Old Straight Track
Alfred Watkins
This is a study of the ancient tracks or leys that criss-cross the British Isles, a system which was old when the Romans first came to Britain. This is a collection of the author's investiations of the ancient monuments, which he argues follow the paths of the planets.






This book is a load of preposterous nonsense outlining the theory that prehistoric Britons built their major monuments on straight-track alignments strecthing for hundreds of miles. But, written in the 1920s, it nevertheless has old-world charm and contains a wealth of genuine information about the structures built by our ancestors from the start of farming to the ROman Conquest.

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