Rare silver coins minted by Viking king Harald Bluetooth discovered in Finland

By The Viking Herald

Metal detectorists discovered a silver cache in Virmo, located between Turku and Rauma in Southwest Finland. The cache held rare minted by Viking king Harald Bluetooth.

The 12 silver coins minted by Harald Bluetooth. Source: Jani Oravisjärvi / Suomen kansallismuseo

In May of 2022, Finnish metal detectorists discovered a silver cache from the Viking Age in a field in Mynämäki, a municipality of Finland located in the Southwest Finland region.

The follow-up excavations carried out by the Finnish Heritage Agency uncovered silver coins and pieces of silver jewelry. 

The hoard included 12 coins minted by Viking king Harald Bluetooth. They are considered very rare, as only a couple of such coins have previously been found in Finland. 

Furthermore, researchers were able to make a noteworthy discovery - the objects were brought to Mynämäki from Poland.

Metal detectorist discovers treasure, immediately calls National Museum Office

The batch of silver objects was found during a metal-detecting trip by enthusiasts of the Vakka-Suomen Metallinetsijät association. 

"My hands were shaking… This was my most spectacular find so far and the first intact cache I've found," metal detectorist Oskari Heikkilä said.

After stumbling upon the find, Heikkilä stopped digging, left the rest of the objects in their place, and reported his findings to the National Heritage Agency

The following week, archaeologists visited the site to carry out trial excavations. A small excavation area was processed at the location of the find, and the rest of the silver cache was carefully lifted from the ground.

The investigations by the National Heritage Agency determined that the objects were densely concentrated, and they may have originally been left in, for example, a leather bag. 

Small pieces of Iron Age pottery vessels were also found in the dark soil layer of the excavation area, which suggests that the site may have been inhabited. Mynämäki is known for many Iron Age sites and finds.

Now, the field area where the cache was found has been registered as a protected archaeological site, and metal detecting and digging will not be allowed there without the permission of the National Heritage Agency. 

No further studies are currently planned.

Metal detectorists were present at the site during the expert investigations. Photo: Marianna Niukkanen / Museovirasto

Silver coins minted by Harald Bluetooth

Jani Oravisjärvi, the curator of the Finnish National Museum who investigated the coins, described the find as "important and interesting." 

"I got the initial information about the discovery directly from Oskari in the field, who sent me pictures of the discovery. My eyes almost immediately fell on Harald Bluetooth's money, and I noticed four (of his) coins in the photographs. 

"I knew we were now on the verge of an important and interesting discovery. It was a great privilege to be the first to get all the discovered coins and objects on my desk," Oravisjärvi said, according to the Agency.

As many as 12 silver coins minted by the Viking king Harald Bluetooth (911–986 CE) were eventually identified, which makes the find exceptional. 

In the past, only one or two similar coins have been found in Finland. In total, about one hundred silver coins were recovered from the place where the cache was found. 

The find contains money from a range of around 250 years. The majority of the coins date to the last decades of the 9th century, but none of the coins in the cache date to the 11th century with certainty. 

From Pomerania to Mynämäki

The origin of money is very diverse. Along with Iraq and Central Asia, the stash includes money from England, Denmark, Poland, Germany, Switzerland, and Strassburg, France.

"At that time, hundreds of different mints were operating in Europe. In addition, dozens of mints operated in the Caliphate and Central Asia. 

"Furthermore, at that time, money circulated completely freely, so the place where the money was minted was not as important as it is today. The most important thing was the material of the money, i.e., silver," Oravisjärvi explained.

Based on the composition, it is very likely that the silver treasure originated in Pomerania, the area of ​​present-day Poland. One of the fragments of the silverware is identical to the plate buckles previously found in Pomerania.

"The origin of the money can almost always be identified. The problem is that the money is often from dozens of different places, making it difficult to tell where the cache originally came from. However, in the case of this discovery, we can do that", Oravisjärvi said.

The discovery will now become part of the Archaeological Collections of the National Heritage Agency. 

Drought Causes Sunken WWII Warships to Emerge Out of Danube River

Over 20 ships emerged as the river faces remarkably low water levels.

By Kyla Guilfoil, abcNEWS

Wreckage of a World War II German warship is seen in the Danube in Prahovo, Serbia Aug. 18, 2022.

Fedja Grulovic/Reuters

Europe’s scorching drought has revealed the hulks of dozens of German warships that became submerged during World War Two near Serbia's river port town of Prahovo.

The ships, sunken on Danube River, were part of Nazi Germany's Black Sea fleet in 1944 as they retreated from advancing Soviet forces, officials said.

Wreckage of a World War Two German warship is seen in the Danube in Prahovo, Serbia August 18, 2022. REUTERS/Fedja Grulovic

The vessels still impact the river today, often hampering river traffic during low water levels, authorities said.

Now, over 20 ships have come to the surface, many of which are still loaded with ammunition and explosives. Officials say the vessels pose a risk to shipping on the Danube.

Ivica Skodric, a 37-year old local fisherman, sails on his boat passing by the wreckage of a World War Two German warship in the Danube in Prahovo, Serbia August 18, 2022. REUTERS/Fedja Grulovic

The vessels have limited the navigable section of the stretch near Prahova to 100 meters, significantly slimmer than the prior 180 meters ships had access to.

Serbian officials have taken to dredging along the river to salvage the usable navigation lanes.

Ivica Skodric, a 37-year old local fisherman, points at the wreckage of a World War Two German warship in the Danube in Prahovo, Serbia August 18, 2022. REUTERS/Fedja Grulovic

We have deployed almost [our] entire [dredging] capacity... We are struggling to keep out waterways navigable along their full length," Veljko Kovacevic, Assistant Minister for Infrastructure and Transportation, told Reuters.

