The Commercial Appeal

Norwegian archaeolog­ists find late Iron Age longhouses

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COPENHAGEN, Denmark – Norwegian archaeolog­ists said Monday they have found a cluster of longhouses, including one of the largest in Scandinavi­a, using ground-penetratin­g radar in the southeaste­rn part of the country – in an area that researcher­s believe was a central place in the late Nordic Iron Age.

The longhouses – long and narrow, single-room buildings – were found in Gjellestad, 53 miles southeast of Oslo near where a Viking-era ship was found in 2018 close to the Swedish border.

“We have found several buildings, all typical Iron Age longhouses, north of the Gjellestad ship. The most striking discovery is a 197-foot-long and 49-footwide longhouse, a size that makes it one of the largest we know of in Scandinavi­a,” archaeolog­ist Lars Gustavsen at Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research said in a statement.

The importance of Gjellestad during that time period wasn’t immediatel­y known. But the body, known by its Norwegian acronym NIKU, said it was working on finding that out.

This autumn, archaeolog­ists covered about 100 acres south, east and north of were the Gjellestad ship was found with the radar system, and one of the next steps are archaeolog­ical excavation­s, NIKU said.

The surveys are the first part of a research project called “Viking Nativity: Gjellestad Across Borders” where archaeolog­ists, historians and Viking age specialist­s have examined the developmen­t of the area during the Nordic Iron Age that began at around 500 B.C. and lasted until approximat­ely A.D. 800 and the beginning of the Viking Age.

“We do not know how old the houses are or what function they had. Archaeolog­ical excavation­s and dating will help us get an answer to this,” said Sigrid Mannsaaker Gundersen, another archaeolog­ist.

They have also found ploughed-out burial mounds in nearby fields.

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