Description: The Bullstones can be found high above the town of Macclesfield on the southern boundary of a moor called Cessbank Common, close to Cleulow Cross. Geographically and topographically this site lies within the Peak District National Park. The ring and standing stone are located on the eastern flank of Brown Hill with an uninterrupted view through approximately 180 degrees. The view to the north, the east and the south is stunning. This takes in sweeping moorland and the summits of Shining Tor and Shutlingsloe to the north-east and the outcrop of The Roaches and Hen Cloud to the south-east. According to the Cheshire County Sites and Monuments Record, The Bullstones is a classed as a barrow and as far as the Victoria County History is concerned its stones are 'obscured by vegetation'. However this is not the case at all. The Bullstones is a spectacular monument in a spectacular setting, and quite possibly one of the most important and unusual monuments in the East Cheshire area, after the Bridestones. The Bullstones, or Bullstrang as it is sometimes known, first came to the attention of Dr John Dow Sainter in the 1870s. The following extract was published his Scientific Rambles Round Macclesfield in 1878: A short time ago, in a field close to the Cross, an ancient burial was investigated by myself and others. The interment proved to be that of a child or young person, and it was similar to that which had been found at Langley [see page..]. The urn, which was also of Celtic type, had been inverted, and among the burnt bones was found a calcinated flint knife and a flint arrowhead.' Interestingly an urn, reputedly from The Bullstones, resides in the basement of the Congleton Chronicle's offices awaiting re-homing in a local museum, should Congleton ever get one. However, it was not the burial itself that was most interesting, but the setting in which it was placed: 'The circumstances connected with this burial were rather peculiar. It lay about three feet below the surface, and was surrounded by a stone circle twenty feet in diameter, with apparently a headstone, more or less mutilated, four feet in height and the same in breadth, placed not in the centre of the circle, but between two and three feet to one side of it, northwards. Directly opposite the headstone, the circle was entered northward by a short avenue of stones; a line of stones also ran up to the circle in an oblique curve from each corner stone at the entrance to the avenue, leaving a small semi-triangular space on both sides of sufficient dimensions to accommodate four or five persons standing upright in each'. Sainter and a team from The Macclesfield Scientific Society did investigate these triangles but 'upon a trial being made with a spade no burial was found in either of them.' The site survives today more or less as Sainter described it. The most striking feature is a central standing stone which dominates the monument. It is a square looking monolith measuring 1.40m wide, 0.70m deep and 1.10m tall. Its 'flat' top contains a bowl-shaped depression formed along the stone's natural bedding, similar to the weathering 'bowls' found on many standing stones found in this region. This 'headstone' sits in a rough oval of cobble-sized stones (overall dimensions 2.80m by 2.50m including the 'headstone'). Surrounding the stone is an incomplete outer ellipse of rounded cobble to small boulder-sized stones with a diameter of 7.90m x 8.50m which appears to mark the perimeter of a small platform. Parts of this ring are barely visible and can be followed or inferred through the encroaching grass. The entrance avenue, as described by Sainter, is difficult to make out as a mass of small boulders is found today. Being rectangular, the 'headstone' has a number of 'faces' that could hold alignments. The long axis of the stone appears to be orientated in the direction of Roach End (the northern tip of The Roaches outcrop). The sight line takes the eye across the Dane valley, over Back Forest (where Lud's Church gorge is situated) and on to the north end of the millstone grit ridge. The north-eastern long plane is orientated in the direction of Cessbank Common, past the characteristic summit of Shutlingsloe to the smooth featureless ridge of Shining Tor (the highest peak in the area). While the south-western face of the stone points to the unimpressive flank of an adjacent hillock with the southerly end of Wincle Minn being visible. So the question is, what exactly is The Bullstones? We have classed it here as a stone circle, because on the face of it that is what it is 'a circle of stones'. As mentioned previously the Cheshire County Sites and Monuments Record describes it as a barrow because of the burial. Dr Sainter also postulated this when he suggested that the circle and standing stone may have been enclosed in a tumulus ten or twelve feet in height, with the circle of stones placed round its base'. However, just because a site has a burial there, it does not make it a burial monument. There are many examples of burials found at stone circles which were used as ritual monuments by the living. For example, at Doll Tor in the Peak District, burials and accompanying urns were found at the base of several of the standing stones, while at Arbor Low an inhumation was found close to the central cove. The Bullstones has many similarities with the centre-stone circles of south-west Scotland, the best example being Glenquickan near Kirkcudbright. Reading Burl's description of this site one gets the feeling of deja vu. It 'is composed of twenty-nine very low, closely set stones in an ellipse...'with an 'apparent gap in the ring at the south-west filled by a stone whose tip just shows above ground. The interior of the ring is tightly laid with small stones like cobbling'. This description continues 'At the middle of the circle is an immense upright pillar...' In his 2000 volume Burl expands his description and explanation of centre-stone circles, which are also found in Shropshire, Wiltshire, south-west Ireland and Cornwall. He states 'circles with centre stones appear to be late and frequently have a cremation deposit at the foot of the centre stone' and that 'the circles are composed of unobtrusive, rounded stones whereas the interior pillar is distinctly bigger.' He adds 'such monuments can never have been conspicuous and were probably for local ceremonies'. As an interesting aside, not far from Glenquickan are located a number of Neolithic Clyde cairns with their characteristic semi-circular forecourts and horned cairns. Ten kilometres south-west of The Bullstones lie The Bridestones, the remians of a ruined long cairn with close affinities to these Clyde cairns. Could this be more than just coincidence? The site undoubtedly has more to uncover and may yet defy current classification theories, but following conversations with John Barnatt of the Peak District National Park Authority, we may be a little closer to revealing the mystery. He describes the Bullstones as 'a truly cracking site' which 'does not fit with our normative typologies'. He believes it has affinities with the platform cairns found in areas such as Dartmoor and Bodmin Moor as well as the centre stone rings in South-west Scotland. Perhaps if attempts to excavate the site in 1984 had not been abandoned due to the landowner changing his mind, we may have had the answer. (information from www.megalithic.co.uk)