The increasing difficulties for shipping boats will impact the country’s vital transportation of coal, which accounts for two thirds of Serbia’s electrical output, officials said.

Further implicating the energy crisis, water flow in Serbia’s hydropower system dropped by half in the past two months, officials told the Balkan Green Energy News.

The country is also already enduring the impacts of the war in Ukraine upon their energy supply.

Officials said the ships vary, with some now showing turrets, command bridges, broken masts and twisted hulls, while even more still remain buried under sand banks.

In March, the Serbian government invited a contracted a private company for the salvage of some of the hulls and removal of ammunition and explosives. The operation cost officials an estimated $30 million, according to the country's infrastructure ministry.

Wreckage of a World War Two German warship is seen in the Danube in Prahovo, Serbia August 18, 2022. REUTERS/Fedja Grulovic

"The German flotilla has left behind a big ecological disaster that threatens us, people of Prahovo," Velimir Trajilovic, 74, a pensioner from Prahovo who wrote a book about the German ships, told Reuters.

The exposure of more of the sunken fleet comes after a summer of low water levels and sizzling drought.

The Danube levels near Prahovo are less than half their average for this time of the summer, experts say.

50kg Silver Bar Found in Madagascar – May Be Treasure of Legendary Pirate Captain Kidd

Underwater explorers believe they have discovered treasure belonging to the notorious 17th-Century Scottish pirate William Kidd in the waters off Madagascar.

A 50 kg block of silver with inscriptions, which is now under armed guard on Sainte Marie island off the east coast of Madagascar. The bar was presented to Madagascar's president at a special ceremony in 2015.

The bar is imprinted with a ‘T’ and ‘S’ on one side and letters and numbers on the other, the meaning of which is currently unknown.


The joint U.S./U.K. archaeological research team believe there are many more such bars still in the wreck.


Captain William Kidd (1645 –1701) was a Scottish sailor who was tried and executed for piracy after returning from a voyage to the Indian Ocean.

The 50kg silver bar found off the coast of Madagascar.

Presidence de la Republique de Madagascar.

One of the most infamous pirates of all time, Captain William Kidd was said to have amassed treasure worth £100,000 – £12 million now – before he was arrested for piracy and murder.
Scotsman Capt Kidd buried a cache somewhere on his travels and at his trial in London, in 1701, tried to barter his knowledge of its location in return for his life.

The Guardian reports that the silver bar was found in shallow waters off Sainte Marie island by a joint UK-US archaeological mission led by Barry Clifford, an underwater investigator who discovered the remains of William Kidd’s ship Adventure Galley in 2000.

Barry Clifford led a team which discovered the suspected treasure

He is typically perceived as either one of the most notorious pirates in history, or as one of its most unjustly vilified and prosecuted privateers. The latter view comes from the fact that his actions were allegedly less destructive and less lucrative than other pirates, yet he met a rather brutal end – he was hanged twice (the first attempt failed), before being covered in tar and hung from a gibbet over the river Thames.


“The son of a Presbyterian minister, Kidd was a buccaneer and a captain for a private British ship in the Caribbean for some years, but it is claimed he decided that he found piracy more rewarding after he was commissioned to sail to Madagascar on the Adventure Galley,” reports The Guardian.

“His most famous capture was a 400-tonne ship, the Quedah Merchant, which carried silver as well as silk, gold, sugar, opium and cloth.”

Kidd was captured in Boston in 1699 and sent to Newgate prison. The treasure found on his ship was valued at £30,000 (around £10 million today), but the remainder of his treasure was never found. The belief that Kidd had left buried treasure contributed considerably to the growth of his legend and has also given impetus to constant treasure hunts in places Kidd is known to have visited.

The treasure has never been found – but experts believe the bar of silver, itself worth more than £17,000 at today’s prices, could be part of the famous loot.

The fate of Capt Kidd’s treasure has prompted numerous hunts around the world over the last three centuries, and his exploits inspired author Robert Louis Stevenson when writing Treasure Island.

Mr Clifford presented the suspected treasure to Madagascar’s president, Hery Rajaonarimampianina and UK and US diplomats at a ceremony on the island.
Mr Vogl added that officials including UK ambassador to Madagascar, Timothy Smart, are hoping the discovery will ‘raise the profile of Madagascar, especially for tourists’.

Capt Kidd was tried not only for piracy but also on the accusation he murdered one of his crewmen in 1697.

His execution was not straightforward, with the noose around his neck twice breaking – but the third rope held firm.

It is believed that Kidd buried much of his treasure, with the legend going down in history in Robert Louis Stevenson’s

The wreck of Kidd’s Armenian ship Quedagh Merchant was found by archaeologists from the University of Indiana in 2007, after decades of competition between treasure hunters to uncover the 500-tonne vessel.

The ship was loaded with treasured satins, muslins, silver and gold that probably belonged to the British East India Company before being commandeered by Kidd in 1699.

Unique New Sword finds from the Viking Age discovered in Stavanger, Norway

The unique discovery sheds new light on the contact between Norway and the British Isles.

The sword is currently at the Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger. Source: Konservator Lise Chantrier Aasen / UiS

Parts of a magnificent sword with unique details in gold and silver have recently been found at Jåttå in Stavanger. The sword blade itself is gone, but the preserved sword grip has exquisite and unique details. 

It is still difficult to see all the details on the sword - but the decorations include gilded elements of the typical animal style from the Late Iron Age, about 550 to about 1050, as well as geometric figures of silver in the so-called niello technique - that is, a metal mixture was added in as black stripes in the silver. The hilt also has ends designed as an animal head.

