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Sandby borg

Coordinates: 56°33′09″N 16°38′21″E / 56.5526°N 16.6392°E / 56.5526; 16.6392
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Sandby Borg
Part of the west wall.
Part of Sandby Borg's west wall.
LocationKalmar län, Öland, Konungariket Sverige (Sweden)
Coordinates56°33′09.6″N 16°38′23.2″E / 56.552667°N 16.639778°E / 56.552667; 16.639778
TypeRingfort
History
Foundedc. 480 A.D.[1]
Site notes
Excavation dates2010-2017, ongoing
ArchaeologistsDr. Helena Victor, Dr. Ludvig Papmehl-Dufay, Clara Alfsdotter
ConditionRuins
Websitesandbyborg.se

Sandby borg is an Iron Age ringfort, one of at least 15 on the island of Öland, Sweden.[2] It sits about 2 kilometers southeast of Södra Sandby village in Sandby parish in southeastern Öland. It is also close to the village of Gårdby.

From 2011 the fort has been subject of excavation, the results of which show that it was the scene of a massacre in the late 5th century AD. The victims of the massacre were never buried but are found lying as they fell, inside the houses and scattered on the streets of the fort. This has resulted in a unique snapshot character of the archaeology at Sandby borg, providing new insights both to violence and conflict in the Iron Age but also concerning everyday life in the ringfort.

Location and size

The ringfort of Sandby borg is located adjacent to the shoreline on south-east Öland. Today, the structure consists of an eroded oval stone wall of 2–3 m height enclosing an area of approximately 5000 m2. The walls are made from local limestone with a fill of erratic boulders and pebbles. Three gates are visible as shallow depressions in the wall; crop marks visible in aerial shots of the site suggest the presence of a possible fourth gate. The original ringfort wall was 4 m wide and would have been approximately 4–5 m high.

Aerial photographs and geophysical surveys of the ringfort interior revealed buried stone structures, interpreted as stone house walls of 53 houses.[3] The layout is similar to that of several other Öland ringforts, e.g. Eketorp, with houses radially placed inside the ring wall and a central block surrounded by a street.[4]

To the west of the ringfort there is a structure consisting of numerous regularly placed rows of large erratic boulders, probably part of the defensive structure of the fort (see image).

Sandby borg ringfort seen from the west. Note the structure of erratic boulders that surrounds the western perimeter of the fort. Photo by Sebastian Jakobsson.

Archaeological excavation

Suspected looting pits were discovered during initial geophysical work by Andreas Viberg in spring 2010. This led the local antiquarian authorities to commission a metal detector survey of the whole site carried out in August 2010. Here, five deposits of exquisite Migration Period jewelry were discovered hidden in different houses within the central block of the fort. Each deposit contained a gilded silver relief brooch along with various items, such as glass beads, finger rings and silver pendants.[5] The relief brooches are large, prestigious items of a very high quality, typically made of gilded silver and covered with decorative animal art designs. The brooches, which were probably part of aristocratic women’s jewelry sets, are decorated in Salins Style I and spiral ornamentation. Typologically, they can be dated to the period AD 450–510.[6]

Excavations have been undertaken by Kalmar County Museum annually since 2011. Already in the first campaign, human remains were found inside houses showing that a violent event occurred at the site probably in the late 5th century AD. After the excavation season 2017, some 9% of the ringfort have been excavated including three of the 53 houses.[7] The results include some fascinating snapshots from everyday life at the fort as well as the gruesome evidence of a brutal mass killing, with a minimum number of 26 individuals identified of which 9 are represented by more or less complete bodies.[8] The victims range in age from small children to elderly adults.[9] Many of the skeletons show clear evidence of sharp force and blunt force trauma, typically inflicted from above or from behind. This suggests that the killing was an act of execution rather than a regular battle. The fact that the bodies have not been buried but were found lying where they fell has created unique archaeological source material and a snapshot of Migration period violence.[10]

The rich artefact assemblage from the excavations and surveys includes everyday items such as pottery and tools, as well as more exclusive and prestigious goods such as silver and gold decorations, imported Roman glass and two Roman gold solidi coins.[11]

The research project

The excavations at Sandby borg was started at a very small scale, in the first years financed by Kalmar County Museum in collaboration with the local authorities.[citation needed] In December 2014, the project successfully raised funds via a Kickstarter campaign to finance the excavations in 2015.[12] This included the complete excavation of House #40, where several skeletons had been found during previous campaigns. The target was SEK 400,000, and the Kickstarter campaign managed to raise SEK 465,619 before the deadline of midnight 31 December 2014. The crowdfunded excavation was carried out in June 2015.[13]

