Aun the Old (Old Norse Aunn inn gamli , Latinized Auchun , Proto-Norse *Audawiniʀ : English: "Edwin the Old") is a mythical Swedish king of the House of Yngling in the Heimskringla . Aun was the son of Jorund , and had ten sons, nine of which he was said to have sacrificed in order to prolong his own life. Based on the internal chronology of the House of Yngling , Aun would have died late in the fifth century. He was succeeded by his son Egil Vendelcrow ( Íslendingabók : Egill Vendilkráka ) identified with Ongentheow of the Beowulf narrative and placed in the early sixth century.
46-605: Ruling from his seat in Uppsala , Aun was reputedly a wise king who made sacrifices to the gods. However, he was not of a warlike disposition and preferred to live in peace. He was attacked and defeated by the Danish prince Halfdan . Aun fled to the Geats in Västergötland , where he stayed for 25 years until Halfdan died in his bed in Uppsala . Upon Halfdan's death Aun returned to Uppsala. Aun
92-406: A scramasax , but according to another interpretation, they were part of a belt. The dead was also given several glass beakers, a tafl game , a comb and a hone . Most scholars agree that the mound was either raised for a woman or for a young man and a woman as the remains of a woman and boy were found. Hildebrand reburied most of the remains, so a new excavation will need to be undertaken before
138-460: A chair. When he had sacrificed a son for the eighth time, he could no longer get out of his bed. When he had sacrificed his ninth son, he was so old that he had to feed, like a little child, by suckling on a horn. After ten years he wanted to sacrifice his tenth and last son and name the province of Uppsala The Ten Lands . However, the Swedes refused to allow him to make this sacrifice and so he died. He
184-535: A ducal coronet , blazoned thus: "Gules, a Royal Orb Or gemmed of the field and Azure with the cross bottoned Argent." Despite the fact that the Uppsala County has a different name and a smaller territory, it was granted the same coat of arms in 1940. Uppland was historically divided into chartered cities and districts. Within Roslagen they were called skeppslag (which roughly means "ship district"), and in
230-498: A few words about the religious beliefs of the Swedes. That nation has a magnificent temple, which is called Uppsala, located not far from the city of Sigtuna. In this temple, built entirely of gold, the people worship the statues of three gods. A general festival for all the provinces of Sweden is customarily held at Uppsala every nine years. Participation in this festival is required of everyone. Kings and their subjects, collectively and individually, send their gifts to Uppsala; and –
276-539: A name which is commonly encountered in especially older English literature as Upland . Its Latinised form, which is occasionally used, is Uplandia . Uppland is famous for having the highest concentration of runestones in the world, with as many as 1,196 inscriptions in stone left by the Vikings . The traditional provinces of Sweden serve no administrative or political purposes, but are historical and cultural entities. The corresponding administrative county , or län ,
322-410: A thing more cruel than any punishment – those who have already adopted Christianity buy themselves off from these ceremonies. The sacrifice is as follows: Of every kind of male creature, nine victims are offered. By the blood of these creatures it is the custom to appease the gods. Their bodies, moreover, are hanged in a grove which is adjacent to the temple. This grove is so sacred to the people that
368-524: Is Uppsala County , which occupies the larger part of the territory. The bulk of the population, however, is within Stockholm County . Minor parts of the province are also in Västmanland , Gävleborg , and Södermanland Counties . Uppland's arms were granted in 1560, distinctive in its depiction of a globus cruciger . Historically, Uppland ranked as a duchy and the coat of arms is represented with
414-545: Is a historical province or landskap on the eastern coast of Sweden , just north of Stockholm , the capital. It borders Södermanland , Västmanland and Gästrikland . It is also bounded by lake Mälaren and the Baltic Sea . On the small uninhabited island of Märket in the Baltic, Uppland has a very short and unusually shaped land border with Åland , an autonomous province of Finland . The name literally means up land ,
460-520: Is a parish and a village outside Uppsala in Sweden . It had 17,973 inhabitants in 2016. As early as the 3rd century AD and the 4th century AD and onwards, it was an important religious, economic and political centre. Early written sources show that already during prehistory, Gamla Uppsala was widely famous in Northern Europe as the residence of Swedish kings of the legendary Yngling dynasty. In fact,
506-714: Is the name of the three large barrows located in Gamla Uppsala. According to folklore, the three gods Thor , Odin and Freyr would be at rest in Kungshögarna or Uppsala högar (from the Old Norse word Haugr meaning mound or barrow; cognate English Howe ). In the 19th and 20th centuries, they were speculated to hold the remains of three kings of the semi-legendary House of Ynglings and were thus known as Aun 's Mound , Adils 's Mound and Egil 's Mound . Today their geographical locations are used instead and they are called
