Showing posts with label Vikings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vikings. Show all posts

Monday, August 27, 2018


According to the Swedish research community, the new findings from Sweden's medieval capital of Sigtuna, dubbed the "Viking Age Scandinavian Shanghai," challenge the stereotype of Norsemen as being emigrants and invaders.

No fewer than half of the population of the Viking town of Sigtuna were immigrants, a new DNA analysis of human remains dating from the 10th to the 12th century has shown.

The study, the largest of its kind so far carried out in Sweden, combined DNA analysis and the strontium analysis of teeth to build a detailed picture of where the people had come from. The study found that approximately 70 per cent of Sigtuna's female population were immigrants, as were 44 percent of the men.

Half of the 38 people whose bones and teeth have been genetically tested came from an array of places, each more remote from the Lake Mälaren area than the next. Apart from fellow Nordic countries Norway and Denmark, the inhabitants' places of origin included places like northern Germany, the British Isles, central Europe, the Baltic States and even Ancient Rus.

According to Maja Krzewinska, the researcher at Stockholm University who was the primary author of the study published in Current Biology, the findings challenge the Vikings' image as being emigrants and invaders.

We're used to thinking of the Vikings as a travelling kind, and can easily picture the school books with maps and arrows pointing out from Scandinavia, as far as Turkey and America, but not so much in the other direction," Krzewinska said in a press-release issued by the university.

Anders Götherström, a professor of molecular archeology at Stockholm University, described Sigtuna, which during the Viking age was a prominent settlement roughly the same size as contemporary European capitals, as a "Scandinavian Shanghai or London."

"Anyone who wanted to do something, to work their way up in the church or in politics were first forced to come to Sigtuna," Götherström said.

According to Götherström, the genetic diversity of Sigtuna's inhabitants is on par with that of Roman legionaries in England, who hailed from various parts of the Europe and beyond and were an extremely heterogeneous group.

"I especially like that we find second-generation immigrants among the buried," Götherström said, praising Sigtuna's cosmopolitanism.

According to Götherström, one of the leaders of the Atlas project, whose goal is to map out Sweden's demographic history, this proved that ethnic Swedes actually didn't exist.

"Something genetically Swedish isn't a thing," he said, as quoted by the Metro newspaper. "We've pieced ourselves together from parts taken from the whole world, and the more we study this genetically, the more we see that people have been moving around the place the whole time."

Sigtuna, a picturesque lakeside resort of 8,000, was one of Sweden's oldest cities, founded in 980 by the country's first Christian king, Olof Skötkonung.

Half of Viking city of Sigtuna were immigrants

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Experts from the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research (NIKU) uncovered the remains of the boat last week. While no wood remained intact, poorly-preserved nails indicated that a boat had been buried there, according to NIKU archaeologist Ian Reed, in a statement.

The boat, which was oriented roughly north-south, was more than 13 feet long. Two long bones, also oriented north-south, were found in the boat. The bones will now undergo DNA analysis to confirm if they are human.

Other artifacts found in the grave include a small piece of sheet bronze, which was up against one of the bones, and personal items such as a spoon and part of a key for a chest. The items likely date the grave from the 7th century to the 10th century, according to Reed.


Boat burials were a common tradition in the Iron Age into the Viking Period, but this is the first from the period to be discovered in the center of Trondheim.

A spokesman for NIKU told Fox News that the Trondheim dig is scheduled to finish Wednesday so archaeologists have been working to secure the remains. “Now the builders working on the refurbished market square will take over,” he said.

The boat grave is the latest stunning archaeological find in Norway.

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Last month, a reindeer hunter found an incredibly well-preserved Viking sword on a remote mountain in Southern Norway. In 2016, archaeologists in Trondheim uncovered the church where Viking King Olaf Haraldsson was first enshrined as a saint.
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Archaeologists in Norway may have unearthed a Viking boat grave

Friday, August 18, 2017

Archaeologists have now described an impressive fortress in the journal Antiquity, built in a perfectly circular arrangement, that they have dated to having been built by the infamous Viking and Danish King Harald ‘Bluetooth’ Gormsson. This is now the fifth such castle discovered in Denmark since the 1930s and has shifted the general opinion of the Vikings, showing that they during the Middle Ages they formed complex, technologically advanced settlements.

