Brattingsborg Castle

Brattingsborg Castle was a royal castle in the town of Tranebjerg on Samsø, Denmark.

The castle was erected at some point in the 12th century and destroyed and burned down in a battle[1] led by the outlawed Marsk Stig in the year 1289. After its destruction, the crown decided to construct the castle of Vesborg on the south coast. Nowadays the only remains of Brattingsborg (lit.: "the fortress of Bratting"), is the earth-mounds of the castle hill along with traces of its double-moat defences and foundations.

The castle hill was thoroughly investigated by archaeologists from the National Museum of Denmark and Moesgård Museum in 2008, as part of a larger project, concerning all of Samsø's five medieval castles. They collaborated with Ecomuseum Samsø and the Cultural Heritage agency. The excavations revealed remains of a former church (25 m long and 8.5 m wide), inside the castle grounds and suggests, that the church caught fire in the violent conflict of 1289, but that it was in use for some years after and then superseded by Tranebjerg Church just 100 m away. There were hints of an even older wooden church at the site and it was clear from the start, that the castle hill had been important since at least the Bronze Age, as Brattingsborg itself was founded on a barrow from that period.

Brattingsborg castle shared name with the still existing manor of Brattingsborg south of Tranebjerg and to distinguish the two, the now non-existent castle, is referred to as 'Gammel Brattingsborg' (English:Old Brattingsborg).

Notes

  1. There is evidence pointing to the incident being not just a battle between armed forces, but also a massacre on civilians. (see Source below).

Sources

Coordinates: 55°50′03″N 10°35′03″E / 55.8342°N 10.5841°E / 55.8342; 10.5841

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