ARCHAEOLOGISTS UNEARTH TWO VIKING AGE SWORDS IN BURIAL GROUND

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Archaeologists unearth two Viking Age swords in burial ground

Archaeologists from Arkeologerna have uncovered two Viking Age swords during excavations in Västmanland, outside of Köping, Sweden.

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The swords were discovered during an archaeological investigation of a Late Iron Age burial ground, which dates from around AD 600 – 1000.

The site contains 100 graves and two burial mounds, with evidence of further burial activity indicated by the discovery of three stone tombs added centuries later into one of the mounds.

Excavations of one of the tombs revealed a large cache of glass beads, while in the middle of the other two tombs, archaeologists found two Viking Age swords which had been placed standing upright in a shallow setting.

In total, around 20 Viking Age swords have been found in the Västmanland area, however, this is the first time that two swords have been found in the same burial ground and left standing untouched.

Speaking on the discovery, Anton Seiler from Arkeologerna, suggests that the swords could have been placed on the mound to honour and remember one’s relatives, being a physical marker that family members could visit and touch 1200 years-ago.

Excavations also found the cremated remains of humans and animal bones, in addition to a gaming piece and parts of a comb and bear claws. Evidence of earlier occupation has also been identified, with archaeological remains of agricultural farming that dates from the Bronze Age or earlier Iron Age.

Why several individuals were buried in the mound centuries later, or determining their gender is still yet to be determined, however, remains sent for an osteological analysis should hopefully provide further answers for the researchers.
Say what you will but IMHO it still amounts to grave robbing/looting.....Sending it to a museum does not make it any less so.

It's one thing for a excavator to hit something and they dig it up to get it out of the way (like that English King a few years back) but another thing entirely to dig-up a known burial site just because you can.
 
This seems to me to be theft. It belonged to the person buried it. No, they no longer need it but it's still theirs.
 
Really? Archaeologists from Arkeologerna? Discovering Viking swords (known throughout the ages as being a symbol of warrior men) in Vast Man Land? Outside of Koping (coping) Sweden?

This actually sounds like something from the Babylon Bee.

BTW OP, if you consider this grave robbing and wrong, how do you feel about all the Egyptian excavations that have happened over the years? Not only did they "rob" the graves, they also took the bodies!
 
Really? Archaeologists from Arkeologerna? Discovering Viking swords (known throughout the ages as being a symbol of warrior men) in Vast Man Land? Outside of Koping (coping) Sweden?

This actually sounds like something from the Babylon Bee.

BTW OP, if you consider this grave robbing and wrong, how do you feel about all the Egyptian excavations that have happened over the years? Not only did they "rob" the graves, they also took the bodies!


You are right.
 
Actually, it would be considered grave robbing if they had known where the graves were beforehand, and conspired to take the items that the dead were buried with as they were being put into the ground.

Discovering it on the other hand, is just simple archaeology and history in my book.
 
Arkeologerna? Why is that important? There should be tons of Viking artifacts in modern Sweden. That's where they came from.
 
Arkeologerna? Why is that important? There should be tons of Viking artifacts in modern Sweden. That's where they came from.

Archaeologists from Arkeologerna sounds too much like a Babylon Bee article to me.

Then there's the fact that Viking swords (a manly thing if there ever was one) were found in Vastmanland (Vast Man Land).

Again, not sure if this is true or not, but it smacks of something that the Bee would put out.
 
Actually, it would be considered grave robbing if they had known where the graves were beforehand, and conspired to take the items that the dead were buried with as they were being put into the ground.

Discovering it on the other hand, is just simple archaeology and history in my book.
The way the article reads it's a well known burial site.
 
This is not a "Seal Team 6 against 1000 Vikings" who wins thread....Go fantasize someplace else. ;)

Who brings a sword to an HK416, Mk-13 sniper rifle, and (if required) a laser-designated Hellfire Drone strike fight?

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