Overview
The hunebed at Lhee generates a contained, womb-like energy field between its massive glacial stones, creating a natural resonance chamber that amplifies earth frequencies. The energy is deeply grounding and ancestral, connecting visitors to the most ancient layers of northern European spiritual consciousness. Many report a sensation of being held or cradled by the stone chamber, with time seeming to slow dramatically within the dolmen's influence. The site facilitates communication with ancestral realms and supports transitions, endings, and the release of what no longer serves.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
Lhee is home to a hunebed (dolmen) in the province of Drenthe, Netherlands, constructed by the Funnelbeaker culture around 3400 BC. The Netherlands contains 54 surviving hunebedden, all located in Drenthe, built from massive glacial erratic boulders deposited during the Saalian ice age. These megalithic tombs served as communal burial chambers and territorial markers for early agricultural communities. The Funnelbeaker people transported stones weighing up to 25 tonnes to construct these monuments, demonstrating sophisticated organizational capacity and deep reverence for their dead.
Rory's Field Notes
Hunebed (dolmen) with Type 4 node still perfectly intact.
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