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- Jelling_stone_ship abstract "The Jelling stone ship is a stone ship, the longest known to have existed, remains of which lie under the two royal barrows at Jelling, Denmark.The Jelling ship was formerly thought to have extended between the two mounds and been 170 metres (560 ft) long, by far the longest stone ship discovered. However, recent archaeological research and the re-evaluation of large pits on the west side of the north mound which were noted in the 1960s has led to a different reconstruction, in which the ship had the north mound as its centre rather than its stern and was 354 metres (1,161 ft) long; this length corresponds to 1,200 Roman feet, and the Trelleborg fortresses were also measured out in Roman feet.King Harald Bluetooth erected a great mound, the largest burial mound in Denmark, over an existing Bronze Age burial mound at Jelling, and buried in it the remains of his father Gorm the Old. Later, to the south of it he raised an even higher empty mound, which a runestone raised by Gorm describes as the grave of Harald's mother, Queen Thyra. One end of the stone ship is preserved under this southern mound. Between the two mounds, Harald placed a larger runestone in memory of both his parents, and the smaller stone now stands beside it. The two stones are now in the churchyard on the south side of Jelling church, the fourth church to occupy the site south of the north mound. Still during the 10th century, Gorm's body was moved from the north mound, which now contains only the grave goods, to a grave under the church.The triangle of stones under the south mound was previously thought to have enclosed a heathen temple and the runestone to Thyra, but when the base of the south mound was opened in 1992 in connection with work on a road, the lines were found to be slightly curved, and traces of the other end of the ship were then found under the north mound also. Dendrochronological evidence dates the building up of the north mound and the creation of the new burial chamber within it to 958-59 CE, coinciding with Gorm's death that winter, and the creation of the south mound to approximately 970. The lichen on the ship stones which were covered by the south mound suggests that by then they had stood in the open for some 20 to 30 years. However, if the ship setting was centred on the north mound, then it post-dates it.The runestone to Thyra, whose original position is unknown, may have been associated with the ship, perhaps forming its prow, in which case it would have been part of Gorm's monument to his queen. There is also a stone ship associated with a Bronze Age burial mound at Bække, where a runestone was raised by Tue, son of Ravn, to his trutnik Thyra, claiming that Tue raised Thyra's mound. A recent suggestion is that Thyra was married first to Gorm and then to Tue and that the mounds and ships represent rival claims to her lands on the part of Tue and Harald. This would explain the raising of an empty mound and the prominent runestone between the two Jelling mounds, in which Harald refers to both his parents.".
- Jelling_stone_ship thumbnail Jelling_gr_kl_Stein.JPG?width=300.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageExternalLink Skalk_0108s3_10.pdf.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageID "30150745".
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageLength "8908".
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageRevisionID "491918154".
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Roman_units_of_measurement.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Bronze_Age.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Bække.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Category:Archaeological_sites_in_Denmark.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Dendrochronology.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Denmark.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Gorm_the_Old.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Harald_Bluetooth.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Heathen_hofs.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Jelling.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Jelling_stones.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Stone_ship.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Thyra.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Tumulus.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink Viking_ring_fortress.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLink File:Jelling_gr_kl_Stein.JPG.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jelling stone ship".
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Convert.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Coord.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Jelling_stone_ship wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Ship_burial_customs_in_Germanic_paganism.
- Jelling_stone_ship subject Category:Archaeological_sites_in_Denmark.
- Jelling_stone_ship hypernym Ship.
- Jelling_stone_ship point "55.75606111111111 9.419441666666666".
- Jelling_stone_ship type Ship.
- Jelling_stone_ship type Site.
- Jelling_stone_ship type SpatialThing.
- Jelling_stone_ship comment "The Jelling stone ship is a stone ship, the longest known to have existed, remains of which lie under the two royal barrows at Jelling, Denmark.The Jelling ship was formerly thought to have extended between the two mounds and been 170 metres (560 ft) long, by far the longest stone ship discovered.".
- Jelling_stone_ship label "Jelling stone ship".
- Jelling_stone_ship sameAs Q6176854.
- Jelling_stone_ship sameAs Stenen_schip_van_Jelling.
- Jelling_stone_ship sameAs m.0g560__.
- Jelling_stone_ship sameAs Q6176854.
- Jelling_stone_ship lat "55.75606111111111".
- Jelling_stone_ship long "9.419441666666666".
- Jelling_stone_ship wasDerivedFrom Jelling_stone_ship?oldid=491918154.
- Jelling_stone_ship depiction Jelling_gr_kl_Stein.JPG.
- Jelling_stone_ship isPrimaryTopicOf Jelling_stone_ship.