The Bronze Age in SE Sweden Evidence of Long-Distance Travel and Advanced Sun Cult

Mörner, Nils-Axel and Lind, Bob G. (2013) The Bronze Age in SE Sweden Evidence of Long-Distance Travel and Advanced Sun Cult. Journal of Geography and Geology, 5 (1). pp. 78-91. ISSN 1916-9779

[thumbnail of 23276-78681-1-PB.pdf] Text
23276-78681-1-PB.pdf - Published Version

Download (11MB)

Abstract

The Bronze Age of Scandinavia (1750-500 BC) is characterized by the sudden appearance of bronze objects in Scandinavia, the sudden mass appearance of amber in Mycenaean graves, and the beginning of bedrock carvings of huge ships. We take this to indicate that people from the east Mediterranean arrived to Sweden on big ships over the Atlantic, carrying bronze objects from the south, which they traded for amber occurring in SE Sweden in the Ravlunda-Vitemölla–Kivik area. Those visitors left strong cultural imprints as recorded by pictures and objects found in SE Sweden. This seems to indicate that the visits had grown to the establishment of a trading centre. The Bronze Age of Österlen (the SE part of Sweden) is also characterized by a strong Sun cult recorded by stone monuments built to record the annual motions of the Sun, and rock carvings that exhibit strict alignments to the annual motions of the Sun. Ales Stones, dated at about 800 BC, is a remarkable monument in the form of a 67 m long stone-ship. It records the four main solar turning points of the year, the 12 months of the year, each month covering 30 days, except for month 7 which had 35 days (making a full year of 365 days), and the time of the day at 16 points representing 1.5 hour. Ales Stones are built after the same basic geometry as Stonehenge in England.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Souths Book > Geological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@southsbook.com
Date Deposited: 15 Jun 2023 11:20
Last Modified: 22 Jun 2024 09:31
URI: http://research.europeanlibrarypress.com/id/eprint/1129

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item