Keltenwelt Am Glauberg

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Keltenwelt Am Glauberg Keltenwelt am Glauberg Museum • Archaeological Park • Research Center Track down a long distant past! Keltenwelt am Glauberg Am Glauberg 1 Our guided tours for groups make the visit to the 63695 Glauburg KELTENWELT at the Glauberg during all seasons of the Phone: 06041/82330-0 year an exciting experience for young and old. Opening hours: For a tour of the exhibition with many additional infor- Tuesday to Sunday from 10 am to 6 pm mation, our visitors can borrow multimedia audioguides Enquries and bookings: 06041/82330-24 (German, English, French) for a fee. www.keltenwelt-glauberg.de Activity programs The proof of the pudding is in the eating – following this Keltenwelt old insight, the KELTENWELT presents a wide range of am Glauberg offers. The focus is on an active experience of archaeology and the immersion into past cultures. During the season extending from March to October, we offer our visitors each day (except for Monday) at 1 pm “open guided tours” in the museum. The World of the Celts at the Glauberg The museum´s treasures The Archaeological Park Museum • Archaeological Park • Research Center The life-sized sandstone statue and the finds from the Explore the spacious archaeological park around the museum. The Glauberg is a very special place and was already burials at the Glauberg remained undiscovered in the From the reconstructed burial mound the route leads to the settled by humans as early as the late Stone Age. ground for nearly 2,500 years. They are the centrepiece of hilltop plateau with the remains of the once imposant celtic The finds from three Celtic burials from the 5th century BC, the exhibition and the original objects are on display. In fortification and the relics from the Middle Ages. and the statue of a Celtic ruler are unique and recognised addition you can also see the finds from settlements at throughout the world as an archaeological sensation. the Glauberg and its environs, which are no less important. Here not only the exciting history of the Glauberg, but also Multimedia installations and a fictional story in comic style a beautiful landscape with a species-rich flora and fauna The museum is part of the KELTENWELT at the that accompanies visitors transport our guests into the age are waiting for you. Glauberg. This also includes a large archaeological park of the Celts. and a research centre. In the park you will find the recon- struction of a burial mound, a mysterious system of banks The exhibition at the KELTENWELT at the Glauberg is The museum bistro – delicacies from the region and ditches, and fortifications from early Celtic times. housed in what is currently one of the most spectacular Further monuments from other historical periods can be museum buildings in Germany. It sheds light on the culture The museum bistro of the KELTENWELT at the Glauberg seen on the Glauberg plateau. of the Celts from a number of quite different perspectives, has prepared to meet your wishes. Here you will find but the centrepiece is always the spectacular finds from delicious cakes, food and drinks. It has a capacity of 80 seats, the Glauberg. a large outdoor and the same opening hours as the museum (10:00 am-6:00 pm, Tuesday to Sunday). Seat reservations for groups are possible. In this case our menu can be adapted to your wishes, too. Discover the world past of the Entry prices Adults: 7,00 € Reduced: 5,00 € (Handicapped including accompanying person, students, unemployed with proof, pensioners) Children (6–18 years old): 3,00 € Children under 6 years old: free entry Family ticket: 14,00 € (2 adults with children) .
Recommended publications
  • The Complexity and Fragility of Early Iron Age Urbanism in West-Central Temperate Europe
    J World Prehist (2017) 30:259–279 DOI 10.1007/s10963-017-9108-5 The Complexity and Fragility of Early Iron Age Urbanism in West-Central Temperate Europe 1 1 Manuel Ferna´ndez-Go¨tz • Ian Ralston Published online: 5 September 2017 Ó The Author(s) 2017. This article is an open access publication Abstract The development of large agglomerations is one of the most important phenomena in later Eurasian prehistory. In west-central temperate Europe, the origins of urbanism have long been associated with the oppida of the second to first centuries BC. However, large-scale excavations and surveys carried out over the last two decades have fundamentally modified the traditional picture of early centralization processes. New results indicate that the first urban centres north of the Alps developed over time between the end of the seventh and the fifth century BC in an area stretching from Bohemia to southern Germany and Central France. Sites such as the Heuneburg, Za´vist, Mont Lassois and Bourges produce evidence of a process of differentiation and hierarchization in the pattern of settlement that was concurrently an expression of, and a catalyst for, increasing social inequality. Although contacts with the Mediterranean world would certainly have played a role in such processes, endogenous factors were primarily responsible for the development of these early Central European agglom- erations. This paper summarizes recent fieldwork results, showing the heterogeneity and diversity of Early Iron Age central places and outlining their diachronic devel- opment. The fragility and ephemeral character of these centres of power and their territories is highlighted.
