Aquhorthies stone circle

The identifying feature is that the largest stone (the recumbent) is always laid horizontally, with its long axis generally aligned with the perimeter of the ring between the south and southwest.

[1] The builders tended to select a site which was on a level spur of a hill with excellent views to other landmarks.

Recumbent stone circles generally enclosed a low ring cairn, though over the millennia these have often disappeared.

[2] They may have been a development from the Clava cairns found nearby in Inverness-shire and axial stone circles may have followed the design.

[7] The antiquarian James Garden visited in 1692 on the insistence of John Aubrey but his report confuses the site with the Auld Bourtreebush stone circle in the next field.