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  • Addison Lee is proud to sponsor the Ancient World in London series.

  • Stonehenge is draped in darkness as thousands await dawn.

  • Suddenlythere is light! As a ethereal sunbeam flashes through the stones...

  • Woah, woah, lets hold it there for a second. This is England, and it's Spring.

  • Stonehenge is one of Britain's greatest ancient sites, but we still don't know what it is!

  • What we do know is that it aligns with the sun, moon and the stars.

  • And that four times a year, on the equinox and solstices, it draws academics, revellers and druids.

  • March 20th was the Spring equinox, and we sent Nicole down to Stonehenge to see what goes on.

  • May there be peace in the North! (May there be peace in the North!)

  • I've been doing the solstices and equinoxes here at Stonehenge for about 22 or 23 years now.

  • It's the most powerful place we could possibly be to celebrate the equinox, really.

  • It's the hub, the epicentre if you like, of the whole system of ancient sacred monuments in Britain.

  • I'm here at Stonehenge and I've just seen the ceremony for the sunriseit was pretty brilliant!

  • Well equinox actually means equal night and it means the day length and the night length are exactly the same.

  • Because the Earth leans over at a funny angle, in summertime we're leaning towards the sun, in winter we're leaning away.

  • And halfway between the two, there's equinox. On equinox, the sun rises due East.

  • It's a very important day if you need to generate your own calendar. You don't have radio, televisions and astronomers telling you where you are in the year.

  • You would've seen today, people at Stonehengebig crowds, lots of banging of drums and calling of the courters and chanting,

  • and what that's really about is the recreation of an ancient tradition, and being at Stonehenge, there's a connection between you today,

  • standing in that place at this special time to the ancestors who have done that right back through the millennia.

  • Why is the equinox so important to you?”

  • Umm.. I don't know if it's really important.”

  • It has a groovy vibe

  • My husband and I have been coming to Stonehenge since the 60s. We're Pagans but not sort of like Druids."

  • "We leave the Druids to do the words for the ceremonies.”

  • In ancient times, the Druids were the inheritors of a much older tradition where watching the sky and knowing when you are in the year,

  • and being part of the natural cycles was really, really important to the people.

  • We like to keep that tradition going, so even though today we have TV sets and radios and iPods and phones,

  • we like to keep the old wisdoms and the old traditions going. It's also important to just tune yourself into the cycles of the year, and be one with nature.

  • Looking eastwards, if we'd had a sunny morning this morning, we would have seen the sun rise through the Outer Saracens circle,

  • over the barrow that is just in front of the woods over there.

  • I'm on my way back to London, and I'm really tired, but it was well worth it. I hope I did a good job bringing in the summer,

  • as I think I need a bit of sun. I can't wait until my next adventure!

  • The equinox is one of only four times of the year you can visit the stone circle at Stonehenge.

  • But if you want to get inside at any time, then visit Stonehenge Virtual at Heritage-Key.com.

  • There you can explore Stonehenge throughout the ages from the comfort of your own home.

  • So what do you reckon? Should we have access to the stones all year round?

Addison Lee is proud to sponsor the Ancient World in London series.

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