Project Details
The Bronze Age and Urnfield periods hilltop settlement on the Bullenheimer Berg, Bavaria - The settlement processes in the southern part
Applicant
Professor Dr. Frank Falkenstein
Subject Area
Prehistory and World Archaeology
Term
from 2012 to 2019
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 221676763
The Bullenheimer Berg which is best known for its numerous hoards from the Urnfield period is representative of a system of Bronze Age and Urnfield hilltop settlements in Main-Franconia, Northern Bavaria. Fieldwork carried out in the 1980s had already yielded substantial information about the fortifications. Since 2010 archaeological surveys and excavations are undertaken on the Bullenheimer Berg by the University of Würzburg. The project is planned for a period of six years, and the scientific goals are to investigate the settlement organisation, the economy, the social organisation and possible religious functions of the hilltop settlement from a diachronic perspective. In the first four years of research excavations in four areas of the site have yielded detailed results which, however, remain partial. In the third funding period the current excavation areas will be extended. Based on the locations of individual buildings, the overall structure of the settlement units will be determined. Thereby, building structures, activity zones and find materials in the prehistoric settlement layer can be differentiated stratigraphically. In this way it is possible to discern occupation layers from the younger and the late Urnfield culture. The aim is, particularly, to investigate a presumed farmstead, a large edifice and a terraced building area of the Urnfield period. Alongside the excavations archaeozoological, archaeometric, pedological and environmental analyses are carried out. Archaeological prospection using magnetometer survey, drill testing and test excavations provide additional data on the occupation and use of the mountain plateau.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
Co-Investigator
Professorin Dr. Heidi Peter-Röcher