Under the Counter, Under the Radar? The Business and Regulation of the Pornographic Press in Sweden 1950–1971
published in Enterprise & Society (2012), 13 (2)
In this article, the process leading to decriminalization of pornography in Sweden in 1971 is analyzed. The interplay... more In this article, the process leading to decriminalization of pornography in Sweden in 1971 is analyzed. The interplay between the structural institutional level and company behavior is stressed, with an emphasis on business strategies. The article shows that the division between hard-core and soft-core pornographic magazines in Sweden was quite different than the development in the United Kingdom and the United States. It also shows how the business strategies used by hard-core pornographers challenged the obscenity legislation and regulation of national distribution, making them obsolete. Even though there was fierce competition between the pornography companies, producers formed joint alternative distribution channels crucial to the survival of the industry.
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Seen by: and 2 moreKönspolitiska nyckeltexter I: från äktenskapskritik till sexualupplysning 1839-1930.
Arnberg, Klara; Sundevall, Fia & Tjeder, David (red.). Stockholm: Makadam.
För innehållsförteckning, se:
För innehållsförteckning, se:
http://nyckeltexter.se/innehallsforteckning/
The Advent of Christianity and Dynastic Name-giving in Scandinavia and Rus’
Early Christianity on the Way from the Varangians to the Greeks / Ed. by Ildar Garipdzanov and Oleksiy Tolochko. Kiev, 2011. (Ruthenica. Supplementum 4.) С. 108–119
Commodity Money, Silver and Coinage in Viking-Age Scandinavia
by Dagfinn Skre
Published in: J. Graham-Campbell, S. M. Sindbæk and G. Williams 2011 (eds.): Silver Economies, Monetisation and Society in Scandinavia, AD 800-1100, pp. 67-91. Aarhus University Press.
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Seen by: and 63 moreLes réseaux d'alimentation en électricité dans les pays nordiques
Reference
Timo Myllyntaus, “Les réseaux d'alimentation en électricité dans les pays nordiques,” Bulletin d'histoire de l'électricité, No 22, Décembre 1993, Paris: Association pour l'Histoire de l'Electricité en France, pp. 85-98.
This article is available also in English. It is titled 'Electricity Supply Systems in the Nordic Countries'. See the... more This article is available also in English. It is titled 'Electricity Supply Systems in the Nordic Countries'. See the list of my papers.
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Seen by:Kilowatts at Work: Electricity and Industrial Transformation in the Nordic Countries
Reference:
Timo Myllyntaus, "Kilowatts at Work: Electricity and Industrial Transformation in the Nordic Countries," In: Nordic Energy Systems. Historical Perspectives and Current Issues, Eds. Arne Kaijser and Marika Hedin, Canton, Mass.: Science History Publications/USA 1995, pp. 101-128.
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Seen by:Kokemäen käsikirjakoodeksi F1 (1548-1549): näkökulmia reformaatiokauden kirkkokäsikirjasidoksen paikalliseen käyttöhistoriaan ja ajoitusmahdollisuuksiin - Der Handbuchkodex von Kokemäki F1 (1548-1549). Zu Gebrauch, Geschichte und Datierungsmöglichkeiten von Handbuchkodexen der Reformationszeit
Published in: Suomen kirkkohistoriallisen seuran Vuosikirja 98 (2008), 21-45.
