Books by John Ljungkvist
Medeltiden är en ur flera perspektiv mycket utdragen mellanperiod i både
Gamla Uppsalas och Upps... more Medeltiden är en ur flera perspektiv mycket utdragen mellanperiod i både
Gamla Uppsalas och Uppsalatraktens landskaps- och miljöhistoria. Det är en
period då vikingatidens och medeltidens bebyggelse- och jordbruksstrukturer
till stora delar lever vidare, men också en tid av förändring då grunden för
landskapet på 1600-talets kartor skapas. Politiska och ekonomiska beslut är
något som påverkar dagens miljöer och samma sak gällde under medeltiden
då Gamla Uppsala genomgår en rad stora förändringar och en alltmer
resurskrävande stad växer upp som granne. Under medeltid fanns fortfarande
förutsättningar för djur knutna till ängs- och våtmarker. Sjön Föret var ganska stor och utgjorde en slättsjö med flera drag gemensamma med t.ex.
Hjälstaviken och Tåkern. Dessutom var de flacka betesängarna utmed Fyrisån
och Föret troligen mycket större, vilket i sin tur skapade förutsättningar för
betydligt större mängder insekter och häckningsplatser för fältfågel. Men detta
är också en tid då inte bara nya monument skapas i form av
domkyrkoprojektet. Åker, äng och våtmarker regleras allt mer och kanske kan
de påbörjade medeltida utdikningarna ses som grunden för det problemfyllda
jordbruk som framträder under 1700-talet. Dessutom genomgår området
förändringar som ingen människa kunde påverka. Landet höjde sig och
områdets stora sjö Föret grundades upp. Den sista resten av bronsålderns
skärgård försvann och då kvarnar etablerades i åarna försvårades förbindelsen
till Östersjön för såväl djur som växter och människor. Det är under
medeltiden som Gamla Uppsala tar sista steget från att ligga i Östersjöns
innersta del till att bli ett slättområde i inlandet.
During the autumn of 2013 Upplandsmuseet, in collaboration with SAU (Societas Archaeologica Upsal... more During the autumn of 2013 Upplandsmuseet, in collaboration with SAU (Societas Archaeologica Upsaliensis) investigated Burial ground 62 as well as parts of 127 and 227, Danmark Parish, in the southeast outskirts of Uppsala. The excavated features included a very large burial mound dating from the late 6th century CE, cremations from 700 – 1000 CE, and inhumations from the 10th to 13th centuries CE. Apart from purely archaeological methods, a number of assisting sciences and methods were utilised. When excavating skeletons we adopted a system of field anthropology. Apart from radiocarbon dating, a number were sampled for stable carbon and nitrogen isotopes. Osteology as well as macro fossil, wood anatomy and phosphate analyses were used. In addition a careful analysis of the different layers making up the mound and GIS-analysis were used to achieve a new and relevant understanding about burial customs and rituals, as well as social and religions conditions, both local regional, during a period of political and religious change. In the southeast edge of Burial grounds 62/127 we excavated a large burial mound 18,5 metres wide and 3 metres high and dating from the late 6th century CE. The funeral pyre had contained a grown male, accompanied by several horses, dogs, birds of prey, pigs and sheep. Artefacts were extremely fragmented by cremation, but among 800 grams of bronze we also found gilded objects with mounted garnets. Parts of a helmet, sword, shield as well as elaborate horse equipment were identified. Among other objects were imported glass, ceramics and whale bone gaming pieces. The mound had been erected in three phases, using clay from marine deposits, presumably from the lake that existed south of the area at the time. This lake was an important communication route for access to the Baltic coast as well as the inland communities of Gamla Uppsala, Valsgärde and Vendel, via various river systems. In the following centuries, the area around the mound was used as a burial ground. Four cremation burials dating from 700 – 1000 CE were excavated and found to be severely damaged by modern landscaping. Burial customs influenced by Christianity included inhumations and began to appear in the 10th century. Up until the 13th century 28 individuals were buried within the excavated parts of Burial grounds 62/127. They were of all ages and biological sexes. In the 12th century a further 12 individuals were buried within Burial ground 227. These early inhumations display great variety in terms of burial customs, body posture and body orientation. Individuals were buried with or without coffins. Very few artefacts were found in the graves. Isotope analysis indicated a substantial diet of fresh water fish. A very peculiar burial from the 12th or 13th century involved an individual who had been partially cremated in a body sized pit, along with both animals and objects.
