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Gotlandic Picture Stones - The Online Edition

GP 391 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs V









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Parish Find Location 
Stenkyrka

Find Location 
The Lilla Bjärs cemetery in Stenkyrka parish, on a stone mound.

Find Context Classification 
Grave

Coordinate Find Location (lat) 
6410855

Coordinate Find Location (long) 
710614

Present Location Classification 
SHM Storage

Coordinate Present Location (lat) 
6581391

Coordinate Present Location (long) 
675775

Material 
Limestone

Height 
82

Width 
40

Thickness 
16

Lindqvist Type 

Lindqvist Shape 

Iconographic Keywords 
 

Runic Inscription or not 
No

Context and Discovery 
The cemetery of Lillbjärs (or Lilla Bjärs, sometimes just Bjärs, also as Bjers), in Stenkyrka parish is one of the largest and most important grave fields on Gotland (RAÄ Stenkyrka 26:1; Lindqvist 1941/42 II, p. 118; Thunmark-Nylén 1995–2006 III:2, p. 627). It includes more than 1000 visible stone settings (rösen and other circular or almost circular stone mounds), as well as a ship-shaped stone setting from the Bronze Age (5 x 2.25 m), and a monumental (17 m in diameter) grave mound called ʻÄuglehaugʼ (or ʻUgglehaugʼ), which probably dates to the Migration Period. An old path of about 550 m leads through the entire area in an east-west direction. Many of the graves were robbed, and only a small number have been excavated, including about a dozen dating to the Viking Period. Remarkable features of the stone mounds are a surrounding dry-stone wall consisting of several layers of limestone slabs, as well as the frequent occurrence of grave orbs (large spherical stones) (gravklot), erected stone slabs, and picture stones in the immediate context of the (Vendel or Viking Period) graves (ibid. pp. 582–583). Lindqvist published nineteen picture stones from this grave field – GP 369–373, 377–381, 388–396, 429–431, 440 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs I–XIX.

“In November 1908, O. V. Wennersten reported in a letter to the National Antiquarian that a local, Emil Svensson in Tune, had discovered three picture stones on the ground belonging to Lillbjärs and taken custody of them. […] On this occasion, the antiquarian Emil Eckhoff visited the find place during the following summer and sent to SHM the stones [Stenkyrka Lillbjärs I–VI] as well as three fragments of another slab, which, however, did not clearly represent a picture stone. He also collected numerous grave orbs (gravklot) […]. In 1911, [Fredrik Nordin] visited the site and was given more information by Svensson about the find place and the circumstances of the discovery of the stones […]. When [Fredrik Nordin] returned in 1913 to conduct excavations, Svensson in the meantime had moved away, and unfortunately, it turned out to be impossible to locate all the find places described by him” (ibid.). Nordin excavated a number of stone settings in 1913 as well as during the following summer and discovered eight more picture stones in situ (Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VII–XIV). Between 1910 and 1912, three more picture stones were reported to Gotlands Museum by Svensson and moved to Visby where they are still kept today (Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XV–XVIII). Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XIX was found later, in 1927.

Most of the picture stones from Stenkyrka church presumably came from the Lillbjärs cemetery as well. Nevertheless, the stock of picture stones from this site can by no means have been recorded completely, and there is good reason to believe that this grave field in the future will provide even more discoveries (cf. Lindqvist 1941/42 II, p. 118).

The stones I–VI were discovered by the worker Emil Svensson in 1908. The picture stone Stenkyrka Lillbjärs V was collected by Svensson near the road in the southern part of the grave field (Lindqvist 1941/42 II, p. 118). “This stone was found in the upper part of a stone mound with a diameter of 6 m, about 25 m south of the find place of [GP 390 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs] III. The stone lay just south of the stone setting’s centre and had fallen over, with the head towards the south” (ibid. 124). The picture stones I–VI (SHM 13742) were delivered to Statens Historiska Museum by antiquarian Emil Eckhoff in 1909 (Fornvännen 1909, pp. 253–354).
GP 369 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs IV
GP 370 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VII
GP 371 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs IX
GP 372 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XIII
GP 373 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XIX
GP 377 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VIa
GP 378 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VIb
GP 379 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VIc
GP 380 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VId
GP 381 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VIe
GP 388 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs I
GP 389 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs II
GP 390 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs III
GP 392 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs VIII
GP 393 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XIV
GP 394 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XV
GP 395 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XVII
GP 396 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XVIII
GP 429 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XVI
GP 430 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XI
GP 431 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs XII
GP 440 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs X

Measurements, Material and Condition 
“Limestone slab, 16 cm thick. The obverse is even, the narrow sides are hewn at right angles towards it, the reverse is rough and unworked. The total height is 82 cm, of which probably no less than 65–70 cm was intended to be visible above ground. The root, which survived in its entirety, has an almost straight lower edge that enabled such an installation. The width of the head is 40 cm, that of the neck 32 cm” (Lindqvist 1941/42 II, p. 124). The mushroom-shaped monument is completely preserved. In the lower part, the slab is dark in colour and still overgrown by lichen.

Description of Ornament and Images 
The stone is not painted, and Olof Sörling’s sketch-like drawing published in Lindqvist’s book (1941/42 II, fig. 514), which does not depict any carvings, is the only documentation available. Nevertheless, there are remains of the decoration discernable on the stone, which are described by Lindqvist as follows: “The stone is decorated with at least 3 mm wide and 1 mm deep lines with rounded bases and with faintly chiseled background fields. Owing to severe weathering, the approximately 8 cm wide framing border (probably with ribbon pattern) is only indistinctly discernible. In the field, beneath a horizontal line just below the neck, probably two men standing upright are shown” (ibid. p. 124).

Interpretation of the Imagery 
No interpretation

Type and Dating 
Mushroom-shaped late-type ʻdwarf stoneʼ, which means Lindqvist’s ʻAbschnittʼ C/D or E. Those stones, if only few remains of decoration are left, can only be roughly dated to the period between the 8th century and about AD 1100.

References 
Fornvännen 1909, pp. 253–354; Lindqvist 1941/42 II, pp. 118, 124, fig. 514.

 
Fyndplats
Bildstenen påträffades 1908 på ett gravröse, vid grävningar på gravfältet Lillbjärs. Överlämnades till Statens Historiska Museum 1909.

Nuvarande lokalisering
Statens Historiska Museum, magasinet i Tumba

Beskrivning
Helt bevarad ”dvärgsten” (period CD eller E), 82 cm hög och som bredast 40 cm. Bildstenen är vittrad, men med rester av kantdekor och uppdelad i två bildfält. Möjligen spår av två stående män i det nedre bildfältet.

Datering
Kan inte dateras med säkerhet, men tillhör perioden 700-1000-talen.

Tolkning
Ingen tolkning

AA

Title
GP 391 Stenkyrka Lillbjärs V

Jan Peder Lamm ID 
281

Statens Historiska Museer ID 
13742

Lindqvist Title 
Stenkyrka, Lillbjärs V


ATA


Last modified Apr 17, 2025

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