"The technique is of very high quality, and the complex decorations and the special helmet design make this a unique find, which will arouse great interest from other parts of Europe," archaeologist and expert on the Viking Age at the Archaeological Museum at the University in Stavanger, Zanette Glørstad, stated.

A rare sword type

The sword belongs to a rare type, which includes the richest ornate and heaviest sword types from the Viking Age. Examples of this sword type have been found in both Eastern and Western Europe. In Norway, less than 20 pieces have been found. Many of the swords found in the country were probably imported.

"But we can imagine that copies may also have been made by skilled swordsmen in Norway. The decoration may indicate that the sword was made in the then Frankish Empire or England and that it can be dated to the early 800s. The closest parallel we know of is a sword from the island of Eigg in Scotland, found in a tomb from the 9th century," the archaeologist added.

The place where the sword was found is known for a number of other significant finds from the Viking Age, such as the "Tomb of the Gausel Queen," one of the richest women's graves from the Viking Age after the Oseberg discovery. 

The "Gausel Queen"

The "Gausel Queen," like the Oseberg women, had brought a number of rich finds from the British Isles to the grave.

"With this finding, we must look at the entire Jåttå-Gausel area again. The collection of imported magnificent finds related to both men and women from the area shows that this has been a hub for contact across the North Sea," Håkon Reiersen, a researcher at the Archaeological Museum in Stavanger, noted.

The sword was found with a metal detector in two parts by two finders, independently of each other. One part was found last year and the other this spring. Both detectorists immediately reported the unique find to the Cultural Heritage Service. In this way, they ensured that the sword could be quickly taken care of at the conservation department at the Archaeological Museum at the University of Stavanger.

When the second find came into the museum, the archaeologists discovered that it matched the find from last year. Thus, the entire grip can now be reconstructed.

When the sword has been preserved, the museum will contact researchers abroad to research the sword's origins. 

Nine-year-old girl finds Neolithic arrowhead while holidaying at Polish lake

A young girl on holiday with her grandmother has discovered a 5,000-year-old flint arrowhead that the local authorities say “opens a new chapter” in the history of the town.

Seven-year-old Miriam was collecting pebbles with her sisters at Jeziorak lake in the northern Polish town of Iława. One that she fished out of the water, around 5 centimetres long, particularly caught her eye, so she decided to take it back with her.

She then showed it to her grandmother, Maria Poniewierska, who immediately recognised it as being manmade. Poniewierska had during her student days done an internship working at an archaeological dig in a prehistoric burial site.

To make sure, Poniewierska consulted her godson, an archaeology graduate, who confirmed that the discovery was no ordinary stone. By law, such finds are the property of the state, so Miriam’s family, who are from the southern city of Kraków, handed over the item to the municipal authorities in Iława.

Subsequent expert analysis has confirmed that it is an arrowhead made of flint and is “most likely from the Stone Age, the Neolithic, about 4,500-5,000 years ago”, says Iława’s official responsible for public spaces, Wiesław Skrobot.

“On the basis of a preliminary comparative analysis, this arrowhead can be associated with a Funnelbeaker culture or – perhaps more likely – with the so-called Corded Ware cultures,” he added, noting that traces of the latter have been found in digs at a former burial site in the village of Babięty Małe, near Iława.

The municipal authorities will hand over the item to specialists in Stone Age flint products, who will be better able to date and identify the arrowhead. They have also expressed their “thanks to Maria Poniewierska and her plucky granddaughters for donating the valuable find to the local authorities”.

“Although the arrowhead is seemingly unimpressive, and its size is not imposing, this discovery opens a new chapter in research on the most ancient history of Iława and Jeziorak,” they wrote.

By Daniel Tilles, Notes From Poland

The bones of Waterloo: around 20,000 people died in the battle, yet mass graves have never been found

Around 20,000 people died in the battle, yet mass graves have never been found. Now, we are getting closer to the truth

Five teeth appeared first, all of them still firmly ensconced in bone, their enamel sparkling, a disturbing toothpaste-white within a mound of hard-baked, windblown earth. When Véronique Moulaert, the Belgian archaeologist operating the digger, heard her colleague scream “STOP NOW”, she knew immediately that something significant had emerged.

It was 3.30pm on July 6 and the team from Agence Wallonne du Patrimoine (AWaP), Belgium’s cultural heritage agency, had been widening a trench at the request of Prof Tony Pollard, director of Glasgow University’s Centre for Battlefield Archaeology. Situated in what was thought to be a roadside ditch, the excavation trench lies just below Mont-Saint-Jean, a farmhouse used as a field hospital by the Anglo-allies on that calamitous summer’s day in 1815 when the Duke of Wellington quashed Napoleon’s dream of a European empire.

While an estimated 20,000 British, Dutch, French and Prussian soldiers died in the bloodied battlefields of Waterloo, just one complete skeleton has been recovered by archaeologists before now and mystery has shrouded what happened to the men’s remains for more than two centuries. Legend has suggested that the remains of thousands were dug up, their bones ground up and used for fertiliser. Now we may find out.

“We were wanting to open the trenches out to four metres, limited by that tree,” Moulaert told me, pointing to a tree laden with apples ripening in the hot, bright sun.

“There is always someone at the front of the digger for safety to watch for what might come out but at 30 centimetres, there was nothing, so we were getting ready to stop work and cover the site up for the day. But when [fellow archaeologist] Alistair Douglas shouted STOP and said quietly ‘human teeth’, I understood immediately that here was something important, something very different to what we had found until then.”

Within 24 hours, says Moulaert, they were able to confirm that what had been unearthed was not just a piece of jawbone and teeth but a skull, and that an intact, articulated skeleton probably lay in the compressed earth below.

