Züschen (megalithic tomb)

Züschen (megalithic tomb)

The Züschen tomb (German: "Steinkammergrab von Züschen", sometimes also "Lohne-Züschen") is a prehistoric burial monument, located between Lohne and Züschen, near Fritzlar, Hesse, Germany. Classified as a gallery grave or a Hessian-Westphalian stone cist ("hessisch-westfälische Steinkiste"), it is one of the most important megalithic monuments in Central Europe. Dating to the late 4th millennium BC (and possibly remaining in use until the early 3rd), it belongs to the Late Neolithic Wartberg culture. The presence of incised carvings, comparable to prehistoric rock art elsewhere in Europe, is a striking feature of Wartberg culture tombs, known so far only from Züschen and from tomb I at Warburg. [Raetzel-Fabian 2000, 126]

Discovery and excavation

The tomb was accidentally discovered in 1894. For a number of years, a row of sandstone blocks had impeded the local miller from ploughing one of his fields. When he decided to remove them, Rudolf Gelpke, an inspector from nearby Garvensburg castle, noted the unusual presence of sandstone in the area of a basalt outcrop. On a visit to the site, he recognised it as a prehistoric monument consisting of two parallel rows of regularly shaped vertical slabs. Gelpke erroneously associated the monument with the Chatti, a local Iron Age tribe. He convinced the owner of the field to remove soil only from the ends of the row. This revealed bones and pottery sherds. At this point, Wilhelm von Garvens, owner of the Garvensburg, was notified. He, in turn, informed the antiquarian Baron Felix von und zu Gilsa. After Gilsa's scrutiny, the tomb was excavated, still in 1894, by Johannes Boehlau, former director of the State Museum at Kassel. [Story of discovery from Boehlau & von Gilsa 1898] Further excavations took place in 1939 and 1949, under the direction of O. Uenze of the archaeological service of Marburg. [Kappel 1990, 3]

Tomb architecture

The rectangular sunken chamber is 20m long and 3.5m wide. It is built of rectangular sandstone slabs, quarried several hundred meters away. Each long wall consists of a row of 12 slabs, one of which is missing. The narrow walls consist of a single slab each. [Kappel 1990, 3; Jockenhövel 1990, 373]

A terminal slab separates the tomb chamber proper from a small anteroom of 2.5m length. At the centre of this slab is a perfectly circular hole, the so-called "Seelenloch" (German for "soul hole"), of 50cm diameter. This is sometimes assumed to be too narrow as an entrance for the passage of human bodies, in which case it may have served as a symbolic connection between the dead within the tomb chamber and the living, assembled in the ante-room for some ritual, perhaps an offering ceremony. [Kappel 1990, 3] Whether the hole could be closed, like in some comparable tombs in France, is not known. The floor of the anteroom was of densely trampled mud. The presence of non-local stones outside the chamber suggests that it was originally covered by an artificial tumulus. It is not clear whether the chamber was roofed in stone or some other material (wood). [Jockenhövel 1990, 373]

Human remains

The earth inside the chamber contained numerous disarticulated human bones. Although the minimum number of individuals is as low as 27, the broken and mixed state of the remains suggests severe disturbance. Thus, it is possible that the number of persons buried here was originally higher. The discovery of an Urnfield period burial above the original depositions indicates that the destruction of the grave, disturbance of its contents and removal of the roof must have taken place before the 10th/9th century BC. Charcoal and ashes were found in a number of locations, especially with human remains near the doorstone and near the southwest terminal slab. None of the human bones showed signs of burning. There was a continuous ash layer in the centre of the anteroom. [Kappel 1990, 6]

Grave offerings

Most finds appeared to be from the main chamber. They were probably placed there on the same occasions as the human bodies. The low number of finds may be the result of the early destruction of the tomb. More common finds included cattle bones and stone tools, including flint knives and sickle blades as well as locally typical triangular slate axes. There were at least three bone tools, namely a chisel, a point and an arrowhead. Pottery fragments were scant; they included a clay cup similar to examples from the related Lohra tomb and collared bottles connected with the northern Funnel Beaker (TRB) Culture. Such bottles appear to have served some special function, maybe the storage of vegetable oils or sulphur for healing purposes. A so-called "Giant Urn" belongs to the later burial. [Jockenhövel 1990, 373; Kappel 1990, 6; W. Schwelnuß 1979: "Wartberg-Gruppe und hessische Megalithik; ein Beitrag zum späten Neolithikum des Hessischen Berglandes", Materialien zur Vor- und Frühgeschichte von Hessen, Bd. 4, Wiesbaden: Landesamt für Denkmalpflege, p. 47-8]

