ESTONIAN ACADEMY
PUBLISHERS
eesti teaduste
akadeemia kirjastus
PUBLISHED
SINCE 1997
 
Archaeology cover
Estonian Journal of Archaeology
ISSN 1736-7484 (Electronic)
ISSN 1406-2933 (Print)
Impact Factor (2022): 1.0
“BURNING PELTS” – BROWN BEAR SKINS IN THE IRON AGE AND EARLY MEDIEVAL (1–1300 AD) BURIALS IN SOUTH-EASTERN FENNOSCANDIA; pp. 3–29
PDF | https://doi.org/10.3176/arch.2017.1.01

Author
Tuija Kirkinen
Abstract

This paper deals with the use of brown bear (Ursus arctos) skins in the Iron Age and Early Medieval death rituals in south-eastern Fennoscandia. In this area, the practice of wrapping bodies in bear skins endured for over 1,000 years, starting in the Roman Iron Age in south-western Finland and ending with the Medieval Age inhumation burials in the Karelian Isthmus. The wrapping of bodies in predator skins is hypothesized by the numbers of 3rd phalanges (i.e. claws) which have been found in burials, especially in cremation cemeteries under level ground (400/600–1000 AD).
Firstly, the role of the bear was studied by analysing bear skin remains, specifically the 3rd phalanges and bear hairs, which have been found in burials, and secondly finds and their find contexts were analysed in terms of references made to them in Finno-Karelian Kalevala-metric poetry. The results stress the role of bear skins in constructing the identity of the deceased as a warrior and as an ancestor. The concept of a warrior as a predator is widely known among Eurasian populations. In south-eastern Fennoscandia the distribution and find contexts indicate that this ritual was adopted mainly from the Germanic cultural sphere.

References


Äikäs, T., Puputti, A.-K., Núñez, M., Aspi, J. & Okkonen, J. 2009. Sacred and profane livelihood: animal bones from Sieidi sites in northern Finland. – Norwegian Archaeological Review, 42, 109–122.

Alaska Fur ID Project (not dated). Alaska Fur ID Project. https://alaskafurid.wordpress.com/ (Read 6 May 2015).

Alberti, B. & Bray, T. 2009. Animating archaeology of subjects, objects and alternative ontologies. Introduction. – Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 19: 3, 337–343.

Andersson, A. & Paulsson, T. 1993. Jägarens skinn och hudar. Bokförlaget Settern, Örkelljunga.

Andrén, A. 2005. Behind Heathendom: archaeological studies of Old Norse religion. – Scottish Archaeological Journal, 27: 2, 105–138.

Andrén, A. 2011. Old Norse and Germanic religion. – Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Ed. T. Insoll. Oxford University Press, 846–862.

Andrén, A., Jennbert, K. & Raudvere, C. (eds). 2006. Old Norse Religion in Long-term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions. An International Conference in Lund, Sweden, June 3–7, 2004. (Vägar till Midgård, 8.) Nordic Academic Press, Lund.

Appleyard, H. M. 1978. Guide to the Identification of Animal Fibres. 2nd edition. Wira, Leeds.

Arponen, A. 2008. Arkeologisen materiaalin konservointi. – Johdatus arkeologiaan. Eds P. Halinen, V. Immonen, M. Lavento, T. Mikkola, A. Siiriäinen & P. Uino. Gaudeamus, Helsinki, 225–235.

Asplund, H. 2005. The bear and the female. Bear-tooth pendants in Late Iron Age Finland. – Rituals and Relations. Studies on Society and Material Culture of the Baltic Finns. Ed. S. Mäntylä. (Suomalaisen Tiedeakatemian toimituksia. Humaniora, 336.) Helsinki, 13–30.

Äyräpää, A. 1931. Kauhavan Perttulanmäen kivikautinen hauta. – SM, 38–39 (1931–1932), 1–15.

Back Danielsson, I.-M. 2007. Masking Moments. The Transitions of Bodies and Beings in Late Iron Age Scandinavia. PhD thesis, Department of Archaeology and Classical Studies, University of Stockholm, Sweden. http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:196957/FULLTEXT01.pdf

Baldick, J. 2000. Animal and Shaman. Ancient Religions of Central Asia. I. B. Tauris & Co Ltd, London, New York.

