The Lost Fort

My Travel and History Blog, Focussing mostly on Roman and Mediaeval Times


2 Jun 2025
  Spring Tour 2025 – Denmark, Part 2: Odense, Æroskøbing, and More Vikings

Here is the second part of my Back with Booty posts from Denmark (the first can be found here). 15 days won’t cover the country – even leaving out Copenhagen and surroundings which I visited years ago – but proved sufficient to see quite a few interesting places.
Odense, lane in the old town

Odense is another town whose origins go back way into the past. The first time the name appears is a charte in which the German Emperor Otto III granted rights (unspecified; have to research that for future posts) to Odense in 988, but archaeological finds go beyond that. Odense had been a Vking settlement – one of Harald Bluetooth’s ring fortresses was buit here – though that past is mostly hidden under the present town.
Odense, Blackfriar’s Square

Odense thrived in the Middle Ages, churches and monasteries were built, as well as handsome houses by merchants and major craftsmen. A large fire in 1247 (during the conflicts of one of the dysfunctional royal families) proved no major setback, albeit several damaged churches were rebuilt in a more 'modern' Gothic style. Prosperity continued after the Reformation – many of the fine houses date to the 16th and mid-17th century, but then an increase in taxes (result of the lost Dano-Swedish War 1657/58) led to a period of stagnation.
Street in Odense

In the late 18th century, a canal was built from Odense harbour to the fjord at the Baltic Sea to faciliate the passage of larger ships, and since the 1840ies, industrialisation brought new prosperity to the city.

But not everyone participated in that development; there were still many poor people (living, like in the towns I mentioned in the first post, in those now so pretty little houses). The parents of Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875), the famous Danish writer, were of those poor. Andersen could only attend high school and university thanks to grants.
Odense, gardens of the new Hans Christian Andersen Museum

Odense is proud of its famous citizen and has built a new museum – Andersen’s birth house has been one for a long time – a modern site, designed by the Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, that opened in 2021. I have not visited it since it is more a virtual and interactive presentation of Andersen’s fairy tales, but the gardens with the rotunds are free for everyone. The main museum is underground.
Funen Village Museum

One of the highlights (besides the Viking Village near Ribe and the Vindelev treasure, see below) was the open air musem Den Fynske Landsby (the Funen Village) near Odense, which reminded me of a similar one in Molfsee near Kiel in Germany I mentioned at the end of this post. It was interesting to compare the styles of the houses and farms.
Funen Village, the inn

The Funen Village opened in 1946, but its establishment began during the German occupation in WW2, in 1944. Many old houses and farm buildings – most of them half timbered and with thatched roofs – from the 18th and 19th century had fallen into disuse and were replaced by modern stone buildings, which was felt to be a shame, because the past vanished. So the idea was born to dismantle such buildings and reassemble them in one place.
Funen Village, interior of a house

The village presents 25 buildings, farmsteads, crofter houses, a parsonage, a school, a watermill, a windmill, an inn (fully functional, though the food is modern, no gritty meal with chaff) and more. The oldest building dates to 1692, the youngest is from 1893. Besides the houses, there are also gardens, stables and pasture with livestock, arable fields. In all, the village looks like something Hans Christian Andersen would have seen in his life, and it was a really nice place to explore on a sunny day.
Funen Village, a landau, with the parsonage in the background

Of course I wouldn’t miss one of Denmark’s most famous historical sites: The rune stones and burial mounds at Jelling. The older stone reads: "King Gorm made these monuments in memory of Thyra / his wife, Denmark’s bót." The meaning of bót is discussed, it can mean "Denmark’s adorment" but also "Denmark’s salvation". There are no contemporary sources outside the rune stones, but later sources present Thyra as a politically active queen who supported her husband.

