Vegetal grave goods in a female burial on Bornholm (Denmark) from the Late Roman Iron Age period interpreted in a comparative European perspective

Authors

  • Sabine Karg
  • Ulla Lund Hansen
  • Anne Margrethe Walldén
  • Jens Glastrup
  • Finn Ole Sonne Nielsen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/21662282.2014.994280

Keywords:

vegetal grave goods, Scandinavia, Late Roman Iron Age, Allium cloves, birch tar

Abstract

Knowledge about the healing properties of plant substances is probably as old as humankind, and this can be demonstrated by botanical finds in archaeological contexts. Southern Scandinavia has a long tradition of supplying deceased persons with vegetal material for use in their afterlife, as shown by single seeds or processed plants in the form of foods, drinks or medicines. A wellknown example is the small container made of birch bark most probably filled with a kind of mead produced from honey, in the Egtved girl’s coffin a find which has been dated to the Early Bronze Age.Another fascinating plant discovery derives fromthe grave of the Fyrkat woman dated to the Viking Age: a handful seeds of the poisonous plant henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) was found in a small pocket fixed to the woman’s belt. Plant materials enclosed in small amulet boxes are quite common and are frequently attached to necklaces that the deceased had certainly worn during their lives. In this article, we discuss the organic finds from a newly excavated amulet box which was discovered in a woman’s grave at the Late Roman Iron Age site of Vellensby, on the island of Bornholm. The box contained two ‘chewing gum-like objects’ with dental impressions and three vegetal objects. Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry analysis was applied to one of the ‘chewing gums’ and the results show that it consists of a mixture of birch tar and plant oil. Based on their morphological characteristics, the three uncharred plant parts could be identified as cloves from a wild species of Allium, probably A. scorodoprasum (sand leek). The traditional medicinal application of sand leek is presented and the symbolic and possible principal meaning of amulet boxes is discussed within a comparative study of related discoveries from female burials throughout Europe.

Author Biographies

Sabine Karg

Faculty of Science, Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Ulla Lund Hansen

Faculty of Humanities, Saxo Institute, Department of Archaeology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Anne Margrethe Walldén

Faculty of Humanities, Saxo Institute, Department of Archaeology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Jens Glastrup

Conservation Department, National Museum of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark

Finn Ole Sonne Nielsen

Bornholms Museum, Rønne, Denmark

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Published

2014-05-01

How to Cite

Karg, S., Hansen, U. L., Walldén, A. M., Glastrup, J., & Nielsen, F. O. S. (2014). Vegetal grave goods in a female burial on Bornholm (Denmark) from the Late Roman Iron Age period interpreted in a comparative European perspective. Danish Journal of Archaeology, 3, 52–60. https://doi.org/10.1080/21662282.2014.994280

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Research Article