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Ladby ship

Coordinates: 55°26′36.07″N 10°37′0.88″E / 55.4433528°N 10.6169111°E / 55.4433528; 10.6169111
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The Ladby ship

The Ladby ship is a major ship burial, of the type also represented by the boat chamber grave of Hedeby and the ship burials of Oseberg, Borre, Gokstad and Tune in South Norway, all of which date back to the 9th and 10th centuries. It is the only ship burial discovered in Denmark. It was discovered southwest of Kerteminde on the island of Funen.

Discovery

The grave is situated within an otherwise unremarkable burial site from the Viking Age. Excavations revealed an abundance of grave goods consisting of both objects and animals. It has been dated to the early 10th century, based on a gilded link of bronze for a dog-harness, decorated in the Jelling style, found there [citation needed].

The grave had been extensively damaged. Since only a few small human bones were found, researchers have concluded that the site is a translation, a conversion from a heathen to a Christian grave [citation needed]. Another interpretation is that the struggle for dominance by King Haraldr Blátönn and his heir, Sveinn Tjúguskegg, may have led to the grave's desecration [citation needed]. The ship was a symbol of power--easily visible to all who travelled or lived in the area--glorifying the minor king buried with it [citation needed]. By removing the deceased and chopping all his grave goods into hundreds of pieces within a few years of the burial, the attackers presumably gave his heirs a great blow to their family prestige [citation needed].

The site was discovered on or around February 28, 1935, and the excavation was performed by conservator Gustav Rosenberg and pharmacist Poul Helweg Mikkelsen, between 1935 and 1937. Their original drawings constitute the primary source-material for information on the find [citation needed]. P.Helweg Mikkelsen paid for an arched building to be raised above the site, which was then covered with earth and grass [citation needed]. This was then given to the National Museum, which had full responsibility for the site until 1994, when it passed to the department of Archaeology and Landscape at the Viking Museum at Ladby (part of The Museums of Eastern Funen) [citation needed].

Two factors regarding the discovery of ships in general are relevant to the discovery of the Ladby Ship </ref>Sørensen, Anne (2001). Ladby: A Danish Ship-Grave from the Viking Age. Viking Ship Museum. p. 58.</ref>. First, ship burial sites are often found on higher terrain, hilltops, slopes, and beach ridges. Second, ship burial sites are usually found in close proximity to the water, whether it be a lake, a fjord, or the sea. The Ladby Ship is thus typical of many ship burial sites, as it is located on top of a mound, near Keterminde Fjord. Presumably, the ship was dragged up from the Fjord to the top of the mound with the assistance of rollers, as was the case with the Oseberg Ship. The ship is a longship that carried 30-32 rowers. While Rosenberg gave no description of the shape of the mound, Mikkelsen described it as an oval. Rosenberg hoped to find stones in a circle-formation around the mound, but instead he discovered a collection of stones to the north and south of the ship and a small pile to the east. Since the stones lie at a higher level than the row of rivets that outline the ship’s gunwale, it is unlikely that the stones were used to support the ship in the burial. Rosenberg concluded that the stones came from a previous mound on the site that was destroyed when the ship-grave was constructed.

Viking Museum Ladby

Now the Viking Museum at Ladby displays many of the original finds and offers an engaging overview of the Viking era as it unfolded on the north east of the island of Funen. The new building from 2007 also contains a reconstruction of the ship burial. It shows the scene as it may have looked right after the funeral, with the deceased chieftain lying on a bed in a full-scale replica of his ship, with all his grave goods, near his dogs and his eleven horses. There is also an interpretive movie about the Vikings' beliefs regarding the journey to the realm of the dead, based on Norse myths and the images on the Gotlandic Picture stones.[1]

Literature

  • Sørensen, Anne C.: Ladby. A Danish Ship-Grave from the Viking Age, Ships and Boats of The North, Vol. 3; Viking Ship Museum in collaboration with the National Museum of Denmark and Kertemindeegnens Museer, Roskilde 2001, ISBN 978-87-85180-44-5

References

  1. ^ "History of the Museum". Viking Museum Ladby (in Danish). Retrieved 20 June 2014.

Sources


55°26′36.07″N 10°37′0.88″E / 55.4433528°N 10.6169111°E / 55.4433528; 10.6169111