    [Show full text]
  • Burial Mounds in Europe and Japan Comparative and Contextual Perspectives
    Comparative and Global Perspectives on Japanese Archaeology Burial Mounds in Europe and Japan Comparative and Contextual Perspectives edited by Access Thomas Knopf, Werner Steinhaus and Shin’ya FUKUNAGAOpen Archaeopress Archaeopress Archaeology © Archaeopress and the authors, 2018. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd Summertown Pavilion 18-24 Middle Way Summertown Oxford OX2 7LG www.archaeopress.com ISBN 978 1 78969 007 1 ISBN 978 1 78969 008 8 (e-Pdf) © Archaeopress and the authors 2018 © All image rights are secured by the authors (Figures edited by Werner Steinhaus) Access Cover illustrations: Mori-shōgunzuka mounded tomb located in Chikuma-shi in Nagano prefecture, Japan, by Werner Steinhaus (above) Magdalenenberg burial mound at Villingen-Schwenningen, Germany,Open by Thomas Knopf (below) The printing of this book wasArchaeopress financed by the Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owners. Printed in England by Oxuniprint, Oxford This book is available direct from Archaeopress or from our website www.archaeopress.com © Archaeopress and the authors, 2018. Contents List of Figures .................................................................................................................................................................................... iii List of authors .................................................................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Download Article (PDF)
    Open Archaeology 2019; 5: 365–382 Original Study Axel G. Posluschny*, Ruth Beusing Space as the Stage: Understanding the Sacred Landscape Around the Early Celtic Hillfort of the Glauberg https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2019-0023 Received February 23, 2019; accepted June 8, 2019 Abstract: The Early ‘Celtic’1 hillfort of the Glauberg in Central Germany, some 40 km northeast of Frankfurt, is renowned for its richly furnished burials and particularly for a wholly preserved sandstone statue of an Early Iron Age chief, warrior or hero with a peculiar headgear – one of the earliest life-size figural representations north of the Alps. Despite a long history of research, the basis for the apparent prosperity of the place (i.e., of the people buried here) is still debated, as is the meaning of the settlement site as part of its surrounding landscape. The phenomenon known as ‘princely sites’ is paralleled in the area north and west of the Alps, though each site has a unique set of characteristics. This paper focusses on investigations and new excavations that put the Glauberg with its settlement, burial and ceremonial features into a wider landscape context, including remote sensing approaches (geophysics and LiDAR) as well as viewshed analyses which define the surrounding area based on the Glauberg itself and other burial mounds on the mountains in its vicinity. Keywords: Sacred places, calendar building, viewshed analyses, hillforts, ‘princely seats’ 1 Introduction – The Glauberg, an Early Iron Age ‘Princely Site’ The Late Bronze Age (Urnfield Culture; ca 1.200–780 BC) and Early Iron Age (Late Hallstatt and Early Latène period; ca 650–260 BC) hillfort on the Glauberg, some 40 km northeast of Frankfurt in Germany (fig.