Over the next 10 days, Gaille MacKinnon, the Australian-born leader of the UK forensic anthropology team, Belgian colleagues Eva Collignon and Caroline Laforest and veteran British Time Team archaeologist Phil Harding, dug and gently brushed away two centuries of cloying earth and dust to reveal the whole human being.

Gaille MacKinnon and Caroline Laforest excavate human remains

Pollard says when human remains are found on a dig, the atmosphere can change dramatically. “When the remains of a body of what is likely to be a soldier is found, all of a sudden there’s a connection with the men who suffered so terribly in that place in another time.”

I remember observing this palpable shift in mood first-hand in 2009 when Pollard and MacKinnon confirmed the existence of five unmarked, mass graves of 250 lost Australian soldiers in the tiny village of Fromelles in northern France. Their evaluation would turn out to be the single largest discovery of first world war dead in modern times, and ultimately paved the way for further excavation and DNA identification of 144 of the soldiers through living relatives, and a re-burial with military honours.

Death and mass graves are MacKinnon’s speciality. She spent years in the field collecting evidence of mass atrocities with the forensic teams of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, and was an integral member of the NYC chief medical examiner’s mortuary team charged with the overwhelming job of re-opening more than 18,000 body bags to DNA-test, identify and separate the tragic mess of co-mingled human remains in the wake of the September 11 attacks.

In the UK, her casework with police has encompassed investigation of terrorist attacks, murders, suspicious and unexplained deaths and historic child abuse. Just days before coming to Belgium, she gave evidence at the public inquiry into the Grenfell fire that claimed the lives of 72 people in central London in 2017.

Watching the team of Waterloo Uncovered – the pioneering charity that partners archaeologists with veterans and serving military personnel – at work and listening to their conversations and debate over the days that followed felt a little like leafing through – or indeed, living – a detective novel. Cautious both by nature and profession, MacKinnon and Laforest spent eight-hour days with the human remains, quietly surmising the sex of the skeleton (likely male) after uncovering and inspecting the shape of the pelvis and noting the lack of tartar, caries and wear and tear of the incisors (youth/ under 30). As more remains came to light, MacKinnon noted that the long bones of the skeleton suggested a young, gracile adult while carefully adding the caveats that “absolutely nothing” could be confirmed until laboratory analysis at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences was complete. For days, the bones of the left hand remained invisible, only to be found under the left hip bone, while the left foot uncovered towards the end turned out to be missing some bones. Just metres away, another team embarked on excavation of the bones of four small horses, leg bones shattered, one with a musket ball in its head.

A human skeleton uncovered on the battlefield

“It’s unlikely we will get much closer to the harsh reality of the Battle of Waterloo than this”, observed Pollard.

MacKinnon added that signs of sharp force trauma and amputation on some of the horse bones raises the possibility that horses injured and shot in the aftermath of the battle may also have been cooked and eaten.

Contemporaneous accounts of the Battle of Waterloo reported that the smoke, screech and crash of muskets and gunfire continued all day on June 18, 1815, subsiding only around 8.30pm when the agonised howls of wounded men and thousands of horses lifted higher above the din. Around 50,000 injured soldiers – 7,000 Prussian troops, 15,000 allied soldiers and 25,000 French troops – and at least 10,000 dead and dying horses were kettled into an area of little more than four square miles. Michael Crumplin, a retired surgeon and military historian, says the density of casualties per mile of the Waterloo front far exceeded that suffered by the British army on the first day of the Somme in 1916.

It was the end of the 23-year-long war against Republican and Napoleonic France, a conflict that had bled Britain both in human lives and financially: the total bill of £1.6bn left a £544m hole in the national coffers.

Crumplin, who is also curator of the Mont-Saint-Jean Military Surgical Museum, says the human loss, estimated at between 2.5% and 3% of the population, was also proportionately higher than that of the carnage wreaked in the first world war between 1914 and 1918.

For the Waterloo Uncovered team, discovering a full set of human remains meant enormous excitement – but also a confronting, grim connection with the suffering of fellow soldiers. There had been no expectation of such a find and the moment only served to illustrate, with a cruel and poignant clarity, the state of emergency around the field hospital on that day. Young soldiers and veterans at a committal ceremony over the skeleton just before the end of the dig were visibly moved by the experience.

Waterloo Uncovered was born of the experiences of two men, Mark Evans and Charlie Foinette, who had studied archaeology together at University College London (UCL) and subsequently served as officers in the Coldstream Guards – a historic regimental connection with Waterloo that would ultimately help them to open up the closely protected battlefield to exploration.

Evans, a livewire with never-ending energy, had been encouraged to return to archaeology as a way of addressing the profound mental legacy of his own experiences in Afghanistan while Foinette, a lieutenant colonel still serving with the battalion, had taken his men on a tour of nearby Hougoumont farm, “sacred ground” for the regiment as the walled garden of the farmhouse in front of the allied line turned into a battle within a battle and led to one of the Coldstream Guards’ most revered and proud moments. Both men realised how little archaeological work had been done despite the mythical status of the battlefield, but also experienced firsthand just how cathartic it could be to bring veterans suffering the mental and physical legacies of modern warfare to a safe military setting in which they could confront as well as share their demons.

“I can’t imagine what it must have been like to hear the sound of the French cavalry when they did their charge – it was around 8,000 horses, which is a huge number, and opposing many, many allied squares of infantry, each one, seven or eight hundred men strong and all of them firing muskets, shouting and screaming. The closest modern comparison we might experience is during a state visit and the Sovereign escort, which is about 120 horses, and that alone is hugely impressive. It’s difficult to imagine what a visceral experience it must have been, what an assault on the senses,” Foinette told me.

“There was not much wind that day, the sound of guns firing, the constant smoke and noise, God knows what effect it had on people who were there … that’s the thing we cannot possibly reproduce: we can stand on that ridge and look at it, but we can’t understand it.”

