From the Old Stone Age to the Early Middle Ages
On the ground floor of the National Museum, archaeological finds from 300,000 years ago provide insights into the distant past of our region. Significant innovations are reflected in the rich collections of prehistory and early history: the invention of tools, the transition to sedentism, or the discovery of metalworking.
Visitors learn exciting things about the technology of hand axe production among the Neanderthals or about the jewelry of women in the Bronze Age. Many questions are answered: where people lived in the Iron Age, when the Chatti came to Hesse, or what difficulties the missionary Boniface faced.
The two covered inner courtyards are dedicated to the more recent developments in agriculture and the use of local resources in the Middle Ages and modern times. They make you curious for further discoveries on the upper floors.
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