1. Lost and found:Viking Age human bones and textiles from Bjerringhoj, Denmark
- Author
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Charlotte Rimstad, Ulla Mannering, Marie Kanstrup, and Marie Louise Jørkov
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,History ,Denmark ,Viking Age ,Human bone ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,law ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,0601 history and archaeology ,Radiocarbon dating ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,060102 archaeology ,business.industry ,National museum ,General Arts and Humanities ,06 humanities and the arts ,Clothing ,Archaeology ,textiles ,Bjerringhoj ,human bone ,business ,museum collections - Abstract
The human remains recovered from the famous Bjerringhøj Viking Age burial in Denmark have been missing for more than 100 years. Recently, an assemblage of bones resembling those recorded at Bjerringhøj—some with adherent textiles—were discovered in a misplaced box in the National Museum of Denmark. Here, the authors use new skeletal and comparative textile analyses, along with radiocarbon dating, to confirm that the bones are indeed those from the Bjerringhøj burial. This rediscovery offers new data for interpreting Viking Age clothing, including the presence of long trousers, and emphasises the importance of reinvestigating old archaeological collections housed within museums and archives.
- Published
- 2021
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