Project Details
The Norse and the Sea: The Maritime Cultural Landscape of Scandinavian Scotland.
Applicant
Dr. Dennis Wilken, since 4/2023
Subject Area
Prehistory and World Archaeology
Medieval History
Geophysics
Medieval History
Geophysics
Term
since 2021
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 468457754
This project will investigate the maritime cultural landscape in Scandinavian Scotland (c. AD 790-1350), through an interdisciplinary approach using archaeological, written and toponymic evidence and address the overarching questions of connectivity and communication in Norse Scotland. The term ‘maritime cultural landscape’ was originally coined by Norwegian archaeologists Christer Westerdahl to denote ‘the unity of remnants of maritime culture on land as well as underwater’. This formed part of his ground-breaking analytical framework developed for the Baltic area and which has been successfully applied in Scandinavia, Germany and the North Atlantic. This concept is virtually unexplored for Scandinavian Scotland, despite being equally applicable to this area. By bringing this innovative research framework combined with archaeological and geophysical fieldwork to Scotland, this project will generate new data on maritime culture and enable important study of this geographic area from a whole new perspective. The project will build on three main strands of research: existing research on the Norse settlement of Scandinavian Scotland, smaller research initiatives focusing on maritime Scotland, as well as research on maritime cultural landscape from Germany, Scandinavia and the wider North Atlantic. The research will be carried out through three work packages. The first one encompasses a PhD project entitled Norse harbours in the west of Scotland for which a number of Norse landing places in Scotland will be identified and examined through geophysical survey and targeted excavation. In the second work package The Norse in the North and West of Scotland: settlements and the sea – the toponymic evidence, a PDRA and project partners will examine place-names to provide insight into maritime travel and harbours in Scandinavian Scotland. Data will also be drawn from oral traditions through study of local folklore and interviews with local people, as such traditions are still strong in rural Scotland. In the third work package Travel and communication in Scandinavian Scotland and the wider North Atlantic an overarching view of the maritime cultural landscape as well as travel and communication will be created through detailed analysis of Norse archaeological remains and landscape study. All in all, the project will provide a whole new view of Scandinavian Scotland. The project results will be presented at workshops and conferences as well as a range of publications and a website.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
United Kingdom
Cooperation Partners
Dr. Andrew Jennings; Dr. Alexandra Sanmark
Ehemalige Antragstellerinnen / Ehemalige Antragsteller
Professorin Dr. Berit Valentin Eriksen, from 1/2023 until 3/2023; Dr. Sven Kalmring, until 12/2022