Bertrand, L., Vichi, A., Doucet, J., Walter, P. & Blanchard, P. 2014. The fate of archaeological keratin fibres in a temperate burial context: Microtaphonomy study of hairs from Marie de Bretagne (15th c., Orléans, France). – Journal of Archaeological Science, 42, 487–499.

Bläuer, A. 2013. Osteologinen raportti Pirkkalan Tursiannotkon vuoden 2012 kaivausten luu­aineistosta (KM 39258). Unpublished report, National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki.

Bond, J. 1996. Burnt offerings: animal bone in Anglo-Saxon cremations. – World Archaeology, 28: 1, 76–88.

Conneller, C. 2004. Becoming deer. Corporeal transformations at Star Carr. – Archaeological Dialogues, 11: 1, 37–56.

Conneller, C. 2011. The Mesolithic. – Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Ed. T. Insoll. Oxford University Press, 358–370.

Deleuze, G. & Guattari, F. 1980/1987. A Thousand Plateaus. Capitalism and Schizophrenia. University of Minneapolis Press, Minneapolis, London.

Douny, L. & Harris, S. 2014. Wrapping and unwrapping, concepts and approaches. – Wrapping and Unwrapping Material Culture. Archaeological and Anthropological Perspectives. Eds L. Douny & S. Harris. UCL Publications, London, 15–40.

Eskelinen, J. professional furrier (Kemin nahkatarvike), personal communication 6 September 2013.

Eskelinen, J. & Franck, K. 2011. Harrastajanahkurin käsikirja, 1. Datafun, Keminmaa.

Formisto, T. 1996. Osteological material. – Vainionmäki – a Merovingian Period Cemetery in Laitila, Finland. Ed. P. Purhonen. National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki, 81–101.

Friedman, J. & Rowlands, M. 1977/1982. Notes towards an epigenetic model of the evolution of ‘civilisation’. – The Evolution of Social Systems. Eds J. Friedman & M. Rowlands. Gerald Duckworth and Co Ltd, Gloucester Crescent, 201–276.

Frog 2014. From mythology to identity and imaginal experience: an exploratory approach to the symbolic matrix in Viking Age Åland. ­– The Viking Age in Åland. Insights into Identity and Remnants of Culture. (Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae. Humaniora, 372.) Helsinki, 349–414.

Frog & Lukin, K. (eds). 2015. Between Text and Practice. Mythology, Religion and Research.
A special issue of RMN Newsletter, 10. http://www.helsinki.fi/folkloristiikka/Summer590618_ 4_0_RMN_10%20Summer_2015.pdf

FU = Finno-Ugrian collection, National Board of Antiquities.

Furskin Co. 2011. Furskin identification. Furskin Co. http://www.furskin.cz/

Goodway, M. 1987. Fiber identification in practice. – Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, 26, 27–44.

Gräslund, A.-S. 2006. Wolves, serpents, and birds. Their symbolic meaning in Old Norse belief. – Old Norse Religion in Long-term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions. An International Conference in Lund, Sweden, June 3–7, 2004. Eds A. Andrén, K. Jennbert & C. Raudvere. (Vägar till Midgård, 8.) Nordic Academic Press, Lund, 124–129.

Groleau, A. 2009. Special finds: Locating animism in the archaeological record. – Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 19: 3, 398–406.

Gustavsson, R., Tomtlund, J.-E., Kennebjörk, J. & Storå, J. 2014. Identities in transition in Viking Age Åland. – The Viking Age in Åland. Insights into Identity and Remnants of Culture. (Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae. Humaniora, 372.) Helsinki, 159–186.

Haavio, M. 1967. Suomalainen mytologia. WSOY, Porvoo.

Hallowell, I. 1926. Bear ceremonialism in the Northern Hemisphere. – American Anthropologist, 28: 1.