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#1732852697503552-504: The Eastern Mound , Middle Mound and Western Mound . They are dated to the 5th and 6th centuries. As Sweden's oldest national symbols they are even depicted on the covers of books about the Swedish national identity. In the 6th century, Gamla Uppsala was the location of royal burials. The location was chosen carefully and in order to make them majestic. The tumuli were constructed on top of
598-502: The Temple at Uppsala : Frey took the kingdom after Njord, and was called drot by the Swedes, and they paid taxes to him. He was, like his father, fortunate in friends and in good seasons. Frey built a great temple at Uppsala, made it his chief seat, and gave it all his taxes, his land, and goods. Then began the Upsal domains, which have remained ever since. Saxo Grammaticus adds that Freyr began
644-451: The scolia , there is an additional description: Near that temple is a very large tree with widespread branches which are always green both in winter and summer. What kind of tree it is nobody knows. There is also a spring there where the pagan are accustomed to perform sacrifices and to immerse a human being alive. As long as his body is not found, the request of the people will be fulfilled. A golden chain encircles that temple and hangs over
690-473: The 1080s the Christian king Ingi was exiled for refusing to perform the sacrifices. Instead Blot-Sweyn was elected, but he was killed by Ingi who could then reclaim his throne. Its great importance in Swedish tradition led to the location of Sweden's first Archbishopric in Gamla Uppsala in 1164. In practice, however, it had lost its strategic importance when it gradually lost ready access to navigable waters as
736-714: The 1296, when it was mentioned that it included the Folklands of Fjärdhundraland , Attundaland , Tiundaland and Roslagen . The Swedish capital of Stockholm is divided between two provinces. The southern half lies in Södermanland and the northern half in Uppland. Uppsala is the seat of the only archbishop of the Lutheran Church of Sweden . Before the Protestant Reformation , the archdiocese and archbishop were within
782-422: The 12th century. The stone building may have been preceded by a wooden church and probably by the large Temple at Uppsala . After a fire in 1240, the nave and transepts of the cathedral were removed, leaving only the choir and central tower, and with the addition of the sacristy and the porch gave the church its present outer appearance. In the 15th century, vaults were added as well as chalk paintings. Among
828-530: The Middle East which were probably part of a casket. The finds show the distant contacts of the people of Uppland in the 6th century. Gamla Uppsala Church ( Gamla Uppsala kyrka ) was the seat of the Archbishopric of Sweden prior to 1273, when the seat was moved to Östra Aros (Östra Aros was then renamed Uppsala due to a papal request). The old cathedral was probably built in the 11th century, but finished in
874-457: The Strong's death, Aun once again returned to Uppsala and once again sacrificed a son to Odin; this time Odin told the king that he would remain living as long as he sacrificed a son every ten years and that he had to name one of the Swedish provinces after the number of sons he sacrificed. When Aun had sacrificed a son for the seventh time, he was so old that he could not walk but had to be carried on
920-805: The area was settled during the Nordic Bronze Age , but most of the grave fields are from the Iron Age and the Viking Age . The great grave field south of the Royal Mounds is from the Roman Iron Age and the Germanic Iron Age . Near the vicarage, a few unburnt graves from the Viking Age have been excavated. Under the present church in Gamla Uppsala have been found the remains of one or several large wooden buildings. Some archaeologists believe that they are
966-422: The ashes be cast into the sea or buried in the earth. Thus, said he, every one will come to Valhalla with the riches he had with him upon the pile; and he would also enjoy whatever he himself had buried in the earth. For men of consequence a mound should be raised to their memory, and for all other warriors who had been distinguished for manhood a standing stone; which custom remained long after Odin's time. [...] It
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#17328526975031012-413: The controversy can be settled. What is quite certain is that the dead belonged to a royal dynasty. In 1874, Hildebrand started an excavation of the western mound and opened an enormous shaft right into the cairn in the centre of the mound. Under the cobble stones, there were the charred remains of the funeral fire. In the western mound were found the remains of a man and animals, probably for food during
1058-427: The father of Aukun, who, in the feebleness of a protracted old age, during the nine years before his death is said to have abandoned the consumption of solid food and only sucked milk from a horn, like a babe-in-arms. Aukun's son was Egil Vendelkråke, [...] Nerman, B. Det svenska rikets uppkomst . Stockholm, 1925. Gamla Uppsala Gamla Uppsala ( Swedish: [ˈɡâmːla ˈɵ̂pːˌsɑːla] , Old Uppsala )
