Kaiserpfalz

Ältere Meldungen

28 May 2025: Excitement is gradually building as the archaeological summer exhibition ‘447 – A Frankish Warrior on His Way to the Afterlife’ (5–24 August) is set to open in just over two months at the kING Culture and Congress Hall in Ingelheim under the patronage of Rhineland-Palatinate's Minister of the Interior, Michael Ebling. Ingelheimer Kultur und Marketing GmbH (IkUM) and the Kaiserpfalz Ingelheim Archaeological Research Centre will then present the spectacular finds from a Frankish warrior's grave that remained untouched for 1,400 years and was discovered in Ingelheim in 2023.

08.04.2025: From 5 to 24 August, the archaeological summer exhibition ‘447 - A Frankish warrior on his way to the afterlife’ will take place in the kING Kultur- und Kongresshalle Ingelheim under the patronage of the Rhineland-Palatinate Minister of the Interior, Michael Ebling. Ingelheimer Kultur und Marketing GmbH (IkUM) and the Kaiserpfalz Ingelheim Archaeological Research Centre are presenting the spectacular finds from a Frankish warrior's grave that remained untouched for 1400 years and was discovered in Ingelheim in 2023.

17.06.2024: The city of Ingelheim and the state of Rhineland-Palatinate have reached a new agreement on the joint research and preservation of cultural heritage. Mayor Eveline Breyer (left) and GDKE Director General Dr Heike Otto signed the new agreement on Monday.

24.8.2023: The Kaiserpfalz Research Centre has published volume 3.1 of its scientific series: ‘Schriftquellen zur Pfalz Ingelheim. Lateinische Texte der karolingischen Epoche gesammelt, übersetzt und kommentiert’ is the title of the book published by Michael Imhof Verlag.

4.8.2023: Since 2015, archaeologists from the Kaiserpfalz Research Centre have been investigating the early medieval burial ground between Rotweinstraße and Stevenagestraße. In June, the Franconian cemetery once again had a big surprise in store: amidst the numerous graves that had already been looted in the Middle Ages, the burial of a man came to light who had been buried in the ground untouched for over 1,300 years.

21.12.2022: Historians and archaeologists examined the diverse relationships between northern and central Europe in the early Middle Ages at an international conference. Two medieval experts from Ingelheim, Holger Grewe, Head of the Kaiserpfalz Research Centre, and Ramona Kaiser (Project Development Department), also travelled to Aachen.

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