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Olle Hemdorff,
University of Stavanger: Thunderstone Found in a Viking Grave
August 10, 2010
What's a Stone Age
axe doing in an Iron Age tomb? The archaeologists Olle Hemdorff at the
University of Stavanger's Museum of Archaeology and Eva Thäte are
researching older objects in younger graves. They have found a pattern.
TOMB RAIDERS:
Archeologists Olle Hemdorff og Eva Thäte investigate finds of older
artifacts in younger graves. The axe from the Stone Age and the pearl
from the Iron Age have been found in the same grave at Avaldsnes.
"If one finds something once, it's accidental. If it is found twice,
it's puzzling. If found thrice, there is a pattern", the archaeologists
Olle Hemdorff and Eva Thäte say.
In 2005 the archaeologists investigated a grave at Avaldsnes in Karmøy
in southwestern Norway, supposed to be from the late Iron Age, i.e. from
600 to 1000 AD. Avaldsnes is rich in archeological finds. They dot an
area that has been a seat of power all the way back to around 300.
Archaeologist Olle Hemdorff at the University of Stavanger's Museum of
Archaeology was responsible for a series of excavations at Avaldsnes in
1993-94 and 2005-06.
"It became clear to us quite early that the grave had been plundered.
The material in the grave had been messed up and now contained brick and
porcelain fragments from younger layers of soil", Hemdorff says.
Plundering of graves was very common in the 19th century and actually
legal. It was not until the Cultural Heritage Act in 1905 made it a
criminal offence for lay persons to excavate cultural monuments.
Axes and pearls
The German archeologist Eva Thäte is
in the spring of 2010 visiting researcher at the Archaeological Museum.
She is also a guest researcher at the University of Chester in England.
The cooperation with Hemdorff started in 2003 when Thäte came to
Stavanger in connection with a doctoral work on the recycling of ancient
tombs. The latest research project carried out by the two archeologists
is on finds of older artifacts in younger graves. In the grave at
Avaldsnes the researchers found seven handsome glass pearls in the dirt.
"In the late Iron Age glass was the most common material for making
pearls, and therefore glass pearls are often found in men's and women's
graves from this period. The women wore the pearls in a cord around the
neck and brought more pearls with them into the grave than men did. The
discovery of the seven pearls made us assume that it was a woman's grave
we investigated", Hemdorff says.
"But then we suddenly found a stone axe. It was in the same layer of
soil as some of the pearls. The axe is from the Stone Age and more than
a thousand years older than the pearls! It is a so-called greenstone
axe. All the other indicators suggested that the cairn was from the Iron
Age and belonged to a buried woman. So why was there an old axe from the
Stone Age in the grave?", the archaeologists asks.
Not accidental
During the last three years documented discoveries of artifacts have
been made that are typical for the Stone Age – marks from flint, flint
fragments, quarts, axes, etc. in younger burial mounds.
"Unfortunately this documentation did not begin until the 1970s. Up to
that date neither archeologists nor grave robbers were aware of these
objects. They were just seen as unimportant and without archaeological
value. It is only now that we are beginning to have enough data for
analysis, and we have made many enough discoveries of Stone Age
artifacts in younger graves to say that they make a clear pattern",
Thäte says.
She points to a good example from Sogndal in Sogn og Fjordane where a
stone axe was found in an untouched stone coffin from the 5th century.
"The axe must have been placed there intentionally. Other finds in
Scandinavia make this pattern even clearer. In Halland in Sweden they
have found a burial site consisting of almost one hundred graves from
the late Iron Age where one has registered processed flint objects in
nearly every grave", Hemdorff says.
Starting with the finds around the grave at Avaldsnes and taking the
other finds into account, it is not likely that the axe ended up in the
grave by accident. Why was it deposited there?
Thunderstones from the sky
The researchers say that people back
in the Iron Age had a conscious relationship to objects from earlier
times that connected them to their past.
"People probably considered old objects as a heritage from their
ancestors. Recycling of old burial mounds for new graves is an
indication of this relationship. The idea was that the mounds were
memories from a distant past, and written sources indicate that
recycling of mounds had a double function. Apart from providing a grave
for the dead they also legitimized property and rights. People asserted
their control over an area by burying their family in a gravesite
belonging to their ancestors", Thäte explains.
The archaeologists think that people in pre-history were superstitious
and that the axe was deposited in the grave as a part of the burial
ritual.
"People believed that the lightning created thunderstones and that
individuals who owned such stones would not be hit by the lightening",
Hemdorff says.
The idea of a rock falling from the sky caused by lightening is known
all over the world. It is certainly found in Roman times and it is
connected to objects like meteors, flint stone axes and petrified sea
urchins.
"According to folklore a flint axe might protect against lightening and
function as a kind of charm", Thäte says.
In Northern Europe the old idea of the thunder god Thor, who throws his
hammer when lightning strikes, is common property. It was alive all the
way up to the 19th century.
"Thor's mission was to protect gods and people against evil and chaos
and it was therefore believed that Thor's rocks protected houses and
people. Two things seem to be important when choosing thunderstones: The
form had to be similar to an axe or a hammer, that is a ground stone or
flint, or the stone had to have "flaming" properties, which flint and
quarts have", Hendorff says.
Phallus and fertility
"Both the form of the axe and the
flint stones to make fire may be associated with fertility. Thor's
hammer is clearly linked to fertility and prosperity. The hammer is a
phallus fertilizing the soil, which gives it apotropaic quality, i.e. it
has the ability to protect against evil and accidents", Thäte explains.
Since people imagined that thunderstones fell to the ground in
connection with lightning, it is possible that the rocks incorporated
some of the qualities of lightening or had the power to create a bright
light.
"Here is a clear pattern once more. We find old artifacts made of flint
in the younger burial mounds. Flint had a strong symbolic power. The
stones created fire and were seen as important objects. They can also
symbolize the power of lightning", Hemdorff says.
The Avaldsnes axe But
now back to the axe at Avaldsnes and the question why it was in the
plundered grave.
"If you consider how widespread the idea of thunderstones was all the
way up to the 19th century, and how common superstition was, it is not
unlikely that the grave robbers left a protective amulet to make up for
their misdeed. After all they opened a grave and committed sacrilege.
Maybe they hoped that the axe provided protection against the spirit of
the dead and their ghosts", Hemdorff says.
More excavations of graves and houses with unusual artifacts and
comparing them to data from different places will probably yield an even
clearer pattern.
Thunderstones are definitely of great archaeological value.
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