Revellers cheered and beat drums as the sun rose at 8.09am on Saturday over the giant standing stones on the winter solstice - the shortest day and the longest night in the Northern Hemisphere.
No one could see the sun through the low winter cloud, but that did not deter a flurry of drumming, chanting and singing as dawn broke.
Low cloud prevented revellers seeing the sun rise over the famous Neolithic monument. (AP PHOTO)
There will be less than eight hours of daylight in England on Saturday, but after that, the days get longer until the summer solstice in June.
The solstices are the only occasions when visitors can go right up to the stones at Stonehenge, and thousands are willing to rise before dawn to soak up the atmosphere.
The stone circle, whose giant pillars each took 1000 people to move, was erected starting about 5000 years ago by a sun-worshipping Neolithic culture.
Its full purpose is still debated: was it a temple, a solar calculator, a cemetery, or some combination of all three?
In a paper published in the journal Archaeology International, researchers from University College London and Aberystwyth University said the site on Salisbury Plain, about 130km southwest of London, might have had political as well as spiritual significance.
That follows from the recent discovery that one of Stonehenge's stones - the unique stone lying flat at the center of the monument, dubbed the "altar stone" - originated in Scotland, hundreds of miles north of the site.
Some of the other stones were brought from the Preseli Hills in southwest Wales, nearly 240km to the west.
Lead author Mike Parker Pearson from UCL's Institute of Archaeology said the geographical diversity suggests Stonehenge may have served as a "monument of unification for the peoples of Britain, celebrating their eternal links with their ancestors and the cosmos".