Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

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Micael
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Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by Micael »

This is an interesting find from Sweden, a previosuly unknown cemetary and church from the 11th century, right at the start of the Christian era here, and what appears to also have been an earlier Norse temple structure on the same site. That the church has been completely forgotten about, despite it likely have been considered an important one given the number of burials in a rural location, and the continuation from the pre-Christian times, is most peculiar. If this belonged to a particular powerbase in society, like the equivalent of a powerful clan, I’m almost getting some ”damnatio memoriae” vibes from this.

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Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"
A couple of miles north of Västerås, in the village of Äs, a major archaeological excavation has been underway for some time. The finds excavated from the sand in the ridge arouse great curiosity among archaeologists. - What we found is nothing that we have seen in any early documents. We don't yet know how to interpret the finds, says Ann Vinberg, archaeologist and project manager at the Cultural Environmental Protection Foundation.

Jonas Edberg
EDITOR IN CHIEF
PUBLISHED Monday 08 July 2024 - 14:10
LAST UPDATED Tuesday 09 July 2024 - 21:50

Västerås Tidning received a question earlier in the early summer from Bishop Mikael Mogren if we wanted to go with him and visit an excavation where the archaeologists found an old church.
Of course we wanted to.
But what neither we nor the bishop knew at the time was the extent of the new discoveries made at the site.

One day in the middle of June, together with the bishop, we headed north on Salavägen. After Tillberga we came to the exit towards Äs and there we could find the site for the excavations.
On the sand ridge, among machines and work vehicles belonging to the landowner's contracting company, there was a whole team of archaeologists carefully sitting and delicately scraping out findings in the sand.
In several of the pits, skeletons and skulls were visible - which had been buried for upwards of a thousand years.
Strategic location
We were met by Ann Vinberg and her colleague Oskar Spjuth who quickly and empathetically began to tell and explain what it is where we saw.
- It is a very strategic location, in the middle of the ridge and close to the streams that lead into Lake Mälaren. Here at Åsen, the roads have always gone. In this particular place, we know that there have been settlements since at least the 2nd century AD, and there have also been finds from the Younger Bronze Age (800-900 years before Christ), they said.
What they did not know, however, was that there was a larger cemetery on the site - with an associated church.
When the first graves were discovered, archaeologists thought that a couple of hundred graves, at most, would be found.

But the more they dug - the more graves were found.
- The graves were close together and we found graves in up to four different layers. Several of the skeletons are also very well preserved because they lie in favorable conditions in the sand, says Oskar Spjuth.
Quite quickly the magnitude of the excavation was realized.
- This is a previously completely unknown - and an extremely unusual remains. We very rarely dig up medieval remains in the countryside. To then, as in this case, dig an almost completely complete cemetery is almost unique in Swedish archaeology, says Ann Vinberg.
- In most medieval cemeteries, the parish church still stands, and you normally don't dig there, he says.
The findings raise questions
What has now been found are 800 bodies that have been buried in the time from around the 11th to the 14th century - and the traces of a smaller church building.
The findings raise several questions for archaeologists. Not least: Who were all the people who were buried here? There were only three or four farms on the site, and there is no indication that this many people could have lived on the site.
And why is there nothing documented about the place? In no documents have the archaeologists been able to find traces of any church or burial place in Äs.
In addition, Romfartuna church, which is a stone's throw away, seems to have been built and put into use before this cemetery ceased to be used.
- It is very unusual for church sites to be forgotten in Sweden, says Bishop Mikael Mogren.
Traces of a wooden church on the site
In the middle of the cemetery was the church building, which was a wooden church that the archaeologists have been able to locate through post holes.
Under the church building itself, they have found four graves, some of which are children's graves. The graves under the church itself are among the oldest found at the site.
- It was often the case in those days that churches were built where great men lived, and whoever is buried under the church could be a great man who lived here.
In the excavation of the old church, the archaeologists have also found findings that may indicate that there was also an earlier building on the site - which may have been a holy place in pre-Christian times.
- We therefore believe that this may have been a place of power and cult which later became a church, says Ann Vinberg.
DNA analysis
All the material that the archaeologists get from the excavation will now be examined - and all the skeletons will be DNA analysed. In this way, they hope to get answers to several of the questions surrounding the forgotten cemetery.
Among other things, we will then get more answers about the origin of the people who were buried here - and how they felt.

What is already thought to be traces of is that at least two of the bodies that have been found seem to have originated from the East.
- We haven't found many objects in the graves, but two women we found had copper rings that may have been in their hair, which was common in Slavic culture. So there we suspect that it is two Slavic women that we have found. It was common for the upper classes to marry across borders at this time, even across larger areas, to create alliances, says Oskar Spjuth.
- So it will be very exciting to see what the DNA analysis will show. In a few years we will get an answer, says Ann Vinberg.
When the visit to the excavations begins to suffer towards the end, Bishop Mikael Mogren gets an idea. He wants to bless the place where the altar used to stand - 700 years after the old church was abandoned.
- Thank you for allowing me to come here to this place. Let us go in peace and serve the Lord with joy. Amen!
kdahm
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by kdahm »

As points to consider to explain the abandonment -

1. Crop patterns in the surrounding region for the 13th to 15th centuries?
2. Weather and surface water in the same period?
3. What is known about the regional governance for the 12th the 16th centuries? Any marriages, mergers, or other events that would lead to either absent lords or transition from one family or upper lord to another? Issues with a steward?
4. Abrupt transition in the ending of graves, or gradual tapering off? Did the nearby church start by using this graveyard, then transition to one closer by?
5. Disease outbreaks in the region? Possibly a severe epidemic of Black Plague, which wiped most of a village out?

