The Hesselager church labyrinth sits on the island of Funen (Fyn) in Denmark's central archipelago — the birthplace of Hans Christian Andersen and a landscape rich in Bronze Age burial mounds. Danish church labyrinths are rarer than their Swedish counterparts, making Hesselager archaeologically significant. At 335.76° Giza bearing, the site deviates from the tighter Baltic corridor, lying instead on the Danish-North Sea alignment that connects to English Troy-town labyrinths. Funen's glacially deposited clay-and-chalk geology, overlying Cretaceous limestone, creates natural aquifer systems. The church's association with a labyrinth suggests a pre-Christian sacred site was Christianized during Denmark's conversion period (960-1100 CE).
Labyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits
7 paths, 8 walls
Material
stone
Age
Medieval
Country
Denmark
Region
Funen
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid