Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com – During the construction of a new house, scientists uncovered a grave with the remains of a shield and a cape buckle. It is the first Viking grave rich in artifacts archaeologists have excavated in Norway’s capital Oslo.
“This location has been a prominent hill, clearly visible in the terrain and with a great view,” says Marianne Bugge Kræmer to sciencenorway.no. She is an archaeologist at the Oslo Municipality Cultural Heritage Management Office.
Some of the objects that were dug out from the grave. The box at the bottom contains the remains of the cape brooch with spheres, which helps archaeologists ᴀssign a preliminary date to the find. (Image: Byantikvaren in Oslo)
Here, on the upper side of the small pond called Holmendammen, someone in the Viking Age chose to build a grave. Today it is a residential area in the west side of Oslo.
“The grave was located directly under a thin layer of topsoil and turf right on the east side of the highest point on the site, with a fantastic view west over today’s Holmendammen. This was a valley where the stream Holmenbekken flowed in ancient times,” Bugge Kræmer said to sciencenorway.no.
Was going to build a new detached house
Holmendammen was built at the beginning of the 20th century after the Holmenbekken was dammed. According to lokalhistorewiki.no (link in Norwegian), the dam was used to make ice, a website with local history information.
Bugge Kræmer was in charge of investigating the Viking grave, which appeared as archaeologists surveyed the site. The investigation was triggered by plans to build a new detached house on a plot by Holmendammen in the Vestre Aker district in Oslo.
Brooch from the Viking Age
The remains of a richly appointed Viking grave appeared here. Cremated human remains were uncovered, as well as many other objects.
The archaeologists found fragments of a soapstone vessel. There was also a penannular brooch – also known as a Celtic brooch, a sickle, two knives, horse tack such as a possible bridle, and a bell, Bugge Kræmer said. NRK Oslo and Viken first reported the discovery.
A shield boss was also discovered in the grave. This is the metal in the center of a wooden shield. Since the wood disintegrates over the course of centuries, it is often the round shield boss that remains.
The penannular brooch, in particular, dates the grave to the Viking Age.
“For now, the grave has been dated based on the artifacts it contains. This type of brooch with spheres began to appear in approximately AD 850 and became common after the 10th century AD,” Kræmer said to sciencenorway.no.
For the record, the Viking Age is the period between AD 800 to 1066.
This is a provisional dating since the finds from the grave are in the Museum of Cultural History for conservation and further research.
But this buckle may say something about who was buried here.
Gender and things
“Men used this kind of cape brooch, and along with the discovery of a shield boss suggests that the deceased was a man,” Zanette Tsigaridas Glørstad said to sciencenorway.no.
Glørstad is an archaeologist and ᴀssociate professor at the University of Oslo’s Museum of Cultural History. She is working with the Holmendammen find at the museum.
A great deal of information can be extracted from archaeological finds. Old DNA can be extracted from old bones and can, for example, reveal kinship, gender, and other inherited characteristics.
One striking example of this is a famous Viking grave in Birka in, Sweden. For more than 150 years, it was believed the person buried there was a male warrior until researchers in 2017 did a genomic analysis which revealed that the remains belonged to a woman.
Holmendammen in the 1920s. Holmenkollåsen, famous for its skiing facilities, can be seen in the background. (PH๏τo: The National Library of Norway)
But the remains from the grave at Holmendammen may not be able to be examined in this way.
“Right now the objects are in our conservation lab, and we are waiting for them to be ready before we can say anything more about the objects. We didn’t find any remains of unburnt bones, so we can’t extract DNA from what we found,” Glørstad said to sciencenorway.no.
It remains to be seen what information the researchers can uncover about the person who was buried here. A report on the discovery is now being prepared.
Oslo graves
Glørstad says this is the first artifact-rich Viking grave in Oslo that archaeologists have excavated. But many objects that can be linked to Viking graves have been found by, among others, construction workers in Oslo over the years.
Glørstad says that they are aware of the discovery of remains from around 60 graves from the Viking Age in Oslo. Most were found around the turn of the century in 1900 when the town expanded to St.Hanshaugen, Grünerløkka, Bjølsen, Tåsen, and Sinsen.
These involve many individual items that can perhaps be connected to a grave, and in some cases, they are found in a pile or together with burnt bones, says Glørstad.
For example, a Viking sword was found when Oslo’s new town hall was to be erected in the 1930s. This is just one of many discoveries that former county conservationist Frans-Arne Stylegar describes on this blog (in Norwegian), which Glørstad mentioned.
Written by Jan Bartek – AncientPages.com Staff Writer