Guernsey Press

Thousands gather at Stonehenge for winter solstice

English Heritage said 6,000 people gathered at the neolithic monument to mark the shortest day of the year.

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Thousands of people greeted the sunrise with cheers as it rose over Stonehenge for the winter solstice.

Those who observed the spectacle at the neolithic monument in Wiltshire braved a blustery morning and overcast skies to catch a glimpse of the sun to mark the shortest day.

English Heritage’s Rebecca Eade said: “It was wonderful to welcome approximately 6,000 people to Stonehenge this morning to celebrate a chilly winter solstice.

“It was a peaceful celebration and despite a cloudy and blustery start, people did enjoy a bright winter solstice sunrise.”

Stonehenge is a monument built on the alignment of the midsummer sunrise and the midwinter sunset.

Winter solstice 2023
Thousands of people braved a blustery morning to catch the sunrise over Stonehenge to mark the shortest day of the year (Ben Birchall/PA)

The date of the equinoxes and solstices varies because the Gregorian calendar does not exactly match the length of the tropical year – the time it takes the Earth to complete an orbit around the Sun.

To realign the calendar with the tropical year, a leap day is introduced every four years and when this happens, the equinox and solstice dates shift back to the earlier date.

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