One of the largest prehistoric burial sites in India — hundreds of ancient stone chambers spread across rocky hills, built over 3,000 years ago during the Iron Age.
Located near Hampi in the Koppal district of Karnataka, the Hirebenkal Megalithic Dolmens are one of the largest and most significant prehistoric burial sites in India. These massive stone structures were built over 2,500 to 3,000 years ago during the Iron Age — long before the Vijayanagara Empire raised its temples just a few kilometres away.
The site contains hundreds of dolmens spread across a dramatic rocky hillscape. Each dolmen is a megalithic chamber tomb — formed by placing large flat stone slabs horizontally over vertical standing stones, creating a closed burial chamber. Inside many of these chambers, archaeologists have discovered Iron Age pottery, beads, iron implements and skeletal remains, offering a rare window into the burial traditions and beliefs of South India's early civilisations.
The sheer scale of the site — and the engineering skill required to move and position these massive stones without modern tools — makes Hirebenkal a genuinely humbling place to visit.
Unlike Hampi's temples — which attract thousands of visitors daily — Hirebenkal remains a quiet, off-the-beaten-path destination. There are no crowds, no ticket queues, no souvenir stalls. Just you, the ancient stones, and the vast rocky landscape stretching to the horizon.
Hirebenkal is best combined with a full-day North Hampi or custom tour. It is approximately 20–25 km from Hampi — easily accessible by tuk-tuk. Rock Shiva can arrange this as an add-on to any tour itinerary.
The Hirebenkal dolmens date to the South Indian Iron Age (circa 1000–300 BCE) — a period of significant social and technological change across the Deccan Plateau. The communities that built these tombs were settled agro-pastoral societies who clearly had both the organisational capacity and the spiritual motivation to construct elaborate stone burial monuments.
The dolmens are classified as megalithic monuments — a broad category of prehistoric stone structures found across Asia, Europe and Africa. The Deccan Plateau has one of the richest concentrations of megalithic sites in the world, and Hirebenkal is among the most extensive.
The site has been studied by archaeologists from multiple Indian universities and institutions, and is protected as an Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) site — though it remains far less famous than it deserves.
Rock Shiva can include Hirebenkal as part of a custom extended itinerary. WhatsApp to plan your trip →
Local expertise, right timing, and zero logistical hassle. Rock Shiva knows exactly how to pair this hidden gem with the rest of your Hampi itinerary.