The results of the investigation are discussed along the three areas within which new and important knowledge has been gained:
• Human lives – Skeletons and burnt bones. The conditions of people’s lives, health and diet are studied.
• Aristocratic environments – The large mound and the rune stone are discussed to highlight social structures in the Uppsala area during the Late Iron Age.
• Religious conversion – Rituals in an era of change. The long period of use provides an opportunity to generate new and relevant knowledge about burial rituals and the Christian conversion progress, as well as testing currently held views on the conversion in the region.
In the Late Iron Age, the Mälaren region contained a clearly stratified society and many sites in... more In the Late Iron Age, the Mälaren region contained a clearly stratified society and many sites in the landscape indicate the presence of an upper stratum, an elite. This concept – elite – may perhaps be seen as problematic, but in this case it is decidedly more neutral, and considerably less limiting and excluding than many other concepts.
The elite was a group that we know possessed larger farm buildings, more monumental and richly equipped graves as well as control over a large part of the specialised handicraft. The people in this elite group of society clearly advertised that they belonged to a special social unit. There are indications that these people had clear similarities with the nobility of the Middle Ages, but they were active in a society without any towns, Christianity or church administration. This dissertation discusses a number of issues concerning the elite of the Late Iron Age. Two studies are central. The first concerns six sites in the Mälaren region: Old Uppsala, Helgö, Vendel, Valsgärde, Husby in Glanshammar parish, and Ancient Sigtuna. The sites are compared to study the similarities and differences of elite settings. I investigate the evidence of different sources for the presence of great landownership, and of their importance for the rulers compared to other resources such as plunder, trade and taxation. The results indicate that the sites had many structural and economic similarities. At the same time, the resource use varied, and each site had its own unique character. The study is concluded with a discussion on the economic structure of the sites.
The second study deals with the elite in the vicinity of Uppsala, an area that mainly through Old Uppsala and the presence of boat graves are usually connected with ancient rulers. The investigation is mainly based on a number of excavated as well as non-excavated graves, some of which have never been published. In addition, a number of placenames and three unique ritual deposits are discussed. The study indicates that the people usually included in the concept of elite were quite common. This provides a new perspective for our view of two long renowned sites: Old Uppsala and Valsgärde.
Papers by John Ljungkvist
The Salme ship burials, 2023
The Vikings begin, 2018
Contribution in the exhibition publication: The Vikings begin
Discussions of pre-Viking trade and production have for many decades focused on products made of ... more Discussions of pre-Viking trade and production have for many decades focused on products made of precious metals, glass and, to some degree, iron. This is hardly surprising considering the difficulties in finding and provenancing products made of organic matter. In this article we examine gaming pieces made from bone and antler, which are not unusual in Scandinavian burials in the Vendel and Viking period (c. ad 550–1050). A special emphasis is placed on whalebone pieces that appear to dominate after around ad 550, signalling a large-scale production and exploitation of North Atlantic whale products. In combination with other goods such as bear furs, birds of prey, and an increased iron and tar production, whalebone products are part of an intensified large-scale outland exploitation and indicate strong, pre-urban trading routes across Scandinavia and Europe some 200 years before the Viking period and well before the age of the emporia.
Fornvännen, 2017
In May 2015 an extremely rare find in the shape of a complete gold and garnet pendant (fig. 1) wa... more In May 2015 an extremely rare find in the shape of a complete gold and garnet pendant (fig. 1) was made during field work by the research project Gamla Uppsala – the emergence of a mythical centre.
The purpose of this article is to present a preliminary overview of the workshop activities in th... more The purpose of this article is to present a preliminary overview of the workshop activities in the late 6th and 7th centuries in Gamla Uppsala, with special focus on the garnets. Our knowledge about the craft activities on this site has changed dramatically since 2010. We have moved from a situation with scattered assemblages of various craft-related items to the discovery of two actual workshops and a significant increase of craft-related objects. These results have provided us with major insights into the organization of high quality craftsmanship in an aristocratic setting and, not least, how garnets were transformed from raw material to finished stones for inlays in jewellery, weapons and riding equipment.