Rock carvings

One of the most striking features of the tomb is the presence of carved symbols on the slabs inside the chamber. [Jockenhövel 1990, 373-5, Kappel 1990, 6-7; Raetzel-Fabian 2000, 123-9] Lines are formed of rows of individual punched dots, possibly applied with a very early metal tool. One of the more common symbols is a simple line with an attached open semicircle, usually interpreted as a stylised depiction of cattle. Normally, two of these symbols are linked by a further line with emphasised terminals. This may be a simple depiction of a plough. More rarely, two of them are linked by what resembles a yoke and pole, suggesting a cart. Occasionally overlapping signs suggest that the individual carvings are in no meaningful relationship to one another, but represent an accumulation of individual signs. Similar depiction of teams of cattle are known from much more recent (Bronze or Iron Age) carvings at Valcamonica near Capo di Ponte, Northern Italy and at Mont Bégo in the French part of the Ligurian Alps. [I. 1978: "Steinkammergräber und Menhire in Nordhessen.", ed. Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Kassel; 6-8, 11-23, also: E. Anati, 1983: Züschen (Kassel) e Anderlingen (Hannover), Germania: Rilievamento e studio dei monumenti megalitici; "Bolletino del Centro Camuno di Studi Preistorici" 20; 132-135..] The symbols are normally assumed to reflect Neolithic ideological or religious ideas. [Raetzel-Fabian 2000, 125]

Reconstruction

A reconstruction of the grave can be seen in the Hessian State Museum ("Hessisches Landesmuseum") in Kassel.

Relationships with other sites

Like any archaeological monument, the Züschen tomb should not be seen as isolated. It is in a close relationship with its landscape and with other sites in the area. Two further tombs, Züschen II and Züschen III are known to have existed in the area. Züschen II was 150m northwest of the main tomb, it was generally comparable, but smaller and undecorated. A third tomb, Züschen III, is located further east. Less than 1km from the Züschen tomb lies the Hasenberg, a prominent basalt dome, the top of which contains an important Wartberg settlement. Intriguingly, the Züschen tomb also appears to be designed in such a way that its main axis point directly at the Wartberg itself, 4km to the east. [Jockenhövel 1990, 375-7]

References

Bibliography

* Johannes Boehlau and Baron Felix von Gilsa zu Gilsa 1898: "Neolithische Denkmäler aus Hessen". Kassel: Döll.
* Dietrich Evers (ed.) 1988: "Die ältesten Wagenbilder Europas." Gravuren im Steinkammergrab von Züschen in Nordhessen - Versuch einer Deutung. Ausstellung im Hess. Landesmuseum Kassel 8.5. - 24.7.1988. Gutenberg: Melsungen.
* Albrecht Jockenhövel 1990: Fritzlar-Lohne und -Züschen: Megalithgräber und Höhensiedlung der Wartberggruppe; in: F.-R. Herrmann & A. Jockenhövel (eds.): Die Vorgeschichte Hessens; Stuttgart: Theiss; p. 373-377.
* Irene Kappel 1990: "Das Steinkammergrab bei Züschen: Denkmal europäischer Bedeutung in Nordhessen, Führungsblatt zu der Grabstätte der Jungsteinzeit in der Gemarkung Lohne, Stadt Fritzlar, Schwalm-Eder-Kreis" Archäologische Denkmäler in Hessen 22, Wiesbaden: Archäologische Denkmalpflege im Landesamt für Denkmalpflege.
* Dirk Raetzel-Fabian: "Die ersten Bauernkulturen. Jungsteinzeit in Nordhessen". Vor- u. Frühgeschichte im Hessischen Landesmuseum in Kassel. Vol 2. Kassel 2000, ISBN 3931787117
* Waldraut Schrickel: "Westeuropäische Elemente im neolithischen Grabbau Mitteldeutschlands und die Galeriegräber Westdeutschlands und ihre Inventare." Habelt, Bonn 1966.

ee also

*Lohra (megalithic tomb)
*Altendorf (megalithic tomb)
*Niedertiefenbach (megalithic tomb)
*Wartberg culture

External links

* [http://www.regionalmuseum-fritzlar.de/projekte/steinkammergrab/steinkammergrab.htm Short decsription on Fritzlar Museum page (in german)]
* [http://www.museum-kassel.de/index_navi.php?parent=1561 Kassel Museum's page on the Züschen tomb]
* [http://www.uni-muenster.de/UrFruehGeschichte/Z%FCschen.html Report of a University of Münster project on the carvings]

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