The second stone was erected by their son Harald Bluethooth in honour of his parents, and to mark the Christianization of the Danes he had undertaken. Besides the text, there are a depiction of Christus and animal ornaments.
The older Jelling stone, front side

Gorm the Old (*~ 900 – † 958 or maybe 963) was a Danish king – whether he ruled all of Denmark is dubious, more likely he ruled over Jutland – with a semi-legendary ancestry that connects him to Harthacnut. Not much is known about him except his marriage to Thyra and being the father of Harald Bluetooth and perhaps other children as well. About Thyra, even less is known.
Jelling, the church and one of the burial mounds

Gorm’s son Harald Bluetooth is connected with the Viking Treasure of Hiddensee, and more shinies can now be seen in Jelling. I was lucky, since the exhibition of the Vindelev Treasure that has been discovered a few miles outside Jelling in 2020, had just opened two days before I visited the the museum.
Jelling, a piece of the Vindelev Treasure

The Vindelev Treasure is older than the finds of Hiddensee; the pieces date to the 5th/6th centuries AD and were deposited in a bog in the 6th century, during the Migration Period. It is assumed that the treasure was laid down as a sacrifice (which means that I’ll have to go back to the comment section of the Hiddensee post where I discussed the problem of safekeeping/sacrifice).

If someone thinks that the guy on the medaillon looks Roman – yes, he does; it’s Constantine the Great. Among the finds were not only 'Nordic' gold bracteates, but also Roman coins and medaillons. Trade connections and maybe even personal meetings went quite far at that time.
The Ladby ship burial

Another Viking site not far from Odense is the Ladby Ship. It is the only Danish ship burial (Norway got several), and the Danes were pretty excited when it was discovered in 1935. The conditions in the mound did not preserve wood very well, so most of what can be seen are impressions of the ship’s planks in the earth. Iron, on the other hand, preserves well, thus lots of nails and rivets have been found (in other sites, sometimes the timber is better preseverd and small iron objects rusted away). Most bones of the buried chief are missing, but those of several horses and dogs have been found, together with pieces to their tack.

Ladby is the only ship burial that has been conservated on site by encasing the ship in glass in an oblong room, and recreating the mound over it. The dim lights make it truly a burial.
Kerteminde, another pretty Danish lane

When traveling to somewhat remote places by public transport, I usually have to aim for a nearby town with a bus/train connection and then catch a local bus, or walk a few miles, ask for a ride, or take a taxi. Though that way I often had some time to explore the towns

Kerteminde is one of those cute little towns with cute little houses. And a coffe shop with yummy cakes. *grin* Settlement in the area goes back to the 11th century, but rights of town were granted Kerteminde only in 1413. Like most other historical places, the town lies directly at the Baltic Sea coast.
The double houses of Egeskov Castle

Egeskov Castle is one of the main tourist attractions on Funen. It is a handsome Late Gothic building with a spacious park, a vintage car museum and a large children’s playground. I was warned not to go there on a weekend, but under the week in pre-holiday season it wasn’t too crowded.
Egeskov Castle, the great house

Egeskov was built by the Danish nobleman Frands Mikkelsen Brockenhuus (1518-1569), military leader, diplomat, and member of the Royal Council, in 1554, though an older building on the grounds is mentioned in 1405. Since there had been a civil war just a few years prior (the Count’s War 1534-36 about succession to the throne as well as a conflict between Catholics and Protestants), Brockenhuus made sure the castle was well fortified. He would die in another conflict, the Nordic Seven Years War (1563-1570), one of the many sub-conflicts in the Nordic Wars over the dominance in the Baltic Sea that lasted from 1554 to 1721.
Egeskov Park, the tulip garden

Brockenhuus bought a lot of adjacent land and added the first park. The castle itself was erected in the lake, resting on oaken pillars (it is said he used up a forest of trees, thus the name Egeskov – oak forest). Access originally was by a drawbridge.