Waterloo Uncovered, says Foinette, has now been excavating the battlefield since 2015, bringing a new group of veterans each summer, every cohort carefully chosen, trained and supervised both by the international team of archaeologists and specialist military welfare officers. During the past five years, they have helped to find and catalogue thousands of small objects, from musket and pistol balls to coins and regimental buttons.

In the summer of 2019, however, metal detectorists picked up a powerful signal in the same Mont-Saint-Jean ditch where the new skeleton has just been found and to the archaeologists’ surprise, discovered not just a trove of metal ammunition boxes but four amputated but still articulated human limbs – a tibia and fibula, parts of a foot, and a femur – seemingly thrown over them in haste. It was impossible for those excavating the limbs not to ponder the suffering of amputation without anaesthesia or antibiotics. And yet, says Pollard, a young veteran who had lost both legs to an IED in Afghanistan and was on site during the find became a valued member of the metal detector team: “What was obvious to him was that had he incurred his injuries in 1815, his chances of survival would have been much lower. One of the positive legacies of the horrors of war has been the advance in medicine made in response to it.”

Carefully lifted from their resting place, the limbs were sent to the AWaP laboratory for scientific analysis and the team, buoyed by their extraordinary and unexpected find, began to look forward to the next dig. Then Covid happened, and the site had to be mothballed for two years – just as the battlefield seemed to be offering new, tangible clues to the 200-year-old mystery of what happened to the dead of Waterloo.

Stories have swirled for more than a century that the bones of the men of Waterloo were collected, sold and ground down to make crop fertilisers.

A report in the Nautical Register of November 1822 estimated that “more than a million bushels of human and inhuman bones” were imported from Europe into the port of Hull after the battles of Leipzig, Austerlitz and Waterloo. These battlefields were “swept alike of the bones of the hero and the horse which he rode” and, thus collected, were forwarded to Yorkshire bone grinders who, “with steam engines and powerful machinery reduce them to a granular state”. The material was then sent on, chiefly to Doncaster, one of the UK’s largest agricultural markets, and sold to farmers to manure their lands: “The oily substance of the bone gradually evolving as the bone calcines make a more permanent and substantial manure than almost any other substance.”

In November 1829, the Spectator reported that Scotland was also an importer of human bones, documenting the arrival of a ship from Hamburg laden with the remains of those fallen on the plains of Leipzig in the battles “fought betwixt France and the allies in October 1813”. Evidence of the removal of teeth from the dead as they lay on the field has also been documented as the first stage in the production of expensive, 19th-century dentures that became known as Waterloo teeth, a practice examined in an intriguing 1968 study of the history of false teeth by John Woodforde.

And yet, says Pollard, it is not unusual for the human bone fertiliser theory to be met with incredulity or even dismissed as urban myth, angst that has meant it has been overlooked or ignored in books and studies of the battle and its legacy.

There are, in fact, a plethora of first-hand, written accounts of the battlefield just after the war ended as well as letters, sketches and paintings by famous or wealthy “war tourists” – perhaps the best known by Sir Walter Scott and the poet Robert Southey – who flocked to see the aftermath and apparently showed little moral compunction even about taking grisly souvenirs. Yale University historian Dr Stuart Semmel wrote an intriguing paper on the behaviour of British tourists to Waterloo, describing it as a kind of replacement for the 18th-century aristocratic Grand Tour, “ushering in the first hints of modern mass tourism”.

Southey, the poet laureate, for example, visited Waterloo on October 3, just three and a half months after the battle, and wrote: “Between Hougoumont and La Haye Sainte, where the Prince of Orange was wounded, 2,000 bodies are buried. Hats, from all which the lace has been stript, caps, shoes, belts, and such things are still lying about in great number; but crows and vultures are not so active after a battle as the followers of an army. When Mr Werth visited the field and saw it in its recent horrors, all the dead horses were lying on their backs, with their feet stiff in the air in the attitude wherein they have been placed by those who came for their shoes!”

Pollard has examined in detail these contemporary accounts and his study, published in the Journal of Conflict Archaeology in June, concludes that based on eyewitness reports, three mass graves containing up to 13,000 bodies must have existed in the aftermath. Realistically, bodies would also have been cremated or disposed of in numerous other locations across the battlefield and he says the fact remains that there is still no reliable record of a mass grave ever being found on site.

“The most likely outcome of such a bloody affair is the fertiliser trade – even if it is not yet case closed.” (Pollard was frustratingly coy about his new, soon-to-be-published research partly based on accounts of battlefield visits by Thomas Ker, a Scottish merchant who was living in Brussels at the time of the battle.)

Waterloo Uncovered has now embarked on a full geophysics survey with Bournemouth and Ghent universities in an effort to try to map, “however coarsely”, the location of unmarked graves oºr cremation sites. A PhD student, Duncan Williams, is using a quad bike to meticulously test the magnetic susceptibility of the soil to flag any anomalies, such as where a hole might have been dug and the area filled again or where there was an area of burning, revealing where ditches may once have been or where soldiers might have created hearths while camping or excavated pits for the cremation of bodies.

Another of the team’s archaeological directors, Dr Stuart Eve, says that the way we think about dealing with the dead changed dramatically after the first world war when memorialisation became much more important.

“Of course, now we wouldn’t even think about it but back then, fertilisers were not chemical. The things we grow, we eat, and the good stuff goes into our bones… it was the circle of life.”

The fact that so few remains have been found makes no sense to us today and yet, after the Napoleonic wars, all the nations involved were poor and desperate to find ways to feed their people. The race to industrialise phosphate fertilisers to help agriculture get back on its feet resonates today as war in Ukraine has left the world not just short of important grains but also of modern fertilisers.

