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Historian Claims Stonehenge Has Armenian Links

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  • Historian Claims Stonehenge Has Armenian Links

    HISTORIAN CLAIMS STONEHENGE HAS ARMENIAN LINKS

    Britain News.Net
    Tuesday 10th February, 2009 (ANI)

    London, Feb 10 : A historian has suggested a link between the
    Stonehenge and an ancient circle of standing stones known as Carahunge
    in Armenia, which predates the historic site in England.

    According to a report in the Salisbury Journal, the historian in
    question is Vardan Levoni Tadevosyan, an Armenian/Spanish historian
    of the occult who visited Salisbury to raise the profile of Carahunge,
    dubbed the Armenian Stonehenge.

    "It's a very important monument, not just for Armenia, but for the
    whole world," he said.

    Carahunge, meaning 'speaking stones', is located 200 km from the
    Armenian capital Yerevan, near a town called Sisian.

    There are over 200 stones on the seven-hectare site and many of the
    stones have smooth angled holes in them, directed at different points
    in the sky, leading scientists to believe it is the world's oldest
    observatory, dating back 7500 years.

    Tadevosyan is very passionate about wanting people to know more about
    Carahunge and has his own theories on its links with Stonehenge.

    His research of the last four years is based on the work done by
    Professor Paris Herouni, a member of the Armenian National Academy
    of Science and president of the Radiophysics Research Institute
    in Yerevan.

    Professor Herouni started investigating Carahunge more than 20 years
    ago and wrote a book, Armenians and Old Armenia, on his findings.

    He sent the book to Prof G.S. Hawkins, who had investigated Stonehenge,
    and he agreed with Herouni's findings.

    According to Tadevosyan, in neolithic times, the Armenians were much
    more advanced than most other cultures.

    A carving found on rocks near Lake Sevan showed they knew the world
    was round, they could accurately measure latitude, and they were
    already skilled in astronomy, archaeology and engineering.

    He believes the earliest population of Britain, who came from Armenia,
    brought the ideas of Carahunge to Europe with them and played some
    part in the creation of Stonehenge and other European sites.

    Tadevosyan plans to put together a leaflet about Carahunge that can be
    available to the public at the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum
    and curator Adrian Green said he would be happy to display leaflets
    about the ancient site.
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