The estate came to the Bille-Brahe family in 1784 and was inherited by the counts Ahlefeldt Laurvid-Bille who still own the castle and park.
Svendborg, the harbour

Svendborg is another town with a number of nice old houses, but I admit, I didn’t take so many photos this time. I got enough colourful little houses already. And since those houses are lived in, you sometimes get cars parking in front, or the ground floor taken up by stores and boutiques; Svendborg is a shopping town and got a main street full of those.
Ærøskøbing, pretty houses

The old character is better preserved in Ærøskøbing on the island of Ærø. One of the reasons is that its importance never went beyond the local trade and crafts, other than large towns like Aarhus or Odense. So the town was never 'modernised' the way those larger cities have been. Today, the townscape is deliberately kept since Ærøskøbing has become a tourist destination; tourism providing its major income.
Ærøskøbing, more pretty houses

The town dates to 1250, but a fire in 1629 destroyed most of it. The town recovered, though, and the old houses were rebuilt, and newer, somewhat larger ones added that show stylistic influences from Funen and northern Germany. Today, the old houses – the oldest dating to 1645 – are lovingly kept. The paint needs to be refurbished regularly; one lady was painstakingly recolouring a black stripe when I walked through the lanes.
The Baltic Sea near Svendborg

The last afternoon in Denmark ended with an ice cream at Ærøskøbing harbour and a ferry tour back to Svendborg. You know I love being on the water.
 
Comments:
Zwei schöne Beiträge über Deine Reise durch Dänemark. Und insgesamt auch ein interessanter historischer Überblick. Ich habe richtig Lust bekommen, mich auch auf den Weg dorthin zu machen. Danke fürs Teilen und herzliche Grüße von der Silberdistel
 
Der einzige Haken ist, dass Dänemark teuer ist. Ich habe einfach nicht mehr umgerechnet, dann gibt es nur einen Schrecken am Ende. ;) Mit dem eigenen Auto (und dem Kofferraum voll mit Wein, Bier etc.) und Ferienhaus, in dem man auch mal selber kocht, dürfte es günstiger werden. Aber für eine Person rechnet sich das nicht - außerdem koche ich nicht gerne.
 
Unsere Tochter sagte auch schon, dass Dänemark teuer ist, aber mit Selbstversorgung würde es gehen.
 
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The Lost Fort is a travel and history blog based on my journeys in Germany, Great Britain, Scandinavia, the Baltic Countries, and central Europe. It includes virtual town and castle tours with a focus on history, essays on Roman and Mediaeval history, hiking tours, and photography.

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I'm a blogger from Göttingen, Germany, with a MA in Literature and History, interested in everything Roman and Mediaeval, avid reader and sometimes writer, opera enthusiast, traveller with a liking for foreign languages and odd rocks, photographer, and tea aficionado. And an old-fashioned blogger who refuses to get an Instagram account.
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Historical Places

Germany
· Castles
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· Romans Remains
· Neolithicum and Bronze Age
· Museums


England
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Finland
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Estonia
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Germany
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Photo Parades

Medieval History

Medieval Life
Hanseatic League
Teutonic Knights
Vikings

Germany
Great Britain
Scandinavia
Lithuania and Livonia
Poland
Bohemia
Luxembourg

Roman History

The Romans at War
Life and Religion

Other Times

Neolithicum to Iron Age
Post-Medieval History


***** ***** ***** ***** *****

Historical Places

Germany

Towns

Bad Sooden-Allendorf
Historical Town and Graduation Tower
Bruchteiche Reservoir

Binz
A Seaside Resort

Braunschweig
Medieval Braunschweig
Lion Benches in the Castle Square
The Quadriga

Erfurt
Medieval Erfurt

Goslar
Medieval Goslar
Chapel in the Klus Rock

Heiligenstadt
Churches St.Martin and St.Mary

Lübeck
St. Mary's Church

Magdeburg
Church of Our Lady: History

Mainz
The Temple of Isis and Mater Magna

Paderborn
Medieval Paderborn

Quedlinburg
Medieval Quedlinburg
The Chapter Church

Speyer
The Cathedral: Architecture
Jewish Ritual Bath

Stralsund
The Harbour
The Old Town

Treffurt
Medieval Lanes and Old Houses

Trier
The Roman Amphitheatre
The Aula Palatina
The Imperial Baths
The Porta Nigra

