Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning

Wrapped in the bog. Perspectives on the Skjoldehamn find and its ethnic and cultural affiliationIn 1936 an extraordinary find of a clothed skeleton wrapped in a blanket and covered with birch bark appeared in a bog at Skjoldehamn on Andøya Island. The wrapped body was laid on a reindeer pelt, which...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Viking
Main Author: Svestad, Asgeir
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Norwegian
Published: Norsk arkeologisk selskap 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476
https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.5476
id ftosloiunivojs:oai:ojs.www.journals.uio.no:article/5476
record_format openpolar
spelling ftosloiunivojs:oai:ojs.www.journals.uio.no:article/5476 2023-05-15T13:25:40+02:00 Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning Svestad, Asgeir 2017-09-10 application/pdf https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476 https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.5476 nor nor Norsk arkeologisk selskap https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476/4835 https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476 doi:10.5617/viking.5476 Viking; Vol 80; 129–156 Viking; Vol. 80; 129–156 2535-2660 0332-608X info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2017 ftosloiunivojs https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.5476 2022-04-22T05:15:45Z Wrapped in the bog. Perspectives on the Skjoldehamn find and its ethnic and cultural affiliationIn 1936 an extraordinary find of a clothed skeleton wrapped in a blanket and covered with birch bark appeared in a bog at Skjoldehamn on Andøya Island. The wrapped body was laid on a reindeer pelt, which in turn was placed on sticks of birch. The grave dates to the 11th century, probably the later half. Compared with relevant Norse, Sámi, and Christian graves and burial customs, the Skjoldehamn grave exhibits several similar features, although typical Christian features seem absent. Norse and Sámi graves display a blend of ethnic features, which makes it difficult to single out a particular burial custom or ethnic affiliation. Previous analyses of the Skjoldehamn costume and shoe fragments strongly indicate similarities with Sámi costume and shoe-making from the 17th century and later. Recent analysis of the metal content of cast rings/pearls from the costume has yielded mean values of 93 % pewter and 6 % lead. Casting of pewter objects is an exclusive Sámi craft in Fenno-Scandinavia and similar objects are documented in several Sámi contexts from the 11th to 14th centuries. Judging from costume and craft traditions alone, the Skjoldehamn find appears to be Sámi. Mixed grave features, however, indicate a more hybrid affiliation. Article in Journal/Newspaper Andøya University of Oslo (UiO): FRITT (E-Journals) Andøya ENVELOPE(13.982,13.982,68.185,68.185) Myra ENVELOPE(12.463,12.463,65.943,65.943) Viking 80 0 129
institution Open Polar
collection University of Oslo (UiO): FRITT (E-Journals)
op_collection_id ftosloiunivojs
language Norwegian
description Wrapped in the bog. Perspectives on the Skjoldehamn find and its ethnic and cultural affiliationIn 1936 an extraordinary find of a clothed skeleton wrapped in a blanket and covered with birch bark appeared in a bog at Skjoldehamn on Andøya Island. The wrapped body was laid on a reindeer pelt, which in turn was placed on sticks of birch. The grave dates to the 11th century, probably the later half. Compared with relevant Norse, Sámi, and Christian graves and burial customs, the Skjoldehamn grave exhibits several similar features, although typical Christian features seem absent. Norse and Sámi graves display a blend of ethnic features, which makes it difficult to single out a particular burial custom or ethnic affiliation. Previous analyses of the Skjoldehamn costume and shoe fragments strongly indicate similarities with Sámi costume and shoe-making from the 17th century and later. Recent analysis of the metal content of cast rings/pearls from the costume has yielded mean values of 93 % pewter and 6 % lead. Casting of pewter objects is an exclusive Sámi craft in Fenno-Scandinavia and similar objects are documented in several Sámi contexts from the 11th to 14th centuries. Judging from costume and craft traditions alone, the Skjoldehamn find appears to be Sámi. Mixed grave features, however, indicate a more hybrid affiliation.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Svestad, Asgeir
spellingShingle Svestad, Asgeir
Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
author_facet Svestad, Asgeir
author_sort Svestad, Asgeir
title Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
title_short Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
title_full Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
title_fullStr Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
title_full_unstemmed Svøpt i myra – Synspunkter på Skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
title_sort svøpt i myra – synspunkter på skjoldehamnfunnets etniske og kulturelle tilknytning
publisher Norsk arkeologisk selskap
publishDate 2017
url https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476
https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.5476
long_lat ENVELOPE(13.982,13.982,68.185,68.185)
ENVELOPE(12.463,12.463,65.943,65.943)
geographic Andøya
Myra
geographic_facet Andøya
Myra
genre Andøya
genre_facet Andøya
op_source Viking; Vol 80; 129–156
Viking; Vol. 80; 129–156
2535-2660
0332-608X
op_relation https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476/4835
https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/5476
doi:10.5617/viking.5476
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.5476
container_title Viking
container_volume 80
container_issue 0
container_start_page 129
_version_ 1766387181934346240