Fragments of Europe's earliest farming culture were excavated at Elsloo in the 1950s and 1960s. The Bandkeramiek (Linear Pottery) settlement, dating from roughly 5300 BC, is one of the most significant Neolithic sites in the Netherlands. Ceramic shards, flint tools, and post-hole traces revealed longhouses occupied by some of the first farmers to reach the Low Countries.
Modern Elsloo has about 7,220 residents and belongs to the gemeente Stein, on the Maas terrace between Sittard and Maastricht. The village centre, perched on the bluff above the Maas floodplain, retains a compact historic core with the Sint-Augustinuskerk and a few 18th-century houses.
The Elsloo castle ruin overlooks the river from the bluff edge. Below, the Maas valley provides walking and cycling routes. Sittard is about 8 kilometres north, Maastricht roughly 15 kilometres south.
Limburg carnival is celebrated enthusiastically here, as in most villages south of the Moerdijk.
Fragments of Europe's earliest farming culture were excavated at Elsloo in the 1950s and 1960s. The Bandkeramiek (Linear Pottery) settlement, dating from roughly 5300 BC, is one of the most significant Neolithic sites in the Netherlands. Ceramic shards, flint tools, and post-hole traces revealed longhouses occupied by some of the first farmers to reach the Low Countries.
Modern Elsloo has about 7,220 residents and belongs to the gemeente Stein, on the Maas terrace between Sittard and Maastricht. The village centre, perched on the bluff above the Maas floodplain, retains a compact historic core with the Sint-Augustinuskerk and a few 18th-century houses.
The Elsloo castle ruin overlooks the river from the bluff edge. Below, the Maas valley provides walking and cycling routes. Sittard is about 8 kilometres north, Maastricht roughly 15 kilometres south.
Limburg carnival is celebrated enthusiastically here, as in most villages south of the Moerdijk.
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