Weimar
Sites of the Weimar Classicism
The Park at the Ilm

Wismar
The Old Harbour

Xanten
Roman and Medieval Xanten
The Gothic House

Castles

Adelebsen
The Keep

Altenstein (Werra)
A Border Castle

Bramburg
Weser River Reivers

Brandenburg (Thuringia)
The Beginnings
Albrecht II of Thuringia

Coburg Fortress
History
Architecture

Ebersburg
The Marshals of Ebersburg
Architecture

Grebenstein
History

Grubenhagen
History of the Keep

Hanstein
Introduction

Hardeg Castle
The Great Hall

Hardenberg
History

Heldenburg (Salzderhelden)
A Welfen Seat

Hohnstein (Harz)
The Counts of Hohnstein
Between Welfen and Staufen
14th-15th Century

Krukenburg
Built to Protect a Chapel

Kugelsburg
The Counts of Everstein
Later Times

Plesse
The Counts of Winzenburg
The Lords of Plesse
Architecture

Polle Castle
An Everstein Stronghold

Regenstein
History

Reichenbach (Hessia)
History

Sababurg
Photo Impressions

Scharfenstein
From Castle to Convention Centre

Scharzfels
History
Architecture

Sichelnstein
History

Stauffenburg (Harz)
A Secret Mistress

Stapelburg
A Little Known Ruin in the Harz

Trendelburg
Photo Impressions

Wartburg
A Virtual Tour

Weidelsburg
History
Architecture
Revisiting the Weidelsburg

Abbeys and Churches

Bursfelde
Early History of the Abbey

Fredelsloh
A Romanesque Basilica

Gehrden
A Romanesque Church

Göllingen
The Byzantine Crypt

Hahnenklee
The Stave Church

Helmarshausen
Remains of the Monastery

Lippoldsberg
Early History of the Abbey
Interior of the Church

Lorsch
The Carolingian Gate Hall

Pöhlde
Remains of the Monastery

Scharzfeld (Harz)
The Cave Church

Vernawahlshausen
Medieval Murals

Walkenried
The Monastery - Introduction

Wiebrechtshausen
Romanesque Church and a Ducal Burial

Wilhelmshausen (Kassel)
The Romanesque Church

Roman Remains

Augusta Treverorum / Trier
The Amphitheatre
The Aula Palatina
The Imperial Baths
The Porta Nigra
The Roman Bridge

Colonia Ulpia Traiana / Xanten
Roman Xanten
The Amphitheatre in Birten

Limes Fort Aalen
The Barracks

Limes Fort Osterburken
The Discovery
The Cohort castellum
The Annex Fort
The Garrisons

Limes Fort Saalburg
A Reconstructed Limes Fort
Shrine of the Standards

Haltern am See
Romans in Haltern
Playmobil Romans, LWL Museum Haltern
Varus Statue See

Romans at the Moselle
Romans at the Moselle
The Villa Urbana in Longuich

Romans at the Rhine
Boppard - The Roman Baudobriga
The Villa at Wachenheim

Neolithicum and Bronze Age

Neolithic Burials
Neolithic Burials in the Everstorf Forest and Rugia
The Necropolis of Oldendorf

Bronze Age
Bronze and Iron Age Remains at the Werra

Museums / Reconstructed Sites

Palatine Seat Tilleda
The Defenses

Viking Settlement Haithabu
The Nydam Ship

Open Air Museums
European Bread Museum Ebergötzen
Open Air Museum Oerlinghausen

Post-Mediaeval Exhibits
Historical Guns, Coburg Fortress
Vintage Car Museum, Wolfsburg


England

Northumbria Tour

Towns

Chester
Roman and Medieval Chester

Hexham
The Abbey - Introduction
The Old Gaol

York
Clifford Tower
The Guild Hall
Monk Bar Gate with Richard III Museum
Museum Gardens
Houses in the Old Town
York Minster: Architecture

Castles

Carlisle
History

Richmond
Conquest to King John
Henry III to the Tudors
Architecture

Scarborough
Romans to the Tudors
Civil War to the Present
Architecture

Roman Remains

Eboracum / York
Roman Bath in the Fortress

Wall Fort Birdoswald
The Dark Age Timber Halls

Wall Fort Segedunum
Museum and Viewing Tower
The Baths

Other Roman Sites
The Mithraeum at Brocolita
The Signal Station at Scarborough


Scotland

Scotland Tour

Towns

Edinburgh
Views from the Castle

Stirling
The Wallace Monument

Castles

Doune
A Virtual Tour
The Early Stewart Kings
Royal Dower House

Duart Castle
Guarding the Sound of Mull

Dunstaffnage
An Ancient MacDougall Stronghold
The Wars of Independence
The Campbells Are Coming
Dunstaffnage Chapel