This paper focusses on animal remains associated with archaeological contexts dated to the middle... more This paper focusses on animal remains associated with archaeological contexts dated to the middle and later phases of the Scandinavian Iron Age, which corresponds to the first millennium AD. The main question to be addressed is whether this record can be used for identifying human impact on certain animal populations for modelling faunal exploitation and interregional trade. In the first part of the paper, we undertake a detailed inventory of animal finds recorded in published excavation reports, research catalogues, and in existing databases maintained primarily by the Historical Museum in Stockholm. We compare the chronological pattern identified in the burial assemblages with a chronological sequence retrieved from pitfall hunting systems located in the Scandinavian inland region. The chronologies of the animal finds from burials and the pitfall systems are then compared with dated pollenanalytical sequences retrieved in the inland region and additional archaeological assemblages, such as graves and hoards of Roman coins. In our discussion, we outline an interregional model of faunal exploitation between AD 300 and 1200, including the possible location of hunting grounds and enddistribution areas for animal products. The paper provides deeper insights into the burial record of the middle Iron Age, arguing for the need for broader interregional approaches, and focussed archaeological research in the inland regions of Scandinavia.
In 2010, the largest find of exquisite gilded silver brooches ever made in Scandinavia came to li... more In 2010, the largest find of exquisite gilded silver brooches ever made in Scandinavia came to light during a metal detector survey in a small fort on Öland in the Baltic Sea. It consisted of five hoards buried in five different houses within the fort. The brooches were of the Dreiknopfbügelfibeln/radiateheaded and relief types. Three of the hoards also contained large quantities of beads and pendants, some quite exclusive and rare. In addition, the upper part of another relief brooch probably belonged to a sixth hoard ploughed up in the late nineteenth century. In 2011, Kalmar County Museum excavations at the site of these hoard finds also revealed the traces of a massacre. Though a connection between the deposition of the hoards and the massacre is plausible, several elements suggest that the deposits are ritual in character and unrelated to the attack on the fort. The regular placing of the hoards in the right corner inside the entrance of the houses suggests ritual acts, and the composition of the hoards demonstrates that the deposits are symbolic. We conclude that the hoards and the brooches are props belonging to the interior of the forts and to activities conducted inside them; they may have been worn by some women during rituals. Why these hoards were left in the Sandby fort is, however, no doubt related to its destruction.
Dans la cadre du programme de recherche international, "Eoreigners in Early Medieval Europe", ini... more Dans la cadre du programme de recherche international, "Eoreigners in Early Medieval Europe", initié par Dieter Quast au Römisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum de Mayence, la question des objets "étrangers" dans les tombes mérovingiennes du nord de la Gaule a été examinée. Les bijoux et accessoires vestimentaires concernés, de type wisigothique et anglo-saxon et moins souvent alaman, lombard et thuringien, convernent majoritairement des tombes féminines. Le nombre limité de cas exclu une mise en relation avec les Grandes Migrations et reflète la circulation des personnes, notamment dans une perspective exogamique
About a partially excavated settlement in northern Gamla Uppsala
The emergence of Gamla Uppsala as a centre has been discussed for centuries. During the past year... more The emergence of Gamla Uppsala as a centre has been discussed for centuries. During the past years, old excavations have been incorporated into the framework of the archaeological research project Gamla Uppsala - the emergence of a mythical centre (GUAM), with GIS and excavations in combination with survey results and reinterpretations, as old excavations are placed in relation to new investigations. This article is based on the results from excavations in 2011 and 2015 and studies of previous investigations in the light of new results. We have chosen to present a stand der forschung of what we currently know about the 6th to 8th century estate in the centre of Gamla Uppsala, how it emerges as part of an unparalleled
monumentalization of the area, what we know of a Migration Period prelude and its transformation during the 8th/9th century. Today we can discuss the relationship between a multitude of elements in the complex, such as individual mounds, the great hall, workshops, economy buildings, fences, paved courtyards, post-row monuments and not least landscape development and resource exploitation on a broad scale. In our strategic work, previously isolated monuments are tied together in a project that will continue in the years ahead.
This paper will discuss a pedagogical approach to integrating the humanities and the natural scie... more This paper will discuss a pedagogical approach to integrating the humanities and the natural sciences. Our approach calls for extended collaboration between the two fields and a capacity to integrate the experimental and deductive lines of reasoning within the natural sciences with the holistic and critical perspectives of the humanities. This paper will describe and discuss how this notion is applied to the construction of a pedagogical framework or a learning environment constituted from landscape theory, GIS, and pedagogical principles derived from EBL and PL. The paper highlights how a landscape approach in combination with the interactive and dynamic properties of GIS can be used as an active learning environment crossing the interfaces of the disciplines.
