Find of moms
The find of Mammen ( Danish Mammenfundet ) is the contents of a grave of a man who was buried around 970 AD, during the reign of Harald Blauzahn , with numerous valuable gifts in Mammen, east of Viborg in Jutland ( Denmark ). The finds from the grave are shown in the National Museum in Copenhagen . The objects are decorated in the so-called mommy style ; Details of the decoration of the textile remnants can be found on the costumes on the Bayeux Tapestry .
Grave content
A silver inlaid ax is one of the accessories . There were also several embroidered and decorated pieces of textile. These include purple-dyed silk remains , twill fabric , madder- dyed fabric, ribbon remnants from tablet weaving and a piece of cloth with an ornament that can be interpreted as a stylized lion's head. The silk remains are evidence of extensive trade relations.
Employees at the Danish National Museum have used the findings to reconstruct a costume in which the various weaving techniques were reproduced.
literature
- Egon Wamers (Ed.): The Last Vikings - The Bayeux Tapestry and Archeology . Archaeological Museum Frankfurt am Main, Frankfurt am Main 2009, ISBN 978-3-88270-506-5 .
- Moms and moms style . In: Heinrich Beck, Dieter Geuenich, Heiko Steuer (Hrsg.): Reallexikon der Germanischen Altertumskunde . 2nd Edition. tape 19 . de Gruyter, 2001, ISBN 3-11-017163-5 , p. 197-204 .
Single receipts
- ↑ Sissel F. Plathe: Clothes make people - Tracht und Mode around 1066. In: Egon Wamers (Ed.): The last Vikings - The Bayeux Tapestry and archeology. P. 68.
- ↑ Lise Gjedssø Bertelsen: The Bayeux Tapestry - An embroidered chronicle of the Viking Age. In: Egon Wamers (ed.): The last Vikings - The Bayeux Tapestry and archeology. P. 34.
Coordinates: 56 ° 24 '10.2 " N , 9 ° 37' 2.3" E