Stirling
Robert the Bruce

Abbeys and Churches

Inchcolm
Arriving at Inchcolm Abbey

Neolithicum and Bronze Age

Neolithic Orkney
Ring of Brodgar
Skara Brae

Brochs and Cairns
Clava Cairns
The Brochs of Gurness and Midhowe - Introduction

Picts and Dalriatans
Dunadd Hill Fort
Staffa


Wales

Towns

Aberystwyth
Castle and Coast

Caerleon
The Ffwrwm
The Roman Amphitheatre
The Baths in the Legionary Fort

Conwy
The Smallest House in Great Britain

Castles

Beaumaris
History
Architecture

Caernarfon
Master James of St.George
The Castle Kitchens

Cardiff
From Romans to Victorians

Chepstow
Beginnings unto Bigod
Edward II to the Tudors
Civil War

Conwy
History
Architecture

Criccieth
Llywelyn's Buildings
King Edward's Buildings

Manorbier
The Pleasantest Spot in Wales

Pembroke
Photo Impressions
The Caves Under the Castle

Roman Remains

Isca Silurum / Caerleon
The Amphitheatre
The Baths in the Legionary Fort


Denmark

Denmark Tour, Part 1 / Part 2


Finland

Towns

Porvoo
Medieval Porvoo


Norway

Castles and Fortresses

Akershus Fortress in Oslo
Kings and Pirates
The Time of King Håkon V
Architecture

Vardøhus Fortress
History

Museums

The Fram Museum in Oslo


Sweden

Neolithicum and Bronze Age

Gotland
Gnisvärd Ship Setting

Museums

The Vasa Museum in Stockholm
Raising the Vasa Wreck


Estonia

Baltics Tour, Part 1 / Part 2

Towns

Tallinn
The History of Medieval Tallinn


Latvia

Baltics Tour, Part 1 / Part 2

Towns

Riga
The History of Medieval Riga


Lithuania

Lithuania Tour, Part 1 / Part 2

Towns

Vilnius
Photo Impressions


Czechia

Czechia Tour

Towns

Cheb / Eger
The Old Town

Karlovy Vary / Karlsbad
Brief History of the Town

Kutná Hora
The Sedlec Ossuary
The Medieval Town and St.Barbara's Church


Poland

Poland Tour

Towns

Gdańsk / Danzig
History of Medieval Gdańsk
Medieval and Renaissance Gdańsk

Kraków
The Old Town
Jewish Kraków - Kazimierz and the Ghetto

Wrocław / Breslau
The Botanical Garden
The Wrocław Dwarfs

Castles

Ogrodzieniec Castle
A Virtual Tour
First Castle to the Boner Family


Belgium

Towns

Antwerp
The Old Town

Bruges
Medieval Bruges

Ghent
Medieval Ghent

Tongeren
Medieval Buildings

Roman Remains

Atuatuca Tungrorum / Tongeren
Roman Remains in the Town


Luxembourg

Towns

Luxembourg City
A Tour of the Town


City Trips

Strasbourg (France)
A Tour of the Town


Landscapes and Geology

Germany

Baltic Sea Coast
Flensburg Firth
Impressions from Rugia
Rugia: Flint Fields
Rugia: Jasmund Peninsula and Kap Arkona
Rugia: The Pier of Sellin
A Tour on the Wakenitz River

Lüneburg Heath
Hiking in the Lüneburg Heath

Harz National Park
A Collection of Tours
Arboretum Bad Grund / Hübichenstein
Bode Valley and Rosstrappe Cliff
Daneil's Cave
Devil's Wall
Ilse Valley and Ilse's Rock
Klus Rock
Lonau Falls
Oderteich Reservoir
Rappbode Reservoir
Rhume Springs
Southern Harz Karst

