Med mynt i munn i middelalder

Mouth-Deposited Coins in Medieval Burials The intentionally deposited coin in a late medieval grave in the ruins of St Mary's Church in Tønsberg raised issues such as: how common was it to be buried with coins in the medieval period, and who and why was someone buried with coins? It does not...

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Main Author: Hanne Ekstrøm Jordahl
Format: Article
Language:Norwegian Bokmål
Published: Norsk arkeologisk selskap 2024-12-01
Series:Viking
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/10946
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author Hanne Ekstrøm Jordahl
author_facet Hanne Ekstrøm Jordahl
author_sort Hanne Ekstrøm Jordahl
collection DOAJ
description Mouth-Deposited Coins in Medieval Burials The intentionally deposited coin in a late medieval grave in the ruins of St Mary's Church in Tønsberg raised issues such as: how common was it to be buried with coins in the medieval period, and who and why was someone buried with coins? It does not seem that the custom can be linked to gender, age or geography, and possibly not to social status. However, human remains with traces of diseases have been observed, and there are several children buried with coins. It may be that the dead were selected because they were vulnerable, both before and after death. The chosen ones may have been exposed because they died suddenly, and that the required rituals were not implemented. It may appear that the burial practice was linked to folk magic concerning revenants in combination with Christian beliefs about the afterlife.
format Article
id doaj-art-26184dda0fdd4d3eb6f86d4f7896eccb
institution DOAJ
issn 0332-608X
2535-2660
language Norwegian Bokmål
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Norsk arkeologisk selskap
record_format Article
series Viking
spelling doaj-art-26184dda0fdd4d3eb6f86d4f7896eccb2025-08-20T02:40:40ZnobNorsk arkeologisk selskapViking0332-608X2535-26602024-12-0189110.5617/viking.10946Med mynt i munn i middelalderHanne Ekstrøm Jordahl0NIKU Mouth-Deposited Coins in Medieval Burials The intentionally deposited coin in a late medieval grave in the ruins of St Mary's Church in Tønsberg raised issues such as: how common was it to be buried with coins in the medieval period, and who and why was someone buried with coins? It does not seem that the custom can be linked to gender, age or geography, and possibly not to social status. However, human remains with traces of diseases have been observed, and there are several children buried with coins. It may be that the dead were selected because they were vulnerable, both before and after death. The chosen ones may have been exposed because they died suddenly, and that the required rituals were not implemented. It may appear that the burial practice was linked to folk magic concerning revenants in combination with Christian beliefs about the afterlife. https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/10946MiddelalderGravGravskikkMyntOsteoarkeologiSkjelett
spellingShingle Hanne Ekstrøm Jordahl
Med mynt i munn i middelalder
Viking
Middelalder
Grav
Gravskikk
Mynt
Osteoarkeologi
Skjelett
title Med mynt i munn i middelalder
title_full Med mynt i munn i middelalder
title_fullStr Med mynt i munn i middelalder
title_full_unstemmed Med mynt i munn i middelalder
title_short Med mynt i munn i middelalder
title_sort med mynt i munn i middelalder
topic Middelalder
Grav
Gravskikk
Mynt
Osteoarkeologi
Skjelett
url https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/10946
work_keys_str_mv AT hanneekstrømjordahl medmyntimunnimiddelalder