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Beowulf's "Great dining hall" being excavated in Eastern Denmark
Posted on 9/2/13 at 1:32 pm
Posted on 9/2/13 at 1:32 pm
quote:
The archaeologists – led by Tom Christensen, director of the Lejre investigation – have so far managed not only to find, excavate and date the late 5 or early 6 century building most likely to have been Lejre’s first royal hall (described in Beowulf as `the greatest hall under heaven’), but have also succeeded in reconstructing what was on the menu at the great feasts held there.
Scientific study this year of the bones of literally hundreds of animals found near the hall, shows that they feasted on suckling pig, beef, mutton, goat meat, venison, goose, duck, chicken and fish.
Other finds from around the hall have included fragments of glass drinking vessels, 40 pieces of bronze, gold and silver jewellery, pottery imported from England and the Rhineland – and the wing of a sea-eagle, whose feathers may well have been used for fletching arrows. Twenty other gold items were found just a few hundred metres away.
The discoveries, reported in the current issue of BBC History Magazine, are of international importance.
“For the first time, archaeology has given us a glimpse of life in the key royal Danish site associated with the Beowulf legend’’, said project director Dr. Christensen, curator of Denmark’s Roskilde Museum, four miles from Lejre.
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As well as investigating the hall most likely to have been the one associated with the Beowulf legend, the archaeologists have found, excavated and dated six other royal feasting halls in Lejre.
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All were roughly on the same site – except for the one associated with the Beowulf legend which was 500 metres to the north.
It may be that the change in location was somehow connected with events described in the legend, part of which actually states that the early royal hall, was in fact abandoned – because of the depredations of Grendel. Whether Grendel (meaning quite literarily ‘the destroyer’) originally existed in some less legendary form – perhaps symbolizing a malevolent spirit responsible for disease and death, or a particularly fierce-looking human enemy – is as yet unknown.
LINK
Posted on 9/2/13 at 1:33 pm to Alahunter
Thanks for the link. 
This post was edited on 9/2/13 at 1:39 pm
Posted on 9/2/13 at 1:44 pm to Alahunter
So badass. As usual, thanks. 
Posted on 9/2/13 at 11:13 pm to Aubie Spr96
They do know that it was a fictional story...right?
Posted on 9/3/13 at 3:25 am to Alahunter
You find some really fascinating articles. 
Posted on 9/3/13 at 3:31 am to Alahunter
No Grendel's arm no care
JK I care. That's awesome
JK I care. That's awesome
Posted on 9/3/13 at 6:40 am to HardingHog
quote:
They do know that it was a fictional story...right?
Not entirely.
Posted on 9/3/13 at 7:44 am to Alahunter
Sweet. Makes me want some mead.
Posted on 9/3/13 at 10:52 pm to Alahunter
Love this stuff alahunter. Wonder how much of the current rant has a clue about what you are referring to.
Keep the faith!
Keep the faith!
Posted on 9/4/13 at 12:24 am to beachreb61
quote:
Love this stuff alahunter. Wonder how much of the current rant has a clue about what you are referring to.
Haven't most people read Beowulf in high school or college?
Or are you referring to something else?
Posted on 9/4/13 at 3:20 am to HardingHog
It sounds like they found this and added what they perceived it to be. Science is eerily similar to religion. Lots of assumptions, very little facts.
Posted on 9/4/13 at 6:20 am to HardingHog
quote:
They do know that it was a fictional story...right?
Like the Bible, the Koran, etc... normal stories from that time get word of mouthed by people(and in many instances children) that believed in mystical shite. They get distorted and shite.
Posted on 9/4/13 at 8:23 am to Alahunter
I find this one exceptionally interesting, having read Beowulf in English Lit (which I don't recommend that class fwiw)
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