This latest fortress, called Borgring, has been found just south of Copenhagen on the island of Zealand. While there is nothing much to see at ground level apart from a few mounds, as the land has been plowed and tilled for centuries, aerial surveys using LIDAR have clearly shown the remains of the ring fortress in incredible detail. Using this as a template, the researchers have been able to uncover a whole host of amazing artifacts revealing just how complex this structure was, and what the culture and society at the time must have been like.
The perfect circular arrangement of the ramparts, built from earth and timber and 144 meters in diameter, shows an astonishing skill, particularly as it was not strictly necessary. The researchers have uncovered paved wooden roads and four gates, as well as jewelry and an amazingly well-preserved carpenter’s box complete with planes and chisels. Tree rings from the timbers date the fortifications to between 970 and 980 CE, during the reign of Harald Bluetooth.

The evidence suggests, however, that the fortress met a brutal end. The archaeologists found signs that the structure seems to have been attacked, with two of the gates having been significantly burned. Whoever was behind the sacking of the fortification is still not known, but Harald Bluetooth did not ascend to the throne without making at least some enemies.
The researchers suggest that an old rivalry with Swedish Vikings may have had some bearings, as the fortress is located within close proximity of the southern tip of Sweden. Not only that, but just decades later there are reports that the Danish and Swedish battled it out on the frigid Baltic Sea that separates the two nations, not far from the pillaged stronghold.

Currently, this is purely speculation, but perhaps with time and further excavations, more could be gleaned about the fate of this once impressive fortification.

source

Thousand-year-old Viking fortress reveals a technologically advanced society

Wednesday, July 5, 2017

IN 2014 ARCHAEOLOGISTS FROM THE MUSEUM OF SOUTH EAST DENMARK AND AARHUS UNIVERSITY DISCOVERED THE PREVIOUSLY UNKNOWN VIKING FORTESS AT BORGRING SOUTH OF COPENHAGEN.

Since then the search has been on to uncover the life, function, destruction and, not least, the precise dating of the Viking fortress. Now a new find has produced a break-through in the investigation.

In the period 2016-18 a programme of new excavations is made possible by a grant from the A.P. Møller Foundation. The team from the Museum of South East Denmark and Aarhus University are joind by leading experts from the Environmental Archeology and Materials Research at the Danish National Museum and the National Police Department’s Section for arson investigation. Prior to this year’s excavations it was only known that the massive, 150m wide fortress dated to the tenth century. Experts suspected that it was built in the reing of Viking king Harold Bluetooth (c.958-c.987), but the association could not be proven.

On Monday 26 June, the archaeological team opened new trenches is the meadow next to the fortress to search for evidence of the landscape surrounding the fortress. Around 2.5 meters below the current surface of the valley was found a c. 1m long piece of carved oak wood with drilled holes and several wooden pegs in situ. The wood carries clear traces of wear, but it is not currently possible to say what function the wood piece has had.

Leading specialist in dendrochronological dating, Associate Professor Aoife Daly from the University of Copenhagen and the owner of dendro.dk, has just completed his study of the piece of wood and says: “The plank is oak and the conserved part of the tree trunk has grown in the years 829-950 In the Danish area. A comparison with the material from the Trelleborg fortress in Sjælland shows a high statistical correlation that confirms the dating. Since no splints have been preserved, it means that the tree has fallen at some point after year 966 “.

Research leader Jens Ulriksen says: “The wood piece was found on top of a peat layer, and is fully preserved as it is completely water-logged. We now have a date of wood in the valley of Borgring, which corresponds to the dating from the other ring fortresses from Harold Bluetooth’s reign. With the dendrochronological dating, in conjunction with the traces of wear the piece has, it is likely that the piece ended as waste in the late 900s, possibly in the early 1000’s. ”

“In the coming week, the National Museum’s environmental archaeologists will take samples of wet depositions in the valley with the aim of uncovering how the layers have evolved from the earliest strata we have dated to the Bronze Age and over time.” Says excavation leader Nanna Holm. Nanna Holm, of course, hopes that the studies will particularly clarify one of the unclear questions archaeologists have, namely where the river was exactly when the fortress was built in the Viking Age, and how passable it was.

