Iron Working in Denmark 500 BC - AD 1000
Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Konferencebidrag i proceedings › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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Iron Working in Denmark 500 BC - AD 1000. / Lyngstrøm, Henriette Syrach.
Ikke angivet. red. / Svante Forenius; Eva Hjärtner-Holdar; Christina Risberg. <Forlag uden navn>, 2008. s. 96-101 (The Introduction og Iron in Eurasia, papers presented at the Uppsala Conference on October 4-8, 2001Activity Reort from UV GAL).Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapport › Konferencebidrag i proceedings › Forskning › fagfællebedømt
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TY - GEN
T1 - Iron Working in Denmark 500 BC - AD 1000
AU - Lyngstrøm, Henriette Syrach
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Iron technology was introduced into Denmark c. 500 BC and for the next 1500 years iron was produced from local bog ore. Iron working was practised in ordinary farming villages and was probably a sideline for farmers who lives where bog ore of a suitable quality and a forest large enough to supply the necessary charcoal were accessible. Even settlements such as Snorup, Starup and Drengsted, where iron was produced on a large scale, seem not to represent a society in which the main economy was based on iron working.During the coference in Uppsala the Danish knives forged from two billets of low-carbon iron, and one billet of medium- or high-carbon iron (the sandwich technique) proved to be of particular interest. The earliest knife forged in this technique to be known so far was found at Lousgaard at Bornholm. It was deposited in a grave in the late 7th or the early 8th century.
AB - Iron technology was introduced into Denmark c. 500 BC and for the next 1500 years iron was produced from local bog ore. Iron working was practised in ordinary farming villages and was probably a sideline for farmers who lives where bog ore of a suitable quality and a forest large enough to supply the necessary charcoal were accessible. Even settlements such as Snorup, Starup and Drengsted, where iron was produced on a large scale, seem not to represent a society in which the main economy was based on iron working.During the coference in Uppsala the Danish knives forged from two billets of low-carbon iron, and one billet of medium- or high-carbon iron (the sandwich technique) proved to be of particular interest. The earliest knife forged in this technique to be known so far was found at Lousgaard at Bornholm. It was deposited in a grave in the late 7th or the early 8th century.
KW - Faculty of Humanities
KW - arkæologi
KW - jernudvinding
KW - jernkniv
KW - archaeology
M3 - Article in proceedings
SN - 978-91-7209-503-8
T3 - The Introduction og Iron in Eurasia, papers presented at the Uppsala Conference on October 4-8, 2001Activity Reort from UV GAL
SP - 96
EP - 101
BT - Ikke angivet
A2 - Forenius, Svante
A2 - Hjärtner-Holdar, Eva
A2 - Risberg, Christina
PB - <Forlag uden navn>
Y2 - 4 October 2001 through 8 October 2001
ER -
ID: 4378290