Baalbek Stones
The Baalbek Stones are six massive Roman worked stone blocks in Baalbek, Lebanon, characterised by a megalithic gigantism unparallelled in antiquity. How the stones were moved from where they were quarried to their final locations is uncertain.
The smaller three are part of a podium wall in the Roman complex of the Temple of Jupiter Baal are known as the "Trilithon". Each of these is estimated at. The quarry was slightly higher than the temple complex, so no lifting was required to move the stones. The large stones may have been moved into position on rollers along temporary earthen banks from the quarry.
The remaining three are Roman monoliths, not part of a larger structure, conventionally known as the "Stone of the Pregnant Woman", the "Stone of the South", and the "Forgotten Stone". These are the first, third, and tied fifth largest known stones ever quarried in human history. They are believed to have been intended for the nearby Jupiter Baal complex, possibly as an addition to the Trilithon; but, perhaps due to their size, they were never removed from their quarry. They have not been used since their extraction in ancient times.
Numerous archaeological expeditions have gone to the site starting in the 19th century, primarily German and French groups, and research has continued into the 21st century.
Trilithon
The Trilithon, also called the Three Stones, is a group of three horizontally lying giant stones that form part of the podium of the Temple of Jupiter Baal at Baalbek. The location of the megalithic structures is atop a hill in the region known as Tel Baalbek. Each one of these stones is long, high, and thick, and weighs around. The supporting stone layer beneath features a number of stones which weigh an estimated and are wide.Although they do not form a trilithon in the modern archaeological sense, they have been known as the Trilithon since at latest the early Byzantine period.
Stone of the Pregnant Woman
The Stone of the Pregnant Woman, also called the First Monolith, still lies in the ancient quarry at a distance of from the Heliopolis temple complex. Although the smallest of the three monoliths, it is also the most famous due to its fine condition, the imposing angle at which it lies, and it never having been fully hidden by the earth.In 1996, a geodetic team of the Austrian city of Linz conducted topographical measurements at the site which aimed at establishing the exact dimensions of the two monoliths and their possible use in the construction of the gigantic Jupiter temple. According to their calculations, the block weighs c., thus practically confirming older estimations such as that of Jean-Pierre Adam.
The rectangular stone block is:
- long
- wide at the base
- wide at the top
- high
- Has an estimated density of
Stone of the South
The Stone of the South, also called the Second Monolith, was rediscovered in the same quarry in the 1990s. With its weight estimated at, it surpasses even the dimension of the Stone of the Pregnant Woman.These are dimensions of the rectangular stone block, assuming that its shape is consistent in its still-buried parts:
- long
- wide
- high
- Has an estimated density of
Forgotten Stone
It is long, wide, and at least high.