Prerequisite:
Admission open to all students with an interest in medieval history and archaeology. Students are recommended, but not required, to take EUH-3182 (Medieval Archaeology) in advance.
Enrollment:
For a summer period of six weeks, the course enrollment
is no more than 10 students. Students taking this course cannot re-take
it for more academic credit.

Credit
This course is offered for six (6) semester hours of coursework. The credit for these hours is to be applied entirely to History (EUH-4186). The course is offered in cooperation with the Department of Archaeology and Ancient History at the Lund University and will take place in Uppåkra near Lund in southern Sweden. Classes will be taught, using lectures and class discussions, supplemented by on-site visits, laboratory work and fieldwork. Participation in an ongoing research excavation will be an integral part of the course. Two weeks of field trips are included in the course schedule. For more details, see the handout.
Textbooks:

There is no attendance policy, but you are responsible for attending all lectures and reading the required texts. The basis for evaluation of performance will be class participation, one exam, and satisfactory fieldwork. The exam will consist of two parts: an identification and/or multiple-choice part, and a short essay, in which you will be asked to synthesize your knowledge of the topic, dropping in facts to show that you understand the concrete aspects of that topic. Make-up exam will be given for very serious reasons, in which case you will have to produce some official proof. The exam counts for twenty percent of the final grade. The fieldwork component will count for 70 percent, of which forty percent represents the journal kept during the four weeks of fieldwork. The remaining ten percent of your overall grade is for participation in class discussions.

Course weekly schedule (lectures and discussions):
Introduction. Archaeology in the classroom,
archaeology in the field.
What is medieval archaeology?
Birgit Arrhenius, “The ancient Svearike—myth or archaeological reality?” Quaestiones Medii Aevi Novae 12 (2007), 191-214.
From culture history to the New ArchaeologyGreene and Moore 7-20 see a video presentation of Thomsen's Three-Age system, as well as the short biographies of Gustaf Kossinna and Oskar Montelius
Rural archaeology: open settlements and housingGreene and Moore 148-189 see brief presentations of the principles of radiocarbon dating and of luminiscence dating
visit the Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research at the University of Arizona
Hans Andersson, “Reflections on Swedish medieval rural archaeology,” in Archäologie des Mittelalters und Bauforschung im Hanseraum. Ein Festschrift für Günter P. Fehring, edited by Manfred Gläser (Rostock: Reich, 1993), pp. 83-91.
Sofia Andersson and Eva Svensson, “The local and regional
arena of a Middle Age Swedish farm,” in Rural
Settlements in Medieval
Eva Svensson, “Gender and spatial pattern in the Scandinavian farmstead and outland,” in Utmark: the Outfield as Industry in the Iron Age and the Middle Ages, edited by Ingunn Holm, Sonja Innselset, and Ingrid Øje (Bergen: Department of Archaeology, 2005), pp. 157-170.
László Bartosiewicz, “People and animals: the
archaeozoologist’s perspective,” in People
and Nature in Historical Perspective, edited by József Laszlovszky and
Péter Szabó (
Peter Norman, “Outer archipelago fishing as a resource in
the societies of the Late Iron Age and the Middle Ages,” Eesti Arheoloogia Ajakiri 13 (2009), no. 2, 132-150.
Bengt Jacobsson, “Trelleborg in Scania. Late Iron Age
settlement, late Viking-age ring fort and high medieval town,” Hikuin 25 (1998), 15-22.
Jørgen Skaarup, “Medieval castles and castle mounds on the
islands south of
Hans Lind, Viveka Löndahl, Susanne Pettersson, “The unknown
castle: the archaeological aspects of lordship, household and rural environment,”
in Military Studies in Medieval
Mary A. MacLeod, “The moot question of urbanism: recent excavations at Birka,” Northern Studies 33 (1998), 11-23.
Peter Carelli, “The past and future of archaeology in
Bertil Helgesson, “Uppåkra in the 5th to 7th
centuries. The transformation of a central place and its hinterland,” in Central Places in the Migration and
Merovingian Periods. Papers from the 52nd Sachsensymposium, Lund,
August 2001, edited by Brigitta Hårdh and Lars Larsson (
Lars Larsson, “A ceremonial building as a ‘home of the gods’? Central buildings in the central place of Uppåkra,” in The Gudme-Gudhem Phenomenon. Papers Presented at a Workshop Organized by the Centre for Baltic and Scandinavian Archaeology (ZBSA), Schleswig, April 26th and 27th, 2010, edited by O. Grim and A. Pesch (Neumünster: Wachholtz, 2011), pp. 189-206.
Christer Carlsson, “The religious orders of knighthood in
medieval

Airfare tickets, passports, visas, adequate medical insurance (including emergency repatriation insurance), and other travel expenses are the responsibility of students. Upon request, assistance with group rates for airfare may be provided.
The excavation site is located just outside the city of Lund, on the road to Malmö, in the province of Skåne (Skania), in southern Sweden. Housing and meals will be offered in the CheckInn bed-and-breakfast inn in Lund, at a distance of only 3 miles to the northeast from the archaeological site. There will be field trips in the area, to Copenhagen (Denmark), Kristianstad and Malmö (Sweden), and Stralsund (Germany), and a mini-van will be rented at a rate included in the total cost above.

© 2011 Florin Curta