hirebenakal megalithic history(ಹಿರೇ ಬೆಣಕಲ್ ನಿಗೂಢ ಸಮಾಧಿಗಳು.🦍⛰️🪨).
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 Published On Oct 11, 2024

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Dolmens of hire benakal
Hidden places in Karnataka

Hirebenakal megalithic mistarious site in Karnataka India.
Hirebenakal or Hirébeṇakal or Hirébeṇakallu (ಹಿರೇಬೆಣಕಲ್ಲು in Kannada) is a megalithic site in the state of Karnataka, India. It is among the few megalithic sites in India that can be dated to the 800 BCE to 200 BCE period. The site is located in the Koppal district, some 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) west of the town of Gangavati and some 35 kilometres (22 mi) from Hospet city. It contains roughly 400 megalithic funerary monuments, that have been dated to the transition period between Neolithic period and the Iron Age. Known locally (in the Kannada language) as eḷu guḍḍagaḷu (or 'the seven hills'), their specific name is moryar guḍḍa (or 'the hill of the moryas"). Hirebenakal is reported to be the largest necropolis among the 2000 odd megalithic sites found in South India, most of them in the state of Karnataka. Since 1955, it has been under the management of the Dharwad circle of the Archaeological Survey of India , it was proposed that Hirebenakal be made a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

This site was built more than 2000 years ago, with many of its megalithic structures dated to between 800 BCE and 200 BCE.The Iron Age is estimated to have spanned more than 1000 years (from 1200 BCE to 200 CE) in this portion of India. The port-holed chamber in the western group of the Hirebenakal area has been compared to similar finds at Rajankolur.

The first published reports on Hirebenakal were those in the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1835, by Philip Meadows Taylor, who was under the service of the Nizam of Hyderabad.For over a century afterwards, no further systematic study of the site was conducted. Between 1944 and 1948, Sir Mortimer Wheeler undertook archaeological excavations; these were supplemented by Adiga Sundara and were published in 1975.[1] In his publication, "The Early Chamber Tombs of South India: A Study of the Iron Age Megalithic Monuments of North Karnataka", Sundara's cataloguing describes details of 300 megalithic burial chambers at a site which was surrounded by thick forest.Andrew Bauer of the Department of Anthropology at Stanford University has carried out investigations in recent years and identified about 1000 different types of antiquaries within an area of about 20 hectares (49 acres). His findings describe anthropomorphic funerary structu
res, menhirs, and circle-shaped stone fences. Bauer states in his writings that the dolmens supported by stone slabs appear to have been erected perfectly, without any joining mortar.

The locals of the village nearest Hirebenakal believe that god himself walks from hill to hill during their annual festival. This belief precludes them from grazing their cattle there

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