Votive Monument Unearthed at Roman Villa in Germany

News November 4, 2024

Head and other fragments from the votive monument, Hechingen-Stein, Germany
State Office for Monument Preservation in the Stuttgart Regional Council
SHARE:

HECHINGEN-STEIN, GERMANY—Archaeologists have uncovered more than 100 fragments of a votive monument at the site of a Roman villa in southwestern Germany, ArtNet News reports. The complex, which was occupied during the second and third centuries a.d., was first excavated between 1978 and 1981 and then became the Hechingen-Stein Roman Open-Air Museum. Archaeologist Klaus Kortüm of the State Office for Monument Preservation in the Stuttgart Regional Council said that the large stone blocks and smaller pieces of the monument recovered during the most recent excavations, including heads and inscription fragments, make up only a small part of the original monument. “The blocks are decorated with reliefs on all sides, showing ancient gods and figures from the associated legends,” he said. “Following Roman times, the monument was broken up into pieces, both large and small, and scattered. Only some parts of the figures are recognizable and these can only be identified using better-preserved examples.” The researchers plan to create a miniature model of the monument with 3-D printed blocks, which will be displayed in the museum alongside the fragments. To read more about Roman Germany, go to “The Road Almost Taken.”

  • Features November/December 2024

    The Many Faces of the Kingdom of Shu

    Thousands of fantastical bronzes are beginning to reveal the secrets of a legendary Chinese dynasty

    Read Article
    Courtesy Sichuan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2024

    Egyptian Crocodile Hunt

    Read Article
    Courtesy the University of Manchester
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2024

    Monuments to Youth

    Read Article
    Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2024

    Nineteenth-Century Booze Cruise

    Read Article
    Tomasz Stachura/Baltictech