Upplǫnd的四个小王国:马术坟墓与维京时代晚期挪威高地的政治整合

Viking Pub Date : 2021-11-19 DOI:10.5617/viking.9046
F. Iversen
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在欧洲大陆和西北欧,在马镫引入的帮助下,武装骑兵与封建主义的出现密切相关,但斯堪的纳维亚半岛也是如此吗?由此产生的军事专家是与日益壮大的国家王国联系在一起,还是与由小国王统治的地方和区域权力领域联系在一起?我将在Upplǫnd的历史区域进行调查,这是最后一个挪威地区,在公元1020年左右被Óláfr哈拉德松整合到挪威王国。挪威已知的51个马术墓地中有三分之二位于这一内陆地区,我将采用一种新颖的方式来调查它们与当地行政单位的关系,如:þriðjungar(三分之一),herǫð(数百个),尤其是fjórðungar(四分之一),以及旅行路线和定居点。很少有证据表明这些坟墓与早期的国家贵族及其统治的斯堪的纳维亚王朝——英格林吉内——有联系,这在之前的研究中是有争议的。马术墓地的传统在Upplǫnd比斯堪的纳维亚其他地方保存得更久,直到11世纪才被基督教化,埋葬的人不太可能是为统一和皈依的国王Óláfr服务的。在历史上已知的贷款人(国王最显赫的仆人)家族和这样的坟墓之间建立联系也很困难。但是,新发现的情况是,这些墓地所在的农场位于地方司法区fjórðungar和地方军事行政附属机构herǫð之间的边界上。这表明这些地点在地方军事系统中具有重要的预警和监督作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Four Petty Kingdoms of Upplǫnd: Equestrian Graves and the Political Integration of the Norwegian Highlands in Late Viking Age Norway
In continental and north-western Europe armed cavalry – aided by the introduction of the stirrup – was closely linked to the emergence of feudalism but was this also the case in Scandinavia? Were the resulting military specialists linked to the growing national kingdoms, or to local and regional power spheres ruled by petty kings? I will investigate this in the  historical region of Upplǫnd – the last Norse area to be integrated into the Kingdom of Norway by Óláfr Haraldsson  around AD 1020. Two thirds of Norway’s 51 known equestrian graves are located in this inland area and I will employ a  novel way of investigating their relationship to local administrative units, such as þriðjungar (thirds), herǫð (hundreds), and not least fjórðungar (fourths), as well as travel routes and settlements. There is little that suggests that these graves were linked to an early national aristocracy, and its ruling Scandinavian dynasty – Ynglingene – as has been argued in previous research. Equestrian grave traditions survived longer in Upplǫnd than elsewhere in Scandinavia, which was not Christianised until the 11th century, and it is unlikely that the buried had served the uniting and converting King Óláfr. It is also difficult to establish links between historically known lendr menn (the most prominent retainers of the king) families, and such graves. However, a new revelation is that the farms where such graves were located, were situated along the  boundaries between local fjórðungar, which were judicial districts, as well as subsidiaries of local military administration in the herǫð. This suggests that these locations had important warning and supervision roles in local military systems. 
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