Re-evaluating ‘Denmark’s Stonehenge’: Bronze Age communal activities in a distinctive landscape setting

Bidragets oversatte titel: RE-evaluering av "Danmarks stonehenge": Fellesaktiviteter i et distinkt landskabskontekst i løbet av Bronsealderen

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningpeer review

Abstract

In 1965, an aerial photograph from eastern Denmark revealed three concentric circles surrounding a large hill. In the following years, the National Museum conducted two small excavations, which seemed to confirm that these circular marks reflected concentric circles of features and large stone holes, but the reports were never completed. The site was later classified as a ‘stone- or woodhenge’.In this paper we assess the interpretation of the aerial photograph and archaeological features around the prominent hill based on a re-excavation and ground-penetrating radar survey of a part of the site. While no circular structures can be identified, we argue that clusters of fire pits at the side of the steep hill represent communal activities from the Bronze Age, which combines the transformative elements of fire with the distinctive landscape of the large hill and the surrounding burial monuments. The site thereby serves as an example that links prominent hilltops surrounded by burial mounds, with the event of establishing fire pits in clusters.
Bidragets oversatte titelRE-evaluering av "Danmarks stonehenge": Fellesaktiviteter i et distinkt landskabskontekst i løbet av Bronsealderen
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftDanish Journal of Archaeology
Vol/bind12
Udgave nummer1
Sider (fra-til)1-8
Antal sider8
ISSN2166-2290
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 19 dec. 2023

Finansiering

The Danish Agency for Culture is thanked for funding the surveys as part of the resources for documenting archaeological sites prone to culti-vation and erosion. The authors are very grate-ful for the helpful comments from Rune Iversen, Lasse Sørensen, Poul Otto Nielsen and Niels H. Andersen during the excavation process and the collaboration with Kalundborg Arkæologi-forening, Camielsa Prévost and the engaged first-year archaeology students from the University of Copenhagen. We would also like to thank The National Museum of Denmark for providing ac-cess to Ramskous’ material in their archives.

BevillingsgivereBevillingsgivernummer
Slots- og Kulturstyrelsen

    Citationsformater