Archaeologists Dig Up 5th Century Murder Mystery at ‘Swedish Pompeii’

Daily Stormer
October 5, 2013

Swedish archaeologists have uncovered an intriguing mystery on an island that is being compared to Italy’s Pompeii.

From NBC:

“It’s more of a frozen moment than you normally see in archaeology,” said Helene Wilhelmson, a researcher who specializes in the study of bones at Sweden’s Lund University. “It’s like Pompeii: Something terrible happened, and everything just stopped.”

Five bodies already have been unearthed amid the ruins of one of the settlement’s houses on the island of Öland, just off the Swedish coast. In a news release, Lund University said more human bones have been identified in other parts of the fort, suggesting there may be scores or hundreds of bodies yet to be dug out.

“There are so many bodies, it must have been a very violent and well-organized raid,” Wilhelmson said.

She and her colleagues say the scene dates to what’s known as the Migration Period, when tribes moved out from Scandinavia and other areas of northern Europe to confront a Roman Empire in decline.

During this era, it was customary for Scandinavians to burn their dead, and very few uncremated remains have previously been recovered, the university said. Was no one left to light the funeral pyre on Öland?

Another puzzling fact is that archaeologists found gilded brooches that hadn’t been plundered by the attackers — and were still buried at the site 1,500 years later.