Søren M. Sindbæk, professor in Archaeology at Aarhus University and part of the excavation team says: “This find is the major break-through, which we have been searching for. We finally have the dating evidence at hand to prove that this is a late tenth century fortress. We lack the exact year, but since the find also shows us where the river flowed in the Viking Age, we also know where to look for more timbers from the fortress.”

Breakthrough in dating Viking fortress

Friday, June 30, 2017

In a Viking settlement on Stevns in Denmark, archaeologists have excavated a two metre deep hole. But it is not just any old hole. This hole, it seems, may be the oldest toilet in Denmark.

Radiocarbon dating of the faeces layer dates back to the Viking Age, making it quite possibly the oldest toilet in Denmark.
“It was a totally random find. We were looking for pit houses—semi-subterrenean workshop huts—and it really looked like that from the surface. But we soon realised that it was something totally different,” says PhD student Anna Beck from the Museum Southeast Denmark.

Apart from representing Denmark’s oldest toilet, the discovery goes against archaeologists’ theories surrounding people’s toilet habits through time, says Beck. Not least because it was discovered in an area of Viking countryside and not in a Viking city.

“We know about privy buildings inside cities in the latter part of the Viking Age and the early Middle Ages, but not from agraian settlements and farms. We imagined that people had defecated in the midden or in the barn with the animals in order to use their waste as fertiliser for the fields,” she says.

Macrofossil and pollen analyses revealed that there were mineralised seeds in the bottom layer—a process that takes place in low oxygen conditions with a high content of phosphate. The archaeobotanists also discovered a high concentration of fly pupae in the same layer.

Both results clearly suggest that the bottom of the hole were covered in a layer of—yes, that’s right, poo.

“Perhaps we’ve overlooked earlier faeces”
In the Viking towns, lots of people meant lots of human waste gathered together in one place, and so they needed a system to deal with it. In contrast, human waste in the countryside could be used as fertiliser, and was in principle a resource that could be collected and used.

This previously explained why archaeologists usually find do not such old toilets in what could be described as the Vikign countryside.

One of the exciting questions now is if toilets were actually a common phenomenon that archaeologists have just overlooked in the belief that they did not exist, says Beck.

“We could well have registered thousands of these pits and not thought that [they contained] faeces. It just looks like a dark layer. When you excavate in the towns you’re rarely in doubt—it often still smells of faeces. But there isn’t the same organic layer out in the field as there are in the towns, so here it decomposes by a completely different process of decay,” she says.

Honey or mead preserved in faeces
Scientific analyses of the sediments accumulated in the two metre deep hole confirmed that they were indeed human faeces.

Pollen analyses revealed a high concentration of insect-pollinated plants—flowers. Flower pollen is found in particular in honey, which is typically a part of the human diet, says Beck.

“I don’t know whether Vikings sat and ate honey, or if it was mead, but the interpretation at least is that it’s pollen from honey, and that is rarely used for feeding animals.”

Pollen analyses also showed that there was not much airborne pollen in the soil layers, which indicates that the hole had been covered, perhaps inside a small building.

When the results of the pollen analyses came back, Beck went back to the archaeological material to see if she had overlooked anything. She discovered two post holes, one on either side of the pit, which could easily pass for a closed construction, she says.
“It shows that there could’ve been a small house built around it, which could explain the lack of airborne pollen. In the space itself there’s residues of building materials that could originate from the building when it was demolished,” she says.

Study turns a blind eye to written sources
Toilets are mentioned in a number of the Icelandic sagas where they are described as separate buildings from the farmstead. But Beck has chosen to not draw too heavily on these written historical sources. In her own words she has chosen to turn a blind eye “a little on purpose” in favour of taking the archaeological discovery as the starting point for her interpretations.

“Written sources such as the Icelandic sagas have always been considered “closer” to people—who they were and what they thought—than the material sources. Therefore archaeological finds are often used to illustrate the story. But sometimes you risk mistreating the archaeological discoveries, because you don’t handle them on their own terms,” she says. “Particularly if the written sources orginates from later periods which might describe completely different conditions.”

