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Solomon’s Temple, Stonehenge, and divine architecture in the English enlightenment

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posted on 2025-05-10, 23:51 authored by Tessa Morrison
Isaac Newton had a long running interest in Solomon’s Temple. For Newton the plan of the Temple was a successor of the ancient Prytanæum, a temple where a sacred fire was kept burning. The plan of the Prytanæum was ‘the frame of the world as the true Temple of the great God’ and it was the antecedent to all other temples. Newton mentioned in an unpublished manuscript that it would appear that Stonehenge was an ancient Prytanæum and as such the architectural style of Stonehenge was an antecedent of Solomon’s Temple. He only mentioned it once but the connection between Solomon’s Temple and Stonehenge was made by other significant figures of the English Enlightenment including Inigo Jones, William Stukeley, and John Wood the Elder. This connection was turned into something particularly English.

History

Journal title

Parergon

Volume

29

Issue

1

Pagination

135-163

Publisher

Australian and New Zealand Association for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (ANZAMEMS)

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment

School

School of Architecture and Built Environment

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