Klavsebølle Snedkergård
Klavsebølle Snedkergård (also called Klausebølle) is a Runddysse in Tullebølle in the north of the Danish island of Langeland . It originated in the Neolithic between 3500 and 2800 BC. BC as a plant of the funnel beaker culture (TBK).
The rectangular, partly free-standing west-east oriented chamber with access in the east has a bearing stone on each long side, one at the west end and one stone on the north side of the entrance. The southern counterpart is missing. The large mushroom-shaped capstone is in situ . There are seven or eight bowls on the top . The remaining hill, plowed off at the side, is about one meter high, no longer round and measures about 7.0 × 6.5 m.
Nearby is the passage grave of Klavsebølle .
See also
literature
- Jens Bech: Monuments on Langeland (= Tryk from Langelands Museum. Vol. 4, ZDB -ID 2370563-2 ). 2nd edition. Langelands Centraltrykkeri, Rudkøbing 1981.
- Karsten Kjer Michaelsen: Politics bog om Danmarks oldtid. (= Politikens håndbøger. ) Politiken, Copenhagen 2002, ISBN 87-567-6458-8 , p. 212.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Runddysse is the name commonly used in Denmark for dolmens that are located in a round hill; In contrast, Langdysser are those dolmens that lie in a rectangular or trapezoidal barn bed
Web links
Coordinates: 54 ° 58 ′ 13.2 ″ N , 10 ° 45 ′ 30.4 ″ E