing orientation is common in the period without implying precision: the long barrows of a millennium earlier tend to face the sunrise/sun-climbing sectors of the horizon, but under the influence of several factors at once, and well-known solstitial monuments such as Newgrange look like one-offs within multifactorial orientation patterns rather than members of a precise tradition. A north-easterly facing in this landscape is not, by itself, strong evidence of solar intent.
Why the modest version is the credible one
There is a useful discipline that cultural astronomers have enforced since the early 1980s, summarised by the statistician Peter Freeman as “observe everything” and “report all you observe.” The failure mode it guards against is selecting the one feature that fits your hypothesis and quietly ignoring the rest. Ruggles and Chadburn deploy exactly this principle to dismantle a series of recent overreaches: Darvill's reading of a 365¼-day calendar in the numerology of the stones; the 2km “mega-circle” of pits around Durrington Walls, much of which turns out to be natural sinkholes and Bronze Age features; and the two Cursus pits said to mark solstice sunrise and sunset from the Heel Stone, which are merely two among several.
The reason the Woodhenge orientation survives the same treatment is that it is a modest claim. It does not require precision Stonehenge itself lacks, it does not require a calendar, and it does not require selecting one feature from many: the long axis of the rings is the obvious feature, and it does point, broadly, the right way. Strip out the embellishments and what is left is defensible: a deliberate, broadly solstitial orientation of the early timber rings, of modest precision, in a landscape where that practice was briefly current.
What the signage overstates
Set against the literature, the public framing — “built to align with the summer solstice sunrise” — is not wrong so much as over-confident in three specific ways. It implies a single, well-determined azimuth, where the axis is in fact contested and hard to fix. It implies the whole monument is the aligned object, where the dating suggests the alignment belonged to the early timber rings and not to the henge that visitors actually see. And it implies a standing, enduring relationship with the sun, where the working life of the sightline was probably brief. The midwinter-sunset half of the claim is weaker still at the site, since the south-western horizon rises and blocks the setting sun, which is part of why the north-eastern, sunrise direction is the one usually emphasised.
A reasonably sceptical verdict
The defensible position, on the best current evidence, is narrow but real:
- The early timber rings were probably deliberately oriented on the solstitial axis, in step with a genuine practice seen at Stonehenge, Durrington and Lark Hill around 2600–2500 BC.
- The orientation is broadly to moderately precise at best; the exact azimuth is not securely known and the two historic surveys disagree.
- The alignment was short-lived and had probably lapsed by the time the henge earthwork — whose entrance ignores the solar axis — was built two centuries later.
- How much of the orientation reflects astronomy and how much an already-solstitial patch of landscape remains genuinely unresolved.
What does not survive is the observatory: there is no evidence Woodhenge measured the solstice, predicted it, or kept a calendar, and good reason to think it could not have. The fair summary is that Woodhenge was a monument oriented on the solstice, for a while, not a monument that observed it. That is a smaller and more interesting claim than the boards suggest — and, conveniently, the one the strongest research actually supports.
Sources
Cunnington, M. E. 1929. Woodhenge: A Description of the Site as Revealed by Excavations. Devizes.
Ruggles, C. L. N. 2006. “Interpreting Solstitial Alignments in Late Neolithic Wessex.” Archaeoastronomy: The Journal of Astronomy in Culture 20: 1–27.
Chadburn, A. and C. L. N. Ruggles. 2017. “Stonehenge World Heritage Property, United Kingdom.” In Heritage Sites of Astronomy and Archaeoastronomy in the Context of the UNESCO World Heritage Convention: Thematic Study no. 2. Paris: ICOMOS, 41–62.
Ruggles, C. L. N. and A. Chadburn. 2024. Stonehenge: Sighting the Sun. Liverpool University Press / Historic England.
Ruggles, C. and A. Chadburn. 2024. “Missing data.” Cosmovisiones / Cosmovisões 5 (1): 99–109. DOI: 10.24215/26840162e007 (open access).
Chadburn, A. and P. Marshall. n.d. Woodhenge, Durrington, Wiltshire: Radiocarbon Dating and Chronological Modelling. Historic England Research Report Series 94/2024.
Ruggles, C., A. Chadburn, M. Leivers and A. Smith. 2021. “A Possible New Sightline in the Stonehenge Landscape.” Journal of Skyscape Archaeology 7 (1): 144–156.
Parker Pearson, M. 2012. Stonehenge: Exploring the Greatest Stone Age Mystery. London: Simon & Schuster.
Magli, G. and J. Belmonte. 2023. “Archaeoastronomy and the alleged ‘Stonehenge calendar’.” Antiquity 97 (393): 745–751.