Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Preface and acknowledgment
- 1. The bare bones
- 2. Eight Viking Age burial grounds in south-east Sweden
- Trinitatis: an early Christian graveyard in Lund
- Vannhög: a burial place near an old Viking fortress
- Fjälkinge: a remarkable burial ground on the fertile plain
- Kopparsvik: a cemetery south of Visby
- Slite Square: with a view of sailing routes to the east
- Fröjel: a burial ground beside a Viking Age harbour
- Birka: a well-known trading place in the realm of the Svear
- Skämsta: a farm cemetery
- A wide range of burial practices
- Everyone was buried
- 3. Immigrants or locals?
- A geological signature can be detected in dental enamel
- Different patterns emerge
- Someone knew how the deceased wanted to be buried
- Did everyone come here voluntarily?
- 4. Health and care for the frail
- “Tall as palm trees”
- Toothless or shining white?
- Joint problems
- Everyday accidents and battle traumas
- The dwarf
- Leprosy: noseless and numb
- Health in Viking Age society
- 5. Markers of identity?
- Filed grooves on the teeth
- Young, old, short, and tall
- Buried like other people?
- Was Gotland the gathering point?
- A Nordic custom or inspiration from elsewhere?
- Why file grooves in teeth?
- 6. Burial grounds designated for particular purposes?
- The influence of Christianity or division into special areas?
- Market places and harbours?
- 7. A time of many faces
- Appendix: Strontium values
- Notes
- References
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