Harris, S. 2014. Wrapping the dead: The Bronze Age mound burials of southern Scandinavia through a wrapping analysis. – Wrapping and Unwrapping Material Culture. Archaeological and Anthropological Perspectives. Eds L. Douny & S. Harris. UCL Publications, London, 115–134.

Harvey, G. 2005. Animism. Respecting the Living World. C. Hurst & Co Ltd, London.

Hedeager, L. 2011. Iron Age Myth and Materiality. An Archaeology of Scandinavia AD 400–1000. Routledge, London, New York.

Herva, V.-P. & Ylimaunu, T. 2009. Folk beliefs, special deposits, and engagement with the environ­ment in early modern northern Finland. – Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 28, 234–243.

Holmberg (Harva), U. 1915. Lappalaisten uskonto. (Suomen suvun uskonnot, II.) WSOY, Porvoo.

Honko, L. 1993. Hunting: Introduction. – The Great Bear. A Thematic Anthology of Oral Poetry in the Finno-Ugrian Languages. Eds L. Honko, S. Timonen & M. Branch. (SKS Toimituksia, 533.) Helsinki, 117–189.

Hukantaival, S. 2007. Hares feet under a hearth – discussing ‘ritual’ deposits in buildings. – Hortus novus. Fresh Approaches to Medieval Archaeology in Finland. – SKAS, 1, 66–75.

Hurcombe, L. 2014. Perishable Material Culture in Prehistory. Investigating the Missing Majority. Routledge, London, New York.

Hyyppä, J., Niemelä, J., Nuotio, T. & Räisänen, M.-L. 1990. Maannostuminen. Suomen kartasto, Vihko 123–126, Geologia. Ed. P. Alalammi. Maanmittaushallitus & Suomen Maantieteellinen Seura, Helsinki, 20–21.

Ingold, T. 2000. The Perception of the Environment: Essays on Livelihood, Dwelling and Skill. Routledge, London, New York.

Insoll, T. 2011. Animism and totemism. – Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Ritual and Religion. Ed. T. Insoll. Oxford University Press, 1004–1016.

Itkonen, T. 1948a. Suomen lappalaiset vuoteen 1945. 1. osa. WSOY, Porvoo.

Itkonen, T. 1948b. Suomen lappalaiset vuoteen 1945. 2. osa. WSOY, Porvoo.

Järvinen, A. 1950. Turkis- ja petoeläimet. – Suomen metsästys. Kokoomateos metsästyksestä ja riistanhoidosta. Ed. Y. Ylänne. Kustannusosakeyhtiö Otava, Helsinki, 147–242.

Jennbert, K. 2006. The heroized dead. People, animals, and materiality in Scandinavian death rituals AD 200–1000. – Old Norse Religion in Long-term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions. An International Conference in Lund, Sweden, June 3–7, 2004. Eds A. Andrén, K. Jennbert &
C. Raudvere. (Vägar till Midgård, 8.) Nordic Academic Press, Lund, 135–140.

Jennbert, K. 2011. Animals and Humans. Recurrent Symbiosis in Archaeology and Old Norse Religion. Nordic Academic Press, Lund.

Jonuks, T. 2009. Eesti muinasusund. (Dissertationes Archaeologiae Universitatis Tartuensis, 2.) http://www.folklore.ee/~tonno/jonuks.pdf

Kairikko, J. 1981. Riistalaukauksen jälkeen. Karisto Oy, Hämeenlinna.

Katiskoski, K. 1987. Lempäälä Päivääniemi. Rautakautisen kalmiston kaivaus ja kartoitus. Unpublished report, National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki.

Kirkinen, T. 2015. The role of wild animals in death rituals – furs and animal skins in the Late Iron Age inhumation burials in south-eastern Fennoscandia. – FA, XXXII, 101–120.

Kivikoski, E. 1965. Magisches Fundgut aus finnischer Eisenzeit. – SM, LXXII, 22–35.

Kivisalo, N. 2008. The Late Iron Age bear-tooth pendants in Finland: symbolic mediators between women, bears, and wilderness? – Temenos, 44: 2, 263–291.

Koivisto, S., Laulumaa, V. & Nurminen, K. (forthcoming). Vanhoja luita ja uusia ajoituksia Kyrönmaan rautakauden haudoista. – National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki.