German Summary:
In den Archiven finnischer Kirchengemeinden werden zahlreiche Gesamtkodexen kirchlicher... more
German Summary:
In den Archiven finnischer Kirchengemeinden werden zahlreiche Gesamtkodexen kirchlicher Handbücher der Reformationszeit und des frühen 17. Jahrhunderts aufbewahrt, deren Inhalt noch nie einer durchgehenden Inventur unterzogen wurde. Die bisherige Forschung hat sich mit individuellen, in Kirchengemeindebesitz befindlichen zusammengebundenen Handbuchkodexen in der Regel nur im Zusammenhang mit Untersuchungen zur Liturgie und deren Geschichte befasst, aber aufgrund des vergleichsweise langen Verwendungszeitraums (von den 1540er Jahren bis zum zweiten Viertel des 17. Jahrhunderts) böte die durchgehend Analyse der Bände die Möglichkeit, auf lokaler Ebene viele Fragen im Grenzbereich zwischen Mittelalter und Neuzeit anzugehen. Gebundene Handbüchern, in diesen zu verschiedenen Zeiten gemachte Eintragungen sowie auf leere Blättern kopierte liturgische Texte ergeben zusammen häufig ein aus verschiedenen Epochen stammendes Dokument, mit dessen Hilfe sowohl sowohl untersucht werden kann, wie eine von oben geforderte Vereinheitlichung in der Liturgie auf lokaler Ebene umgesetzt wurde als auch welche Dinge von den Ortspfarrern Ende des 16. und Anfang des 17. Jahrhunderts in ihrem Dienst für wichtig erachtetet wurden.
Als Beispiel für die sich durch die in Gemeindebesitz erhaltenen Handbuchkodexen für die Forschung eröffnenden Möglichkeiten dient hier der in den Archiven der Gemeinde von Kokemäki erhaltene Handbuchkodex F1, der zusammengebunden die offiziellen schwedischsprachigen Handbücher für kirchliche Amtshandlungen und den Gottesdienst aus dem Jahre 1548, die entsprechenden von Mikael Agricola in Druck gegebenen finnischsprachigen Handbücher aus dem Jahre 1549 sowie eine von Agricola im Jahre 1549 in Druck gegebene Passion enthält. Aufgrund der im Kodex gemachten Eintragungen wurde der der Kirche von Kokemäki gehörende Einband 1592 repariert. Die Agendenlage wird im ältesten erhaltenen Inventarium der Bücher der Kirche von Kokemäki aus dem Jahre 1630 erwähnt. Aufgrund der Anmerkungen wurde sie erst im Mitte des 17. Jahrhunderts aus dem Gebrauch genommen.
Die kodikologische Analyse des Kodexes sowie die paläographische und vergleichende Untersuchung der Randbemerkungen und selbständigen liturgischen Texte ergibt, dass das Werk vom dritten Viertel des 16. Jahrhunderts bis wenigstens zum zweiten Viertel des 17. Jahrhunderts von den Pfarrern der Gemeinde Kokemäki benutzt wurde. Bei der Identifizierung der persönlichen Handschriften der Verfasser wurde ein als Anlage zu den sog. Vogtbüchern erhaltenes Zehntenverzeichnis verwendet, das seit 1566 vom Hauptpfarrer des entsprechenden Sprengels geschrieben und beglaubigt wurde. Anhand von Handschriftenanalysen und Textvergleichen lässt sich der überwiegende Teil der in Latein verfassten Perikopen des Kodexes dem Hauptpfarrer Michael Stephani (1558-1578) zuschreiben, während die auf leeren Blättern oder zwischen den gedruckten Text kopierten liturgischen Texte von unterschiedlichen Schreibern stammen. Von den auf Finnisch, Schwedisch oder Lateinisch geschriebenen Texten ist der lateinische Exorzismus des Effatio-Teils der Taufe eine direkte Kopie der Manuale Aboensis von 1522, die schwedischsprachige Allokutio und das Dankgebet aus der Taufordnung, die finnischsprachige Aufforderung an die Paten und die an das Ehepaar gerichtete schwedischsprachige Allokutio sind dagegen Kopien bzw Übersetzungen der Kirchenordnung des Jahres 1571. Ein finnischsprachiger Segensspruch für einen Krankenbesuch findet sich in der gleichen, aus dem 16. Jahrhundert stammenden Form auch im Agendenkodex von Urjala.