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Books by John Ljungkvist
Gamla Uppsalas och Uppsalatraktens landskaps- och miljöhistoria. Det är en
period då vikingatidens och medeltidens bebyggelse- och jordbruksstrukturer
till stora delar lever vidare, men också en tid av förändring då grunden för
landskapet på 1600-talets kartor skapas. Politiska och ekonomiska beslut är
något som påverkar dagens miljöer och samma sak gällde under medeltiden
då Gamla Uppsala genomgår en rad stora förändringar och en alltmer
resurskrävande stad växer upp som granne. Under medeltid fanns fortfarande
förutsättningar för djur knutna till ängs- och våtmarker. Sjön Föret var ganska stor och utgjorde en slättsjö med flera drag gemensamma med t.ex.
Hjälstaviken och Tåkern. Dessutom var de flacka betesängarna utmed Fyrisån
och Föret troligen mycket större, vilket i sin tur skapade förutsättningar för
betydligt större mängder insekter och häckningsplatser för fältfågel. Men detta
är också en tid då inte bara nya monument skapas i form av
domkyrkoprojektet. Åker, äng och våtmarker regleras allt mer och kanske kan
de påbörjade medeltida utdikningarna ses som grunden för det problemfyllda
jordbruk som framträder under 1700-talet. Dessutom genomgår området
förändringar som ingen människa kunde påverka. Landet höjde sig och
områdets stora sjö Föret grundades upp. Den sista resten av bronsålderns
skärgård försvann och då kvarnar etablerades i åarna försvårades förbindelsen
till Östersjön för såväl djur som växter och människor. Det är under
medeltiden som Gamla Uppsala tar sista steget från att ligga i Östersjöns
innersta del till att bli ett slättområde i inlandet.
The results of the investigation are discussed along the three areas within which new and important knowledge has been gained:
• Human lives – Skeletons and burnt bones. The conditions of people’s lives, health and diet are studied.
• Aristocratic environments – The large mound and the rune stone are discussed to highlight social structures in the Uppsala area during the Late Iron Age.
• Religious conversion – Rituals in an era of change. The long period of use provides an opportunity to generate new and relevant knowledge about burial rituals and the Christian conversion progress, as well as testing currently held views on the conversion in the region.
The elite was a group that we know possessed larger farm buildings, more monumental and richly equipped graves as well as control over a large part of the specialised handicraft. The people in this elite group of society clearly advertised that they belonged to a special social unit. There are indications that these people had clear similarities with the nobility of the Middle Ages, but they were active in a society without any towns, Christianity or church administration. This dissertation discusses a number of issues concerning the elite of the Late Iron Age. Two studies are central. The first concerns six sites in the Mälaren region: Old Uppsala, Helgö, Vendel, Valsgärde, Husby in Glanshammar parish, and Ancient Sigtuna. The sites are compared to study the similarities and differences of elite settings. I investigate the evidence of different sources for the presence of great landownership, and of their importance for the rulers compared to other resources such as plunder, trade and taxation. The results indicate that the sites had many structural and economic similarities. At the same time, the resource use varied, and each site had its own unique character. The study is concluded with a discussion on the economic structure of the sites.
The second study deals with the elite in the vicinity of Uppsala, an area that mainly through Old Uppsala and the presence of boat graves are usually connected with ancient rulers. The investigation is mainly based on a number of excavated as well as non-excavated graves, some of which have never been published. In addition, a number of placenames and three unique ritual deposits are discussed. The study indicates that the people usually included in the concept of elite were quite common. This provides a new perspective for our view of two long renowned sites: Old Uppsala and Valsgärde.
Papers by John Ljungkvist
monumentalization of the area, what we know of a Migration Period prelude and its transformation during the 8th/9th century. Today we can discuss the relationship between a multitude of elements in the complex, such as individual mounds, the great hall, workshops, economy buildings, fences, paved courtyards, post-row monuments and not least landscape development and resource exploitation on a broad scale. In our strategic work, previously isolated monuments are tied together in a project that will continue in the years ahead.
Gamla Uppsalas och Uppsalatraktens landskaps- och miljöhistoria. Det är en
period då vikingatidens och medeltidens bebyggelse- och jordbruksstrukturer
till stora delar lever vidare, men också en tid av förändring då grunden för
landskapet på 1600-talets kartor skapas. Politiska och ekonomiska beslut är
något som påverkar dagens miljöer och samma sak gällde under medeltiden
då Gamla Uppsala genomgår en rad stora förändringar och en alltmer
resurskrävande stad växer upp som granne. Under medeltid fanns fortfarande
förutsättningar för djur knutna till ängs- och våtmarker. Sjön Föret var ganska stor och utgjorde en slättsjö med flera drag gemensamma med t.ex.
