A stone labyrinth at Tahkuna on the northern tip of Hiiumaa (Dagö) — Estonia's second-largest island — first documented by Karl von Löwis of Menar in 1912. Hiiumaa's strategic position at the mouth of the Gulf of Riga has made it contested ground for centuries: Swedish, Russian, German, and Soviet forces all fought for control. The labyrinth belongs to the eastern Baltic tradition linking Estonian, Finnish, and Swedish sites across the gulf. At Giza bearing 351.13°, 3,301 km from the Great Pyramid, marking the eastern Baltic labyrinth frontier.
Labyrinth Details
Pattern
Classical 7-Circuit
Circuits
7 paths, 8 walls
Material
stone
Age
16th-17th century
Country
Estonia
Region
Hiiumaa Island (Dagö)
Related Sites — Ley Line — Earth Grid