Korhonen, T. 1982a. Saaliseläimen talja kirkkouhrina. – SM, 89, 45–68.

Korhonen, T. 1982b. Saaliseläimen taljan ja kotieläimen vuodan käyttö uhreina. – Suomen Antropologi, 3, 96–121.

Koryakova, L. & Epimakhov, A. 2007. The Urals and Western Siberia in the Bronze and Iron Ages. Cambridge University Press.
https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511618451

Koski, K. 2011. Kuoleman voimat. Kirkonväki suomalaisessa uskomusperinteessä. (SKS toimituksia, 1313.) Helsinki.

Krohn, J. 1894/2008. Suomen suvun pakanallinen jumalanpalvelus. Salakirjat, Helsinki.

Krohn, K. 1915/2008. Suomen suvun uskonnot. Suomalaisten runojen uskonto. Salakirjat, Helsinki.

Lahtiperä, P. 1975. Osteologisk problematik inom Finska flatmarks brandgravfälten. – Kontaktstencil, 9, 46–48.

Lahtiperä, P. 1978. Tampereen Vilusenharjun kalmiston luuanalyysi. Tampere-Vilusenharju: nuoremman rautakauden kalmisto Pirkanmaalla. – Karhunhammas, 3, 1–12 (Appendix).

Lehikoinen, H. 2009. Ole siviä sikanen. Suomalaiset eläinuskomukset. Kustannusosakeyhtiö Teos, Helsinki.

Leppäaho, J. 1949. Kalevala vertailevan muinaistieteen valaisemana. – Kalevala – kansallinen aarre: kirjoituksia kansalliseepoksen vaiheista. Eds F. Heporauta & M. Haavio. WSOY, Porvoo, 49–81.

Leppäaho, J. 1950. Tarsilaisen poltto. – Kalevalaseuran Vuosikirja, 30, 99–111.

Leppäaho, J. & Vilkuna, K. 1937. Muinaisrunojemme sotisopa. – Kalevalaseuran Vuosikirja, 17, 169–197.

Lönnrot, E. 1835. Kalewala taikka Wanhoja Karjalan runoja Suomen kansan muinoisista ajoista. SKS, Helsinki.

Losey, R. 2010. Animism as a means of exploring archaeological fishing structures on Willapa Bay, Washington, USA. – Cambridge Archaeological Journal, 20: 1, 17–32.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774310000028

Losey, R., Bazaliiskii, V., Lieverse, A., Waters-Rist, A., Faccia, K. & Weber, A. 2013. The bear-able likeness of being: ursine remains at the Shamanka II cemetery, Lake Baikal, Siberia. – Relational Archaeologies. Humans, Animals, Things. Ed. C. Watts. Routledge, London, New York, 65–96.

Mäntylä-Asplund, S. & Storå, J. 2010. On the archaeology and osteology of the Rikala cremation cemetery in Salo, SW Finland. – FA, XXVII, 53–68.

Møhl, U. 1978. Bjørnekløer og brandgrave. Dyreknogler fra germansk jernalder i Stilling. – Kuml, 1977, 119–129.

Muhonen, T. 2008. Something old, something new: Excursions into Finnish sacrificial cairns. – Temenos, 44: 2, 293–346.

National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki. The Archaeological Archives.

NM = The National Museum of Finland, Helsinki. Collections.

Pentikäinen, J. 2007. Golden King of the Forest. The Lore of the Northern Bear. Etnika Oy, Helsinki.

Petré, B. 1980. Björnfallen i begravningsritualen – statusobjekt speglande regional skinnhandel? – Fornvännen, 75, 5–14.

Pihlman, S. 1990. Kansainvaellus- ja varhaismerovingiajan aseet Suomessa. Typologia, kronologia ja aseet ryhmästrategioissa. (Iskos, 10.) Helsinki.

