Här några foton och länk till ett bronsåldersgravfält i Kalmeväli. Estland.
Det upptäcktes 1975 och grävdes ut 1980 i samband med motorvägsbygge.
Här den utgrävda södra delen. Graven längst upp till vänster är nog den till förmodat utseende restaurerade graven:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File ... Graves.jpg
Här lite mera om gravfältet på engelska :
http://www.europeana.eu/portal/record/2 ... 17543.html
Finns det något snarlikt i Sverige ?
Bronsåldersgravar i Estland
Re: Bronsåldersgravar i Estland
Det finns fyllda skeppsättningar från bronsåldern i Sverige, men ingenting vad jag vet som liknar det där.
Re: Bronsåldersgravar i Estland
Här finns mer att läsa
Re: Bronsåldersgravar i Estland
Tack för svaren.
Av länken framgår bl a att de funna gravarna flyttats ca 20 m och återställts.
"The first above-ground graves that appeared in
Estonia are stone-cist graves, used from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age, approx. 1100–200 BC. The graves have one or several stone cist(s) in the middle, which is surrounded by circular stone
wall(s) with stone filling in-between the structures."
"The stone-cist grave field at Jõelähtme in northern Estonia is a well-known Bronze Age heritage site.
During the rescue excavations from 1982 to 1984, 36 stone-cist graves were discovered and fully opened. In 1985, all of them were reconstructed approxi-mately 20 meters south from their original location."
Av länken framgår bl a att de funna gravarna flyttats ca 20 m och återställts.
"The first above-ground graves that appeared in
Estonia are stone-cist graves, used from the Late Bronze Age to the Early Iron Age, approx. 1100–200 BC. The graves have one or several stone cist(s) in the middle, which is surrounded by circular stone
wall(s) with stone filling in-between the structures."
"The stone-cist grave field at Jõelähtme in northern Estonia is a well-known Bronze Age heritage site.
During the rescue excavations from 1982 to 1984, 36 stone-cist graves were discovered and fully opened. In 1985, all of them were reconstructed approxi-mately 20 meters south from their original location."