1,721,398 research outputs found
Erik Cinthios bibliografi 1946-2011
A bibliograhy of Erik Cinthio, professor in medieval archaeology at Lund University. The bibliography covers the period 1946-2011. In his festschrift, "Medeltiden och arkeologin. Festskrift till Erik Cinthio" (1986) a bibliograhy by the same author covered the period 1946-86
Mellan kungar och kaniker : Dalby till debatt
A discussion on the relationship between the church and the manor, the socalled westwork and the socalled royal palace at Dalby. The palace is interpreted as a monastery and the westwork as a "Galilaea", both from the 12th C
Tornet avslöjas
The tower revealed: On the uncovering of the remains of the central tower in the castle of Lindholmen, Scania
Kanon, mindesmærker og oldtidsfund
The Sun-Chariot from Trundholm is world famous, and the finding place is marked with a monument. In the same way the finding places for The golden horns from Gallehus, the Egtved girl, the Dejbjerg chariots, the Gundestrup cauldron, the Nydam boat and many other finds have been remembered during the 20th Century with memorials, often a stone monument. Which finds have become national symbols or have received their own memorial? When did it happend? Who took the initiative? Why excactly these finds? Why raise memorials over archaeological finds? The memorials over archaeological finds in Denmark are related to a debate on canonization and nationalism, currently a topic because of the Danish Cultural Canon and also the choice of Danish World Heritage places
Locus Celebris : Dalby kyrka, kloster och gård
A collection of 30 papers from the international conference "Locus Celebris - The Church, Monastery and Manor of Dalby" in April 2010
Hans Anderssons bibliografi
The bibliography of the Swedish historian and medieval archaeologist Hans Andersso
Gotlands guldålder : Kyrkor, konjunkturer och korståg
On Gotland medieval ruins and unfinished churches bear witness of a Golden Age, which suddenly was interrupted. With the enormous chancel ofKällunge as a point of departure I ask, why medieval Gotland declined. Hitherto the explanations have been a shift in the transit trade in the late 13th C., the civil war between Visby and the countryside in 1288, the Pla- gue of 1350, the invasion by the Danish king Valde- mar Atterdag 1361 or a rise of taxes by king Erik of Pomerania in 1412. Chronologies of the building activity at the churches, the town wall and the stone houses based on written sources, art history and den- dro chronology show however, that the turning point was already in the middle of the 13th C. I suggest, that the Golden Age of Gotland in the 13th C. was a war-economy created by the crusades in the Baltic. Gotland on one hand supported the crusaders and on the other hand sold weapons to the heathens. As the Baltic Rim was christianized the boom was over. The town and the countryside were now competitors on a shrinking market. The town concentrated on forti- fications, whereas the tradesmen of the countryside undermined their own position by ostentatious in- vestments in churches. The countryside continued a mentality ofofferings, where once silver hoards in the ground had been replaced by churches over ground
Erik 90!
Introduction to a seminar and a book with four articles and also a revised bibliography celebrating Professor Emeritus Erik Cinthio's 90 years birthday in 2011
När Gud flyttar ut : ödekyrkor förr och nu
When God moves out - deserted churches in the past and the present: A discussion on the fate and future of deserted churches since the Middle Ages in mainly Scandinavia. The article is departuring from the case of Maglarp in Scania, where a church from 1909 was demolished in 2007
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