    [Show full text]
  • La Arqueología Funeraria Desde Una Perspectiva De Género
    COLECCIÓN ESTUDIOS 145 La Arqueología funeraria desde una perspectiva de género II Jornadas Internacionales de Arqueología y Género en la UAM Lourdes Prados Torreira (Ed.) Clara López Ruiz y Javier Parra Camacho (Coords.) COLECCIÓN ESTUDIOS 145 La Arqueología funeraria desde una perspectiva de género II Jornadas Internacionales de Arqueología y Género en la UAM Lourdes Prados Torreira (Ed.) Clara López Ruiz y Javier Parra Camacho (Coords.) Servicio de Publicaciones de la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Todos los derechos reservados. De conformidad con lo dispuesto en la legislación vigente, podrán ser castigados con penas de multa y privación de libertad quienes reproduzcan o plagien, en todo o en parte, una obra literaria, artística o científica fijada en cualquier tipo de soporte, sin la preceptiva autorización. © Ediciones UAM, 2012 © Los/as respectivos/as autores/as Ediciones Universidad Autónoma de Madrid Campus de Cantoblanco C/ Einstein, 1 28049 Madrid Tel. 914974233 (Fax 914975169) http://www.uam.es/publicaciones [email protected] ISBN: 978-84-8344-218-0 Diseño y maquetación: Miguel A. Tejedor López Depósito legal: Printed in Spain - Impreso en España ÍNDICE Prólogo .........................................................................................................7 Lourdes Prados Torreira Muerte y género en la Prehistoria española ..........................................21 Sandra Montón Subías La mujer en el III milenio a. C. a través de las manifestaciones funerarias: un ejemplo en territorio madrileño ...................................39
    [Show full text]
  • Routes4u Project Feasibility Study on the Roman Heritage Route in the Adriatic and Ionian Region
    Routes4U Project Feasibility Study on the Roman Heritage Route in the Adriatic and Ionian Region Routes4U Feasibility Study on an Iron Age cultural route in the Danube Region Routes4U Project Routes4U Feasibility study on an Iron Age cultural route in the Danube Region ROUTES4U FEASIBILITY STUDY ON AN IRON AGE CULTURAL ROUTE IN THE DANUBE REGION August 2019 The present study has been developed in the framework of Routes4U, the Joint Programme between the Council of Europe and the European Commission (DG REGIO). Routes4U aims to foster regional development through the Cultural Routes of the Council of Europe programme in the four EU macro-regions: the Adriatic and Ionian, Alpine, Baltic Sea and Danube Regions. A special thank you goes to the author Martin Fera, and to the numerous partners and stakeholders who supported the study. The opinions expressed in this work are the responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of the Council of Europe. www.coe.int/routes4u 2 / 57 Routes4U Feasibility study on an Iron Age cultural route in the Danube Region CONTENTS Contents ................................................................................................................................................................... 3 I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ........................................................................................................... 5 II. ANALYSIS OF THE “STATE OF THE ART” OF IRON AGE HERITAGE IN THE DANUBE REGION...............................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Architecture, Style and Structure in the Early Iron Age in Central Europe
    TOMASZ GRALAK ARCHITECTURE, STYLE AND STRUCTURE IN THE EARLY IRON AGE IN CENTRAL EUROPE Wrocław 2017 Reviewers: prof. dr hab. Danuta Minta-Tworzowska prof. dr hab. Andrzej P. Kowalski Technical preparation and computer layout: Natalia Sawicka Cover design: Tomasz Gralak, Nicole Lenkow Translated by Tomasz Borkowski Proofreading Agnes Kerrigan ISBN 978-83-61416-61-6 DOI 10.23734/22.17.001 Uniwersytet Wrocławski Instytut Archeologii © Copyright by Uniwersytet Wrocławski and author Wrocław 2017 Print run: 150 copies Printing and binding: "I-BIS" Usługi Komputerowe, Wydawnictwo S.C. Andrzej Bieroński, Przemysław Bieroński 50-984 Wrocław, ul. Sztabowa 32 Contents INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................... 9 CHAPTER I. THE HALLSTATT PERIOD 1. Construction and metrology in the Hallstatt period in Silesia .......................... 13 2. The koine of geometric ornaments ......................................................................... 49 3. Apollo’s journey to the land of the Hyperboreans ............................................... 61 4. The culture of the Hallstatt period or the great loom and scales ....................... 66 CHAPTER II. THE LA TÈNE PERIOD 1. Paradigms of the La Tène style ................................................................................ 71 2. Antigone and the Tyrannicides – the essence of ideological change ................. 101 3. The widespread nature of La Tène style ................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Glauberg-Poster
    Geoarchaeological studies of man-environment-interaction at Glauberg, Wetterau, Germany. Annette Kadereit1) Ulrich Dehner2), Leif Hansen3), Christopher Pare3) & Günther A. Wagner1) 1) Forschungsstelle Archäometrie der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften am Max-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Saupfercheckweg 1, D-69117 Heidelberg 2) Fachbereich Geowissenschaften, Geographisches Institut, Johannes Gutenberg - Universität Mainz, D-55099 Mainz 3) Institut für Vor- und Frühgeschichte, Johannes Gutenberg - Universität Mainz, Schillerstr. 11 Schönborner Hof - Südflügel, D-55116 Mainz Introduction The Glauberg in Hesse, Germany, is a basaltic foothill of the Tertiary Vogelsberg volcano rising 150 m above the fertile Wetterau basin (fig. 1a). In this unique topographic position an impressive Iron Age hillfort is located on top of the plateau (fig. 1b). The discovery of extremely richly furnished „princely graves“ (fig. 2) directly to the south of the Glauberg suggests that during the late Hallstatt and early La Tène periods (600 - 250 BC) the Glauberg was the centre of an Iron Age ‘princely’ dynasty. In order to understand the ‘Early processes of centralisation and (a) urbanisation.’ and ’The origin and development of early Celtic ‘princely seats’ and their teritories’ research has been taken up at the Glauberg together with other important central European Iron Age sites (e.g. Heuneburg, Ipf, Hohenasperg, Mont Lassois) within a priority research programme (SPP 1171) of the German Science Foundation (DFG.). At Glauberg, geoarchaeological studies have been taken up to gain a precise knowledge of the settlement history against the background of landscape development and use. The present study analyses the annex, a complex Fig. 2: View from the North over the tumulus above (b) enclosure of ramparts and ditches on the northern Glauberg slope (fig.
