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🏛️ Heart of Neolithic Orkney

Archaeology & Antiquity United Kingdom Europe

🏛️ Heart of Neolithic Orkney
Maes Howe — UNESCO World Heritage passage grave, circa 2800 BCE


🕐 3 min read · Updated 1 Apr 2026 at 11:01

UNESCOUNESCO World Heritage Site

📋 Fast Facts
  • Built circa 2800 BCE as a passage grave and burial tomb
  • Entrance passage aligns with the winter solstice sunset
  • Features 12th-century Viking runes carved into interior walls
  • Located on Orkney Mainland, part of a larger UNESCO-designated Neolithic complex

Maes Howe is a large chambered tomb on Orkney's Mainland, one of the finest examples of Neolithic architecture in northern Europe. Dating to around 2800 BCE, it comprises a long entrance passage leading to a circular central chamber, constructed from massive stone slabs and topped with a corbelled roof, all covered by an earthen mound. The site's astronomical alignment and engineering precision demonstrate sophisticated knowledge among Neolithic builders, while later Viking inscriptions record ...

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