“Tony’s investigations show it was well known in Belgium at the time that mass graves were excavated, in fact there’s a great quote where the British are called the vampires of Europe because they emptied the post-Napoleonic battlefields of bones,” Eve said.

“Theoretically for us, finding a mass grave would be interesting but finding an empty mass grave – well that would be even more so because then we have direct evidence of this stuff actually happening.”

Paola Totaro is a journalist based in London and specialising in European affairs, social policy and the arts

Source: https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/the-bones...

New runestone discovered – might be one of the oldest in Denmark

A new runestone has been discovered in Denmark, and it may be one of the oldest in the country, according to the National Museum of Denmark, which described it as "extremely rare." 

THE VIKING HERALD

The Mosekær runestone is two meters long and 80 centimeters wide. Source: Lene Brandt

The runestone was discovered by accident by Lene Brandt and her husband, Anders Nielsen, while they were renovating the kitchen in a house a little outside the city of Randers in Denmark. The find is the 44th runestone discovered in the area around Randers.

The couple immediately called the culture-historical Museum Østjylland. The estate is from the 1800s, and the stone was under the floor under the stove.

The runestone is two meters long and 80 centimeters wide. As it was found in the Mosekær village, it has already been named the Mosekær stone (Mosekærstenen).

"The more floor we removed, the larger the stone appeared. I'm a little proud that it was found here and that we managed to get it transported out of the house in one piece," Lene Brandt told DR.

The fascinating runestone

was discovered by Lene Brandt and Anders Nielsen while they were renovating their kitchen in a house outside of Randers in Denmark. Photo: Lene Brandt

Initial examinations

Runologist Lisbeth Imer of the National Museum in Copenhagen has examined the runestone and identified an important detail on it.

It is engraved with five runes that can be read as "aft bi" and roughly translated to "In memory of B..."

After this, the rest of the stone is broken off or chopped off, so the rest of the name is not visible.

Runestones are typically erected in memory of people, so this one must have been erected on behalf of someone with a name that starts with B (maybe Bjørn, Bjarne, or Birger?)

At first glance, the runes seem to make up the end of a longer rune text, but they could also be the beginning of the stone's rune text, Lisbeth Imer believes.

There are only five carvings – i.e., runic letters - left of the original inscription in the stone.

The runestone is engraved with five runes that can be read as "aft bi" and translated to "In memory of B..." Photo: The National Museum of Denmark

Important detail

And it is this detail - whether the runes begin or finish the sentence on the runestone - that can help experts determine what time period the runestone is from.

If it is the beginning of the sentence, the stone probably belongs to the oldest group of runestones in Denmark, which has precisely this type of inscriptions - making it an extremely rare runestone.

For example, such a runestone is the Flemløse stone from Southern Funen, which dates all the way back to the 7th century, with an inscription that begins in exactly the same way "Aft [name] ..."

According to the National Museum of Denmark, the Mosekær stone could date back to the 8th century when the Viking Age began. In comparison, Jellingstenenen is from the year 965.

However, it seems the National Museum of Denmark needs more time to determine how old - and rare – the stone actually is.

The stone will now be included in the National Museum's official collection. It could later be lent for exhibition at Museum Østjylland.

There are only five carvings left of the original inscription in the runestone. Photo: The National Museum of Denmark

How J.R.R Tolkien created Lord of the Ring's Middle Earth using an archaeological site in the Forest of Dean

The magic of Middle Earth is wrapped up in Lydney Park

It is often wondered whether the magical and intricate landscapes of Middle Earth were devised straight from J.R.R Tolkien’s incredible imagination or reworkings of landscapes he had seen before. It is believed that the author of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings was partly inspired by an archaeological find in the Forest of Dean.

Tolkien was reportedly influenced by the ancient Roman archaeological site that he worked on at Lydney Park in 1929. He worked on the site of an old Roman temple, known as Dwarf’s Hill.

The hill was built on an earlier Iron Age settlement, and was littered with tunnels and open cast iron mines. It is said that Tolkien was very taken with the whole area.

At the time, there were rumours that within 20 years of the Romans leaving, local people thought the ruins were the homes of dwarves and hobgoblins that were afraid of the hill. It was during this time that Tolkien was working on The Hobbit, and was evidently interested in the rumours surrounding the archaeological ruins.

There are certainly similarities between Tolkien’s Shire and the secluded Lydney Park. The park is a wooden valley, with lakes, a deer park and flowering shrubs. In spring time it is carpeted with daffodils, primroses and bluebells.

Another connection is that the roman God Noden was known as the Lord of the Mines – not too far away from The Lord of the Rings. It seems as though the area is wrapped up in a folklore very similar to the iconic trilogy.

Danish king who gave name to Bluetooth could be buried in Poland, researchers claim

King Harald "Bluetooth" Gormsson was thought to be buried in Roskilde in Denmark but a Swedish archaeologist and a Polish researcher have claimed they have pinpointed his most probable burial site as the village of Wiejkowo in Poland.


By Samuel Osborne, news reporter

A Viking king whose nickname was used for Bluetooth wireless technology could actually be buried in Poland rather than Denmark, researchers have claimed.

According to a chronicle from the Middle Ages, King Harald "Bluetooth" Gormsson of Denmark, who died 1,000 years ago, was buried in Roskilde in Denmark in the late 10th century.

But a Swedish archaeologist and a Polish researcher have recently claimed in separate publications they have pinpointed his most probable burial site as the village of Wiejkowo, in an area of north-western Poland that had ties to the Vikings in Bluetooth's time.

Marek Kryda, author of the book Viking Poland, told The Associated Press a "pagan mound" he claims to have located beneath Wiejkowo's 19th-century Roman Catholic church probably holds the king's remains.

