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‘Everything In Its Right Place’—Selective Depositions in Bronze Age Southwest Sweden

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2024

Peter Skoglund
Affiliation:
Department of Cultural Sciences Linnaeus University Universitetskajen 1 391 82 Kalmar Sweden Email: peter.m.skoglund@lnu.se
Courtney Nimura
Affiliation:
Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology University of Oxford Beaumont Street Oxford OX1 2PH UK Email: courtney.nimura@ashmus.ox.ac.uk
Christian Horn
Affiliation:
Department of Historical Studies University of Gothenburg Renströmsgatan 6 41255 Göteborg Sweden Email: christian.horn@gu.se
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Abstract

Hoards have played a significant role in our narratives of the European Bronze Age, but their purpose and meaning have been the source of much debate. These debates have been positively impacted by studies that investigate the ways in which hoards are connected to specific landscape contexts. In this paper, we discuss the outcome of one such in-depth field study of 62 Bronze Age metalwork deposition locations from the Swedish province of Halland. By systematically analysing digital sources such as museum archives, church records and historical maps, we were able to establish the locations of a number of previously unlocated finds, which were then visited in the field. Through this combined archival work and fieldwork, we distinguished several patterns that allude to a connection between metalwork deposits, object types and specific places in the landscape. These patterns shed light on the landscape context of hoards in this region and illuminate how deposition patterns changed over time; we consider some factors that may help to explain these changes. The results emphasize the importance of landscape studies for understanding the role of selective deposition in European Bronze Age societies, and more broadly, the social implications of hoards in their context.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of the Halland coast and the find places denoted by their BALMS database number. ‘Wet’ context (54) find locations are black dots and ‘dry’ context (8) find locations are orange dots. The rivers mentioned in the database are labelled.

Figure 1

Figure 2. The findspots in this study were located through a combination of archival research and fieldwork, a method which is exemplified at Mossarp (B23). (a) The record at the National Historical Museums in Stockholm, dated 10 June 1862, says that a golden spiral ring was found by Kristina Andersdotter when digging for peat in a plot in a bog in Mossarp that belonged to Anders Börjesson in Lindberg. (Source: SHM 2967.) (b) An extract from a map dating to 1860 where the formerly commonly used bog in Mossarp is divided into individual plots. Anders Börjesson in Lindberg 5 was, together with Olof Svensson, assigned plot ‘k’ which is written below the map. (Source: Delning av mosse Mossarp 1860 Lmm, 13-Lin-124.) (c) Peter and Courtney make observations on plot ‘k’ in May 2022, as part of the fieldwork. We now understand that the find was found close to the edge of the bog and close to the stream Skatebäcken. (Photograph: P. Skoglund.) (d) The golden spiral ring today in National Historical Museums in Stockholm. The shape of the spiral was somewhat changed by the finder Kristina Andersdotter. (Photograph: Ulf Bruxe, Historiska museet/SHM [CCBY 2.5].)

Figure 2

Table 1. The number of different natural elements observed at the find places related to Period 2–6, organized by Phases.

Figure 3

Table 2. Objects from find places dating to Phase 1 (n = 17 sites; 73 objects) and their relationship to different topographical elements, organized alphabetically by object type.

Figure 4

Table 3. Objects from find places dating to Phase 2 (n = 14 sites; 30 objects) and their relationship to different topographical elements, organized alphabetically by object type.

Figure 5

Table 4. Objects from find places dating to Phase 3 (n = 31 sites; 54 objects) and their relationship to different topographical elements, organized alphabetically by object type.

Figure 6

Figure 3. Selection of axes (the most common object type in the BALMS database) from different periods. (a) Shaft-hole axe, Phase 1: Period 2, B65, SHM 6928; (b) Palstave (‘ceremonial/prestige’), Phase 1: Period 2, B19, SHM 6434 and (c) Palstave (‘working’) from the same site; (d) Socketed axe, Phase 2: Period 4, B61, SHM 4728: 5; (e) Socketed axe, Phase 3: Period 5/6, B34, SHM 13387:3. (Drawings and photographs: Historiska museet/SHM [CCBY Sweden 2.5].)

Figure 7

Figure 4 (opposite). Smörkull (B47). (a) The panoramic view of the sea from the top of the outcrop (Photographs: C. Nimura); (b) the view of the outcrop from the find place (Photograph: C. Nimura); (c) a LIDAR map of the region, showing the location of the find place (Data source: Lantmäteriet); (d–e) the gold bowl from Smörkull showing the circular designs on the bottom (Photographs: Ulf Bruxe, Historiska museet/SHM [CC BY 4.0].)

Figure 8

Figure 5 (opposite). Kalvabol (B13). (a) View of both outcrops flanking the bog, taken from the road above the bog (Photograph: C. Nimura); (b) a LiDAR map of the area, showing the location of the find place and an arrow that shows the direction of the photograph (Data source: Lantmäteriet); (c) the two neckrings (Photograph: Historiska museet/SHM); (d) an elevation diagram showing the height of the two outcrops that surround the bog.

Figure 9

Table 5. Dryland finds: their date, contents, relationship to natural elements, and other observations.

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