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    04

    Jul 2023

    Last Updated: 04/07/2023
    Environment
    Environment

    English Heritage declines to buy Ripon's 'Stonehenge of the North'

    by Calvin Robinson Chief Reporter

    | 04 Jul, 2023
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    thornborough-henges-looking-west
    One of the UK's most important neolithic sites, the Thornborough Henges, north of Ripon, will be accessible on September 16. Photo: English Heritage.

    English Heritage has declined to buy a section of Thornborough Henges near Ripon after talks with the landowner broke down.

    The cluster of Neolithic monuments above the River Ure consists of three large circular henges that have been described as the Stonehenge of the North. They date back 4,500 years.

    The northerly henge is currently on the market for £200,000.

    Knight Frank, which is selling the freehold of the land on behalf of owner Richard Bourne-Arton, described it as a “unique opportunity”.

    However, English Heritage, which currently manages the central and southern sections of the henge, confirmed that it has decided against purchasing the land.

    It said part of the decision was because the site was in better condition than the other two, which were added to Historic England’s heritage at risk register in 2009.



    The charity added in a statement that it also had “limited resources” to be able to go-ahead with the purchase.

    A spokesperson for English Heritage said:

    "Of the three henges, the northern henge is the best preserved (it is not on the Heritage at Risk register) and it has recently come up for sale.
    "However, English Heritage is a charity with more than 400 sites to care for – the vast majority of which are like Thornborough, free-to-enter but not free-to-maintain – and we have limited resources."


    The move comes after the remaining two sections of the monument were gifted to the public free of charge in February.




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    Historic England has described the Neolithic site as “probably the most important single ancient site between Stonehenge and the Orkney Islands in Scotland”.

    The three large circular earthworks are each more than 100 metres in diameter.

    Construction firms Tarmac and Lightwater Holdings gifted the site into the legal ownership of Historic England, which is a non-departmental public body, although it is managed by the charity English Heritage.

    The site is located near West Tanfield, between Ripon and Masham, just outside the Harrogate district.