Silver hoards in Sámi areas

The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resources. However, while the silver of the hoards from these periods may previously have circulated in a certain economic sphere, the hoarding practice itself and the content of the hoards show similarities...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Spangen, Marte
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Finnish Antiquarian Society 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768
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spelling fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/109768 2023-05-15T16:11:53+02:00 Silver hoards in Sámi areas Spangen, Marte 2021-07-18 application/pdf https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768 eng eng The Finnish Antiquarian Society https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768/64553 https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768 Iskos; Vol. 17 (2009): Recent perspectives on Sámi archaeology in Fennoscandia and North-West Russia; 94–106 Iskos; Vol 17 (2009): Recent perspectives on Sámi archaeology in Fennoscandia and North-West Russia; 94–106 0355-3108 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Peer Reviewed Article 2021 fttsvojs 2021-07-21T22:48:19Z The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resources. However, while the silver of the hoards from these periods may previously have circulated in a certain economic sphere, the hoarding practice itself and the content of the hoards show similarities to hoardings of earlier periods that were probably related to an ancient fertility cult. The similarities suggest that the Viking Age and Early Middle Age hoards should be interpreted as ritual deposits too. The late occurrence of silver hoards in northern Fennoscandia may indicate the adoption of a Norse offering tradition in an unsettling time of changes in society and belief systems. The tradition may have been adopted by a previously "hybrid" population living in the interface between Norse and Sámi cultural groups. A hybrid group could have avoided the harsh methods of Christianization by leaning towards Sámi contacts and identity, though at the same time bringing with them certain elements that were characteristic of the old Norse faith. Article in Journal/Newspaper Fennoscandia Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
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collection Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
op_collection_id fttsvojs
language English
description The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resources. However, while the silver of the hoards from these periods may previously have circulated in a certain economic sphere, the hoarding practice itself and the content of the hoards show similarities to hoardings of earlier periods that were probably related to an ancient fertility cult. The similarities suggest that the Viking Age and Early Middle Age hoards should be interpreted as ritual deposits too. The late occurrence of silver hoards in northern Fennoscandia may indicate the adoption of a Norse offering tradition in an unsettling time of changes in society and belief systems. The tradition may have been adopted by a previously "hybrid" population living in the interface between Norse and Sámi cultural groups. A hybrid group could have avoided the harsh methods of Christianization by leaning towards Sámi contacts and identity, though at the same time bringing with them certain elements that were characteristic of the old Norse faith.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Spangen, Marte
spellingShingle Spangen, Marte
Silver hoards in Sámi areas
author_facet Spangen, Marte
author_sort Spangen, Marte
title Silver hoards in Sámi areas
title_short Silver hoards in Sámi areas
title_full Silver hoards in Sámi areas
title_fullStr Silver hoards in Sámi areas
title_full_unstemmed Silver hoards in Sámi areas
title_sort silver hoards in sámi areas
publisher The Finnish Antiquarian Society
publishDate 2021
url https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768
genre Fennoscandia
genre_facet Fennoscandia
op_source Iskos; Vol. 17 (2009): Recent perspectives on Sámi archaeology in Fennoscandia and North-West Russia; 94–106
Iskos; Vol 17 (2009): Recent perspectives on Sámi archaeology in Fennoscandia and North-West Russia; 94–106
0355-3108
op_relation https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768/64553
https://journal.fi/iskos/article/view/109768
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