Brochure Hunebedcentrum (English)
Transcription
Brochure Hunebedcentrum (English)
S C A N D I N A V Opening times I Ë GRONINGEN Monday to Friday 10-00 to 17-00 pm Weekends and public holidays 11-00 am to 17-00 pm Museum Haren G R O N I N G E N Winschoten Hoogezand-Sappemeer Oude Pekela VEENDAM Closed on Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day. BO Nieuwe Pekela Admission RGER ASSEN Special price for groups of 15 or more. The Dutch Annual Museum Pass is valid. The largetst megalith in the Netherlands STADSKANAAL Nieuw Buinen BORGER Musselkanaal No dogs allowed Ter Apel Activities D R E N T H E Klazienaveen Coevorden O Animations P AAT STR BED NE HU DS OF EG KOESTE TRA N374 STADSKANAAL AT IALE VINC PRO ASSEN N374 PROVINCIALE WEG WEG STRAAT HOOFD The Hunebedcentrum was designed by the famous architectural couple Aldo and Hannie van Eijck. N34 The daily lives of our extraordinary ancestors from Drenthe HO Activities GRONINGEN ERSTRAAT UWEN Museum shop Hunebedcentrum Bronnegerstraat 12 9531 TG Borger T: 0031 (0)599 236374 E: info@hunebedcentrum.nl I: www.hunebedcentrum.nl DRO The Hunebedcentrum is located exactly where it should be: right next to the largest megalith in the Netherlands. Inside the museum you’ll find a lifesize replica of one of these impressive Stone Age structures. But what would it have looked like when it was first built? … Design: Staal & Duiker, Haren - Photo’s: Wladimir van den Burg - Print: Koninklijke van Gorcum, Assen Z Stone Age house and granary Museum café L A N D N W Geogarden EMMEN Hoogeveen D U I T S The Hunebedcentrum organises special educational, cultural and sporting activities throughout the entire year for both children and adults. Please refer to our website for more information: Film hall Follow the megalith builders’ trail N34 EMMEN www.hunebedcentrum.nl Welcome to the Hunebedcentrum (Megalith Centre) in Borger With 16 megaliths in the surrounding area, the village of Borger in the province of Drenthe is the megalith capital of the Netherlands. So it’s no surprise to find the Hunebedcentrum here! A remarkable museum in a remarkable building. The start of an unforgettable journey into a prehistoric age. The Megaliths are mysterious stone monuments dating back some 5,000 years. But what are they exactly? Who made them? How? And why? How did people live back in those times? What did the countryside look like? Join us on a journey of discovery in Borger. Follow the megalith builders’ trail. An icy journey from Scandinavia Your visit to the Hunebedcentrum will start with a film, which will take you back some 150.000 years on an icy journey from Scandinavia to Drenthe. Not tall, but strong This is a family of megalith builders. They weren’t very tall people, an adult man would grow to around 1.65 m and a woman 1.55 m. And they didn’t grow particularly old, no more than around 50-60 years of age. But they were certainly strong enough to move stones weighing around 20 tons. How heavy is that exactly? Well, it’s 20 cars without wheels. So how did they manage to do that? The film will show you. Look, listen, feel, smell, do.. Experience! Trechterbeker (Funnel Beaker) In the olden days people thought these peculiar stone piles or Hunebedden were the graves of a race of giants known as ‘huynen’. Of course we now know better. This is why experts prefer to speak about the ‘Funnel Beaker’ people. This beautiful beaker shows where the name came from. No angels Most people imagine the megalith builders to have been peaceful farmers. But is this truly an accurate picture? Many battle hammers have been found. Surely these weren’t just used for decoration? This man certainly didn’t meet a peaceful end. And this young woman was strangled with a cord. A complete inventory From hunter to farmer Bon appétit Bears on the road Before 5000 BC, everyone lived by hunting, fishing and collecting edible plants. There were only a few hundred people and they travelled around the wild and desolate countryside. Later, agriculture spread across Europe and then the villagers began to build large houses and create final resting places for themselves … Einkorn, emmer and a pork cutlet. Does that sound good? Emmer is a type of wheat. This is what the megalith builders grew on their fields along with barley, beans and flax. Cattle would graze along the forest’s edge: pigs, sheep, goats and cows. Make sure you take care when going out for a stroll! The skull of a young brown bear was found not far away in Friesland. There are still 54 megaliths in the Netherlands. Of course there used to be a lot more, but many of them were demolished. The last undisturbed megalith to have been excavated by our ‘prehistoric detectives’ (in 1970) stands in the ‘Drouwener’ field, not far from Borger. The complete contents of this megalith can now be seen and enjoyed by the public for the very first time in the Hunebedcentrum.