Gone Medieval - Orkney’s Buried Vikings
Episode Date: July 27, 2021How did Viking remains find themselves under a house in Orkney? In 2015, human remains were unearthed on the northeast coast of Papa Westray. The graves were stumbled upon by sheer luck, with further ...investigations revealing the finds to be remains of Viking age burials. Cat is joined by field archeologist Lindsey Dunbar, who served as a project manager for the rare discoveries. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hello everyone, I'm Dr Kat Jarman and this is Gone Medieval from History Hit.
Today we're once again going to be talking about the Viking Age.
In 2015, human remains were discovered on the north-east coast of Papa Westray in Orkney.
Soon became obvious that these graves were in fact the remains of Viking Age burials.
And not only that, one of them was a very well.
rare Viking boat burial and a second grave was richly furnished with weapons including a sword.
Of course, the big question is who these people were and where they came from.
Now, Historic Environment Scotland has just announced that work is starting on the analysis of these two graves,
which means we might finally get some answers.
We're going to bring you updates on that project as soon as we can, but for now,
I wanted to find out more about the original burials and excavations and this really very extraordinary site.
It's special not just because of the finds, but also because the graves were found right underneath somebody's house.
So today, I'm delighted to be joined by fieldwork project manager Lindsay Dunbar from AOC Archaeology Group.
So welcome to Gone Medieval, Lindsay.
Thank you.
Thank to be here.
So I'm really excited to hear more about this grave.
Obviously, the main discovery was made a few years ago, and you were actually part of that team that oversaw and managed.
In fact, you managed the excavations, didn't you?
Yeah, I was the sort of project manager for when the project first arrived on our desk,
and it was done over probably four separate excavations,
and I was lucky enough to be involved hands-on in three of them.
So it was an interesting project from start to finish.
Fantastic. I'm very, very envious.
But before we go into the actual burials,
I was hoping you could just sort of set the context a bit
because some of our listeners might not be that familiar to the location.
Can you just describe where the site is for me, sort of geographically,
and why that's quite unique?
Right, yeah, the site itself lies on the Arcan Islands,
which are to the north of Scotland, the Scottish mainland.
And when you get to the Orkney Islands,
you're looking at a series of smallish and largest islands,
and the one that we were on was Papua Westry,
which is actually one of the northernmost of the Orkney Islands.
And it lies close to the larger island of Westry.
And Papa Westry, I think there's only a population of about 60 people on the island.
And there's only ferry crossings twice a week.
So it's not easy to get there time-wise,
it's not easy there to get equipment.
And obviously on the island, you're quite limited with the materials you've got.
So there was quite a lot of pre-planning involved to make sure we had everything with us that we needed for the works.
And then when you get to where the actual site is itself, it lies on the, would be the eastern side of Papa Westray.
And it has amazing views across to another smother island, which is called the Home of Papa.
And where it sits on the Home of Papa, you can see those three chambered kerns,
Neolithic chambered cairns there that you can see from exactly from where our site is.
And the site itself, it lies on top of a large, sort of north-south aligned sandgeon right on the coast.
So on what you can imagine on one side, you've got maybe a six, seven-meter drop down onto the seashore,
and then you have this sort of flatish, sort of 10-metre-wide plateau,
and then inland, the ground falls away by a couple of metres again.
And it's on top of this ridge that there was an 18th century farmsteading.
And effectively, that farm-sitting was renovations to that property were the reasons that we were called to site in the first.
place. So it's really quite a spectacular location about it sound of it. It is amazing views,
like I say, of down onto the seashore and then across to the home of Papa as well. So you can
see all these monuments, which are sort of early Neolithic, most of those. But yeah, it's quite
a archaeologically rich area and stuff from the Neolithic onwards. And because of the lack of settlement,
there's a great number of the sort of pre-stallial mounds or chambered cairns or standing stones
are stall in situ. There's also a lot of settlement from that period onwards all the way through
from a Viking and medieval stuff
where you can see the remains
all over the Okina Islands basically.
So these sites, some of these monuments,
would have been visible to people
in the Viking Age as well,
which I think is quite an interesting point.
Absolutely, yeah.
I think it's like at Mize Howe,
the Chamberchern on Orkney,
where they've got Viking graffiti
inside, runny graffiti inside the chambered kerns.
Obviously, these...
And there's a number of examples
of Viking burials
where they have buried them on sites
of ancient burials,
basically prehistoric burials,
it probably predated the Viking
by 1,000 years, 1,500 years, even more in some cases.
Okay, so let's get straight onto these particular Viking burials.
And I know that in this case, they were actually found quite accidentally,
not as a planned excavation, but by the landowner through some building walks.
So tell me how that first happened.
Yeah, okay, I would say the 18th century in farmsteading had fallen into disrepair over about the last.
