Water and the Afterlife – Water-related Resources in the Burial Construction of the Nordic Bronze Age

Christian Horn
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Abstract

The waterscape, including the sea, rivers, and lakes, was highly important to communities living during the Nordic Early Bronze Age (1800/1700–1100 bc). Waterways acted as highways that facilitated journeys, trade, and warfare, enabling maritime warriors and others to distinguish themselves. This is reflected in the maritime location of rock art and important Early Bronze Age burials, which have been used to reconstruct the Nordic Bronze Age cosmology. This centres on the journey of the sun across the sky during the day, and the underworld during night. This article analyses the use of water-related resources, such as seaweed, petrified organics, beach pebbles, and molluscs, in the construction of burials, which has received little attention despite renewed interest in the maritime seascape. The data demonstrate that local communities used different resources, indicating that a common belief system was realised in local differences. These marine materials were collected from the beach, which can be conceptualised as the liminal zone between the land of the living and the sea of the dead. It is suggested that these materials, in line with other funerary practices, helped to guide the recently deceased into the afterlife in the sea.
水与来世--北欧青铜时代墓葬建筑中与水有关的资源
在北欧青铜时代早期(公元前 1800/1700-1100 年),包括海洋、河流和湖泊在内的水域景观对于生活在这里的人们来说非常重要。水道就像高速公路一样,为旅行、贸易和战争提供了便利,使海上战士和其他人得以脱颖而出。岩石艺术和青铜时代早期重要墓葬的海洋位置反映了这一点,这些艺术和墓葬被用来重建北欧青铜时代的宇宙观。其核心是白天太阳在天空中的旅行和夜晚冥界的旅行。本文分析了与水有关的资源,如海藻、石化有机物、海滩卵石和软体动物在墓葬建造中的使用,尽管人们对海洋景观重新产生了兴趣,但这一问题却很少受到关注。数据表明,当地社区使用了不同的资源,这表明在地方差异中实现了共同的信仰体系。这些海洋材料都是从海滩上收集的,海滩可被视为生者之地和死者之海之间的边缘地带。有人认为,这些材料与其他殡葬习俗一样,有助于引导新近逝去的人进入海中的来世。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
1.70
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