Pluskowski, A. 2006. Harnessing the hunger. Religious appropriations of animal predation in early medieval Scandinavia. Old Norse Religion in Long-term Perspectives: Origins, Changes, and Interactions. An International Conference in Lund, Sweden, June 3–7, 2004. Eds A. Andrén,
K. Jennbert & C. Raudvere. (Vägar till Midgård, 8.) Nordic Academic Press, Lund, 119–123.

Powers, R. 1967. Report on the bear phalanges. – A La Téne III Burial at Welwyn Garden City. – Archaeologia, 101, 1–62.

https://doi.org/10.1017/S0261340900013771

Price, N. 2002. The Viking Way. Religion and War in the Late Iron Age Scandinavia. (Aun, 31.) Uppsala.

Price, N. 2006. Vikingatida sejd, trolldom och schamanism. – Odens öga – mellan människor och makter i det förkristna Norden. – Skrifter/Stadshistoriska Avdelningen, 6, 112–119.

Pylkkänen, R. 1955. Säätyläispuku Suomessa vanhemmalla Vaasa-ajalla 1550–1620. (SMYA, 55.)

Pylkkänen, R. 1970. Barokin pukumuoti Suomessa 1620–1720. (SMYA, 71.)

Raninen, S. 2007. Kovia ja nimekkäitä miehiä. Persoonan konstituutio rautakaudella. – Muinais­tutkija, 1, 18–28.

Raninen, S. 2009a. Ikkunoita muinaiseen sankariaikaan? – Maasta, kivestä ja hengestä = Earth, stone and spirit: Markus Hiekkanen Festschrift. Ed. H.-M. Pellinen. Kulttuurien Tutkimuksen Laitos, Arkeologia. Turku, 66–77.

Raninen, S. 2009b. Rautakautisia rajanylityksiä – sotaisa Suomi? Arkeologipäivät, 2008, 45–51.

Russell, N. 2012. Social Zooarchaeology. Humans and Animals in Prehistory. Cambridge University Press.

Saarinen, J. 2013. Behind the text: reconstructing the voice of a singer. – Limited Sources, Boundless Possibilities. Textual Scholarship and the Challenges of Oral and Written Texts. A Special Issue of RMN Newsletter, 7. Eds K. Lukin, Frog & S. Katajamäki. http://www.helsinki.fi/folkloristiikka/ English/RMN/RMN_7_Dec_2013_Limited_Sources_Boundless_Possibilities.pdf

Salmo, H. 1938. Die Waffen der Merowingerzeit in Finnland. (SMYA, 42: 1.)

Salmo, H. 1941. Merovinkiaikaisen ratsusotilaan hautakalusto Euran pitäjän Pappilanmäestä. – SM, 47, 11–39.

Salo, U. 2012a. Kalevalaiset myytit ja uskomukset arkeologian, kielihistorian ja kulttuurihistorian näkökulmasta, II. Luonto ja kulttuuri: muinaissuomalaisten elämänymmärrys. Amanita, Somero.

Salo, U. 2012b. Kalevalaiset myytit ja uskomukset arkeologian, kielihistorian ja kulttuurihistorian näkökulmasta, III. Tuoni, Pohjola, taivas: arkeologian ja kalevalaisten runojen tuonelat. Amanita, Somero.

Sarkamo, J. 1970. Retulansaaren uhriröykkiö. – SM, 77, 35–47.

Sarkamo, J. 1984. Retulansaaren ‘uhriröykkiö’. – Suomen historia, 1. Eds E. Laaksonen, E. Pärssinen & K. Sillanpää. Weilin & Göös, Espoo, 306.

Sarmela, M. 2009 (partially revised version in English). Finnish Folklore Atlas. Ethnic Culture in Finland, 2. SKS, 587. Published first time in Finnish in 1994. http://www.kotikone.fi/matti.sarmela/ folkloreatlas.pdf

Schauman-Lönnqvist, M. 1996a. The Vainionmäki society. – Vainionmäki, a Merovingian Period Cemetery in Laitila, Finland. Ed. P. Purhonen. National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki, 130–135.

Schauman-Lönnqvist, M. 1996b. Weapons. – Vainionmäki, a Merovingian Period Cemetery in Laitila, Finland. Ed. P. Purhonen. National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki, 53–62.

