11 research outputs found

    Om Egtvedpigens rejse

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    En debatterende anmeldelse af Karen Margarita Frei: Egtvedpigens rejse (København 2018) med udgangspunkt i anmelderens indgående kendskab til fund og fundsted

    Et gravkammer fra enkeltgravskulturen

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    Grave chambers m the single-grave culture The earliest construction in a ploughed-down barrow at Gårslev, East Jutland, was a well preserved grave chamber built for two men. The chamber was erected on the original soil surface and measures 2.60x2.10 m, built of vertical planks and 4 large corner posts, dug into a 50-55 cm deep foundation trench, supported by stones (Fig. 2). Well preserved carbonized wood remained, 30-40 cm above the surface. The posts as well as the planks were standing on the inner side of the trench (Fig. 3-4). Each plank was 30-40 cm wide and 6-9 cm thick. The corner posts were 60 cm wide and 10 cm thick. No traces of the dead were left. One of them must have been buried with his head to south-west, the face to west, with a battle axe, a small thin-bladed flint axe, a polished thick-butted axe and a swayed, East-Danish beaker. At the western end of the chamber a man lay with his head north-west orientated, with a small battle axe and a swayed East­Danish beaker (2-5) (Fig. 4, 7, 8). Obviously the dead have been of different status. The grave is dated to the Ground-Grave Period. The chamber was covered by roof planks and has at a time collapsed over the buried. A nearly 2.70 m long and 50-55 cm wide oak plank was preserved, because it had been scorched (Fig 5-6). A frame of large stones, 40-50 cm tall, remained in the southern side of the barrow (Fig. 1 & 9). The barrow was slightly oval, 22x24 m. Beside the grave chamber there was also a small house in the nort-eastern corner, 1.3x1 m. It was built of vertically placed planks, 5 cm thick and 15-20 cm wide (Fig. 10). No artifacts date the building. The fill of trench and planks proved to be quite similar to that of the trench and planks in the grave chamber. The barrow was reused later for one of the more common graves from the Upper-Grave Period (6-7) (Fig. 11, 12, 13). Contemporary, rather small wooden coffins with a long entrance as well as larger grave chambers are known in a limited number from sites in North Jutland (8-12) in the same area, Himmerland, which has the largest concentration of stone built coffins (13), but none of them is quite similar to the Gårslev-chamber, as well as the small plank house beside the barrow is not known from any other finds. The grave goods in the two graves from Gårslev clearly show that both graves belong to the East-Danish and South-Jutlandish Single Grave Culture (17, 18). The beakers have most of their parallels at North Funen, but also some in the eastern Schleswig-Holstein and Mecklenburg. The pottery from North Funen is also showing close relationship to pottery from North Jutland (19, 20, 21). Lone og Steen Hvass Vejle Museum                          &nbsp
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