Mindestens eine der liturgischen Textkopien hatte der Pfarrer der Gemeinde Kokemäki, Johannes Michaelis (1578-1599) geschrieben, eine stammt vom Pfarrer Johannes Clementis Mentz (1600-1606), und zwei von Pfarrer Matthias Sigfridi (1608-1621).
Der aus einem vorreformatorischen Manual kopierte lateinische Exorzismus trägt wahrscheinlich die Handschrift Pfarrer Michael Stephani und zeigt, dass ein Teil der Gottesdienstordnung, die als Folge der Reformation aus der Handbüch entfernt worden war, auch nach 1549 in Kokemäki noch für notwendig erachtet wurde.
Fishing with Monks - Padise Abbey and the River Vantaanjoki from 1351 to 1429.
Published in: Marjo Poutanen (Ed.), Colonists on the Shores of the Gulf of Finland: Medieval Settlement in the Coastal Regions of Estonia and Finland. Vantaa City Museum Publications, 22. Vantaan Kaupunginmuseo, Lahti 2011, p. 37-64.
The paper discusses the role of Cistercian economic activity in late 14th century and early 15th Century region of... more The paper discusses the role of Cistercian economic activity in late 14th century and early 15th Century region of Nyland (Uusimaa) in Southern Finland. How did the Cistercian Abbey of Padise (Ger. Padis) in Estonia first come into possession of fishing rights for salmon in the River Vantaanjoki in Finland, and what was the significance of these rights for the economy and everyday life of the monastery during the period of the abbey's donation in 1351–1429? What impact did the monks and lay brethren have on the use of the river and the structure of settlement in its area, now in the dense suburban network of Vantaa and Helsinki?
Bank, bomber og beredskab - hemmelige danske nødpengesedler fra den kolde krig [Banks, bombs, and boxes – secret Danish emergency banknotes from the Cold War]
Published in Nationalmuseets Arbejdsmark, Copenhagen 2011, 170-181.
An English version will be published - in 2012 I hope.
During the Cold War most countries had civil emergency preparedness systems (figs.3 and 7) to safeguard the... more
During the Cold War most countries had civil emergency preparedness systems (figs.3 and 7) to safeguard the infrastructure – for example the vital money supply. In Denmark the National Bank developed a preparedness system as early as 1950–51 that was to function if the country’s only banknote
printing works in Copenhagen was incapacitated by an act of war, for example invasion or aerial bombardment. The bank deposited material for the production of the ordinary banknotes in two of its provincial branches.
In 1965 it was resolved that the preparedness would be expanded with
1) deposition of printing plates for ordinary banknotes in Canada and with
2) a special preparedness to ensure the money supply in the transition period between the act of war and the time when ordinary banknotes could once again be printed somewhere in Denmark.
The system was developed at the National Bank in 1965–72 and came to consist of two identical boxes with equipment for producing simple temporary emergency notes at provincial
printing works (figs.1,4–6). The two boxes were deposited in two of the bank’s branches in the provinces in 1972–1989, and their seals could only be broken by written order from the board of directors of the bank.
After the end of the Cold War and the closing of the branches in 1989, the boxes came back, still sealed, to the National Bank in Copenhagen, where they lay stored away and forgotten until they were found by chance in 2008. The unique emergency preparedness system for safeguarding Denmark’s money
supply has now been secured for posterity at the National Museum.
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Seen by:Det sista manliga yrkesmonopolet: Genus och militärt arbete i Sverige 1865-1989
(2011) Dissertation. Stockholm: Makadam förlag.
(Abstract in English below)
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Bokens baksidetext:
Sverige har aldrig haft någon allmän värnplikt... more
(Abstract in English below)
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Bokens baksidetext:
Sverige har aldrig haft någon allmän värnplikt bara manlig värnplikt. Inte ens den aktiva jämställdhetspolitiken från 1970-talet och framåt lyckades ändra på detta. Jämställdheten diskuterades gärna i termer av kvinnors rättigheter, medan skyldigheter som värnplikten förutsattes kvarstå hos männen.
