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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:Kirkton_of_Bourtie_stone_circle
rdf:type
geo:SpatialThing owl:Thing dbo:Place
rdfs:label
Kirkton of Bourtie stone circle Steinkreis Kirkton of Bourtie
rdfs:comment
Kirkton of Bourtie stone circle is a recumbent stone circle located in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. It is situated about 2+3⁄4 miles (4.4 km) to the northeast of Inverurie at the end of a south-facing hillside just outside the hamlet of Kirkton of Bourtie. It stands on arable land near a minor road at an altitude of 515 ft (157 m) above sea level, with the Hill of Barra prominently visible to the north. Der Kirkton of Bourtie ist ein Steinkreis vom Typ Recumbent Stone Circle (RSC) in einem Feld bei Oldmeldrum, etwa 4,4 km nordöstlich von Inverurie in Aberdeenshire in Schottland. Merkmal der RSCs ist ein „liegender Stein“ begleitet von zwei stehenden, hohen, oft spitz zulaufenden „Flankensteinen“, (englisch flankers) die Teil des Kreises sind oder sich nahe dem Kreis befinden. Die am River Dee häufigen Kreise wurden zwischen 2300 und 1800 v. Chr. errichtet. In der Nähe liegt der .
dbp:name
Kirkton of Bourtie stone circle
geo:lat
57.31399917602539
geo:long
-2.332211017608643
foaf:depiction
n16:Kirkton_of_Bourtie_stone_circle.jpg
dct:subject
dbc:History_of_Aberdeenshire dbc:Buildings_and_structures_in_Aberdeenshire dbc:Scheduled_monuments_in_Scotland dbc:Stone_Age_sites_in_Scotland dbc:Archaeological_sites_in_Aberdeenshire dbc:Stone_circles_in_Aberdeenshire
dbo:wikiPageID
46620759
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
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dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbc:History_of_Aberdeenshire dbr:Inverurie dbr:Bronze_Age dbr:Stone_circle dbc:Scheduled_monuments_in_Scotland dbr:Recumbent_stone_circle dbc:Stone_Age_sites_in_Scotland dbr:Scotland dbr:Sheldon_stone_circle dbr:Ordnance_Survey dbc:Stone_circles_in_Aberdeenshire dbc:Archaeological_sites_in_Aberdeenshire dbr:Aberdeenshire dbr:Neolithic n21:Kirkton_of_Bourtie_stone_circle.jpg dbr:Cairn dbc:Buildings_and_structures_in_Aberdeenshire
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freebase:m.01370lfy yago-res:Kirkton_of_Bourtie_stone_circle n18:xtnh dbpedia-de:Steinkreis_Kirkton_of_Bourtie wikidata:Q20713726
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dbt:Infobox_ancient_site dbt:European_megaliths dbt:Authority_control dbt:Convert dbt:Gbmapping dbt:Coord dbt:Reflist dbt:Commons_category dbt:Use_dmy_dates
dbo:thumbnail
n16:Kirkton_of_Bourtie_stone_circle.jpg?width=300
dbp:epochs
dbr:Bronze_Age dbr:Neolithic
dbp:location
dbr:Aberdeenshire dbr:Scotland
dbp:mapType
Scotland
dbp:type
dbr:Stone_circle
georss:point
57.313998 -2.332211
dbo:abstract
Kirkton of Bourtie stone circle is a recumbent stone circle located in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. It is situated about 2+3⁄4 miles (4.4 km) to the northeast of Inverurie at the end of a south-facing hillside just outside the hamlet of Kirkton of Bourtie. It stands on arable land near a minor road at an altitude of 515 ft (157 m) above sea level, with the Hill of Barra prominently visible to the north. The circle is badly damaged, with only the eastern flanker, the recumbent and two western stones surviving. The recumbent is broken but is the longest of all known such stones; it measures around 17 ft (5.2 m) in length by 3 ft 4 in (1.02 m) broad and with a girth of 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m). It probably weighs upwards of thirty tons. The stone sits on a slightly raised mound and is aligned with the "major southern moonset". The east stone is 9 ft 10 in (3.00 m) high, while the west stones are 6 ft (1.8 m) and 7 ft 9 in (2.36 m) high. The other stones, of which there were once probably six or seven, are missing, but it is thought that the circle may originally have had a diameter of around 71 ft (22 m). Some stones that may possibly be from the circle have been incorporated in a nearby gateway and wall. Fragmentary cairns are visible within the ring. The area around the stones appears to have been used as a dump for naturally deposited stones that have been cleared off the fields. A "rude pavement" in the circle that was described in 1867 has by now disappeared entirely. This may have been the base of a now-destroyed cairn. The circle's partial destruction may well have occurred in fairly recent history. Writing in the late 18th century, the Rev Thomas Shepherd referred to the presence in the area of "three Druidical circles here, two of them pretty entire". Half a century later, only two of those remained, namely Kirkton of Bourtie and Sheldon stone circle, the latter of which was said to be in "a state of considerable preservation". By the time it was mapped by the Ordnance Survey in 1867 the Kirkton of Bourtie circle had been reduced to its present four stones; the map-makers reported, "No one [in] the parish remembers having seen it in any other condition than at present." The circle was scheduled by the Office of Works as an ancient monument in 1925, but its interior remained under the plough until as late as 1999. Der Kirkton of Bourtie ist ein Steinkreis vom Typ Recumbent Stone Circle (RSC) in einem Feld bei Oldmeldrum, etwa 4,4 km nordöstlich von Inverurie in Aberdeenshire in Schottland. Merkmal der RSCs ist ein „liegender Stein“ begleitet von zwei stehenden, hohen, oft spitz zulaufenden „Flankensteinen“, (englisch flankers) die Teil des Kreises sind oder sich nahe dem Kreis befinden. Die am River Dee häufigen Kreise wurden zwischen 2300 und 1800 v. Chr. errichtet. Der stark beschädigte Kreis besteht aus dem etwa 3,0 m hohen östlichen Flankenstein, dem liegenden Stein und zweien der westlichen Steine des Kreises. Ursprünglich hatte er zehn oder elf Steine und etwa 22,0 m Durchmesser. Der liegende Stein ist zerbrochen, aber mit etwa 4,9 m neben dem von Old Keig als der längste aller liegenden Steine bekannt; (Cothiemuir Wood misst als nächstlängster 4,2 m). Er ist 1,02 m breit und wiegt wahrscheinlich mehr als 30 Tonnen. Der Stein liegt auf einem leicht erhöhten Hügel. Die westlichen Steine sind mit 1,8 m und 2,36 m auch sehr hoch. In der Nähe liegt der .
gold:hypernym
dbr:Circle
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POINT(-2.3322110176086 57.313999176025)