    [Show full text]
  • Birch-Bark Hats and Elite Status in Iron Age Europe Cara Melissa Reeves University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
    University of Wisconsin Milwaukee UWM Digital Commons Theses and Dissertations December 2015 Head and Shoulders Above the Rest: Birch-Bark Hats and Elite Status in Iron Age Europe Cara Melissa Reeves University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: https://dc.uwm.edu/etd Part of the Archaeological Anthropology Commons Recommended Citation Reeves, Cara Melissa, "Head and Shoulders Above the Rest: Birch-Bark Hats and Elite Status in Iron Age Europe" (2015). Theses and Dissertations. 1036. https://dc.uwm.edu/etd/1036 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by UWM Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of UWM Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HEAD AND SHOULDERS ABOVE THE REST: BIRCH-BARK HATS AND ELITE STATUS IN IRON AGE EUROPE by Cara Reeves A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Anthropology at The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee December 2015 ABSTRACT HEAD AND SHOULDERS ABOVE THE REST: BIRCH-BARK HATS AND ELITE STATUS IN IRON AGE EUROPE by Cara Reeves The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 2015 Under the Supervision of Professor Bettina Arnold As competition between Celtic elites increased in Iron Age continental Europe (c. 800- 25/15 BC), ornamentation of the head figured prominently in status displays across the Celtic world. Mortuary and iconographic contexts reveal that headgear made of both metal and organic materials marked elite status, but materials varied regionally by gender and age throughout the Iron Age.
    [Show full text]
  • Differentiation and Globalization in Early Iron Age Europe
    CONNECTING ELITES AND REGIONS AND ELITES CONNECTING CONNECTING ELITES AND REGIONS The Early Iron Age Hallstatt C period in Northwest and Central Europe is marked by the emergence of monumental tumuli with lavish burials, some of which are known as chieftain’s or princely graves. This new burial rite reflects one of the most noteworthy developments in Early Iron Age Europe: the rise of a new and elaborate way of elite representation north of the Alps. These sumptuous burials contain beautiful weaponry, bronze vessels and extravagantly decorated wagons and horse-gear. They reflect long-distance connections in material culture and elite (burial) practices across the breadth of Northwest and Central Europe. Research into this period, however, tends to be regionally focused and poorly accessible to scholars from other areas – language barriers in particular are a hindering factor. In an attempt to overcome this, Connecting Elites and Regions brings to- gether scholars from several research traditions and nations who present regio- nal overviews and discussions of elite burials and material culture from all over Northwest and Central Europe. In many cases these are the first overviews available in English and together they make regional research accessible to a wider audience. As such this volume contributes to and hopes to stimulate research on the Early Iron Age Hallstatt C period on a European scale. CONNECTING ELITES AND REGIONS Perspectives on contacts, relations and differentiation during the Early Iron Age Hallstatt C period in Northwest and Central Europe edited by ISBNSidestone 978-90-8890-442-4 Press Sidestone Robert Schumann & ISBN: 978-90-8890-442-4 Sasja van der Vaart- Verschoof 9 789088 904424 Source reference: Schumann, R.