Men värnpliktslagens utformning gjorde inte bara könsskillnad mellan medborgarna när det gällde deras skyldigheter mot nationen. Den hindrade också kvinnor från att skaffa sig den utbildning som krävdes för att utföra vissa militära uppgifter. Först år 1989 gavs kvinnor samma formella rättigheter som män att utöva militärt arbete.
Ekonomhistorikern Fia Sundevall undersöker här det sista manliga yrkesmonopolet och dess fall. Sundevall visar hur värnpliktslagen länge bekräftade och återskapade militären som ett manligt kompetensområde, men också att hundratusentals kvinnor bedrev militärt arbete långt innan militäryrkena öppnades för dem. Genom bland annat lottarörelsen gavs kvinnor möjlighet till viss militär utbildning och kunde tjänstgöra inom krigsmakten på frivillig väg. Men deras närvaro var villkorad och deras verksamhet organiserades i hög grad utifrån föreställningar om kvinnors och mäns skilda egenskaper och nationsuppgifter.
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The last male bastion in the labour market: gender and military work in Sweden 1865-1989
Throughout history, gender has been a central component of the Swedish armed forces’ division of labour. Its most striking expression is that soldiers have almost exclusively been, and expected to be, male. In Sweden, the last barrier to women’s access to military work was removed in 1989. No other occupational area remained closed for women that long.
The main objective of this thesis is to examine how women received full formal economic citizenship through the removal of the last formal barriers to women’s paid labor. A secondary objective is to analyze the perceptions and importance of duty and obligations in women’s economic citizenship. The author argues for the need of a historical perspective to understand the processes that led to gendered equal rights in access to paid military work. For this reason, the thesis explores continuity and change in women’s military work and the gendered division of labor of the Swedish armed forces, from the year of 1865, when women’s military work entered a new phase through the establishment of voluntary defense organizations. The study ends in 1989 when the last barrier to women’s access to military work was removed and women thus received full formal economic citizenship in terms of equal formal rights to choose one’s profession and compete in the labor market.
Drawing on a wide range of printed and unprinted source material, the thesis highlights the interaction between practice, norms, and legislation, where practice (women’s military work and its developments) broadened the perceptions and norms (of women working in the military), thus creating conditions for a more widespread practice through legislative changes.
”Det självklara undantaget?” Militäryrkena och frågan om kvinnors behörighet till statstjänst (ca 1919-25)”
i Militärhistorisk tidskrift, 2006, s. 87-119.
Review of Britain and Ireland 900-1300: Insular Responses to Medieval European Change, by Brendan Smith.
by Andrea Jones
Published in Comitatus, 31, 2000.
Brendan Smith, Britain and Ireland 900-1300: Insular Responses to Medieval European Change. (Cambridge:... more
Brendan Smith, Britain and Ireland 900-1300: Insular Responses to Medieval European Change. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999) 283pp.
Within the context of a growing interest in British—as opposed to strictly English—history, this volume undertakes a survey of the cross-currents between England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales during the earlier portion of the medieval period. As Robert Bartlett, one of the book’s contributors, has pointed out, the tenth through the fourteenth centuries were a vitally important period in “the Europeanization of Europe;” they were also a crucial period in the negotiation of power and culture among the component parts of the British Isles. Considering the complexity and range of this collection, it is a wonder that the book manages to be so remarkably clear and coherent. Containing ten articles by some of the foremost British historians, it is a valuable addition to studies of the period—and to the scholar’s bookshelf.