“I’m trying to turn things around and say that the material sources perhaps contain a part of our history, which serves as more than an illustration. The material evidence poses new questions and if we don’t take them up, then they’ll never be answered,” says Beck. “In this case, the material and written sources play well together, but sometimes they do not, and what is then the ‘right’ story? My claim would be that they both are - even if contrary.”

Colleague: “Toilets are a new concept”
But you cannot just ignore the written sources, says Kjartan Langsted, director of Museum Nordsjælland in Denmark. He did not partake in the new excavation but is familiar with the findings.

He suggests that ethnology—the study of people’s culture and daily lives in the past—does not point towards a toilet as the explanation.

“My main counter argument is that toilets [in the countryside] are a relatively new concept until recent times. Ethnographic sources show that the first toilets were introduced in the countryside in the middle of the 1800s. Before that it was normal to take care of business on a midden or in the stable,” says Langsted.

“Today a trip to the toilet is private, but that doesn’t mean that it was this way in the past. Everything was a resource to be used,” he says.
Langsted does not entirely rule out that the toilet could have been introduced in the Viking age—but he is waiting to see evidence from a more aristocratic environment than the excavation site at Strøby Toftegaard. The site may well have been a society of high status, but not on the same level as other Viking sites in Denmark.

“From what I can see in recent sources, it’s strange that it was introduced at this location and at this time. But that doesn’t mean that I reject the idea. There are also good arguments towards the toilet interpretation, for example, the scientific analyses that show that it is excrement,” he says.

“But” he adds, “you should also consider that the [excrement] could have reached the hole by some other means.”

Humans separated themselves from their animals
Beck has met resistance from academic circles over her interpretation of the pit as an early toilet prototype.

“Which is interesting, because I think that it’s hard to reject,” she says.

The idea that excrement was used as a resource on fields, requires people to have a modern, rational relationship to life,” says Beck.

“But we know from cultures the world over that the treatment of faeces is surrounded by complicated cultural and social rules and taboos. From toilet culture, you can learn a lot about the norms and rules of that particular society,” she says.

“For example, we know that animals, which had previously lived under the same roof as humans for thousands of years, were moved out of people’s homes at this time. The distance between humans and animals became larger, both physically and mentally. That ideal doesn’t fit so well perhaps with them sitting out in the stable to defecate along with the animals,” she says.

Touch a 1,000-year-old Viking palisade

Monday, June 19, 2017

When archaeologist Geir Grønnesby dug test pits at 24 different farms in central Norway, he nearly always found thick layers of fire-cracked stones dating from the Viking Age and earlier. Carbon-14 dating of this evidence tells us that ago, Norwegians brewed beer using stones.
WHEN ARCHAEOLOGIST GEIR GRØNNESBY DUG TEST PITS AT 24 DIFFERENT FARMS IN CENTRAL NORWAY, HE NEARLY ALWAYS FOUND THICK LAYERS OF FIRE-CRACKED STONES DATING FROM THE VIKING AGE AND EARLIER. CARBON-14 DATING OF THIS EVIDENCE TELLS US THAT AGO, NORWEGIANS BREWED BEER USING STONES.

There’s nothing archaeologists like better than piles of centuries-old rubbish. Ancient bones and stones from trash heaps can tell complex stories. And in central Norway, at least, the story seems to be that Vikings and their descendants brewed beer by tossing hot rocks into wooden kettles.

“There are a lot of these stones, and they are found at most of the farmyards on old, named farms,” says Geir Grønnesby, an archaeologist at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology’s University Museum.

Grønnesby is fascinated by the history of Norwegian farm settlements, and with good reason. Much of the story of how Norwegian farms were settled and developed over the millennia remains a mystery.

There’s a simple reason for this: most archaeological digs are from construction projects, because developers are required to check for cultural artefacts before beginning construction. It is rare that a developer would build a road or other big development through a farm, which means they are rarely dug up by archaeologists.

In other words, “most of the archaeological information we have about the Viking Age comes from graves, and most of the archaeological information about the Middle Ages comes from excavations in cities,” Grønnesby said. That’s a problem because “most people lived in the countryside.”