National Park Hainich
Oberderdorla and Hainich National Park

Nature Park Meissner-Kaufunger Wald
Blue Dome near Eschwege
Hiking in the Meissner
Hessian Switzerland
Rossbach Heath
Salt Springs at the Werra

Nature Park Reinhardswald
Old Forest at the Sababurg

Nature Park Solling-Vogler
The Forest Pasture Project
Hannover Cliffs
Raised Bog Mecklenbruch

Pretty Places in Göttingen
Spring in the Parks of Göttingen
Winter Impressions

Rivers and Lakes
Autumn at Werra/Weser
The Danube in Spring
Edersee Reservoir
A Rainy Rhine Cruise
Vineyards at Saale/Unstrut
Weser River Ferry
Weser Skywalk

Wildlife
Harz Falcon Park
Ozeaneum Stralsund: Baltic Sea Life
Ozeaneum Stralsund: North Sea Life
Red squirrels


Baltic Countries

Baltic Sea Cruise

Lithuania
Beaches at the Curonian Spit
Geology of the Curonian Spit


Great Britain

The East Coast
By Ferry to Newcastle
Impressions from the East Coast

Scottish Sea Shores
Crossing to Mull
Mull: Craignure to Fionnphort
Dunollie and Kilchurn
Highland Mountains: Inverness to John o'Groats
Pentland Firth
Staffa
Summer in Oban

Scotland by Train
West Highland Railway

Wildlife
Sea Gulls


Scandinavia

The Hurtigruten-Tour
A Voyage into Winter
Light and Shadows

Norway by Train
From Oslo to Bergen
From Trondheim to Oslo

Wildlife
Bearded Seals
Dog Sledding With Huskies
Eagles and Gulls in the Trollfjord


Geology

Fossils and Rocks
Fossilized Ammonites
Loket Meteorite (Czechia)

Photo Parades

Photo Parade 2023
Photo Parade 2024

Medieval History

Medieval Life

Warfare
Trebuchets
Late Medieval Swords

Medieval Art
The Choir Screen in the Cathedral of Mainz
The Gospels of Heinrich the Lion
The Hunting Frieze in Königslutter Cathedral
Medieval Monster Carvings
The Viking Treasure of Hiddensee

Craftmanship
Goldsmithery
Medical Instruments

The Hanseatic League

History of the Hanseatic League
Introduction and Beginnings

Hanseatic Architecture
Examples of Brick Architecture
Hall Houses (Dielenhäuser)

Goods and Trade
Stockfish Trade

Towns of the Hanseatic League
Riga
Stralsund
Tallinn / Reval

The Order of the Teutonic Knights

The Northern Crusades
The Conquest of Danzig
The Siege of Vilnius 1390

Vikings

Viking Material Culture
The Viking Treasure of Hiddensee

Viking Ships
The Nydam Ship


Germany

Geneaology

List of Medieval German Emperors
Anglo-German Marriage Connections

Kings and Emperors

The Salian Dynasty
King Heinrich IV

Staufen against Welfen
Emperor Otto IV

Princes and Lords

House Welfen
Heinrich the Lion's Ancestors
The Dukes of Braunschweig-Grubenhagen
Otto I of Braunschweig-Göttingen

The Landgraves of Thuringia
The Ludowing Landgraves of Thuringia
Albrecht II and Friedrich I of Thuringia

Dukes and Princes of other Families
Prince Wilhelm Malte of Putbus

Counts and Local Lords
The Marshals of Ebersburg
The Counts of Everstein
The Counts of Hohnstein
The Lords of Plesse
The Counts of Reichenbach
The Counts of Winzenburg

Feuds and Rebellions

Royal Troubles
Otto IV and Bishop Adalbert II of Magdeburg

Local Feuds
The Lüneburg Succession War
The Thuringian Succession War
The Star Wars


Great Britain

Kings of England

House Plantagenet
Richard Lionheart in Speyer
King Henry IV's Lithuanian Crusade

Normans, Britons, Angevins

Great Noble Houses
The Dukes of Brittany
The Earls of Richmond

Kings of Scots

House Dunkeld
Malcolm III and Northumbria
Struggle for the Throne: Malcolm III to David I
King David and the Civil War, 1
King David and the Civil War, 2