The first article in the book is also the most problematic, though it is still outstanding. Alfred P. Smyth’s “The effect of Scandinavian raiders on the English and Irish churches: a preliminary reassessment” refutes the arguments of revisionist historians with regard to the Vikings who so profoundly changed the course of British history beginning in the late eighth century. Though Smyth is convincing in demonstrating the revisionists’ manipulation of historical evidence to downplay both the size of the Viking raiding parties and the violence they inflicted, he does, perhaps, protest too much. He dismisses claims that the Viking raids led to a revitalization of the European economy and the expansion of international trade by noting that “the Northmen did not operate charities for the benefit of their victims” (3). Furthermore, he asserts that the Vikings effectively destroyed large portions of monastic and church culture in the British Isles, helped to promote the downfall of the Carolingian world, and “accelerated the militarization of Christianity in Germany, Francia and the British Isles, resulting in the active participation of churchmen on the battlefield and in the militarization of Christian ideology vis-à-vis non-Christian neighbours” (35).
This last statement, which seems to border on blaming the Vikings for the behavior of British Christians in such matters as the atrocities of the Crusades or the persecution of Jews, is extremely troublesome. And although Smyth is correct in noting that the revisionists ignore or deny the extensive destruction Vikings wreaked on the British Isles, he in his turn simply dismisses what can be construed as the positive results of their depredations—economic growth and the emergence of a more global outlook in Britain. In the end, the truth probably lies somewhere between the views of the historians Smyth opposes and his own characterization of the Vikings as “warriors erupting out of the prehistory of the North, whose descendants more than two centuries later were still languishing in a state of bloody barbarism at Old Uppsala” (38).
Benjamin T. Hudson’s “The changing economy of the Irish Sea province” is an excellent overview of the subject that picks up where Smyth left off and to some degree counteracts him by describing the role Northmen played in the tenth and eleventh century trade boom, which could “resemble a Scandinavian lake” during that period (43). However, beginning in the early eleventh century, the increased involvement of merchants from the south resulted in an Irish Sea that “began to assume some of the attributes of an English lake” (52). The article also explains the role of the Church in encouraging trade beginning in the twelfth century and the shifts that led to the nearly complete dominance of trade in the region by English royal concerns by the end of the thirteenth century.
Robert Bartlett’s chapter on “Cults of Irish, Scottish and Welsh saints in twelfth-century England” begins with a snapshot of the eleventh century, when the saints’ cults of Ireland, Wales, and Scotland “did not overlap substantially with those in England” (67). Bartlett then explains how, in the following century, English ecclesiastics not only began to promote the cults of Celtic saints, but also to integrate episodes from Celtic hagiography into their own. He concludes that “there was little in the way of cultural resistance or distancing in the encounter between English ecclesiastics and the saints of the other parts of the British Isles” (84-6).
Máire Herbert’s “Sea-divided Gaels? Constructing relationships between Irish and Scots, c. 800-1169,” explores how Irish-Scottish identities and interactions were defined by members of the Irish literati during the period. The relationship between the two nations was depicted in contemporary Irish writing as one defined by common ancestry rather than geographical boundaries until about the late ninth century, but by the mid-twelfth century, Irish men of letters had come to view their relatives in Scotland as a separate people. However, Herbert has found that “cultural relationships . . . continued to affirm the centuries-old transinsular bonds” (97). As Herbert points out, associations between the two nations would change still further after the invasion of Ireland in 1169.
Seán Duffy’s “The 1169 invasion as a turning-point in Irish-Welsh relations” picks up at precisely that point, discussing how the Norman incursions altered subsequent interactions between the Welsh and the Irish. In the period before 1169, the Welsh and Irish nobility were closely allied and the Irish often intervened in Welsh affairs. However, the new generation of marcher barons created by the events of 1169 disrupted many of these old ties while establishing new, and very different, ones. According to Duffy, many of the marcher barons owned land in both Wales and Ireland, and “used the profits of their estates on one side [of the Irish Sea] to finance campaigns of conquest and colonization on the other” (113). This led to a protean relationship in which periods of goodwill between the marcher barons and the Welsh resulted in nonchalant Welsh attitudes toward the Irish plight, whereas the two nations were drawn together by their common experiences when royal or baronial powers impinged more upon Welsh rights.
