Logo Musée du Patrimoine

All French heritage classified by regions, departments and cities

Castles and Military Heritage Religious heritage Industrial heritage Heritage of cities Archaeological heritage Museums Attractions and tourist attractions The most beautiful villages The most beautiful monuments in France

Archaeological sites in Moselle

Retrouvez les 5 Archaeological sites in Moselle recensés par Musée du Patrimoine de France.
Nous proposons également plusieurs hébergements en Moselle
Département

Sélection de 8 archaeological sites sur 5 en Moselle

Archaeological site of the tumour necropolis in Teterchen
Archaeological sites
57220 Téterchen

The Tumular Necropolis of Teterchen is an archaeological site located in Moselle, in the Great East. Listed as a historic monument in 1994, it bears witness to an ancient funeral heritage in the region.
Archaeological site of La Maxe
Archaeological sites
57140 La Maxe

The archaeological site of La Maxe, located near Metz en Moselle, reveals remains of continuous human occupation of the ancient Neolithic (ca. 5000 BC) in the early Middle Ages, with Gallo-Roman and Merovingian traces.
Archaeological site of Mont-Saint-Germain in Châtel-Saint-Germain
Barred spur
57160 Châtel-Saint-Germain

The archaeological site of Mont-Saint-Germain in Châtel-Saint-Germain, Moselle, is a barred spur occupied from the Neolithic to the Middle Ages, revealing traces of habitats, fortifications and a merovingian necropolis overlooking the Moselle valley.
Bliesbruck Archaeological Site
Archaeological sites
57200 Bliesbruck

The archaeological site of Bliesbruck is a major Gallo-Roman complex located in the Blies Valley, Moselle (Great East), revealing thermal baths, artisanal districts and remains of an ancient and prosperous agglomeration between the 1st and the 5th century.
Bricking the Seille in Marsal
Brickery
57630 Marsal

The bricking of the Seille in Marsal is a vast proto-industrial archaeological site of the Iron Age, dedicated to the extraction of salt by terracotta, located in the valley of the Seille in the Great East, active from the 6th century BC to the 1st century AD.