Essentially, he says, Norwegian farms are sitting on an enormous underground treasure trove that in places dates from the AD 600, the late Iron Age — and yet they are mostly untouched.

“So I started doing these small excavations to look for cultural layers in farmyards,” he said. “The oldest carbon-14 dates I found are from 600 AD, and all the dates are from this time or later. And when I found the stones, I had to write about them, since there were so many.”

A curious sociologist

Grønnesby is not the first to remark on fire-cracked stones on farms in central Norway. That distinction goes to a pioneering sociologist named Eilert Sundt, who recorded an encounter on a farm in 1851 in Hedmark.

As Sundt later wrote, he was walking and saw a farmer near a pile of strange-looking, smallish stones.

“What’s with these stones?” he asked the farmer, pointing to the pile. “They’re brewing stones,” the farmer told him. “Stones they used for cooking to brew beer — from the old days when they didn’t have iron pots.”

In his article, Sundt noted that most of the farms he visited had piles of burned or fire-cracked stones. Every time he asked about them, the answer was the same: they were from brewing, when the stones were heated until they were “glowing hot” and then plopped into wooden vessels to heat things up. The stones were so omnipresent, Sundt wrote, and so thick and compact in places that houses were built right on top of them.

Reports from archaeologists who examined farmsteads in more recent times also confirm this observation. When one archaeologist dug a test trench in the 1980s at a farm in Steinkjer, north of Trondheim, he found a cultural layer more than a metre thick, much of which was fire-cracked stone.

Grønnesby himself excavated more than 700 cubic metres of stone from a portion of a farmstead in Ranheim, also north of Trondheim. And when Grønnesby did his test sample of the 24 farms, 71 per cent either had cracked stone layers or probably did.

Rituals and the Reformation

It’s not so unusual that Vikings brewed beer using stones, Grønnesby said. Brewing with heated stones has also been reported from England, Finland and the Baltics. It’s a tradition that continues in Germany, where it’s possible even today to buy “stone-brewed beer”.

Grønnesby says the presence of great numbers of brewing stones on Norwegian farms underscores the cultural importance of beer itself.

“Beer drinking was an important part of social and religious institutions,” he said.

For example, the Gulating, a Norwegian parliamentary assembly that met from 900 to 1300 AD, regulated even the smallest details of beer brewing and drinking at that time.

The Gulating’s laws required three farmers to work together to brew beer, which then had to be blessed. An individual who failed to brew beer for three consecutive years had to give half his farm to the bishop and the other half to the King and then leave the country. Only very small farms were exempt from this strict regulation.

What’s equally interesting is when brewing stones disappear from cultural layers — at about 1500, right around the time of the Reformation.

“It could just be a strange coincidence,” Grønnesby said. “It could be religion. Or it could be that iron vessels were more widely available by then.”

From rubbish heaps to treasure troves

Each time a glowing hot brewing stone was plopped into a cold vat of fluid, it would crack. After several of these cycles, the stones would be too small to be useful and the brewers would toss them out onto a rubbish heap.

That means the thick layers of stones also contain other artefacts, like old spinning weights and loom weights, animal bones and beads. It is for this reason, as much as for the stones themselves, that the layers are important, Grønnesby said.

“Archaeologists are always finding these layers, but they used to look at them and scratch their heads, and (the layers) didn’t get the kind of recognition they deserve,” he said. “These layers represent archives from the Viking Age to medieval times, so we should excavate them more often.”

You can read about Grønnesby’s research in the recently published book, “The Agrarian Life of the North: 2000 BC to AD 1000: Studies in Rural Settlement and Farming in Norway”, edited by Frode Iversen & Håkan Petersson. Grønnesby’s chapter is entitled “Hot Rocks! Beer Brewing on Viking and Medieval Age Farms in Trøndelag.”

The Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

Brewing Viking beer — with stones

Thursday, November 3, 2016


It might sound incredulous, but the small lump of soil pictured above represents one of the most sensational discoveries made at Denmark’s fifth Viking ring fortress: Borgring.

