Ale's Stones
{{Short description|Stone ship in Ystad, Sweden}}
{{Infobox ancient site
|name = Ale's Stones
|alternate_name =
|image =Ales_Stenar_from_pole_camera.jpg
|alt =
|caption = Ale's Stones at Kåseberga, around ten kilometres southeast of Ystad.
|map_type =
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|relief = yes
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|coordinates = {{coord|55.382665|14.0543879|region:SE_type:landmark|display=inline}}
|location = Scania, Sweden
|region = Österlen
|type = Monument
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|built = Nordic Iron Age
|abandoned = {{circa|1200}}
|epochs =
|cultures = Norse
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|excavations =
|archaeologists = Björn Wallebom; Bengt Söderberg
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Ale's Stones ({{langx|sv|Ales stenar}} or {{langx|sv|label=none|Ale stenar}}) is a megalithic monument in Scania in southern Sweden. It is a stone ship, oval in outline, with the stones at each end markedly larger than the rest. It is {{convert|67|m|ft|abbr=on}} long formed by 59 large boulders, weighing up to 5 tonnes each.
The carbon-14 dating system for organic remains has provided seven results at the site. One indicates that the material is around 5,500 years old, whereas the remaining six indicate a date about 1,400 years ago. The latter is considered to be the most likely time for Ales Stenar to have been created. That would place its creation towards the end of the Nordic Iron Age.{{cite web|url=http://www.raa.se/cms/en/places_to_visit/our_historical_sites/ales_stenar.html |title=Ales stenar |date=2008-08-05 |publisher=Swedish National Heritage Board |accessdate=2009-05-10 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090522065053/http://www.raa.se/cms/en/places_to_visit/our_historical_sites/ales_stenar.html |archivedate=22 May 2009 |url-status=dead }}
Function
The function and purpose of Ale's stones is much disputed, and there are many different theories. It is generally believed to be a grave monument or a cult center, but another theory is that it is a sun calendar.Ales stenar information folder, Swedish National Heritage Board
A theory explained by Howard Crowhurst (ACEM, Association for the Knowledge and Study of Megaliths, in France) claims that the monument is connected with the summer solstice and lunar standstill.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=1441&v=S6aRoiQnnoE&feature=emb_logo Carnac 2015 - Les cycles de la Lune]
"The Ales Stenar, known in English as the Ale's Stones, is an ancient megalithic monument of Sweden. The stones are outlining a ship. Here we show the well-known alignment of this ship along the sunset direction on summer solstice. We propose also alignments of the stones along the northern possible moonset on major and minor lunar standstills. These astronomical alignments are shown using the Photographer's Ephemeris. It is possible that this megalithic monument was used for observing the cycles of the moon."[https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02265659 Astronomical Alignments of Ales Stenar along Sunset and Moonset Directions](Amelia Carolina Sparavigna, Department of Applied Science and Technology, Politecnico di Torino)
Excavations
In 1989, during the first archaeological excavations performed in order to scientifically investigate and date the monument, archaeologists found a decorated clay pot with burned human bones inside the ship setting. The bones are thought to come from a pyre and to have been placed in the pot at a later date. The pot's contents varied in age; some material was from 330 to 540 CE while a piece of charred food crust also found inside was determined to be from 540 to 650 CE.{{cite book|last=Strömberg |first=Märta|authorlink=Märta Strömberg|title=Amico amici: Gad Rausing den 19. maj 1997|editor=Jonas Ellerström and Gad Rausing|publisher=Signum|date=1997-05-19|chapter=Det stora skeppet på åsen|pages=51–71|isbn=91-87896-30-3|language=Swedish}} The archaeologists working on the project also found birch charcoal remains from 540 to 650 CE underneath an undisturbed boulder.{{cite web|url=http://www.zwoje-scrolls.com/as/aleseng.html|title=Ales Stenar: When? Who? What for?|last=Kobos|first=Andrew M.|year=2001|accessdate=2009-05-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100328125212/http://www.zwoje-scrolls.com/as/aleseng.html|archive-date=2010-03-28|url-status=dead}} According to the Swedish National Heritage Board, carbon-14 dating of the organic material from the site indicates that six of the samples are from around 600 CE, while one sample is from ca. 3500 BCE. The diverging sample came from soot-covered stones that are believed to be the remnants of an older hearth, found close to the ship setting. On the basis of these results, the Swedish National Heritage Board has set a suggested date of creation for Ale's Stones to 1,400 BP, which is the year 550 CE.
Gallery
File:Ales stenar - Ale's Stones - 2021 05 29.jpg|Aerial view 2021.
File:Ales stenar - KMB - 16000300030002.jpg|Aerial view.
File:Ales stenar - KMB - 16000300016281.jpg|Longitudinal view.
File:Ales stenar - KMB - 16000300037836.jpg|Information panels on site.
File:Ales stenar - KMB - 16000300016275.jpg|Side view of Ales Stone.
File:Ale's Stones in Kåseberga as seen from the ocean.jpg|Aerial view from the sea.
File:Ale Stenar.jpg|View from inside the area
References
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External links
{{Commons}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20120325113258/http://www.raa.se/cms/en/places_to_visit/our_historical_sites/ales_stenar.html The Swedish National Heritage Board's official website on Ale's Stones]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20130622161335/http://www.arkeologiuv.se/cms/showdocument/documents/extern_webbplats/arkeologiuv/publikationer_uv/rapporter/uv_rapport/2012/uvr2012_021.pdf Ales stenar: 2012 Report by Swedish National Heritage Board (in Swedish)]
{{Ship burial customs in Germanic paganism}}
{{European Standing Stones}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Archaeological sites in Sweden
Category:Megalithic monuments in Europe
Category:Germanic archaeological artifacts