Hjälstaviken och Tåkern. Dessutom var de flacka betesängarna utmed Fyrisån
och Föret troligen mycket större, vilket i sin tur skapade förutsättningar för
betydligt större mängder insekter och häckningsplatser för fältfågel. Men detta
är också en tid då inte bara nya monument skapas i form av
domkyrkoprojektet. Åker, äng och våtmarker regleras allt mer och kanske kan
de påbörjade medeltida utdikningarna ses som grunden för det problemfyllda
jordbruk som framträder under 1700-talet. Dessutom genomgår området
förändringar som ingen människa kunde påverka. Landet höjde sig och
områdets stora sjö Föret grundades upp. Den sista resten av bronsålderns
skärgård försvann och då kvarnar etablerades i åarna försvårades förbindelsen
till Östersjön för såväl djur som växter och människor. Det är under
medeltiden som Gamla Uppsala tar sista steget från att ligga i Östersjöns
innersta del till att bli ett slättområde i inlandet.
The results of the investigation are discussed along the three areas within which new and important knowledge has been gained:
• Human lives – Skeletons and burnt bones. The conditions of people’s lives, health and diet are studied.
• Aristocratic environments – The large mound and the rune stone are discussed to highlight social structures in the Uppsala area during the Late Iron Age.
• Religious conversion – Rituals in an era of change. The long period of use provides an opportunity to generate new and relevant knowledge about burial rituals and the Christian conversion progress, as well as testing currently held views on the conversion in the region.
The elite was a group that we know possessed larger farm buildings, more monumental and richly equipped graves as well as control over a large part of the specialised handicraft. The people in this elite group of society clearly advertised that they belonged to a special social unit. There are indications that these people had clear similarities with the nobility of the Middle Ages, but they were active in a society without any towns, Christianity or church administration. This dissertation discusses a number of issues concerning the elite of the Late Iron Age. Two studies are central. The first concerns six sites in the Mälaren region: Old Uppsala, Helgö, Vendel, Valsgärde, Husby in Glanshammar parish, and Ancient Sigtuna. The sites are compared to study the similarities and differences of elite settings. I investigate the evidence of different sources for the presence of great landownership, and of their importance for the rulers compared to other resources such as plunder, trade and taxation. The results indicate that the sites had many structural and economic similarities. At the same time, the resource use varied, and each site had its own unique character. The study is concluded with a discussion on the economic structure of the sites.
The second study deals with the elite in the vicinity of Uppsala, an area that mainly through Old Uppsala and the presence of boat graves are usually connected with ancient rulers. The investigation is mainly based on a number of excavated as well as non-excavated graves, some of which have never been published. In addition, a number of placenames and three unique ritual deposits are discussed. The study indicates that the people usually included in the concept of elite were quite common. This provides a new perspective for our view of two long renowned sites: Old Uppsala and Valsgärde.
monumentalization of the area, what we know of a Migration Period prelude and its transformation during the 8th/9th century. Today we can discuss the relationship between a multitude of elements in the complex, such as individual mounds, the great hall, workshops, economy buildings, fences, paved courtyards, post-row monuments and not least landscape development and resource exploitation on a broad scale. In our strategic work, previously isolated monuments are tied together in a project that will continue in the years ahead.
This paper focusses on animal remains associated with archaeological contexts dated to the middle and later phases of the Scandinavian Iron Age, which corresponds to the first millennium AD. The main question to be addressed is whether this record can be used for identifying human impact on certain animal populations for modelling faunal exploitation and interregional trade. In the first part of the paper, we undertake a detailed inventory of animal finds recorded in published excavation reports, research catalogues, and in existing databases maintained primarily by the Historical Museum in Stockholm. We compare the chronological pattern identified in the burial assemblages with a chronological sequence retrieved from pitfall hunting systems located in the Scandinavian inland region. The chronologies of the animal finds from burials and the pitfall systems are then compared with dated pollenanalytical sequences retrieved in the inland region and additional archaeological assemblages, such as graves and hoards of Roman coins. In our discussion, we outline an interregional model of faunal exploitation between AD 300 and 1200, including the possible location of hunting grounds and enddistribution areas for animal products. The paper provides deeper insights into the burial record of the middle Iron Age, arguing for the need for broader interregional approaches, and focussed archaeological research in the inland regions of Scandinavia.
