Native Name: | Steinkiste auf dem Hartberg |
Map Type: | Germany |
Map Size: | 200 |
Coordinates: | 49.9051°N 6.3899°W |
Epochs: | Late Neolithic, c. 3000 BC |
The Hartberg megalithic tomb is an archaeological site of the late Neolithic Age, near Schankweiler and about 10km (10miles) south-west of Bitburg, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, near the border with Luxemburg.
The site, on the western slope of the Hartberg north of Schankweiler, dates from about 3000 BC. It is the only Neolithic tomb of this type in Rhineland-Palatiate. It is a gallery grave, with two chambers, formed from sandstone slabs and blocks, the main chamber measuring about 2by. The entrance to the tomb is an incomplete slab with part of a circular opening about in diameter. There is the lower half of a slab separating the main chamber and a poorly preserved antechamber. There were originally roof slabs, and the grave was probably once covered with a mound.[1] [2] [3]
There has been excavation of the site. Bones and pottery sherds were found in the tomb, and flint knives, flint arrowheads and pottery sherds were discovered outside; these suggested a date of about 3000 BC. There was a small beaker in the tomb, with "barbed-wire" decoration, of the early Bronze Age, suggesting that the site was in use, perhaps with interruptions, for about 1000 years. A long stone stele was found in the tomb, which may have stood above the mound.[1] [2] [3]
Slabs from the tomb were later used in the early Iron Age to build a house nearby. During the Roman period or later there was quarrying from the rocky ground that forms the western wall of the tomb.[1] [3]