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      For the Blind Eye Only? Scandinavian Gold Foils and the Power of Small Things

      Norwegian Archaeological Review
      Informa UK Limited

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          The Iron Age ritual building at Uppåkra, southern Sweden

          Six years ago we reported the discovery of a central place at Uppåkra in southern Sweden which promised to be unusually rich and informative (Hårdh 2000). At 40ha it already stood out as the largest concentration of residual phosphate in the whole province of Scania, with surface finds of Roman and late Iron Age metalwork (second-tenth century AD). Following this thorough evaluation, the project moved into its excavation phase which has brought to light several buildings of the first millennium AD, among them one that has proved truly exceptional. Its tall structure and numerous ornamented finds suggest an elaborate timber cult house. This is the first Scandinavian building for which the term ‘temple’ can be justly claimed and it is already sign-posting new directions for the early middle ages in northern Europe.
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            Doors to the dead. The power of doorways and thresholds in Viking Age Scandinavia

            Mortuary practices could vary almost indefinitely in the Viking Age. Within a theoretical framework of ritualization and architectural philosophy, this article explores how doors and thresholds were used in mortuary practice and ritual behaviour. The door is a deep metaphor for transition, transformation and liminality. It is argued that Viking Age people built ‘doors to the dead’ of various types, such as freestanding portals, causewayed ring-ditches or thresholds to grave mounds; or on occasion even buried their dead in the doorway. The paper proposes that the ritualized doors functioned in three ways: they created connections between the dead and the living; they constituted boundaries and thresholds that could possibly be controlled; and they formed between-spaces, expressing liminality and, conceivably, deviance. Ultimately, the paper underlines the profound impact of domestic architecture on mortuary practice and ritual behaviour in the Viking Age.
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              The sense of being seen: Ocular effects at Sutton Hoo

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Norwegian Archaeological Review
                Norwegian Archaeological Review
                Informa UK Limited
                0029-3652
                1502-7678
                December 22 2015
                December 22 2015
                : 48
                : 2
                : 129-151
                Article
                10.1080/00293652.2015.1104516
                79e4ea3c-8a31-492c-82d4-8063c982750c
                © 2015
                History

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