I don't think they'd been inhabited since about 2000.
and there was a couple who was retiring from the north of England
and they had bought the property and were looking to renovate it
and Orkney Council were very keen for people to be able to come in and renovate
effectively what are dilapidated or ruinous buildings
because there was very little new excavations to be required for the works
most of which renovation works there was no archaeological mitigation put on the
as part of the planning so the owners started on their works
and during some of the building works they needed sand
and they went to extract some sand from the far end of the plot
and it was there that they thought they'd found some human bones
and then contacted the Orkney Council archaeologist
she was able to come out and confirm that they were human
but because it wasn't part of the planning condition
or there was no mitigation in place
she then informed historic environment Scotland
and as part of their human remains call off contract
they have a fast response unit
that's supposed to be there within 24 hours
and luckily at that point
AOC were the company that held the contract
so we were then forwarded the details
and we're up on the island within about
well it wasn't quite 48 hours
but as quick as we could get there. And that was in early 2015. Okay. And that early burial, though,
didn't turn out to be a Viking one. That first one was actually quite a bit older, wasn't it?
Yeah, what you're looking at was when our guys got up there onto sight, the body would have been
disturbed by a small excavating machine that had dug it. So the first instance was to clean up the
site's best they could establish which bones were in situ, which bones had been disturbed.
And it turned out that you were looking at a very simple, sort of roughly square,
grave measuring only about 1.2 meters by 1.2 meters and quite shallow. There was no sign of a coffin.
There was no stones marking the grave. There was no stone linings or capstones over the body.
It looked like it was a very simple cut into the beach sand and then the beach sand replaced on top.
The body looked like it was sort of an accrued inflammation. There was obviously some of the
bones were damaged, but it looked like it was an adult male. There was obviously staining in the
bottom of the pit where you could see where the body had decomposed. So it was obviously of a fair age.
there'd obviously been some disturbance to it previously before
there was no grave goods
so therefore you're just left with the body
and it could be prehistoric
there was also the idea that
there was a tradition of
burying bodies that had been washed up on the shore
burying them within just beyond the sort of high tide mark
and again giving them a very simple burial
especially for 18th and 19th century
bodies like that
and in actual fact we'd been called out
the home of papa which is island just across
about two months before
that because human bones had been found on the beach there and that was expected the same
discussions were had and we interpreted those bones as having been washed out from a Sayward's
burial and it was presumed that we were possibly looking at the same thing with that first burial.
But then you've had some radiocarbon dates, I believe.
Yeah, since then we have had some radio carbon dates directly off the body and it's placed
it to be first or second century AD so a very late Iron Age and predating the Vikings by
four or five hundred years.
So this is some of that earlier archaeology, but a grave in itself like that, just on its own,
can't necessarily tell us that much. However, the landowner, this wasn't the last that he would
find on his property, because a little bit later, he did some more building work, didn't he,
and came across something else?
Yeah, a matter of months later, so further into 2015, he was doing renovation works within
what he was calling the boiler room, which was a small building at the very end of the staring,
and whilst trying to underpin the walls there,
he again disturbed some human remains
and we were quickly dispatched back again,
back up to the island.
And in this instance,
we got what turned out to be,
although disturbed,
it seems to be sort of a classic Viking boat burial.
Fantastic.
Yeah.
That's very much unexpected.
Yeah.
So this was essentially underneath one of his buildings
or inside one of his buildings, really.
Actually, the boat was just like,
because it was such a small build,
small annex building, the actual boat was probably slightly larger than the building and extended
out either side of it slightly. So I know the stern of the boat came out underneath where the doorway
was into the building. But the steady had quite shallow foundations, hence the need for the underpinning,
which is what they were doing. And it looked like that building when it had gone in would have
partially disturbed the top of the boat. But substantially the boat was intact under the building.
But then obviously, unfortunately, when he'd gone in to do some of the underpinning before he realised,
It was only the human bone that made him realise it was a burial he was disturbing.
He'd spotted the odd nail in the material he was moving,
and these were obviously boat nails from the were the remains of the boat.
It was in better condition than we first imagined.
So what was actually left then of that boat?
How much remained of it?
Well, basically, it's a wooden boat, so it's like a clinker boat.
So most of these ones, and the other examples have been found,
very little of the boat survives,
and what you really have is the shadow of where the boat is.
And the most crucial part of that is the boat nails
that held the timbers of the boat together
and it's effectively those
which then if you can plot out where all these are
and carefully excavate down through them
if you look at the plan of the nails
it will show you the plan of the boat
and some of those
it's quite impressive because you have the sides of the boats coming up
as well so if you can plan it in 3D
you effectively have the outline of what was a boat
whereas in the ground it's a little bit of staining
and then like I say the nails
and we recovered about 230
boat nails from it
and the boat itself is probably about five metres long,
but about one and a half metres wide.
