Thorsberg moor explained

The Thorsberg moor (German: Thorsberger Moor, Danish: Thorsberg Mose or Thorsbjerg Mose, South Jutlandic: Tosbarch, Tåsbjerre "Thor's hill") near Süderbrarup in Anglia, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, is a peat bog in which the Angles deposited votive offerings for approximately four centuries. It is the location of important Roman Iron Age finds, including early Elder Futhark runic inscriptions such as the Thorsberg chape, a Roman helmet, a shield buckle, and an early example of socks (attached to trousers). The finds are of similar importance as the contemporaneous finds from Illerup and Vimose in Denmark.

Excavation

The moor was excavated in 1858 - 1861 by a teacher from Flensburg, Helvig Conrad Engelhardt. The objects recovered by Engelhardt are on exhibit in the state museum of archaeology at Gottorf Castle; another 500 finds are on exhibit in the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen.

Discoveries

The deposits were made from approximately 100 BC to 500 AD[1] and are clearly votive in nature.[2] However, it is doubtful that they were dedicated specifically to Thor. The placename may reflect worship of Thor there by Danes during the Viking Age rather than by Angles during the Roman Iron Age. And as Engelhardt noted, although the 'Thor's hammer' symbol occurs on several finds from the site, it is a motif that can be found in many non-Germanic contexts, even on Native American artefacts.[3] They include early examples of clothing, both Germanic and Roman, in particular the footed trousers, which are commonly dated to the 4th century but which now appear to be no later than 300 AD;[4] objects of Roman workmanship including two phaleræ, military decorations in the form of richly decorated gold discs 13.2 cm in diameter made in the 3rd century in the workshop of Saciro, thought to have been near Cologne, which have the image of a seated man with a spear, possibly a representation of Mars;[5] and objects of Germanic workmanship, notably the Thorsberg chape, a piece of a scabbard bearing one of the earliest inscriptions in runes.

Some of the Germanic fibulæ and shield bosses of ultimately Roman origin appear to be from Germanic tribes in Greater Germania, who were in closer contact with the Romans than the Angles.[6] After approximately 200 AD, the deposition of weapons increased, possibly as a result of conflict between tribes such as the Marcomannic war (166 to 180 AD), possibly as a result of Roman campaigning. Many of the objects deposited, especially the weapons, have been made useless by breaking, bending, etc. It was common practice among Celtic peoples to ritually "kill" such weapons.[7]

In addition to the weapons and other man-made objects, the deposits in the bog include isolated bones.[8] Just outside the moor is an Iron Age tumulus with a stone circle.

See also

References

External links

54.64°N 9.77°W

Notes and References

  1. [Thomas Birkmann]
  2. Malcolm Todd,The Early Germans, Oxford: Blackwell, 1995,, p. 261.
  3. Conrad Engelhardt, Thorsbjerg Mosefund: beskrivelse af de oldsager, som i aarene 1858-61 ere udgravede af Thorsbjerg mose ved Sønder-Brarup i Angel, Copenhagen: Gad, 1863, p. 71
  4. Graham Sumner, Roman Military Clothing (2): AD 200-400, Botley: Osprey, 2003,, p. 35.
  5. [Herbert Schutz]
  6. Birkmann, p. 46.
  7. Dragos Mandescu, "Killing the Weapons. An Insight on Graves with Destroyed Weapons in Late Iron Age Transylvania", Proceedings of the International Colloquium from Târgu Mureș, 7-9 October 2011, Killing_the_Weapons._An_Insight_on_Graves_with_Destroyed_Weapons_in_Late_Iron_Age_Transylvania.
  8. Herbert Jankuhn, Nydam und Thorsberg: Moorfunde der Eisenzeit, Neumünster: Wachholtz, 1983,, p. 22 : "Vereinzelt kamen . . . auch Tierknochen vor, so einige Pferdeknochen und ein Rinderhorn" (Animal bones also occurred in isolation . . . such as a few bones from horses and a bovine horn).