For decades, Dr. Semir Osmanagić has been researching megalithic sites in England: megalithic circles, dolmens and menhirs, as well as tumuli. The conclusion is always the same: the official explanations about the funerary function of these monuments are incorrect.
British archaeologists and historians still cannot move beyond the hypothesis that these locations served for burials or, at best, for religious rituals. Moreover, the naming of these archaeological sites often serves to confuse and divert attention from their real purpose.
Of course, it is not disputed that at many locations local inhabitants, thousands of years later, were buried near or even beneath these monuments. However, that was not their original purpose.
A community capable of planning, designing, shaping and transporting multi-ton stone blocks, observing astronomical phenomena, locating underground energy phenomena, and then using the energy of the newly created space for very practical purposes, was not a primitive Neolithic society but rather an advanced community.
Reducing the purpose of an extraordinary monument such as the now almost destroyed Coldrum Long Barrow to the function of a cemetery is senseless. At one time, this series of multi-ton dolmens, with a megalithic circle measuring 15 × 31 meters and oriented toward the sunrise during the winter solstice, was a true school in nature. Members of the community gathered there to learn astronomy, the calendar, energy healing, strengthening the immune system, and developing spiritual senses.
The same applies to the King’s Men Stone Circle (“Stone Circle of the King’s Men”?). This invented name was given to obscure the purpose of three preserved monuments. Of course, they have nothing to do with medieval rulers, but they do have much to do with underground energies, community decision-making processes, and astronomical phenomena in the sky.
Great Britain is incredibly rich in megalithic sites, and it is shameful that after so much time institutions and compliant “experts” still fail to investigate their true function.






