Shortly after Fornvännen 2012:1 reached subscribers on paper, issue 2011:2 has now been published on-line. Get thee there, Dear Reader, and read for free (not dearly)!
- Joakim Wehlin on why some of Gotland's mightiest Bronze Age monuments were built next to the island's single megalithic tomb of the Early Neolithic.
- Karl-Magnus Melin on ancient wells.
- Torun Zachrisson makes an interesting suggestion as to where the church of Birka may have been located.
- Jürgen Beyer tries to make sense of some semi-literate 16th century epigraphy in Plattdeutsch on Gotland.
- Tryggve Siltberg criticises Anders Andrén's view of Medieval social structure in rural Gotland.
- Staffan von Arbin & Hans Linderson present the Medieval shipwreck in Jorefjorden (you read about it here first!)
- Herman Bengtsson identifies the architect's portrait in Uppsala Cathedral.
- Magnus Green traces the fate of some English ecclesiastical embroidery in a Swedish rural church after the Reformation.
- Log in to post comments
More like this
Is this part of the Stone of Mora?
After some issues with the image resolution in the PDFs, we've now put Fornvännen 2010:3-4 on-line. Read new research for free!
Middle Neolithic festival site in Scania
Roman bronze coinage found in the woods of northern Sweden
Roman mirror shard found on the…
Fornvännen 2016:1 is now on-line on Open Access.
Anton Seiler on a weapon grave with fragments of a Vendel helmet found at Inhåleskullen near Uppsala. Some of the metalwork is interestingly decorated in Salin's Style III/E and must be late additions to the assemblage.
Rune Edberg and Johnny…
Fornvännen 2011:1 is half a year old, and so has been published as an open-access full-text journal. Six months is the Berlin Declaration's limit for what qualifies as Open Access. Check it out!
Joakim Goldhahn on early Swedish rock art documentation
Frans-Arne Stylegar et al. on two bronze…
My colleague Karl-Magnus Melin specialises in ancient and modern woodworking and has a major paper in Fornvännen's summer issue about well fittings made from hollowed-out tree trunks. He's kindly sent me some post-conservation pics of a Viking Period wooden drinking bowl. It's lathe-turned unless…
Considering the wealth of new material in Fornvännen (and your busy scheldue displayed in a previous thread) we can now define the qualities needed for an archaeologist:
"It does not feel fear, or fatigue, or pain. And it absolutely *will not stop*, ever!"
(OT) "Foot bones allow researchers to determine sex of skeletal remains" http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-foot-bones-sex-skeletal.html
I don't know exactly how reliable this method is, considering the crossover of male/female morphology among individuals. If it stands up to scrutiny it should be very useful, especially for prehistoric burial sites of cultures where the gender roles are poorly known.
Also very useful in the unfortunately common cases where grave robbers have known which end of each grave is likely to contain the upper body and associated jewellery, leaving only the legs for the archaeologist to find.
OT: Gangland
So this is why there are so many rock carvings of elk? The bronze-age people were just expressing their fear of elk raids.
--- --- --- ---
"Gang of thieving Swedish elk caught in the act" http://www.thelocal.se/39426/20120301/
Yes this is the constant terror we live under in the North...
(Ineviatble xenophobe comment: "Swedish" elk? I bet they were immigrant elk! Goddamn welfare-cheating elk from the south! :-)
(OT) Sceptic alert! While the tomb may be unusual, it seems as if people are shoehorning a lot of interpretations into this single find.
"Tomb exploration reveals first archaeological evidence of Christianity from the time of Jesus" http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-02-tomb-exploration-reveals-archaeolog…
--- --- --- --- --- ---
"Women central part of pre-colonial Maya society" http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-03-women-central-pre-colonial-maya-soc…