Wielbark Culture (, ) was an archaeological culture identified with the Goths which appeared during the first half of the 1st century AD. It replaced the local Oksywie Culture (Oxhöft Kultur), a culture which was part of the Przeworsk culture.
After a cemetery of over 3000 tombs was discovered in the time of the German Empire, the culture it was attributed to was named Willenberg Kultur in German after the nearest village, called Willenberg at the time (today Wielbark). It is located near Malbork (Marienburg), about 40km south of the Baltic Sea coast. In 1938, it was described as "gotisch-gepidischen Gräberfeldes Braunswalde-Willenberg bei Marienburg".
The report of the original excavation was rediscovered in 2004. A project of the Humboldt University in Berlin intends to restore and analyze it, in cooperation with Polish partners and funded by Dronning Margrethe og Prins Henriks Fond.
In the first half of the 3rd century AD, the Wielbark Culture left settlements by the Baltic Sea, at that time called Mare Suevicum or Mare Germanicum, except for the areas adjacent to the Vistula, and expanded into the area which later (by 1000 AD) became Mazovia and Lesser Poland (Lubelszczyzna) on the eastern side of the Vistula reaching into Ukraine, where they formed the Chernyakhov culture.
The people of the Wielbark Culture used both inhumation and cremation techniques for burying their dead. Whether they used one or the other varied from site to site and it is believed to have depended on family traditions.
A characteristic of this culture, which it had in common with southern Scandinavia, was the raising of stone covered mounds, stone circles, solitary stelae and variations of cobble cladding.
There were no weapons nor tools in the Wielbark culture graves, unlike the Przeworsk culture for which it was typical to give the dead such gifts. Instead, the gifts were mostly ornaments and costumes. A few graves have shown spurs, and this would be the only warrior attribute found.
Another feature of the Wielbark culture was the use of bronze to make ornaments and accessories. Silver was used seldom and gold rarely. Iron appears to have been used extremely rarely.
Gothiscandza was located at the mouth of the Vistula, and this area was given as the land of the Gutones (Pliny the Elder) or Gothones (Tacitus):
The names given by Pliny and Tacitus appear to be identical to *Gutoniz, the reconstructed Proto-Germanic form of Gutans, the Goths' name for themselves.
Some have suggested that the three ships of Goths arriving at the Vistula is merely symbolic whereas others have ascribed the ships to the Gepids, the Ostrogoths and the Visigoths. A third interpretion is that the ships only contained the Norse clan of Amal's royal family.
However, archaeologists are wary of ascribing ethnicities to archaeological cultures, and it is considered to be an extremely difficult matter (e.g. Kennewick Man). This is reflected by the names used for the cultures, usually baptised after the towns where remains are found. In this case, the town was called Willenberg when the discoveries were made, well before 1945. This naming tradition is not honoured in Willenberg's case, as even German scientists carefully use the Polish name Malbork-Wielbark *.
The latest tendency is to doubt the equation between the Wielbark Culture and the Goths, and it has been established that the Wielbark culture did not appear solely through immigration from Scandinavia. Instead it appears to have evolved from the Oksywie culture and possibly through Scandinavian influence.
This theory is based on the fact that the Wielbark Culture shared the same geographical extent as the Oksywie Culture and even continued to use many of the Oksywie cemeteries. The settlements consisted both of the original inhabitants and of groups of Scandinavians.
The present view is that the direct settlements of Goths (recorded by Jordanes as well as H. Schedel, see link) at the Mare Germanicum, today Poland, are those characterised by barrow cemeteries by which there are raised stone circles and solitary stelae (Scandinavian burial customs with a concentration in Götaland). This type is found between the Vistula and the Kashubian and Krajenskian lakelands reaching into the Koszalin region. These burial grounds appeared in the second half of the 1st century.
The Wielbark Culture seems to have been a mixed society composed of both Goths and Gepids from Scandinavia as well as the previous inhabitants. In the 3rd century, the Wielbark community left their settlements and reached their new homeland, Oium, in Ukraine, where they would found a new empire.
Ancient peoples | Archaeological cultures | Archaeology of Poland | Goths | History of the Germanic peoples | Iron Age
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"Wielbark Culture".
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