The Bedolina Map — a large carved rock in Val Camonica sometimes called 'the world's oldest map' — depicts what appears to be a topographic representation of fields, paths, structures, and waterways, including labyrinthine patterns. Dated to the Iron Age (possibly 1000-500 BCE), the carving is one of the most debated petroglyphs in European archaeology: interpretations range from an actual cadastral map to a cosmological diagram to a ritual game board. At 320.54° Giza bearing, Bedolina sits within the Val Camonica UNESCO World Heritage Site — part of the 200,000+ petroglyph complex spanning 8,000 years. The rock's position overlooking the valley floor supports the map interpretation, as key features align with actual landscape elements visible from the carving's location.
WikipediaLabyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits
7 paths, 8 walls
Material
rock_carving
Age
Iron Age
Condition
intact
Country
Italy
Region
Capo di Ponte, Brescia, Lombardy
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid