19 January 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

A Roman Votive Monument Discovered During Excavations at the Roman Open-Air Museum Hechingen-Stein

During recent excavations by the State Office for Monument Preservation (LAD) in the Stuttgart Regional Council and the Association for the Promotion of the Roman Open-Air Museum Hechingen-Stein e.V. (Zollernalb District) on the grounds of the open-air museum, an extraordinary Roman votive monument was discovered.

With more than 100 pieces portraying Roman gods and mythological scenes, this astounding discovery deepens our knowledge of the area’s ancient Roman religious customs. This archaeological treasure was publicly revealed on October 24, 2024.

According to archaeologist Dr. Klaus Kortüm of the Landesamt für Denkmalpflege (State Office for Monument Preservation) in Stuttgart, the original monument was composed of several stacked stone blocks, each decorated on all sides with reliefs illustrating deities and mythical characters from the Roman period.

 “The blocks are decorated with reliefs on all sides, showing ancient gods and figures from the associated legends. The monument was broken up into large and small individual pieces and scattered in post-Roman times. Only parts of the figures can be recognized on them, which can often only be named based on better-preserved parallels,” said Kortüm.

Large relief block of a woman with a flower necklace. Photo: LDA in the RPS, K. Kortüm
Large relief block of a woman with a flower necklace. Photo: LDA in the RPS, K. Kortüm

Only a small portion of the original pieces have been recovered thus far, making reconstruction of this Roman monument extremely difficult. Archaeologists have chosen to use scaled-down 3D-printed replicas in order to restore it to its full and correct form, enabling them to put together a model that is true to the original structure.



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



The plan is to permanently exhibit the originals together with the finished model in the open-air museum, said Kortüm.

According to the archaeologists, comparable pillars of the gods have rarely been found in the Roman border provinces on the Rhine and Danube. According to initial findings, the Hechingen specimen must have been quite large compared. But who might the high-ranking owner have been? Who consecrated it and what was the occasion? The monument’s discovery throws a significant light on the large Roman villa complex of Hechingen-Stein, which has not yet revealed all its secrets.

Large relief block Man with staff. Photo: LDA in the RPS, K. Kortüm
Large relief block Man with staff. Photo: LDA in the RPS, K. Kortüm

The main building of the Roman estate from the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD was excavated between 1978 and 1981 by the then Tübingen branch of the Monuments Office. The open-air museum was established the following year and has been continually expanded ever since. New excavations have been carried out almost every year since 1992 in cooperation between the local association responsible for the museum and the state office. Today, the entire complex of a Roman estate, including the farm buildings and the surrounding wall, can be experienced by interested visitors.

State Office for Monument Preservation in the Stuttgart Regional Council

Cover Image Credit: Fragments of the monument to the gods at Hechingen-Stein: heads and inscription. Photo: LDA in the RPS, K. Kortüm

Related Articles

Archaeologists Discover 2,000-Year-Old Jug in Tajikistan Bearing Woman’s Name

4 July 2025

4 July 2025

In a discovery of rare historical and cultural significance, archaeologists in southern Tajikistan have uncovered a 2,000-year-old clay jug bearing...

The history of Kültepe Mound in central Turkey goes back another 300 years

12 December 2021

12 December 2021

In Kültepe, where the first written documents of Anatolia were unearthed, the date based on 5 thousand years was updated...

3,500-Year-Old Hittite Linen Fabric Exhibited for the First Time

10 March 2025

10 March 2025

A remarkable artifact, a piece of Hittite linen fabric dating back 3,500 years, has been publicly exhibited for the first...

A new study attributes Japanese, Korean and Turkish languages all to a common ancestor in northeastern China

11 November 2021

11 November 2021

According to a new study, modern languages ranging from Japanese and Korean to Turkish and Mongolian may have had a...

New Research Uncovers Earliest Evidence of Humans in Rainforests, Pushing Timeline Back 150,000 Years

3 March 2025

3 March 2025

The rainforests, as important biomes on earth, were considered uninhabited until recent history. New findings now show that humans lived...

An Ancient Site Found in UAE may be Sixth-Century Lost City of Tu’am

18 June 2024

18 June 2024

Ruins from the sixth century have been discovered during excavations in the United Arab Emirates Umm Al Quwain region, which...

Ceremonial cave site from Postclassic Maya period discovered in Yucatán Peninsula

21 December 2021

21 December 2021

Archaeologists have discovered a ceremonial cave site in Chemuyil on the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico, that dates from the Postclassic Maya...

Time Team Cracks Sutton Hoo Mystery: ‘Master Count’ Bucket Was a Burial Urn

20 May 2025

20 May 2025

In a remarkable breakthrough at the historic Sutton Hoo site in Suffolk, England, archaeologists have revealed that a 6th-century Byzantine...

‘Proof of biblical kings’, Israel deciphers 8th century BC Hezekiah inscription after a decade of research

17 December 2022

17 December 2022

Israeli archeologists have deciphered an 8th-century BC inscription discovered on a palm-sized stone tablet after a decade of research.  The...

Iraqis Disliked El Nouri Mosque’s Restoration Plan

18 April 2021

18 April 2021

UNESCO recently announced that the El Nouri mosque, which was bombed by ISIL(The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant),...

Getting to Know Matar Kubilea

8 February 2021

8 February 2021

Hittite state’s, With its collapse in 1200-1190 BC, Anatolia entered a period of drift from holistic to dispersal. (The Hittite...

A stunning fresco depicting Helen of Troy is revealed during excavations at the ancient Roman city

11 April 2024

11 April 2024

Archeologists have uncovered remarkably preserved ‘fresco’ paintings on a wall in the banqueting room of a large house along Via...

Rare medieval bone flute unearthed in Kent, southeastern coast of England

22 November 2022

22 November 2022

Archaeologists from Cotswold Archaeology have unearthed a rare medieval bone flute during excavations in Herne Bay, located in Kent, southeastern...

DNA Cracks a 750-Year-Old Murder: The Vicious Killing of a Forgotten Duke Finally Exposed

16 November 2025

16 November 2025

For more than seven centuries, the violent end of a young medieval nobleman remained an unresolved whisper in European history—half...

The First Native Americans were Among the First Metal Miners in the World

20 March 2021

20 March 2021

An arrowhead made of pure copper 8,500 years ago dates the history of the copper age to an earlier period,...