Birger Nerman
Birger Nerman | |
---|---|
Born |
Norrköping | 6 October 1888
Died | 22 August 1971 82) | (aged
Birger Nerman (6 October 1888 – 22 August 1971) was a Swedish archaeologist, professor, and author.
Background
Birger Nerman belonged to a bourgeois family Nerman (Nehrman) from Vimmerby. He was the son of Janne Nerman (1844–1920), the bookseller in Norrköping, and his wife Anna Ida Nordberg. Born in Norrköping, Birger was the younger brother of the Swedish Communist leader Ture Nerman and the twin brother of the artist Einar Nerman.
Career
Birger Nerman taught as a temporary professor at Uppsala University in 1917 and in 1920. In 1923 he became professor in archeology at the University of Dorpat (Tartu, Estonia). There he led the excavations of Izborsk (1924) and Grobin in Latvia (1929), among other early medieval sites.
In 1925 the Swedish Armed Forces published his The Rise of the Swedish Realm (Det svenska rikets uppkomst) in which Nerman argued that the formation of the Swedish state had been completed by the 8th century, that it was the direct continuation of the "powerful Svea kingdom" mentioned by Tacitus, and that Sweden with its history of two millennia held senior rank among the existing nations of Europe.[1]
In 1938, Nerman became the head of the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities, a position he held until 1969. In 1946, he became a member of the Swedish Royal Academy of Letters. Between 1967 and 1970, he was chairman of the Swedish Chamber of the World Anti-Communist League.[2]
Selected works
- Die Vendelzeit Gotlands (1969)
- Grobin-Seeburg; Ausgrabungen und Funde (1958)
- Tiotusen àr i Sverige (1945 )
- Gamla Upsala : Svearikets hjärtpunkt (1943)
- Die Völkerwanderungszeit Gotlands (1935)
- Die verbindungen zwischen Skandinavien und dem Ostbaltikum in der jüngeren eisenzeit (1929)
- Die Herkunft und die frühesten Auswanderungen der Germanen (1924)
- Studier över Svärges hedna litteratur (1913)
References
- ↑ Citat ur Det svenska rikets uppkomst (1925)
- ↑ Svenskt biografiskt lexikon (Stockholm. 1988)