There were sort of traces of where the keel was.
And then within the boat,
the body had placed in a crouch position
within the centre of the boat
and on top of the body had been placed
a, or probably a leather-covered wooden shield.
And all the remains of that
is the sort of metal central boss that survived.
So it was that in the combination of the boat nails
of your definite signifiers for.
a Viking boat burial.
Fantastic. And there are a few of these, aren't there, from other sites in Scotland?
Do you know roughly how many sort of graves like that are we looking at in Scotland?
For the boat burials, you're looking at about maybe 10, I think.
I'm not entirely sure of the exact figure.
But I suspect it's about 10 boats that have been found to date.
Most of these were excavated in the 19th century.
So in terms of recent discoveries, as far as I'm aware,
ours is there's only a 21st century boat burial that's been found.
So obviously when it's come through our sort of recording in the field,
there's a few bits and pieces that we've managed to do
that we're open to other, after the earlier excavations,
mostly doing the sort of 3D pinpointing of finds and stuff like that.
The methods have come on quite a long way since a lot of those early boats were discovered, haven't they?
Oh, absolutely, yeah.
And what's so interesting about this as well, though,
is that this burial, right, this way of burying the people,
is quite unique to Scandinavia at this point in time,
and also it's quite regional in Scandinavia.
So actually that is showing us potentially some quite clear.
links. Oh, absolutely. Like I say, that is your classic bobarrier. You only really get, as far as I'm
aware, I'm not sure that there's any been found in mainland Scotland. I think they're all
restricted to the Shetland and the Auckland Islands. So this is definitely a really, really important
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I have to say, I feel a little bit sorry for this landowner
because I know that when you're doing building work,
the last thing you want is to have to have a team of archaeologists come in.
But as it happened, even this was not the last thing
that was going to come up on his farm
because there was one more burial discovered later.
Yeah, probably the most impressive of the three
in terms of artefacts and preservation was the last burial.
And in this one, this was the only time
where he was doing excavations out with the footprint
of the existing building
and he had to run a service
I think it was a wastewater service
from the house
all the way to the far end
of the plot to the receptive tank
and it was whilst he was cutting
this deeper, narrower trench
that in the base of his trench
he got the handle of a sword
basically sticking out the side
of the bottom of his trench
and when you saw the pictures of it
there was no mistaking
that that was a sword handle
which in 20 years of archaeology
I've done
I've never found a sword
and he found one
literally two yards from his front door
so yeah. Wow, yeah
that was pretty amazing but it wasn't just a sword was it it was actually a lot more when you came back
again the difficulty we had here was that the burial was probably about one meter one point two meters
below the current ground surface and it was effectively lying in a sort of two and a half meter wide
gap between a very small outbuilding and the actual property the actual standing steadings so there was
some we had to get a structural engineer involved to ensure that our excavations sent it collapse
they were effectively all cut through sand as well so that was a bit difficult to organise but once we
managed to get the excavation safely in a safe manner to undertake, you were looking at a pretty
much undisturbed burial. The grave cut itself was probably about two metres by about not point
eight metres and it was covered with a variety of large stones which it probably would have had
a small cairn on top of it demarcating its location and under the stones there was the unarticulated
skeleton in the crutch position sort of lying on his right hand side. Quite a large adult
individual. The preservation of the bones was
particularly good considering it was sand that it was in as well
and you could clearly see that he was lying with his
like I say on his right hand side his knee sort of tucked up a bit
and then his hands in front of him together up in front of his face
and then the sword the handle that you'd seen extending out was actually resting
on his thigh just by his knee the handle and then the tip of the sword
was resting just on his cheek so they'd laid the sword across him
and then on top of his right shoulder there was a shield
with it obviously laid a large shield then on top of the sword.
And this was all in pretty, pretty amazing levels of preservation
from other examples I've seen, or pictures I've seen of similar age burials.
This was quite good.
And it was obviously, it had been undisturbed.
They are really very unique.
So you have a boat burial and a weapon burial like this,
and so well preserved.
This doesn't happen every day at all.
No, no.
And there was probably evidence of bits in front of the sword.
There was a series of possible arrow heads and a knife.
And it looked like there was possible textiles remaining on those as well.
And because we knew there was obviously a sword on site,
we'd come up with the head conservator from AOC as well.
She was on site the entire time to ensure that everything was done in the correct manner.
I know sometimes as archaeologists are so accused of just trying to get to the treasure
and dig it out quickly to have a look at it.
And the conservators are always saying, you shouldn't have done that, you should have done this.
So she was on site to ensure that everything was lifted correctly.
