The Historical Archaeology of the Medieval Crisis in Scandinavia

Authors

  • Birgitta Berglund NTNU, Museum of Natural History and Arehaeology
  • Katarina Briksson Länsmuseet Gavleborg
  • Ingunn Holm Museum of Cultural History, University of Oslo
  • Håkan Karlsson
  • Jenny Karlsson Skogsstyrelsen
  • Susanne Pettersson
  • Anna Sundberg Kulturmiljö, Länsstyrelsen Gävleborg
  • Bo Ulfhielm Länsmuseet Gävleborg
  • Stig Welinder Department of Humanities, Mid Sweden University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.2009.06

Keywords:

outland, deserted farms, outland production, land clearance, summer farms, mass catching, iron production, tar production, mining, blast furnaces

Abstract

In the wake of the Black Death in i 1350 Europe saw demographic disaster, economic decline, and social and political breakdown. Thousands of farms were deserted. This is the Medieval Agrarian Crisis. The latest decadesof outland archaeology, primarily within the frames of rescue archaeology, have made it possible to outline the course of the crisis in the forested parts of middle Scandinavia. The 14th and 15th centuries were a time of economic change rather than economic decline. However, various areas changed in different ways. When taking outland production into account the medieval crisis has to be conceptualised in another way; it was not solely an agrarian crisis. It was also early industrial expansion and change towards extensive farming.

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Published

2009-12-28

How to Cite

Berglund, B. (2009) “The Historical Archaeology of the Medieval Crisis in Scandinavia”, Current Swedish Archaeology, 17(1), pp. 55–78. doi: 10.37718/CSA.2009.06.

Issue

Section

Research Articles