During 2016–2018, the project has been funded by the Bank of Sweden Tercentenary Foundation. This allowed the full excavation of House 4 in 2016 and House 52 in 2017.[citation needed] The focus of the project is the excavation and subsequent osteological and bioarchaeological analysis of the human skeletal remains, in order to further understand the demography of the victims in the massacre at Sandby borg.[14]

The Sandby borg research project is headed by archaeologists Dr. Helena Victor and Dr. Ludvig Papmehl-Dufay, both at Kalmar County museum.[15] Archaeologist and physical anthropologist Clara Alfsdotter of Bohusläns museum is responsible for the osteological analysis together with Associate Professor Anna Kjellström at the Osteoarchaeological Research Laboratory, Stockholm University. Bioarchaeological analyses are carried out under the supervision of Associate Prof Gunilla Eriksson, Prof Kerstin Lidén and Prof Anders Götherström at the Archaeological Research Laboratory, Stockholm University. A sub-project looking into the cultural heritage of Sandby borg and its implication for present society is headed by Associate Prof Bodil Petersson at Linnaeus University. Development of digital presentation and documentation of fieldwork is headed by Nicholas Nilsson and Fredrik Gunnarsson at Kalmar County Museum. Since 2014, the project also employs a professional photographer, Daniel Lindskog, and a film-maker, Sebastian Jakobsson. The artefacts recovered during the excavations is preserved by conservator Max Jahrehorn of Oxider.

References

  1. ^ Curry, Andrew (March 2016). "Öland, Sweden. Spring, A.D. 480". Archaeology Magazine. Vol. 69, no. 2. The Archaeological Institute of America. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  2. ^ Söderström, Ulrika (2015). Sandby Borg: Unveiling the Sandby Borg Massacre (in Swedish). Kalmar lāns museum. ISBN 9789198236620.
  3. ^ "Viberg, A., Victor, H., Fischer, S., Lidén, K. & Andrén, A. 2014. The ringfort by the sea: Archaeological geophysical prospection and excavations at Sandby borg. Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt 44:3" (PDF).
  4. ^ Stenberger, M. 1933. Öland under äldre järnåldern. Diss. Uppsala Univ.; Borg et al. 1976
  5. ^ Fallgren, Jan-Henrik; Ljungkvist, John (2016). "The Ritual Use of Brooches in Early Medieval Forts on Öland, Sweden". European Journal of Archaeology. 19 (4): 681–703. doi:10.1080/14619571.2016.1147318 – via Cambridge Core.
  6. ^ e.g. Haseloff 1981; Näsman 1984b; Magnus 1997, 2002; Kristoffersen 1999; Fischer & Victor 2011
  7. ^ Fleur, Nicholas St (2018-04-25). "A Massacre Frozen in Time: Skeletons in Sweden Reveal Ancient Attack". The New York Times.
  8. ^ Alfsdotter, C. 2018. Bad death at Sandby borg. A bioarchaeological analysis of intergroup violence and postmortem agency of unburied corpses. LNU Licentiate No 13, 2018. Linnaeus University Press.
  9. ^ Papmehl-Dufay, L. & Alfsdotter, C. 2016. Sandby borg V. Seminariegrävning 2014. Sandby borgs skrifter 5. Kalmar: Kalmar läns museum.
  10. ^ Alfsdotter, Clara; Papmehl-Dufay, Ludvig; Victor, Helena (2018-04-24). "A moment frozen in time: evidence of a late fifth-century massacre at Sandby borg". Antiquity. 92 (362): 421–436. doi:10.15184/aqy.2018.21 – via Cambridge Core.
  11. ^ Victor, H. 2015. Sandby borg -ett fruset ögonblick under folkvandringstid. In: Arnell, K.-H. & Papmehl-Dufay, L. (eds) Grävda minnen. Från Skedemosse till Sandby borg. Kalmar: Kalmar läns museum
  12. ^ Papmehl-Dufay, Ludvig; Söderström, Ulrika (27 September 2018). "Creating Ambassadors Through Digital Media: reflections from the Sandby borg project". Internet Archaeology (46). doi:10.11141/ia.46.3.
  13. ^ Gunnarsson, F, Alfsdotter, C. & Victor, H., 2015, Sandby borg – undersökningar 2015. Sandby sn, Öland. Museiarkeologi sydost, Kalmar läns museum. Sandby borgs skrifter 7.
  14. ^ "Riksbankens Jubileumsfond - Frozen in Time - histories of life and moments of death at Sandby borg". www.rj.se.
  15. ^ "Arkeologi". www.kalmarlansmuseum.se.

Further reading

56°33′09″N 16°38′21″E / 56.5526°N 16.6392°E / 56.5526; 16.6392