1104-435: The gables of the building. Those who approach see its gleam from afar off because the shrine, which is located on a plain, is encircled by mountains so situated as to give the effect of a theatre. For nine days feasts and sacrifices of this kind are celebrated. Every day they sacrifice one human being in addition to other animals, so that in nine days there are 72 victims which are sacrificed. This sacrifice takes place about
1150-504: The human sacrifices at Gamla Uppsala: Also Frey, the regent of the gods, took his abode not far from Uppsala, where he exchanged for a ghastly and infamous sin-offering the old custom of prayer by sacrifice, which had been used by so many ages and generations. For he paid to the gods abominable offerings, by beginning to slaughter human victims. The sacrifices at the Temple at Uppsala are described by Adam of Bremen : At this point I shall say
1196-438: The journey. The remains of a warrior's equipment were found. Luxurious weapons and other objects, both domestic and imported, show that the buried man was very powerful. These remains include a Frankish sword adorned with gold and garnets and a board game with Roman pawns of ivory . He was dressed in a costly suit made of Frankish cloth with golden threads, and he wore a belt with a sumptuous buckle. There were four cameos from
1242-479: The land rose owing to the constant post-glacial rebound . People have been buried in Gamla Uppsala for 2,000 years, since the area rose above water. Originally there were between 2,000 and 3,000 mounds in the area but most have become farmland, gardens and quarries. Today only 250 barrows remain. In the parish there are more than 1,000 preserved archaeological remains, but many more have been removed by agriculture. There are cairns of splintered stone that reveal that
1288-582: The medieval wooden sculptures there are three crucifixes from the 12th, 13th and 15th centuries. Archbishop Valerius was buried here. King Eric IX of Sweden was as well, before being moved to Uppsala Cathedral . Astronomer, physicist and mathematician Anders Celsius (1701–1744) was also buried at Gamla Uppsala Church next to his grandfather Magnus Celsius (1621–1679). 59°53′49″N 17°37′44″E / 59.897°N 17.629°E / 59.897; 17.629 Uppland Uppland ( Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɵ̌pːland] )
1334-518: The northern part consists of farms. Medieval Scandinavians held Gamla Uppsala as one of the oldest and most important locations in Scandinavia. The Danish chronicler Saxo Grammaticus held Odin himself to have resided in Gamla Uppsala far back in the mists of time: At this time there was one Odin, who was credited over all Europe with the honour, which was false, of godhead, but used more continually to sojourn at Uppsala; and in this spot, either from
1380-710: The oldest Scandinavian sources, such as Ynglingatal , the Westrogothic law and the Gutasaga talk of the King of the Swedes (Suiones) as the "King at Uppsala". It was the main centre of the Swedes. During the Middle Ages , it was the largest village of Uppland , the eastern part of which probably originally formed the core of the complex of properties belonging to the Swedish Crown,
1426-703: The one tenacious of life had to receive the food of an infant a second time. And he turned the narrower part of the sword of the bull [HORN] toward himself when the reddener of kinsmen [Aunn] drank lying down [from] the tip of the sword of the yoke-reindeer [BULL > HORN]. The grey-haired eastern king could not hold up the sword of the bull [HORN]. The Historia Norwegiæ presents a Latin summary of Ynglingatal , older than Snorri's quotation (continuing after Jorund ): Iste genuit Auchun, qui longo vetustatis senio IX annis ante obitum suum densæ usum alimoniæ postponens lac tantum de cornu ut infans suxisse fertur. Auchun vero genuit Eigil cognomento Vendilcraco [...] He became
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1472-506: The remains of the Temple of Uppsala , while others hold that comes from an early Christian wooden church. Churches were often built on pre-Christian sacred sites, though. Adjacent to the present church there is a plateau of clay, the Plateau of the Royal Estate ( Kungsgårdsplatån ), on which archaeologists have found the remains of a large hall . The Royal Mounds (Swedish: Kungshögarna )
1518-565: The remains of the charred grave offerings. Among the most important finds in the eastern mound were many fragments of decorated bronze panels with a dancing warrior carrying a spear. These panels have probably adorned a helmet of the Vendel Age type, common in Uppland (the only foreign examples being the Sutton Hoo and Staffordshire helmets). There were also finds of gold which probably had adorned
1564-417: The rest of the province hundreds . The abovementioned districts and cities have no administrative function today. The population of Uppland was 1,602,652 as of 31 December 2016. The provincial population corresponds to the different overlapping counties as follows: Uppland is the birthplace of Bridget of Sweden (1303 – 23 July 1373). The earliest unambiguous mention of the province of Uppland comes from
