Beyond The Swedish Postcard
In the summer of 1905, archaeologists opened the earth outside the eastern wall of Visby on the Swedish island of Gotland. What they found was unprecedented in medieval archaeology: the dead buried in their armor. Chainmail coifs still wrapped around skulls. Mail shirts draped over ribcages. Gauntlets still covering finger bones. And wounds on those bodies that told a story of absolute horror. The Battle of Visby in 1361 was more than a military defeat. It was a moment when the deepest fractures in medieval society, between city and countryside, between merchant and farmer, between the people inside the walls and the people left outside; became a death sentence for nearly two thousand Gutnish farmers. In this episode of Beyond the Swedish Postcard, we trace the path from the Black Death to the battlefield. We explore how the plague hollowed out Scandinavia and created the conditions for conquest. We follow the rise of Valdemar Atterdag, the Danish king who rebuilt his shattered kingdom from nothing and then set his sights on Gotland. We walk the battlefields of Ajmundsbro and Fjäle myr, where Maria Lingström's groundbreaking 2025 doctoral thesis at Uppsala University is reshaping our understanding of the invasion; revealing five hundred conflict-related artefacts and possible evidence of early firearms. And we stand before the locked gates of Visby, asking the question that has haunted Gotland for over six hundred years: why didn't they open? Along the way, we confront uncomfortable truths about who fights and who profits, who is expendable and who survives, and how the patterns of 1361 still echo in the world we live in today. Today, the armor of the fallen can be seen at the Gotland Museum in Visby and the Swedish History Museum in Stockholm. But the dead still lie beneath a stone cross at Korsbetningen. The inscription asks us to pray for them.
23 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Beyond The Swedish Postcard!