Lots of possibilities. Good posting.
warshipadmin
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by warshipadmin »

"we found graves in up to four different layers" caught my eye.Why? were they short of space, which seems unlikely, or does sand accrete fairly rapidly at that site?
Nathan45
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by Nathan45 »

Thats a good point. Maybe a big battle or disease/famine?
Craiglxviii
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by Craiglxviii »

warshipadmin wrote: Fri Jul 19, 2024 12:37 am "we found graves in up to four different layers" caught my eye.Why? were they short of space, which seems unlikely, or does sand accrete fairly rapidly at that site?
Not unknown across most of Europe; once an area of ground had been consecrated (and usually enclosed with a fence or wall) they’d just stack the bodies in there.
warshipadmin
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by warshipadmin »

So they raise the ground level? I can't say I've seen that.
Craiglxviii
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by Craiglxviii »

warshipadmin wrote: Fri Jul 19, 2024 7:40 am So they raise the ground level? I can't say I've seen that.
Yep. Look at any Norman era church here. They’re set in rolling grounds. That’s the effect of 800 years of burials stacked many deep.
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Micael
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Re: Forgotten thousand-year-old cemetery baffles archaeologists: "Unique"

Post by Micael »

kdahm wrote: Thu Jul 18, 2024 9:46 pm As points to consider to explain the abandonment -

1. Crop patterns in the surrounding region for the 13th to 15th centuries?
2. Weather and surface water in the same period?
3. What is known about the regional governance for the 12th the 16th centuries? Any marriages, mergers, or other events that would lead to either absent lords or transition from one family or upper lord to another? Issues with a steward?
4. Abrupt transition in the ending of graves, or gradual tapering off? Did the nearby church start by using this graveyard, then transition to one closer by?
5. Disease outbreaks in the region? Possibly a severe epidemic of Black Plague, which wiped most of a village out?

Lots of possibilities. Good posting.
Some thoughts concerning points 3 and 5.

3: During the 13th century there were a string of disturbances/rebellions in the country, wherein essentially two different groupings of powerful men were pitted against one another. Documentation is incomplete but it went on from 1210 to 1280 at least. The background is that one side wanted to strenghten the central power, eminating from a singular king and sphere around him. The others, who were the ones effectively in rebellion, gravitated towards the older ways with more decentralisation, powerful local lords and things etc. This latter group is usually collectively referred to as ”Folkungar.” In the end they lost with their last prominent leader being executed in 1280. While I don’t believe that any lords seated at this particular site has been documented as having been involved in this, I know that that one of the ”clans” involved in the Folkunga grouping were from not too many miles away.

Hence, I’m thinking that perhaps the downfall of the Folkungar might be related, that is to say if a local lord from this site was on their side and the family got weakened to a point of being effectively dissolved in the aftermath of 1280. Being on the losing side might also explain why there might be a desire to abandon a church that might have been closely associated with the family, and replace it with a new one that had no such connections.

5: The Black Plague did do a number on the population at times, and there was a degree of abandonment of farms and so on. However abandonments were then primarily in areas with less fertile land and such, and more central and economically important areas such as this one seems to have filled up pretty quickly by displaced survivors from outlying areas.

One thing that should be considered here is that the current general consensus by historians is that the Swedish aristocracy fared surprisingly well in comparison to the population in general, and also the Norwegian aristocracy. By contrast the Norwegian one was hit very hard by deaths and were essentially weakened to the point of extinction as a result. This is offered as one of the explanations as to how it could exist a sufficient amount of local powerbases to rebel and oppose the Danish monarchs during the Kalmar union days, and eventually finally break free, in Sweden. In Norway those powerbases got wiped out by the plague. So if this local powerstructure was wiped out by the plague it would be a exception to the norm, not impossible but probably also not the likeliest explanation.

In addition to the above points I also find it interesting that that there is one of the most prominent grave fields of the pre-Viking/Viking eras in Sweden close by (10 km). It includes the largest surviving burial mound in Sweden, ”Anundshög”, boat graves, a bunch of runestones and was also a Thing site. So during that era there would have been something of a power center in the general area, but exactly what happened to those who were in power there and their descendants is unclear. If this church site and the Anundshög grave field (which is prominently situated by the old east-west main road) is connected to the same people, that the burials moved away from the old burial site and to the place of the old cult site, since Christian burials is usually by a Church, that might add to our understanding a bit. But I would have thought that the prominent burials would have moved into Västerås, which this is on the outskirts of, since that’s were the larger churches and such would have been built. Questions abound.
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