John Gillingham’s “Killing and mutilating political enemies in the British Isles from the late twelfth to the early fourteenth century: a comparative study” explores Celtic adoptions of and resistance to the chivalric code imported with the Normans in 1066. By the mid-thirteenth century, Scotland and Wales had adopted the chivalric convention of sparing high-ranking prisoners of war, but earlier traditions persisted in Ireland. Gillingham speculates that greater political unity and the build-up of towns and castles in Scotland and Wales, but not in Ireland, may have played a role in this fact. While noting the disgust expressed by English commentators concerning Celtic violence, Gillingham demonstrates that “in Wales and Ireland the English were . . . inclined to treat the native aristocracy with much less than chivalrous respect” (120). He also notes that the English began to diverge from this chivalric code by the fourteenth century—a development mirrored in France and explained by Maitland and others as the birth pangs of the modern state. Gillingham rejects this thesis and proposes that historians’ propensity for seeing “’modernizing’ trends” in such changes should be scrutinized.
Dauvit Brown’s “Anglo-French acculturation and the Irish element in Scottish identity” documents the changes that occurred between the central Middle Ages, when Ireland and Scotland were so closely allied as to form one people, and the fourteenth century, when that relationship had become more distant and complicated. As the Scots underwent a process of Anglo-French acculturation, they distanced themselves from their Irish connections, probably because of the emergent English stereotype of the Irish as barbarians. However, Scottish origin-legends from the period identify strongly with the history of Ireland, perhaps because “the [Scottish] royal genealogy, from which the kingship took its lustre of antiquity, was studded with legendary Irish figures who each stood at key points in the matrix of power and prestige portrayed in Gaelic high culture” (151).
The last three chapters of the book focus on the lives of exceptional people in the history of the British Isles: the Anglo-Norman John de Courcy, who rose from comparative obscurity in England to lordship in Ireland; the MacSorleys of the Hebrides; and the deVescys of the northern English borderlands. In the process, they reveal how these individuals were both shaped by and themselves affected historical processes. Marie Therese Flanagan’s “John de Courcy, the first Ulster plantation and Irish church men” traces de Courcy’s acquisition of power by using monasteries as a colonizing force. “Coming in from the margins: the descendants of Somerled and cultural accommodation in the Hebrides, 1164-1317” is R. Andrew McDonald’s account of how the MacSorley sea-kings increasingly became anglicized as the Hebrides were integrated into the Scottish kingdom during the latter half of the thirteenth century, though they had resisted assimilation longer than their neighbors. In the book’s final chapter, “Nobility and identity in medieval Britain and Ireland: The de Vescy family, c. 1120-1314,” Keith J. Stringer traces the history of a northern border family as it demonstrates that “however passionately the Westminster-centred government believed otherwise, defining the contours of power and identity in these islands was not solely its prerogative” (199). Indeed, the de Vescys frequently placed themselves at odds with English royal policy, pursuing their own regional interests at the expense of English stability; a fact which reveals the very fluidity of Anglo-Celtic boundaries during the period.
In the course of its ten chapters, Britain and Ireland 900-1300 admirably accomplishes what it sets out to achieve: an overview of how the “Celtic fringe” has in fact refused to be a fringe for more than a millennium, not only through interaction between Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, but also in its shaping of English history. It is a useful survey of a complex chapter in the political development of the British Isles, providing both an excellent starting point for those approaching the subject for the first time and thoughtful, provocative analysis for those more familiar with it.
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Alfred Rosenberg und die Nordische Gesellschaft
co-authored with Birgitta Almgren and Ernst Piper
published in the Journal
NORDEUROPAforum. Zeitschrift für Politik, Wirtschaft und Kultur N.F. 11 (2008:2), pp. 7–51
This contribution traces the emergence, Gleichschaltung, expansion and demise of the Nordische Gesellschaft [Nordic... more This contribution traces the emergence, Gleichschaltung, expansion and demise of the Nordische Gesellschaft [Nordic Society] with a special focus on its leading protagonist Alfred Rosenberg. In the beginning of the article, the history of ideas and the organisational foundations of the society are being set as a background. In the main part of the text the Nordische Gesellschaft’s activity during the “Third Reich” and under Rosenberg’s auspices is being analysed. Sources used comprise both archival material as well as the NG’s own publications.