The lump of soil was removed from the area around one of the fortress’ four gates and it contains the remains of a collection of tools, which probably once lay inside a Viking toolbox.

The toolbox is the first direct indication that people have lived in the fortress. There have been only a handful of similar discoveries around the world.

ScienceNordic was allowed to help archaeologist Nanna Holm excavate the toolbox as it was opened for the first time in 1,000 years.

You can watch the work unfold in the video below.

Tools scanned at the hospital
The exciting find first came to the attention of Holm and her colleagues when a couple of amateur archaeologists with metal detectors found a signal near to the fortress’ east gate.

“We could see that there was something in the layers [of soil] around the east gate. If it had been a big signal from the upper layers then it could’ve been a regular plough, but it came from the more ‘exciting’ layers. So we dug it up and asked the local hospital for permission to borrow their CT-scanner,” says Holm.

There suspicions proved to be correct and they discovered a large collection of iron that immediately looked like tools. Even though the toolbox itself was long gone--wood rots away over time--but the placement of the objects suggested that they were not simply random finds.

First direct evidence of life in the Viking castle
Collections of tools from the Viking Age are exceptionally rare. Iron was worth a lot to the Vikings and if anyone had discovered discarded tools, they would have melted them down to repurpose for something else, says Holm.

“The toolbox is the first direct indication of life that we’ve found around the fortress,” she says. “I’m very excited to get a closer look at these objects and get a better understanding of what type of craftsman we’re dealing with.”

The CT-scans revealed that the toolbox probably contained some spoon drills and a drawplate, which the Vikings used this to produce thin wire bracelets. Spoon drills were used to drill holes in wood.

“My first thought is that this looks like something belonging to a carpenter,” says Holm.


The gate was used again after a fire
The location of the toolbox by the fortress’s east gate is interesting in itself. It may have been placed there after a great fire hit the north and east gates in the second half of the 10th century.

Archaeologists have previously discovered evidence of a fire on the site, after which, a floor was laid inside the gate. It looks as if the gate was inhabited after the fire, says Holm.

“Right now we’re trying to figure out if [the gate house] was used for housing or as a workshop after the fortress was built,” says Holm.

The archaeologists currently think that the moat and the east gate were constructed during the latter half of the 10th century. This is also around the time it burnt--albeit the fire was not strong enough to cause a collapse.

“It looks like the fire was brought under control before it spread, and afterwards they laid two layers of clay inside the gate,” says Holm. “In each layer we find a fireplace, and we found the toolbox in the youngest layer.”

Toolbox was well buried
The craftsmen presumably lived very well, whether he used the east gate as a home or a workshop. It was 30 to 40 square metres of space and had its own fireplace--and of course, the toolbox with the valuable iron tools.

So why did he leave the premises and his toolbox?

Perhaps because at some point, the gate simply collapsed, says Holm.

“We found the tools under the posts, so there’s some evidence that the gate collapsed, and it probably did so because they were rotten, old, and unstable. We only discovered the outline of the posts, suggesting that the rest simply rotted away. Then the tools got buried until we discovered now,” she says.

The box contained 14 Viking tools
The excavation of the soil took two days and ultimately revealed the remains of 14 objects.

Some of them stood out clearly on the CT-scan., for example, the spoon drills and the drawplate, but others were in too poor condition or contained too little iron to appear on screen.

You can watch a time-lapse of the excavation in the video below.

“I’m quite content that we found so many objects in a very small space,” says Holm. “It’s exciting that there are so many things that we couldn’t see on the scan. However, I’d hoped that the things wouldn’t be so corroded, which would’ve allowed me to say what everything is with greater certainty,” says Holm.

X-rays will give more answers
The next step is to x-ray the objects in the toolbox. This should help Holm to work out exactly what they are.

“For example, it looks like one of the spoon drills could in fact be a pair of tweezers or pliers. X-rays should tell us,” she says.

The studies will continue for several weeks to come. Archaeologists are investigating the items individually while taking care to preserve them so they can be put on display next year.

“They don’t look like much now, but conservationists are talented people, and when they’ve finished with them, they’ll be ready for exhibition,” says Holm.

Archaeologists discover a Viking toolbox

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