There is some very interesting symbology incorporated into this massive crop circle that was found right near the Rollright Stones, in Oxfordshire on July 15, 2015.

What can you make of these symbols?

Crop circle July 15

Why did they place the crop circle near these ancient stones?

Crop circle July 15 2

This area was originally settled by various tribes of the Anglo-Saxons and in the 8th century the settlement at Oxford in the eighth century that the area grew in importance. Alfred the Great was born across the Thames in Wantage, Vale of White Horse.

The University of Oxford was founded in 1096 after the Norman invasion, though its collegiate structure did not develop until later on. The university in the county town of Oxford (whose name came from Anglo-Saxon Oxenaford = “ford for oxen”) grew in importance during the Middle Ages and early modern period.

The Rollright Stones is a complex of three Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monuments near the village of Long Compton on the borders of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire in the English Midlands. The three monuments now known as the King’s Men, the King Stone and the Whispering Knights, are distinct in their design and purpose, and were built at different periods in late prehistory. The names which are currently given to them – the King’s Men, the King Stone and the Whispering Knights – descend from folklore that has surrounded the site since the Early Modern period, although these terms have since been adopted by archaeologists and heritage managers.

 

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