Author: Thomas Baurley

BlogBronze Age 3500-1200 BCEFolkloreNeolithic 4500-2000 BCERaths and RingfortsStone Circles

Stone Circles

Stone Circles can be found worldwide but are most notorious in the British, Irish, and Scottish landscapes. Stones can be small, medium, and large, often dug into the ground as deep as they rise above the ground. A Stone Circle is a circular ring of stones, often with a defined entrance between two stones, with arrangements often related to the path of the rising and setting sun or the moon at sacred times of the year or in geographic alignment with other sites, hills, and circles.
Contemporary history 1945 CE-PRESENTEarly modern period 1500-1800 CEHistoricIndustrial Age 1760-1970 CEInformation Age 1970 CE-PRESENTInternet Age 1900 CE-PRESENTLate modern period 1500-1945 CEMachine Age 1880-1945 CEModern History 1500 CE-PRESENTPaper

Playing Cards

The exact origin of playing cards is unknown, but many theories exist about their possible beginnings. It has been concluded by many stage magicians that cards were brought by Arabs from the Middle East, early 14th century to Europe via Spain and Italy.
Ancient history 5000-600 BCEBronze Age 3500-1200 BCEFolklorePrehistory 3 MILLION-5000 BPRaths and Ringforts

Irish Fairy Forts

“Fairy Forts” are the names given especially by the Irish, Cornish, and other residents of the Isles around Ireland, Scotland, Wales, and Britain who strongly believe in the faerie folk. This is a localized term for the “raths”, “ringforts”, “lios”, “hillforts”, “rounds”, “earthen mounds”, or circular dwellings found in England, Ireland, Scotland, Isle of Man, and Wales.