In the end, we actually had to lift the skull and the sword as one,
because the tip of the scabbard had fused to the cheek and part of the forehead where it had been resting on the skull.
Right, okay. So that sounds definitely quite a challenge to do.
Yeah, it was technically quite difficult and it was quite, like I say, it was quite a small hole,
and we couldn't extend it out too far because of the constraints of the standing buildings either side of the excavation as well.
So it was a tricky and time-consuming effort.
Fantastic.
Now, the good news now that's just come out is that you've got lots of new funding for the
new project to actually really investigate these graves. So tell me about the new work that's
just starting now. Well, the post-ex is continuing as we speak. So there's obviously there's
conservation on all the artefacts that came out. So there's a lot of information there that can
be gathered. Like I say, there was potential remains of textiles. There was a scabbard itself
and then the sword itself. And I know from looking at, I saw a couple of x-rays of the handle
when it first came back. And you can tell there's quite a lot of detail and information it can
be garnered from that, which isn't readily apart when you look at it in its current condition,
or its condition when it was lifted. So there's a lot of work to be done with that. I've also been
told that with regards the bodies, obviously we'll do our standards of human bone, whether sex, age,
look for pathologies or anything like that, but also other stuff to do with like isotope analysis,
looking at whether these people are incomers to the island or whether they're part of a mixed
population. Yeah, basically follow along those lines of trying to work out exactly where these people
derived from. Yeah, and that's really exciting because we've now quite recently got quite a lot of
new information. It's been some new ancient DNA studies that are showing a mix of migrants coming in,
a lot of them from Scandinavia, and mixing into marrying with the local population that was there before.
So that, instead of seeing as these are buried in a very typically Scandinavian or Viking fashion
with a boat and the artefacts, then, that could be really important, couldn't it?
I think that's one of the
one of the key research agendas of the whole post-ex program
will be trying to derive as much information about that as they can
but I suppose the only other thing to mention would be
is that when we were on site after the excavation had finished
of the sword burial
we then excavated the rest of the service track
and there's probably remains of a further two
or potentially two cairns also on the site
one directly under the house the entrance to the house
and then one line to the side
but obviously because they weren't under any threat from the works that have been carried out in the renovations,
they've been left in situ.
So we're probably looking at a larger cemetery than has been shown by the two burials that we have.
Well, the two definite Viking burials we have.
I suspect there's a good evidence for the chance of being another two.
And given the size of the mound, if there were burials all the way along,
you could be looking at another couple on there quite easily.
So it could be quite a substantial Viking-age Scandinavian possibly cemetery,
which is essentially sitting right underneath somebody's house.
directly over his house yeah
or directly under his house sorry
it's one of those ones is that
I'm not even sure that people constructing the house
in the first instance would have been aware
of what they were on
I've done a few jobs where you could tell
the body was must have been known about
but the people constructing the building
they must have hit them and they've just decided
to carry on a building anyway
but I don't suspect these guys
who built this one were completely unaware
of the significance of the mound
it's a beautiful location
if you're going to put a house somewhere there
it would be a prime spot
and is there any
of a settlement or a village or some Viking-age houses around there?
If you're looking at Papua Westry, there is a couple of potential eroding settlement sites which are undated.
Their provisional dates have possibly been medieval, but some of those may well be Viking.
In date, they've just never been subject to excavation.
They're recorded as known sites.
They're down in the Historic Environment Scotland's database is settlement sites, but they're undated.
But there was a very good chance that there would have been associated settlement.
either close to where we are or at least on Papa Westry. And like I say, Westry itself's only a few
miles away. The home of Papa, I think there's maybe one possible settlement site which is undated
on it as well. So yeah, further opportunities to examine any of those sites. I think we'd throw
up one or two that would be Vikingian age. That would be fantastic. Well, I'm really excited to
follow this project as it continues. And I know that we are going to be checking in with you all.
And we will hopefully be getting some updates along the way. Is there anything else you
wanted to say about it or are you happy to wrap it up there? The important bit I suppose is that
the fieldwork is really just the first element in what is a really large project and there's so
much more information that can be gleaned from the post-ex stage and there's new techniques and
developments and research that are happening all the time so I know there's older sites have been
revisited and they've gone back in with more modern techniques and derived a whole wealth of new
information and we're lucky enough with our site that there's a lot of different techniques that we can now
attempt which I think will bear fruit.
Fantastic. Well, I can't wait to hear more about that.
And I think we're going to be getting some updates from you and your team as things happen
later on. So we'll be checking back in with you. But Lindsay, thank you so much for coming
to talk to us here today. No problem. It was enjoyable. Thank you.
So hopefully we'll bring you some updates on this project in the not too distant future.
But for now, thanks for listening. I'm Dr. Kat Jarman and this has been Gone Medieval from History Hit.
As always, do subscribe to
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