Unknown initiator. Expanded by King Gudfred, Harald Bluetooth, Canute IV, Valdemar I and others.
In use
974,[1] 1848, 1864.
Materials
Earth, timber, stone, bricks
Wall
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Location
Schleswig, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
Part of
Archaeological Border Complex of Hedeby and the Danevirke
Criteria
Cultural: (iii), (iv)
Reference
1553
Inscription
2018 (42nd Session)
The Danevirke or Danework[2] (modern Danish spelling: Dannevirke; in Old Norse; Danavirki, in German; Danewerk, literally meaning earthwork of the Danes[3]) is a system of Danish fortifications in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. This historically important linear defensive earthwork across the neck of the Cimbrian peninsula was initiated by the Danes in the Nordic Iron Age about AD 650. It was later expanded multiple times during Denmark's Viking Age and High Middle Ages. The Danevirke was last used for military purposes in 1864 during the Second War of Schleswig.
The Danevirke consists of several walls, trenches and the Schlei Barrier. The walls stretch for 30 km, from the former Viking trade centre of Hedeby near Schleswig on the Baltic Sea coast in the east to the extensive marshlands in the west of the peninsula. One of the walls (named Østervolden), between the Schlei and Eckernförde inlets, defended the Schwansen peninsula.
According to written sources, work on the Danevirke was started by the Danish King Gudfred in 808. Fearing an invasion by the Franks, who had conquered heathen Frisia over the previous 100 years and Old Saxony in 772 to 804, Godfred began work on an enormous structure to defend his realm, separating the Jutland peninsula from the northern extent of the Frankish empire. However, the Danes were also in conflict with the Saxons south of Hedeby during the Nordic Iron Age, and recent archaeological excavations have revealed that the Danevirke was initiated much earlier than King Gudfred's reign, at least as far back as 500 AD and probably well before that.[4] Because of its historical importance and testimony to the defense of trade routes in the Viking Age, the Danevirke and the nearby Viking town of Hedeby were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2018.[5]
^Else Roesdahl. "Broer, Ringborge og Dannevirke [Bridges, Ringcastles and Danevirke]". danmarkshistorien.dk (in Danish). Aarhus University. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
^Fehring, Günter P. (24 October 2014). The Archaeology of Medieval Germany: An Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 9781317605119.
^Ordbog over det danske Sprog: Virke
^Danevirke – Ældre end hidtil antaget! Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine Museum South-Jutland. (in Danish)
^"Archaeological Border complex of Hedeby and the Danevirke". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. UNESCO. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
The Danevirke or Danework (modern Danish spelling: Dannevirke; in Old Norse; Danavirki, in German; Danewerk, literally meaning earthwork of the Danes)...
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wise and powerful woman who ordered the building or fortification of the Danevirke, consistent with her commemoration on multiple Viking Age runestones....
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Kingdom of Denmark History Archaeology Viking Age Kalmar Union Reformation Danevirke Denmark–Norway Danish Empire Colonization of the Americas Golden Age Scandinavian...
Kingdom of Denmark History Archaeology Viking Age Kalmar Union Reformation Danevirke Denmark–Norway Danish Empire Colonization of the Americas Golden Age Scandinavian...
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Kingdom of Denmark History Archaeology Viking Age Kalmar Union Reformation Danevirke Denmark–Norway Danish Empire Colonization of the Americas Golden Age Scandinavian...
this area between the Danes and the Germans led to construction of the Danevirke, from Schleswig, on the Schlei, an inlet of the Baltic Sea, to the North...
Kingdom of Denmark History Archaeology Viking Age Kalmar Union Reformation Danevirke Denmark–Norway Danish Empire Colonization of the Americas Golden Age Scandinavian...