Abstract
A massive tenth-century AD ring fortress was recently identified at Borgring, south of Copenhagen in Denmark. The combination of high-resolution LiDAR mapping, geophysical survey and targeted small-scale excavation has demonstrated that the site belongs to a rare class of monuments—the Trelleborg-type ring fortress. Borgring is the first such monument to be found in Denmark in over six decades, and provides an opportunity to investigate a type-site of Viking Age military organisation and conflict. The authors argue that Borgring complements a varied group of fortification structures in late Viking Age Denmark, part of a military network close to contemporaneous European ideas of military kingship and defence.
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CITATION STYLE
Goodchild, H., Holm, N., & Sindbæk, S. M. (2017). Borgring: the discovery of a Viking Age ring fortress. Antiquity, 91(358), 1027–1042. https://doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2017.118
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