Schauman-Lönnqvist, M. 1999. The west Finnish warriors and the early Svea kingship (550–800 AD). – The Making of Kingdoms. Papers from the 47th Sachsensymposium York, September 1996. Eds T. Dickinson & D. Griffiths. (Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History, 10.) Oxford University Committee for Archaeology, 65–70.

Schönfelder, M. 1994. Bear-claws in Germanic graves. – Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 13: 2, 217–227.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0092.1994.tb00040.x

Schwindt, T. 1898. Naturfolkens föreställningar om sjukdomarna. – FM, 5, 1–10.

Siikala, A.-L. 1992. Suomalainen šamanismi. Mielikuvien historiaa. (SKS toimituksia, 565.) Helsinki.

Siikala, A.-L. 2008. Myytit, riitit ja tietäjän toimet. – Savo ja sen kansa. (Savon historia, VII. SKS:n toimituksia, 1192.) Helsinki, 110–186.

Siikala, A.-L. 2012. Itämerensuomalaisten mytologia. (SKS toimituksia, 1388.) Helsinki.

Siikala, A.-L. 2014. Singing of incantations in Nordic tradition. – Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 191–205.

Skogstrand, L. 2010. The bear and Roman Iron Age masculinity. Unpublished abstract in
European Association of Archaeologists’ 17th congress in Oslo, Norway. http://www.eaa2011.no/ absractsearch.cfm?pMode=AbstractView&pAbstractId=22394

SKVR-database by SKS. Available in http://dbgw.finlit.fi/skvr/

Ström, Å. 1980. Björnfällar och Oden-religion. Fornvännen, 4, 266–270.

Suomen turkiseläinten kasvattajien liitto ry. 1983. Nahkontaopas. Minkin, hillerin, ketun ja suomensupin. Suomen turkiseläinten kasvattajien liitto ry, Vaasa.

Tarkka, L. 2005. Rajarahvaan laulu. Tutkimus Vuokkiniemen kalevalamittaisesta runokulttuurista 1821–1921. (SKS toimituksia, 1033.) Helsinki.

Teerink, B. 2003. Hair of West-European Mammals. Atlas and Identification Key. Cambridge University Press.

Torvinen, M. 1979. Liedon Kukkarkosken kivikautinen kalmisto. – SM, 82, 37–80.

Tupala, U. 1999. Eläinuhreja vai teurasjätettä – Euran Luistarin rautakautisen ruumiskalmiston eläinluumateriaalin lähdekriittistä tarkastelua. Unpublished MA thesis. University of Turku, Department of Cultural Research, Archaeology.

Turunen, A. 1979. Kalevalan sanat ja niiden taustat. Karjalan Kirjapaino Oy, Lappeenranta.

Vanhatalo, S. 2008. Jämsä Hiidenmäki. Rautakautisen polttokalmiston ja sen ympäristön koekaivaus. 2002–2004 ja 2007. Unpublished excavation report, National Board of Antiquities, Helsinki.

Wamers, E. 2009. Von Bären und Männern. Berserker, Bärenkämpfer und Bärenführer im frühen Mittelalter. – Zeitschrift für Archäologie des Mittelalters, 37, 1–47.

Watts, C. 2013. Relational archaeologies: roots and routes. – Relational Archaeologies. Humans, Animals, Things. Ed. C. Watts. Routledge, London, New York, 1–20.

Wessman, A. 2009. Polttokenttäkalmistot muistojen maisemassa. – Arkeologipäivät, 2008, 30–37.

Wessman, A. 2010. Death, Destruction and Commemoration: Tracing Ritual Activities in Finnish Late Iron Age Cemeteries (AD 550–1150). (Iskos, 18.) Helsinki.

Wickholm, A. & Raninen, S. 2006. The broken people: Deconstruction of personhood in Iron Age Finland. – EJA, 10: 2, 150–166.

Willerslev, R. 2007. Soul Hunters. Hunting, Animism, and Personhood among the Siberian Yukaghirs. University of California Press, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London.
https://doi.org/10.1525/california/9780520252165.001.0001

 

Back to Issue