
"A fleet of stone ships on a Scanian heath where six hundred fires once burned for the dead"
Vätteryd grave field
Tjörnarp, Skåne län, Sweden
Skane's largest Iron Age grave field spreads across open heathland between Tjornarp and Sosdala. Fifteen stone ships point toward unseen horizons. One hundred and eighty-three menhirs mark cremation sites where fires once consumed the dead and their offerings. Bronze Age petroglyphs with wagon carvings unique in all of Sweden lie beneath the later burials. Over two thousand years of sacred fire and stone.
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Quick Facts
Location
Tjörnarp, Skåne län, Sweden
Coordinates
56.0159, 13.6677
Last Updated
Feb 17, 2026
Learn More
Vatteryd was Skane's principal cremation cemetery during the Iron Age, active from approximately 400 to 900 CE. The Bronze Age petroglyphs indicate earlier sacred use of the landscape dating to 1800-500 BCE. The site is one of the largest grave fields in Scandinavia.
Origin Story
No origin stories survive for the site. The cultures that created and used Vatteryd left no written records. The petroglyphs may encode mythological narratives about solar deities and fertility cycles, but their precise meanings are lost. In broader Norse tradition, stone ships represent the vessel that carries the dead to the afterlife, and the Vatteryd stone ships may be understood as a fleet of ghost ships gathered at the boundary between the living world and the realm of the dead.
Key Figures
The cremated dead of Vatteryd
The hundreds of individuals whose remains were interred beneath the standing stones and within the stone ships across five centuries of use
Bronze Age petroglyph carvers
The anonymous artists who created Skane's only inland rock art site, including the unique diversity of wagon carvings, establishing sacred use of the landscape centuries before the first burial
Spiritual Lineage
The site's lineage extends from the Bronze Age communities who carved the petroglyphs through the Iron Age populations who chose this heath for their cremation cemetery. The specific communities are unnamed in historical records. The 1955-1957 archaeological survey documented the surviving monuments and established the site's significance within Swedish prehistory. Current stewardship by the County Administrative Board of Skane ensures the site's preservation and interpretation.
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