Stavsager Høj ved Fæsted – de bronzealderlige aktivitetsspor og deres atypiske karakter .

Forfattere

  • Lars Grundvad
  • Martin Egelund Poulsen

Resumé

The Iron Age weapon deposits at Fæsted have previously been presented at Arkæologi
i Slesvig, but since then three more campaigns have been excavated at the site which
is rightfully called Stavsager Høj. These later excavations have yielded numerous spectacular
discoveries, and the focus has long been on the Iron Age finds. But in fact, the
site has also revealed much older artefacts and structures from the Bronze Age. These
older discoveries will be the focus here, because they also deserve to be presented as
they represent remains that, in some cases, may have no Danish parallels.
It has long been known that the region around Stavsager Høj is visually characterized
by a distinctive row of burial mounds stretching from the south to the north, several
of which have been found to contain rather rich grave goods. Stavsager Høj is
one of these mounds. However, the recent archaeological excavations have revealed
structures that, together with the mounds, testify to a landscape of special significance
as early as the Early Bronze Age. The excavated archaeological remains are seen
in the shape of a number of extensive oval ditch structures, which are ¹⁴C-dated to
around 1500 BC. Furthermore, cooking pit assemblages are seen in the form of both cooking pit ditches and clusters, which also
testifies to an atypical use of the landscape. The purpose of this article is to present
these Early Bronze Age discoveries, to place them in their landscape context, and to
provide an interpretation of their use – are these discoveries evidence of religious practice and gatherings, or are they evidence of secular aspects that just have not been observed at contemporary sites?

Publiceret

2026-02-16

Citation/Eksport

Grundvad, L., & Egelund Poulsen, M. (2026). Stavsager Høj ved Fæsted – de bronzealderlige aktivitetsspor og deres atypiske karakter . Arkæologi I Slesvig-Archäologie in Schleswig, 2024(20), 197–212. Hentet fra https://tidsskrift.dk/arkaeologi_i_Slesvig/article/view/166002