Advertisement
News

Ship burial discovered in Norway predates Viking Age

A burial mound explored last June in Norway holds the remains of a ship that predates the Viking age. Archaeologists believe this is Scandinavia’s oldest known ship burial.

Archaeologists and a metal detectorist conducted the survey at Herlaugshagen at Leka, which is located in Trøndelag County in central Norway. Carried out by NTNU Science Museum and Trøndelag County Municipality, it was funded by a grant of NOK 100,000 from Norway’s National Antiquities Agency. The purpose was to be able to date the burial mound more closely, and possibly confirm whether the burial mound may have contained a ship. The archaeologists found iron rivets, a horse’s tooth, preserved remains of wood and charcoal.

Advertisement

The rivets allowed the researchers to date the site. “The mound was constructed in approximately 700 CE,” said Geir Grønnesby, an archaeologist at the NTNU University Museum. “This is called the Merovingian period and precedes the Viking Age. This dating is really exciting because it pushes the whole tradition of ship burials quite far back in time.”

Grønnesby was project manager for the dig. He says the date for the ship has many consequences: “It tells us that people from this area were skilled seafarers – they could build big ships – much earlier than we previously thought.”

Advertisement

The development of shipbuilding has played a key role in the discussion about when and why the Viking Age started. We can’t say that the Viking Age started earlier based on this dating, but Grønnesby says that you don’t build a ship of this size without having a reason for doing so.

“The burial mound itself is also a symbol of power and wealth. A wealth that has not come from farming in Ytre Namdalen. I think people in this area have been engaged in trading goods, perhaps over great distances.”

This map shows the approximate locations of the large burial mounds located in central Norway. Map: Kolbjørn Skarpnes/NTNU

He is supported by archaeologist Lars Forseth from Trøndelag County Authority who also participated in the dig. “I think that the location along the shipping route plays a key role in understanding why Herlaugshaugen burial mound is located at Leka,” Forseth said. “We know that whetstones have been traded from Trøndelag to the continent from the mid-700s onwards, and goods transport along the route is key to understanding the Viking Age and developments in ship design before the Viking Age.”

The Herlaugshaugen burial mound has a diameter of over 60 metres and is one of the largest burial mounds in Norway. It was excavated three times during the late 1700s, and according to the accounts that exist, some kind of wall, iron rivets, a bronze cauldron, animal bones and a seated skeleton with a sword were found.

Advertisement
Finding of rivets in Herlaugshaugen. Photo: Lars Forseth/Trøndelag County Municipality

The skeleton was exhibited for a while at Trondheim Cathedral School as King Herlaug of Namdalen, a ninth-century ruler, but no one knows what happened to it.

“Unfortunately, these finds disappeared in the early 1920s. The skeleton was exhibited for a while at Trondheim Cathedral School as King Herlaug, but no one knows what happened to it,” Grønnesby said. “All the other finds have also disappeared. It is said that the bronze cauldron was melted down and made into shoe buckles.”

Here you see a brown layer at the bottom of a shaft. This layer is the original cultivation layer on which the mound is built. This shaft is not the one where rivets were found. Photo: Lars Forseth/Trøndelag County Municipality.

The Herlaugshaugen burial mound has been dated to the Merovingian Period (ca. 550 to 800 CE), which is just before the Viking Age. Generally speaking, not many archaeological finds are made from this period, but the first ship burials occurred during its early stages. Among these are the spectacular ship burials at Vendel and Valsgärde in Sweden, where people were buried lying on down pillows with ornate weapons and helmets.

Advertisement

Could there have been a connection between the ruling class at Vendel and Valsgärde and the people who built the burial mound at Leka? That is not an unreasonable assumption: Not far from Leka – further into Namdalen valley – there are even more large burial mounds, which archaeologists believe are from the Merovingian Period.

Archaeologist Lars Forseth excavating the burial mound at Herlaugshaugen. Photo: Geir Grønnesby, NTNU University Museum

“In fact, about 10 percent of all the large burial mounds in Norway are found in Namdalen. These are mounds of more than 37 metres in diameter, and it is almost inexplicable that an anonymous valley in Norway appears to be a key area for large-scale burial-mound building,” says Lars Forseth.

“We don’t know what these large mounds contain because hardly any of them have been investigated. But archaeologists have wondered for a very long time whether there is a connection between Namdalen and the areas of Vendel and Valsgärde in Sweden,” Grønnesby said.

The burial mound. Photo: Lars Forseth/Trøndelag County Municipality

Grønnesby adds that Vendel and Valsgärde also have similarities with the fantastically rich ship burial in Sutton Hoo in England. The Sutton Hoo burial is also dated to the Merovingian Period, and is considered the oldest monumental ship burial.

Advertisement

“Should the ship in Herlaugshaugen burial mound be seen in connection with the burial mounds in Namdalen, Vendel, Valsgärde and Sutton Hoo, or is it a different phenomenon? This is a very exciting question, and something we want to explore further,” says Grønnesby.

Top Image: Archaeologists used a drone to get an above-ground view of what the big burial mound in Leka looked like. The mound, called Herlaugshaugen, is mentioned in Snorre’s royal sagas as the final resting place of King Herlaug. Photo: Hanne Bryn, NTNU University Museum

Advertisement