1610-407: The ridge. By burning the dead king and his armour, he was moved to Valhalla by the consuming force of the fire. The fire could reach temperatures of 1500 °C. The remains were covered with cobblestones and then a layer of gravel and sand and finally a thin layer of turf. Thus he (Odin) established by law that all dead men should be burned, and their belongings laid with them upon the pile, and
1656-432: The separate trees in it are believed to be holy because of the death or putrefaction of the sacrificial victims. There even dogs and horses hang beside human beings. (A certain Christian told me that he had seen seventy-two of their bodies hanging up together.) The incantations, however, which are usually sung in the performance of a libation of this kind are numerous and disgraceful, and it is better not to speak of them. In
1702-457: The sloth of the inhabitants or from its own pleasantness, he vouchsafed to dwell with somewhat especial constancy. This tradition was also known by the Icelandic historian Snorri Sturluson , who, however had Odin reside in nearby Fornsigtuna , whereas the god Freyr lived in Gamla Uppsala. Freyr is also said to have founded two of the central institutions of Iron Age Sweden, the Uppsala öd and
1748-495: The so-called Uppsala öd , of which the western part consisted of the royal estate itself, kungsgården . It was also the location of the Thing of all Swedes which was a thing (general assembly) held from prehistoric times to the Middle Ages , at the end of February or early March. It was held in conjunction with a great fair called Disting , and a Norse religious celebration called Dísablót . The Law of Uppland says that it
1794-482: The time of the vernal equinox . The 16th century Johannes Magnus , the Archbishop of Uppsala, asserted that the city was anciently founded by, and named for, an early Swedish king named Ubbo (Uppsala = Ubbo's Hall), who would have supposedly reigned c. 2300 BCE . However, in the absence of any corroborating evidence, Magnus' accounts no longer enjoy widespread acceptance among scholars today. It
1840-529: Was a symbolic moment when Pope John Paul II visited Scandinavia in 1989 and held an open-air mass at the royal mounds in Gamla Uppsala, as this was a Norse religion cultic centre, which became Sweden's first archbishopric in 1164. In 2000, the Swedish AsatruSociety restarted the tradition of holding blóts at Gamla Uppsala. It is a testimony to the sanctity of the location in the mindset of followers of medieval Norse religion that Gamla Uppsala
1886-521: Was at this assembly that the king proclaimed that the fleet levy would be summoned for warfare during the summer, and all the crews, rowers, commanders and ships were decided. It was not only the Norse cultic centre, it also became Sweden's archbishopric in 1164. Gamla Uppsala lies on Fyris Wolds , a cultivated plain in the valley of the River Fyris which is densely populated in its southern part, while
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1932-488: Was buried in a mound at Uppsala and succeeded by his last son Egil. From that day, dying in bed of old age was called Aun's sickness . Knátti endr at Uppsǫlum ánasótt Aun of standa. Ok þrálífr þiggja skyldi jóðs alað ǫðru sinni. Ok sveiðurs at sér hverfði mækis hlut inn mjávara, es okhreins ôttunga rjóðr lǫgðis odd liggjandi drakk. Máttit hárr hjarðar mæki austrkonungr upp of halda. Decrepitude long ago overtook Aunn at Uppsala. And
1978-499: Was given to Bror Emil Hildebrand , the director-general of the National Archives. In 1846, he undertook the excavation of the nine-metres-tall (30 ft) Eastern mound with the hope of finding the grave of a Swedish king of old. The excavation was complex and generated a lot of publicity. A 25-metre-long (82 ft) tunnel was dug into the mound, where they found a pot of clay filled with burnt bones and around it there were
2024-505: Was now 60 years old, and in an attempt to live longer he sacrificed his son to Odin , who had promised that this would mean he would live for another 60 years. After 25 years, Aun was attacked by Halfdan 's cousin Ale the Strong . Aun lost several battles and had to flee a second time to Västergötland . Ale the Strong ruled in Uppsala for 25 years until he was killed by Starkad the old . After Ale
2070-464: Was the last stronghold of pre-Christian, Norse Germanic kingship . During the 1070s and 1080s there appears to have been a renaissance of Norse religion with the magnificent Temple at Uppsala described in a contested account through an eye-witness by Adam of Bremen . Adam of Bremen relates of the Uppsala of the 1070s and describes it as a pagan cult centre with the enormous Temple at Uppsala containing wooden statues of Odin, Thor and Freyr. Sometime in
2116-471: Was their faith that the higher the smoke arose in the air, the higher he would be raised whose pile it was; and the richer he would be, the more property that was consumed with him. In the 1830s, some scholars claimed that the mounds were pure natural formations and not barrows. This affront to ancient Swedish national symbols could not be accepted by the future Swedish king Karl XV and in order to remove any doubt, he decided to start an excavation. The task
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