He said geological satellite images available on a Polish government portal reveal a rotund shape under the Church of The Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary that looks like a Viking burial mound.

But Swedish archaeologist Sven Rosborn says Mr Kryda is wrong because Bluetooth, who converted from paganism to Christianity and founded churches in the area, must have been buried in an appropriate grave somewhere in the churchyard.

Bluetooth died in 985, probably in Jomsborg - now believed to be the Polish town of Wolin - which is near Wiejkowo.

He was given his nickname because one of his teeth, which had probably gone bad, looked blueish, according to chronicles from the time.

He was one of the last Viking kings to rule over what is now Denmark, northern Germany and parts of Sweden and Norway and spread Christianity throughout his kingdom.

Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson named its Bluetooth wireless technology after the king to reflect how he united much of Scandinavia during his rule. The logo for the technology features the Scandinavian runic letters for the king's initials, HB.

Mr Rosborn put forward his research in the 2021 book The Viking King's Golden Treasure and Mr Kryda challenged some of his findings in his own book published this year.

Mr Rosborn, former director of Sweden's Malmo City Museum, began his quest in 2014 when an 11-year-old girl asked his opinion about a small coin-like object with old-looking text that had been in her family's possession for decades.

The 10th-century golden Curmsun disc with the name of Danish King Harald 'Bluetooth' Gormsson. Pic: AP

Experts determined the cast gold "Curmsun disc" dated from the 10th century, with a Latin inscription reading: "Harald Gormsson (Curmsun in Latin) king of Danes, Scania, Jomsborg, town Aldinburg."

Maja Sielski's family, who moved to Sweden from Poland in 1986, said the disc came from a trove found in 1841 in a tomb beneath the Wiejkowo church, which replaced the medieval chapel.

The Sielski family came into possession of the disc along with the Wiejkowo parish archives, which contained medieval parchment chronicles in Latin, in 1945.

A family member who could read Latin translated some of the chronicles, which dated as far back as the 10th century, into Polish, to find they mention Bluetooth - another fact linking him to the Wiejkowo church.

Mr Kryda said the Curmsun disc is "phenomenal" with its meaningful inscription and said it would be worth it to examine Wiejkowo as Bluetooth's burial place.

However there are currently no plans for any excavations.

Source: https://news.sky.com/story/danish-king-who...

High-status Danish Vikings wore exotic beaver furs

Beaver fur was a symbol of wealth and an important trade item in 10th Century Denmark, according to a study published July 27, 2022 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Luise Ørsted Brandt of the University of Copenhagen and colleagues.

Written sources indicate that fur was a key commodity during the Viking Age, between 800-1050 CE, but fur doesn't often survive well in the archaeological record, so little direct evidence is available. Previous reports have used the microscopic anatomy of ancient fur to identify species of origin, but this method is often inexact. All in all, not much is known about the kinds of furs the Vikings preferred.

Map of studied sites (a) and examples of included fur: b) Hvilehøj C4273-97, fragment 1, c) Hvilehøj C4280c, d) Bjerringhøj C143. Graphics: Luise Ørsted Brandt and Charlotte Rimstad. Photos: Roberto Fortuna, National Museum of Denmark. Credit: Brandt et al., 2022, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

In this study, Brandt and colleagues analyzed animal remains from six high-status graves from 10th Century Denmark. While no ancient DNA was recovered from the samples, perhaps due to treatment processes performed on furs and skins and probably due to preservation conditions, identifiable proteins were recovered by two different analytical techniques. Grave furnishings and accessories included skins from domestic animals, while clothing exhibited furs from wild animals, specifically a weasel, a squirrel, and beavers.

These findings support the idea that fur was a symbol of wealth during the Viking Age. The fact that beavers are not native to Denmark suggests this fur was a luxury item acquired through trade. Some clothing items included fur from multiple species, demonstrating a knowledge of the varying functions of different animal hides, and may have indicated a desire to show off exclusive furs. The authors note the biggest limiting factor in this sort of study is the incompleteness of comparative protein databases; as these databases expand, more specific identifications of ancient animal skins and furs will be possible.

The authors add: "In the Viking Age, wearing exotic fur was almost certainly an obvious visual statement of affluence and social status, similar to high-end fashion in today's world. This study uses ancient proteins preserved in elite Danish Viking burials to provide direct evidence of beaver fur trade and use."

'Dragon skull' found buried in Shrewsbury Castle as exploration hots up

Archaeologists exploring an historic castle in a heatwave may have felt like they were under attack from a fire-breathing monster - but never expected to come across a 'Welsh dragon'.

Dr Nigel Baker, at Shrewsbury Castle

Experts and student volunteers have been digging at Shrewsbury Castle since Sunday, July 17, and were seriously feeling the heat last week.

They have made several interesting discoveries, including animal bones which resemble a dragon's skull. But could they really have found evidence of a mythical creature?

"It looks like it could be the head of a Welsh dragon, but in reality, it's a large piece of cow," said Dr Morn Capper, with a wry smile.

A dragon skull? No, just part of a bovine skeleton

They may not have found a winged serpent in the grounds of the castle, but the dig has captured the imagination of Salopians, 700 of whom turned up on Saturday to an open day to take a look at some of the artefacts. Shropshire Council's cabinet members have also been to visit this week.

As well as animal bones, ornate pottery and glass, the team have also uncovered structures providing more clues to the castle's history.

They have dug three large holes at the top of the motte, next to Laura's Tower.

"We're probably at the most exciting point in the excavation, because to find more stuff at the bottom of the hole you're digging before you get to the end of the project, and you have to fill it back up again," said archaeologist Dr Nigel Baker.

