Tradition guide
Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition
Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sites connect places through shared lineage, practice, story, and pilgrimage across the global atlas.
2 sacred places share this lineage. Use the country and site-type filters to narrow in.
Atlas summary
Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred sites overview
Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred sites connect places through shared lineage, ritual use, memory, and pilgrimage practice across the Pilgrim Map atlas.
Use this page to compare country clusters, common place types, UNESCO-tagged landmarks, and the map distribution before exploring individual site pages.
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Search within Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sites
Showing 1-2 of 2 sites in this tradition guide
Old Castle of Lieto
Lieto, Lieto – Southwest Finland, Finland
Rising some 55 to 56 meters above the Aura River near Turku, the Old Castle of Lieto (Liedon Vanhalinna) is one of Finland's most extensively excavated prehistoric...
Tenhola Castle Hill
Hattula, Raseborg / Tenhola – Uusimaa, Finland
Tenholan linnavuori is an Iron Age and medieval hillfort on a sand esker above Lake Vanajavesi in Hattula, Finland....
Key questions
Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred-site questions
- What are Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred sites?
- Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred sites are places connected by shared lineage, practice, memory, ritual use, or pilgrimage tradition.
- Where can I find Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred sites?
- The strongest country clusters in this guide include Finland.
- What kinds of places are included?
- Common place types include hillfort.
- Can I map Baltic-Finnic Iron Age Hillfort Tradition sacred sites?
- Yes. Compare country clusters and site types first, then open individual pages for coordinates, historical context, and visitor guidance.