Previous
Next
Underwater archaeologists discover the ruins of an ancient pile dwelling settlement. (nb.admin.ch)
(nb.admin.ch)
A diver brings an archaeological find to the surface of Lake Sempach, canton Lucerne, that dates as far back as 4,400 BC. (Kestone/Sigi Tischler)
Keystone
Ceramic pot from the early Stone Age (4,000 BC), found on the shore of Lake Zurich near Männedorf. (Keystone/Eddy Risch)
Keystone
A cutlass from the early Stone Age, found in Egolzwil, canton Lucerne. (Kantonsarchäologie Luzern)
In 1997 workers on a federal railways project found the remains of 20 prehistoric villages in Concise, canton Vaud, near Lake Neuchâtel. (Keystone/Sandro Campardo)
Keystone
This model of a pile dwelling was built for the opening of the Swiss National Museum in 1898. (Keystone/Eddy Risch)
Keystone
Historical painter Karl Jauslin (1842-1904) depicted pile dwellers. (Wikipedia)
Wikipedia
Pile dwellers on the move for the Neuchâtel shooting festival in 1882. (Laténium, Hauterive)
Diorama of the pile dwelling Cortaillod-East on Lake Neuchâtel. (Laténium)
A five-star version of a pile dwelling, Hotel Palafitte, at the Expo.02 national exhibition in Neuchâtel. (Keystone/Laurent Gillieron)
Keystone
A natural-material builder constructs a thatch roof at the Wauwil pile dwelling in canton Lucerne. (Keystone/Sigi Tischler)
Keystone
The houses in Wauwil, canton Lucerne, were built out of wood, covered in clay and then covered in straw. (Keystone/Sigi Tischler)
Keystone
Grain harvest in the field: In summer 2007, two families were the focus of a television programme called "Lake Dwellers from Pfyn - Stone Age live" by Swiss channel SF1. (SF/Daniel Ammann)
The modern "pile dwellers" at a communal meal around the fire pit. (SF/Daniel Ammann)
In a dugout canoe along Lake Walen between cantons St Gallen and Glarus. (SF/Daniel Ammann)
Pile dwellings in alpine countries have been granted World Heritage status.
This content was published on
June 27, 2011 - 18:32
Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Slovenia, Italy and France have successfully campaigned to have 111 of the most important lakeside pile dwellings in the Alps designated World Heritage sites. Of these, 56 are in Switzerland.
You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!
If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.