Houses Bruce and Stewart
The Early Stewart Kings

Welsh Princes

The Princes of Gwynedd
The Rise of House Aberffraw

Scotland and England

The Wars of Independence
Alexander of Argyll
The Fight for Stirling Castle

Wales and England

A History of Rebellion
Llywellyn ap Gruffudd to Owain Glyn Dŵr


Scandinavia

Kings of Denmark

House Knýtlinga
Harald Bluetooth's Flight to Pomerania

Kings of Norway

Foreign Relations
King Eirik's Scottish Marriages
King Håkon V's Swedish Politics
Beginnings of the Kalmar Union

Danish Rule in the Baltic Sea

The Duchy of Estonia
Danish Kings and German Sword Brothers

Feuds and Rebellions

Alv Erlingsson of Tønsberg


Livonia and Lithuania
(Livonia: Latvia and Estonia)

Lithuanian Princes

The Geminid Dynasty
Troublesome Cousins - Jogaila and Vytautas

The Northern Crusades

The Wars in Lithuania
The Siege of Vilnius 1390

Conflicts in Livonia
The History of Riga
The History of Reval (Tallinn)


Poland

Royal Dynasties

The Jagiełłonian Kings
Władysław Jagiełło and the Polish-Lithuanian Union

The Northern Crusades

The Conquest of Pomerania and Prussia
The Conquest of Danzig


Bohemia

Royal Dynasties

The Bohemian Kings of House Luxembourg
King Sigismund and the Hussite Wars


Luxembourg

House Luxembourg
King Sigismund


Roman History

The Romans at War

Forts and Fortifications

The German Limes
The Cavalry Fort Aalen
Limes Fort Osterburken
Limes Fort Saalburg

The Hadrian's Wall
Introduction
The Fort at Segedunum / Wallsend

Border Life
Exercise Halls
Mile Castles and Watch Towers
Soldiers' Living Quarters
Cavalry Barracks

Campaigns and Battles

Maps
The Romans in Germania

The Pre-Varus Invasion in Germania
Roman Camp Hedemünden
New Finds in 2008

The Battle of the Teutoburg Forest
Museum Park at Kalkriese

The Battle at the Harzhorn
Introduction

The Batavian Rebellion
A Short Introduction

Roman Militaria

Armour
Early Imperial Helmets
Late Roman Helmets
The Negau B Helmet

Weapons
Weapon Finds at Hedemünden
The pilum
Daggers
Swords

Other Equipment
Roman Saddles


Roman Life and Religion

Religion and Public Life

Religion
Curse Tablets and Good Luck Charms
Isis Worship
Memorial Stones
The Mithras Cult

Public Life
Roman Transport: Barges
Roman Transport: Amphorae and Barrels
Roman Water Supply

Architecture
Roman Public Baths

Domestic Life

Roman villae
Villa Urbana Longuich
Villa Rustica Wachenheim

Everyday Life
Bathing Habits
Children's Toys
Face Pots


Other Times

Neolithicum to Iron Age

Germany

Development of Civilisation
European Bread Museum, Ebergötzen
The Hutewald Project in the Solling
Open Air Museum Oerlinghausen

Neolithic Remains
Stone Burials of the Funnelbeaker Culture
The Necropolis of Oldendorf

Bronze Age / Iron Age
The Nydam Ship

Scotland

Neolithic Orkney
The Neolithic Landscape of Orkney
Ring of Brodgar
Skara Brae
Life in Skara Brae

Bronze Age / Iron Age
Clava Cairns
The Brochs of Gurness and Midhowe - Their Function in Iron Age Society

Scandinavia

Bronze / Iron Age
The Ship Setting of Gnisvärd / Gotland


Post-Medieval History

Development of Technologies
Otto von Guericke and the Magdeburg Hemispheres
Attempts at Raising the Vasa Wreck

Explorers
Fram Expedition to the North Pole
Fram Expedition to the South Pole

Arts and Literature
The Weimar Classicism