"Ett starkt blockhuus tvenne mijl hitom Jennecoping" = A Strong Blockhouse, ten kilometers south of Jönköping"
Published on the Jönköpings läns museum homepage, december 2010 in the series "History of the Month" (Månadens Historia)
The Nordic Seven Years War lasted from 1563 to 1570 with Sweden on one side, facing an alliance of Denmark, Lübeck and... more
The Nordic Seven Years War lasted from 1563 to 1570 with Sweden on one side, facing an alliance of Denmark, Lübeck and Poland. The main reasons were Danish discontent over the dissolution of the Kalmar Union of 1397 and a more expansive Swedish foreign policy during the reign of the new king Erik XIV.
The conflict developed into a war of attrition, with terrible acts of cruelty performed by both sides. In the autumn.of 1567 a Danish army under the command of Daniel Rantzau was sent into the Swedish heartland in an attempt to break the stalemate. The offensive followed the road along the Nissan river, through sparsly populated woodlands towards the town of Jönköping and its new royal castle.
Initially, the defenders avoided battle and instead blocked the advance on the single road leading north by felling large numbers of trees across it. But on october 31, about ten km SW of Jönköping, the Danish vanguard found a heavily defended blockhouse filled with both regular troops and a posse consisting of local peasants. The forces were probably evenly matched with about 1000 fighting men on each side, but the Danes were better led and being highly skilled professional soldiers they won the day.
This almost forgotten skirmish in a war 444 years distant has been regarded as a Swedish defeat. Still, the local commanders had gained one important thing - time. With the Danish army engaged in battle it was possible to destroy the bridges and wooden carriageways leading across the vast Dumme mosse bog. This gave the defenders a possibilty to evacuate Jönköping and to burn town and castle in the retreat.In doing so Rantzau and his 8000 soldiers, among them many mercenaries from Scotland, were deprived of a safe winter quarter and possible provisions. Any sensible officer in charge of an army, stranded in hostile territory with winter closing in, should have turned around. But instead Rantzau pressed on, into the central district of Östergötland where the Danish forces spent the following months burning, looting and skirmishing with the inferior defenders before returning to Danish soil.
This is the background for our project "Getaryggen 1567" where a research team from the Miliseum (Museum for the Royal Engineers), the Jönköping County Museum and the Battlefield Team of the National Heritage Board set out to find the actual battlefield. After comprehensive studies in archives and out in the forrests along the former road our efforts were successful in the fall of 2010. On a steep hillside where the road did a turn, a number of battle-related objects were found with the aid of metal detectors. Bolts from crossbows, bullets from cavalry pistols and the blade from a warhammer are not the kind of objects you should expect to find in a peaceful forrest in Småland...
The mapping and excavation on the battlefield of 1567 will continue, but another research topic has also come into focus. What did this conflict, where an army "just happened to pass by", do to the local communities along the Nissan road? We know from written sources that a number of parishes in the region disappeared during the mid 16th century. When studying the lists of taxpayers for 1568, the year after the Rantzau campaign, a frightening picture emerges. Words like "burnt", "laid waste" and "deserted" are used to characterize the farmsteds several kilometers on both sides of the road. We can follow the tracks of the Danish search-parties and realize the extent of the wasteland they created. A 16th century army normally lived of the land, and this was certainly the case in the fall of 1567...
In the future the project "Getaryggen 1567" plan a close survey of some of these deserted farms and villages, beginning with Västra Jära, where Rantzau's army spent the night before the battle. By doing so it will be possible to trace changes in the local agrarian settlement that were the result of one tragic incident. And - to begin to understand what it really meant to be in harms way in the 16th century; being a peasant who happened to live where an army marched by...