"We know this was the strongest point of the Norman castle, and was once crowned by a tall wooden tower, sometimes called the ‘Great Tower of Shrewsbury’, until that was undermined by the river and fell down in the mid-1200s.

“The big question is though – how much damage did Thomas Telford do up there when he built Laura’s Tower? Previous digs found that Telford’s restoration in the 1780s had been extremely destructive, though evidence survived that the site had been occupied in the Saxon period, and before the castle was built by the Normans to suppress revolt in newly-conquered Shrewsbury."

Within the holes the team has dug, you can see "ear-shaped" crevices which would have supported the wooden frame of the 'Great Tower'.

"This proves the intentions of William the Conqueror for this castle," added Dr Capper, of University Centre Shrewsbury's history and archaeology department. With views from the top stretching for miles, it could have been a key point for Norman control.

The dig, which was made possible by a £6,790 grant from the Castle Studies Trust, has also provided an invaluable opportunity for University Centre Shrewsbury students to get hands on experience at unearthing history.

Student volunteer Demi Jefferies, from Florida, US, is studying for a masters in museums and heritage practice in Shrewsbury. She said: "I've always been really into history, and I've always loved British history. When I got the opportunity to come here I had to take it. You can learn so much with books, but coming here and being involved in something like this brings it to life."

This was the third archaeological dig at the castle, and Dr Baker said he doesn't think there will be another any time soon due to what has already been found, and the research that will need to go into exploring artefacts discovered.

But he was pleased with the team's work in roasting hot weather. "I think our team deserve huge credit for working in the worst conditions I can think of," he said.

TodayWEDS is the last opportunity to visit the castle and see the finds made before the team leaves the site. Visitors are welcome until 4.30pm.

Source: https/wwwshropshirestarcom/news/local-hubs...

In Drug Trafficking Raid, Spanish Police Find Antiquities Instead

When Spanish authorities raided the home of a suspected drug trafficker in the Valencian town of Guadasser, they were expecting to find drugs and weapons. Instead they found a trove of archaeological artifacts stretching back to the 12th century which were suspected to looted.

The find represents more evidence of the links between the global trade in looted antiquities and other forms of organized crime. (Photo: Guardia Civil, License)

“The agents have found archaeological remains of ceramics - such as tiles, pots and bowls - dating between the 12th and 18th centuries. Some of the pieces were arranged on work tables for classification and restoration, while others were already restored and displayed in different areas of the home,” Spanish authorities said in a statement.

The 68-year-old owner was arrested on charges of crimes against historical heritage, against public health, drug trafficking, and illegal possession of weapons after an unregistered rifle and shotgun were also found.

“Yet another example of overlap between different commodities in transnational criminal networks,” tweeted the ATHAR Project which tracks the illegal antiquities trade online.

The illegal antiquities trade is a multi-billion dollar global industry, according to a 2018 report by Standard Chartered Bank and in recent years law enforcement has begun to see how it ties in with other criminal industries.

It’s not just an industry that only affects wealthy buyers in the West either. Antiquities trafficking frequently funds militancy and organized crime in the source counties as well. Groups which have no compunctions about trafficking in arms or narcotics, rarely also have issues trading in their nations’ cultural heritage.

“Organized crime has many faces. The trafficking of cultural goods is one of them and it is not a glamorous business run by flamboyant gentlemen forgers, but by international criminal networks,” said Catherine de Bolle, Executive Director of Europol after a massive crackdown on the trade in 2020.

Source: https://www.occrp.org/en/daily/16606-in-dr...

Archaeologists discover mysterious 1,300-year-old shipwreck near Bordeaux

Unearthed in 2015, during preventive excavations before the construction of a vast real estate project a few hundred meters from the Garonne, this ship is “the second or third” dating from the High Middle Ages discovered in France.

In Villenave-d’Ornon, a few kilometers south of Bordeaux, archaeologists from Inrap (National Institute for Preventive Archaeological Research) are trying throughout the summer to unravel the mysteries of an “extremely rare” wreck, buried since 1300 years under an old arm of the Garonne. Unearthed in 2015, during preventive excavations before the construction of a vast real estate project a few hundred meters from the Garonne, this ship is “the second or the third” dating from the High Middle Ages discovered in France, according to Laurent Grimbert, archaeologist, responsible for the excavation presented to the press on Tuesday June 14.

According to the first datings of wood and ceramic pieces, the 12-meter long wreck would have transported goods, probably agricultural, on the river and as far as the Atlantic coast between 680 and 720. At the time, the city of Bordeaux, under the control of the Merovingians, was part of an independent Duchy of Aquitaine. It was plundered in 732 by the emir Abd al-Raman, then besieged a century later by the Vikings. But the origin of the ship, whose excavations started in 2019, remains a mystery. To avoid the drying out and degradation of these pieces of wood buried for 13 centuries, and watered every 30 minutes on site, the archaeologists will only have three months to carry out their complete study.

Complex excavations

“We are probably on a mix, the dismantling will tell us, on a crossbreeding of techniques” of the time going from the north of Europe to the Mediterranean, explains on the spot Marc Guyon, specialist in naval architecture. Until the beginning of September, a team of 10 archaeologists will try to dismantle the 200 to 300 ribs (transverse beams) which structure the hull, via hundreds of pegs, to determine the architectural tradition of the boat, its real height, its capacity to tonnage, or even the techniques used at the time to make it watertight.

To find its precise geographical origin, an archaeo-dendometer dispatched to the site analyzes the wood of the parts of the boat already dismantled – oak, Scots pine, chestnut – to draw up its growth curve, via its rings, before comparing it. reference chronologies on forests compiled at European level. Ceramic boxes, animal bones and a wooden spoon will also be analyzed.

The site will be open to the public on Saturday June 18 during the European Archeology Days.