    [Show full text]
  • High Mobility Rates During the Period of the “Celtic Migrations”? Sr/ 86Sr
    High mobility rates during the period of the “Celtic migrations”? 87Sr/86Sr and δ18O evidence from Early La Tène Europe Mirjam Scheeres High mobility rates during the period of the “Celtic migrations”? 87Sr/86Sr and δ18O evidence from Early La Tène Europe Dissertation zur Erlangung des Grades Doktor der Naturwissenschaften Am Fachbereich Biologie der Johannes Gutenberg–Universität Mainz Mirjam Scheeres geb. am 20.06.1979 in Zwolle, Niederlande Mainz, 2014 (D77) Ich erkläre hiermit, dass ich die vorliegende Arbeit selbständig verfasst und keine anderen als die angegebenen Quellen und Hilfsmittel benutzt habe. Mainz, Januar 2014 Yesterday is history Tomorrow is a mystery Today is a gift That is why we call it the present -Eleanor Roosevelt- PREFACE This thesis encompasses the first results of the bioarchaeometric (87Sr/86Sr and δ18O) research that started on the 1st of November 2008. The study, conducted under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Kurt W. Alt in Mainz, resulted in three manuscripts that will be presented in this thesis. The first paper (Chapter 3) is in press and will appear in “The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Continental Celts” (Scheeres et al., 2013a). In this contribution 87Sr/86Sr and δ18O data are used to investigate whether the biologically related individuals of Münsingen-Rain (Switzerland) originated from a local or non-local community and if non- local individuals occurred in both the early and the late phase of the cemetery. The second paper (Chapter 4), which is published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, examines if the 87Sr/86Sr data indicate different mobility rates among the deceased at the Early La Tène cemeteries of Nebringen (Germany) and Monte Bibele (Italy) (Scheeres et al., 2013b).
    [Show full text]
  • Palynological and Archaeological Data – a Comparative Approach
    Reconstructing Ancient Landscapes and Vegetation Astrid Stobbe Palynological and Archaeological Data – a Comparative Approach Abstract: The 600 km2 of the basin of the Wetterau, part of the “Rhein-Main-Tiefland” in the federal state of Hesse in Germany, is an archaeologically intensively investigated landscape. Numerous precisely dated palynological studies are available, and so a direct comparison of archaeological and palynological results is possible. The vegetation history, as recorded in four pollen diagrams, will be discussed in relationship with the archaeological data known from a radius of 1, 3 and 5 km around each of the sites from which pollen was taken. The aim of the study is to investigate in which cases the established vegetation changes can be directly linked to the archaeological record. Furthermore, possible causes will be investigated. Introduction from the valley floor. Due to this undulating relief the Wetterau differs from other plains, for example The study area is the 600 km2 of the Wetterau, situ- the North German Lowlands. The valley is sur- ated north of Frankfurt am Main, in the federal state rounded by two low mountain ranges (Vogelsberg of Hesse in Germany (Fig. 1). Overall the area is a in the east and Taunus in the west) with peaks of large basin, but there are numerous ridges that rise some 800 m and more. Extreme fertile loess soils cover the area which has been intensively inhab- ited since the first farmers of the linear pottery culture (LBK). Above all the sensational discovery of the Early-Latène “Fürstensitz” (princely site) at the Glauberg attracted public interest in the area (Baitinger / Pinsker 2002).
    [Show full text]
  • New Research on Late Bronze Age Hillforts Between the Taunus and the Vogelsberg
    On the Fringes of the Mountain Ridge 27 Daniel Neumann On the Fringes of the Mountain Ridge – New Research on Late Bronze Age Hillforts between the Taunus and the Vogelsberg Introduction Although researching hillforts has already a long tradition, the knowledge on fortified settlements from the Bronze Age is restricted and in many ways still very limited. This situation is true for many regions in Europe, and the case of the Cen- tral European Mountain Range is no exception in this regard. Henceforth research within the LOEWE initiative “Prehistoric Conflict Research – Bronze Age Hillforts between Taunus and Car- pathinan Mountains”1 has been challenging this situation since 2016. Within the framework of this initiative two projects examining hillforts in the federal state of Hesse have been established2 and will be complemented by an investigation of the past landscape.3 In the following a preliminary insight into the first year’s research on the Late Bronze Age hilltop sites between the mountain ranges Vogelsberg and Taunus will be given.4 Fig. 1 Location of the area of research within the federal state of History of research Hesse and the Federal Republic of Germany (made with Natural Earth) The area of research is confined by two moun- tain ranges: the Taunus and the Vogelsberg (Figs. ods of time is known. Thereby the density of sites 1–2). Whilst the Taunus is part of the Rhenish on the slopes of the Taunus is remarkable (Fig. 2). Slate Mountains, the Vogelsberg is by contrast In view of excavations, collected artefacts or the of volcanic origin.
    [Show full text]