| Lilleberge Viking Burial | |
|---|---|
| Size | Ht 23 cm, Width 20 cm |
| Created | 9th-10th Centuries AD |
| Period/culture | Viking |
| Present location | British Museum |
| Identification | 1891,1021.67 |
TheLilleberge Viking Burial orLilleberge Ship Burial is a major hoard ofViking objects found in a barrow at Lilleberge inNamdalen, centralNorway in the late nineteenth century. Since 1891, it has been an important part of the British Museum's early medieval collection.[1]
Lilleberge is located inNord-Trøndelag county in the district ofNamdalen. A large shipbarrow in the vicinity of Lilleberge was excavated in the 1886 by the British archaeologist, Alfred Heneage Cocks. The barrow was over 40 metres in length and contained a ship that was 10 metres long. Cocks later took all the finds to England and sold them to theBritish Museum in 1891.
The grave group from Lilleberge represents an important assemblage ofVikingjewellery and other artefacts that belonged to a prominent female dignitary from the local tribe. Probably the most significant object from the burial is the almost intactwhalebone plaque[2] which may have served as a cutting board for food or as a surface to smooth items of clothing.
Other objects from Lilleberge include a pair of copper alloy ovalbrooches, necklaces made of coloured glass beads, aspindle-whorl, a gilded Celtic mount (that was only recently discovered in the British Museum's stores[3]), an iron pot stand, rivets from a Viking boat and skeletal remains from the deceased.