A special emphasis is placed on the changes of the inhumation burial rite during the transition between the Migration and Vendel period . It is a time when the chamber burials of the previous period ceases to exist . For a short time can however somewhat simpler, in some degree high status burials still be found . Along the Fyris river appears a new type of inhumation in shape of boat burials . In other areas are we seeing completely new ways how the Vendel period elite are manifesting themselves . West of the Runsa fortress is the rich Migration period inhuma- tions superseded by far more monumental mounds covering cremation burials with new ways of displaying material wealth . These changes coincide with a mix of societal changes . The international exchange system with central Europe is being abandoned in favor of the North Sea region and the settlement system begins to stabilize after long term transition phase .
See link to press release. More will follow after release in August 28.
This excavation has greatly contributed to creating an overview of the royal manor area from different times. From the turning point, the design, dating and abandonment of the great hall, as well as actions related to this, have become much clearer. From the other surfaces, significant complementary knowledge of how the royal manor has been structured and the organization, scope and continuity of economic activities has been gained. The excavation has raised new issues concerning changes at the site during the 7th C as well as why some phases lack material evidence.
- Investigate and concretize the abundant but largely undated settlement remains detected 1957-58 west of the southern Kungsgården plateau.
- Investigate the remains in the vast but hitherto unexplored northern Kungsgården plateau.
- Further investigate the nature of the settlement remains in the farmland north of the Kungsgården plateaus.
The trench west of the southern Kungsgården plateau was placed over and alongside one of the 1957-58 trenches in order to relate to possible grubenhauser (SFB). Under the turf and the tilled soil, appeared a very dense presence of features consisting mostly of postholes but also two possible grubenhausers, pits and a large hearth. The dates of the features (14C) and the artefacts ranged from the 5th to the 20th centuries, but with a strong emphasis on the 5th -13th century. The artefacts consisted of wattle and daub, pottery, fragments of molds and a crucible as well as an large quantity of unusually well-preserved animal bones including fishbones from the 5/6th century. The large hearth was 14C-dated to the 12th century and contained slag and pieces from an oven.
The trenches on the north Kungsgården plateau revealed a complex stratigraphy reflecting a range of building phases with 14C-datings from late the 4th to the 10th century and artefacts from the 13/14th century. The find material consisted of animal bones, beads, clasp, comb, pottery, slag, spur and wattle and daub.
In the farmland north of the Kungsgården plateaus five test trenches were excavated. The results showed that there were preserved cultural layers and features from the Iron Age. They complement earlier results from metal detector surveys and a recent GPR survey. They stress that the arable land holds some well preserved settlement remains that stretches from late 4th -11th century.
research tools, also provides an educational platform to adapt research training at the advanced level and to establish cross-institutional research collaborations. The paper presents our collective experience from 10 years of learning landscapes and of using landscape as a conceptual frame in teaching archaeology and in building student designed research approaches that explore the long term social and environmental relations. As will be shown, landscape, provides a conceptual base, that enables even first year students to build smaller
research projects and address research questions, that constitutes not only new approaches in archeological analyses but also contribute with new understanding of the prehistoric past. The paper critically reviews the pedagogical methodologies and conceptual frames used and we also suggest that some of these methodologies are relevant also for larger cross-disciplinary research projec.
Small and large-scale excavations yielding important results have recently been conducted in the famous central place and burial ground of Old Uppsala, Sweden. Once a Vendel period royal manor, specialized craft centre and famous Viking Age cult centre, the present-day Old Uppsala is a rural and somewhat peripheral suburb. The central institutions established here during the Late Iron Age and Early Medieval period have all been relocated to the more urban setting of present day Uppsala, a process completed as early as the 14th century. The site retained a special significant position in the surrounding rural landscape in the Early-Modern period, both as a royal farm and as a political and religious arena, linked to the festivities of Saint Erik and the developing nation state. Recent excavations by Uppsala University and Upplandsmuseet have clarified the previously understudied later phases of the settlement around the royal manor and the later cathedral, shedding new light on structures relating to royal and ecclesiastical manors as well as historical sources. This presentation will summarize the results so far and address questions concerning the ever-changing concepts of centrality, urbanism and rurality related to the site.