This stone labyrinth occupies the grounds of the ruined Cistercian monastery of Roma (Romakloster), founded in 1164 on Gotland. The juxtaposition of a pre-Christian labyrinth with a medieval monastic site exemplifies the Church's practice of Christianizing pagan sacred geography. The Cistercians were renowned for their hydraulic engineering and site selection based on water and stone qualities. At 345.84° Giza bearing, the Romakloster labyrinth shares the precise azimuth of the Visby Trojaborg and Tibble labyrinth — a three-point alignment spanning hundreds of kilometers along the same Giza bearing. Roma's position at Gotland's center, where the island's limestone aquifer surfaces, suggests the monks recognized the same geological qualities the labyrinth builders had identified centuries earlier.
Labyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits
7 paths, 8 walls
Material
stone
Age
Medieval to modern
Condition
intact
Country
Sweden
Region
Gotland Island
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid