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ARCHAEOLOGY The remains of a Viking Hall complex were uncovered southwest of Lejre , Denmark in 1986 - 1988 by Tom Christensen of the Roskilde Museum.Christensen, Tom. "Lejre Beyond Legend - The Archaeological Evidence." ''Journal of Danish Archaeology 10'', 1991. Wood from the foundation was Radiocarbon -dated to about 880 A.D. It was later found that this hall was built over an older hall which was itself dated to 680 . In 2004 - 2005 , Christensen excavated a third hall located just north of the other two. This hall was built in the mid- 6th Century , exactly the time period of Beowulf . All three halls were about 50 meters long.Niles, John D., "Beowulf’s Great Hall" , ''History Today'', October 2006, 56 (10), pp. 40-44 In Gudme , Denmark two similar halls were excavated in 1993 . Of the so called "Gudme Kongehal" (Kings hall) only the post holes where found. The larger of the two was 47 meters long and 8 meters wide. Gold items found near the site have been dated between 200 and 550. The Iron Age graveyards of Møllegårdsmarken and Brudager are close by. The halls may have been part of a regional religious and political center serving as royal feasting places with Lundeborg serving as harbor.Sørensen, Palle Østergaard, 1993. Hal på hal Skalk 1993:6. -1994. Gudmehallerne. Kongeligt byggeri fra jernalderen. Nationalmusees Arbejdsmark. A similar large hall has been found next to the church of Gamla Uppsala , Sweden on a clay plateau called Kungsgårdsplatån. This was the feasting hall of the Swedish kings. Together with the religious center ( Temple At Uppsala ), nearby royal estates (husaby/ Uppsala öd ), and the royal grave mounds, it was part of the religious and political central region of the Swedish people. From around 500 A.D. up until Christianization (the 13th century at the latest), these large halls were vital parts of the political center. They were superseded by the Medieval Banquet Halls of later times. Other such halls may have been found at Högom (Medelpad) and Borg , Norway on the Lofoten s. One excavated here from the iron age measured 67 meters long and an even later finding (from the Viking era) measured 83 meters long. LEGENDS AND HISTORY There are several accounts of large feasting halls constructed for important feasts when Scandinavian royalty was invited. According to a legend recorded by Snorri Sturluson , in the '' Heimskringla '', the late 9th Century Värmland ish chieftain Áki invited both the Norwegian king Harald Fairhair and the Swedish king Eric Eymundsson , but had the Norwegian king stay in the newly constructed and sumptuous one, because he was the youngest one of the kings and the one who had the greatest prospects. The older Swedish king, on the other hand, had to stay in the old feasting hall. The Swedish king was so humiliated that he killed Áki. The construction of new feasting halls could also be the preparation for treacherous murders of royalty. In the '' Ynglinga Saga '' part of the ''Heimskringla'', Snorri relates how, in the 8th Century , the legendary Swedish king Ingjald constructed a large feasting hall solely for the purpose of burning all his subordinate petty kings late at night when they were asleep. According to '' Yngvars Saga Víðförla '', the same ruse was done by the Swedish king Eric The Victorious and the Norwegian ruler Sigurd Jarl , when they murdered Áki, a rebellious Swedish subking, at Gamla Uppsala , in the late 10th Century . MYTHOLOGY From at least the tenth century onwards in Norse Mythology , there are numerous examples of halls where the dead may arrive. The best known example is Valhalla , the hall where Odin receives half of the dead lost in battle. Freyja , in turn, receives the other half at Sessrúmnir . ETYMOLOGY The old name of such halls may have been ''sal/salr '' and thus be present in old place names such as "Uppsala"Brink, Stefan, 1996. Political and Social Structures in Early Scandinavia. A Settlement-historical Pre-study of the Central Place.. The idea or concept may have been preserved in the German word ''Festsaal'' (feasting hall). PRECURSOR The mead hall developed from European Longhouse s:
The possibly related medieval longhouse types of Europe of which some examples have survived are among others:
MODERN POPULAR CULTURE In J. R. R. Tolkien 's Fictional Universe of Middle-earth , Meduseld was the great ''Golden Hall'' built in Rohan . Meduseld was a large hall with a straw roof, which made it appear as if it were made out of Gold when seen from far off. Its walls were richly decorated with tapestries depicting the history and legends of the Rohirrim , and it served as a house for the King and his kin, a meeting hall for the King and his advisors, and a gathering hall. REFERENCES LINKS |
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