THE ROYAL BURIAL
MOUNDS
IN SWEDEN
G'day folks,
Welcome to some facts about ancient burial mounds for royalty in Sweden.
Dating back to the 5th and 6th centuries, the Royal Mounds of Gamla
Uppsala have been shrouded in mystery for generations. Some believed the
three large mounds to be gods Thor, Odin, and Freyr, others thought
them to be the burial sites of legendary kings, while some people
believed them to be, well, simply natural lumps of dirt. The latter
speculation angered Swedish King Karl XV, and in 1830 he commissioned a
widely publicized excavation to settle the matter once and for all.
Headed by Bror Emil Hildebrand, the first archaeological dig of the
Eastern Mound confirmed that it was indeed a burial site, though
findings were less than spectacular: A clay pot of burned bones and some
burial gifts. They believed it to be a grave for either a young woman
or a young man and a woman. The second excavation in 1874 of the Western
Mound yielded more impressive findings of warrior equipment, luxury
weaponry, as well as a prominent man dressed in a suit of golden
threads. This grave was confirmed to date back to the 6th century.
Though archaeologists were unable to identify the bodies of the mounds,
they are quite certain the mounds belonged to a royal dynasty. As
Sweden’s oldest national symbols, the Royal Mounds have retained their
significance, especially emphasized by a trip from Pope John Paul II in
1989. The three mounds are known today as the Eastern, Middle, and
Western Mounds.
Clancy's comment: There ya go. Interesting, eh? I bet you are glad you now know what the mounds were for.
I'm....
No comments:
Post a Comment