This study of the transition from pagan to Christian society in South Scandinavia between the sixth and the eleventh centuries ad aims to show that the common social and ideological denominator for the period was simplification. This facilitated the social stratification which developed during the Roman Iron Age, i.e. before the recession in the middle of the millennium. The method applied is a reconstruction of the pagan view of the human or civilised world and its transformation, based on a sociological and psychological reading of texts and burial contexts. Hall or home and the journey of civilisation are central concepts in the analysis. This pre-Christian view is contrasted with the early Christian notions which come to the fore in the poem Ludwigslied. Based on an analysis of this poem the general principles of pagan and Christian ontology can be termed "complementarity" and "categorisation" respectively ("complementarity" as against "categorisation"). The study is summarised in a chapter relating the period to three macro-sociological concepts: agreement, personality and centrality.
Author(s): Frands Herschend
Series: Occasional Papers in Archaeology, 24
Publisher: Uppsala University
Year: 2001
Language: English
Pages: 200
I. INTRODUCTION 7
II. THE JOURNEY OF YOUR LIFE 11
III. "HÖLL" AND "SAL" 39
IV. THE BURIAL SCENE 61
V. "LUDWIGSLIED" 95
VI. COMPLEMENTARITY 127
VII. ORDERING LANDSCAPES 149
VIII. APPENDICES 181
IX. REFERENCES 187