As archaeologists increasingly recognise alternative ways of dealing with death and burial – in heaps of fire-cracked stones, settlement debris etc. – new inquiries and alternative explanations may be presented. This paper proposes that the hoarding of precious metals was one way of burying the dead during the Scandinavian Late Iron Age, through the inclusion of a few of the dead person’s belongings, or objects thought to be good metaphors for him or her. The contents of the hoard, as well as the act of depositing it, were considered to be essential for the correct transition of the dead person into their new status in the afterlife. Thus, as part of a social contract between the dead and the living, it was in everybody’s interest to proper...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
In the Horvnes cairns in Alstahaug on the coast of Helgeland, North-Norway, people have been buried ...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
As archaeologists increasingly recognise alternative ways of dealing with death and burial – in heap...
The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resourc...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
The text discusses reuse and modifications of older graves in southern Sweden during the Late Iron A...
This paper investigates possible interpretations of a cremated grave material from the Vendel period...
Viking-Age coin-dated hoards have been studied at length in terms of their insights into the histori...
It is generally considered that cairns and stone constructions of different shapes and sizes make up...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
To handle death may be a difficult task for the living. The deathof a person creates a turbulent sit...
Silver coin hoarding is a distinct feature of the Viking Age in some northern European areas, and th...
Early medieval interactions with the dead did not stop after the funeral. The graves were often re...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
In the Horvnes cairns in Alstahaug on the coast of Helgeland, North-Norway, people have been buried ...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
As archaeologists increasingly recognise alternative ways of dealing with death and burial – in heap...
The Viking and Middle Age silver hoards have often been assumed to be simply hidden economic resourc...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Throughout Scandinavia the funeral practices of the Iron Age were, in general, inhumation or cremati...
The text discusses reuse and modifications of older graves in southern Sweden during the Late Iron A...
This paper investigates possible interpretations of a cremated grave material from the Vendel period...
Viking-Age coin-dated hoards have been studied at length in terms of their insights into the histori...
It is generally considered that cairns and stone constructions of different shapes and sizes make up...
It is argued that recent archaeological theories of death and burial have tended to overlook the soc...
To handle death may be a difficult task for the living. The deathof a person creates a turbulent sit...
Silver coin hoarding is a distinct feature of the Viking Age in some northern European areas, and th...
Early medieval interactions with the dead did not stop after the funeral. The graves were often re...
The emergence of inhumation cemeteries is a phenomenon of the mid-first millennium AD across Western...
In the Horvnes cairns in Alstahaug on the coast of Helgeland, North-Norway, people have been buried ...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...