Talk:Götaland theory

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NPOV?[edit]

This article is not npov. It advocates by including too many counter-arguments. Now, I couldn't care less about the topic, but I feel that the "principle of reaching objectivity" is not taken into account during the production of the article. What "real encyclopedia" (and Wikipedia is a VERY real encyclopedia) has a conclusion in any of its articles? None that I've read. - Sigg3.net 14:30, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)

I'd rather have the article deleted. It is generally laughed at, and the believers are mostly confined to a certain a Swedish province.--Wiglaf 18:03, 18 Feb 2005 (UTC)
In fact, there are so many problems with the content that I will stay away from editing it any further.--Wiglaf 14:35, 19 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Objectivity can't be to refrain from listing the available counter-arguments to a regionalist crackpot theory, just in order to not to make it look as off-the-mark as it actually is. If this theory is indeed considered notable enough for Wikipedia, a reasonable summary of the extensive evidence available against it must be allowed into the article, otherwise Wikipedia will be spreading delusion rather than knowledge. The heading "Conclusions" could possibly be renamed to something indicating its about the academic consensus' conclusions, rather than Wikipedia's own. / Alarm 15:29, 27 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
This is not an updated article, not an objective article and not an objective one. It should be deleted, or at least given a full rewrite. The only sources listed are two of the strongest adherents of the "Sveaskola" and nothing is said about Viktor Rydbergs start of the theory (he died before the Nazis were formed), no names of prominent writers (Verner Lindblom, Mac Key, etc.) and nothing is mentioned about the fact that we only have one source claiming there ever was a temple and religous centre in Uppsala. And that one is Adam of Bremen's text, which is not objective either. Please rewrite or delete. /Khan, 16:47, 18 september 2009

Vote for Deletion[edit]

This theory derives from the nazi "archaeologist" Darré, Hans Reinerth and Eric Oxenstierna. The Swedish nazi amateure Carl-Otto Fast and more recent pronazi dillettants are still using this sick theory. It has nothing to do with facts. It must be deleted.

remove from article[edit]

Opposing notes of interest for not placing Ubsola in Uppland[edit]

Several interesting notes have been raised against the common theory of Svealand being the ancient home of Sveas and the Ása cult, e.g. the following:

1

In some ancient sources (Tacitus' Germania), the tribe or country of Suiones, Sveoner, or Sveas, are said to be living side by side with a different people, the Sitones, who are ruled and governed by women.
Near the old town Sigtuna (being most certainly proven to have existed at the time of Olof Skotkonung) an ancient rune stone have been found, stating the name sithone.

2

The same type of burial customs, the big mounds containing ashes in an urn, is not known in other parts of south and middle Sweden prior to the big mounds in Gamla Uppsala, but there are in fact the same type of mounds found further to the north, securely dated to the 3rd century A.D. Similar mounds are also dated to 200–300 A.D. in western Norway. This might indicate that the customs of big mounds had come from the north of Sweden to the south, rather than the opposite as could be expected for an expanding tribe of Sveas in Uppland. In fact, the burial customs could well indicate that they are the remains of the Sitones, perhaps stemming from the Bronze Age since the burial customs correspond with those of the urn field culture in Europe during the younger bronze age and pre-Roman Iron Age.

3

When Odin came to the kingdom of Gylfi, he got the land by help of Gefjon, who "ploughed the land westwards into the sea, leaving a whole in the land that became a sea", and that this land became Sjælland, said to be the increase of Denmark. Furthermore, the myth says that "bays of Sjælland lies like capes in the sea". Even today, any professional would find it hard to fit Sjælland of Denmark into Mälaren of Sweden.
With Lake Vänern bordering Västergötland, on the other hand, it is not at all hard to see the similarities of Sjælland as being "taken from the land" of Sweden.
How can any bit of land from Mälaren be drawn westwards into the sea—crossing the whole landmasses of Sweden—and become Sjælland?
(Naturally, the inclination here is not that the land was actually taken from Sweden to form Sjælland, but rather that the land the invaders/immigrants accomplished was exchanged for Sjælland.)

According to Jordanes, the Danes expanded— or were forced—southwards, in turn forcing the Heruliis (a German tribe, thought to be located at Själland around the first century A.D.) to emigrate southwards.

4

Written in English, the name Logen/Lagen for the great sea in Snorri's sagas is very easily deducted to be just that, not a name of a special lake, but the only real notion needed; it is the lake—the greatest of them all, Vänern.
Is it possible that Snorre got the name Mälaren to mean Logen due to the fact that Sigtuna, and Birka, was located here...?

5

Adam of Bremen also described the trade center Birka, as the town where the first bishop Ansgar during the 9th century was supposed to have come to declare Christianity among the heathen people of the north.

  • He seems to have had several sources, but the places referred to in these sources must not necessarily have been the same.
  • One theory states that the epithet Birka in fact rather defines a general market location, rather than being the name of a specific town.
  • The trade town was supposedly placed with a harbor to the north, facing the Baltic Sea—which is not really the case for Birka at Björkön in Mälaren.
  • Furthermore, there are several known trade centers in ancient Sweden, and the one at Björkön is not necessarily the one referred to by Adam of Bremen. One possible location is Köpingsvik in the county of Öland in the Baltic Sea, that not only has several remains from the 9th and 11th century, but actually lies "in a bay to the north into the Baltic Sea".
  1. Gamla Uppsala holds several mounds, of which the most famous, the three great mounds known as the kings' mounds are visible from far away. These are said to be the mounds of three famous mythological kings, Ane (Aun), his son Egil—also known as Ongentheow and sometimes Angantyr—(father of Ottar and Ale), Adils (Ottar's son), living sometimes around 450–550 A.D.
  2. Also, it is an indisputable fact that the county of Uppland holds several findings from around the Iron Age that indicate that a kingdom was ruled from here.
  3. Furthermore, an often named place in the myths and sagas is Fyris Wolds, a vast field near the temple site of Uppsala. The river passing the modern city of Uppsala is in fact called the Fyris (Fyrisån). Fyris survives as the name of a mediaeval royal estate on the location and in the names of two small lakes. The application of the form to the river, is however from the 17th century.
  4. In Snorri Sturluson's Heimskringla, the Ynglinga saga being part of the history of ancient Norwegian kings, the place Ubsola (Upsalum) is said to be located by the lake Lagen/Logen, which Snorri means should be the lake Mälaren, dividing Uppland and Södermanland and hosting the capital of Sweden, Stockholm, at its eastern shores. The ancestor of the Ynglinga family is said to be Frey, the God that came to Scandinavia together with Odin. When Odin found the place to be, he named that country (or place, castle, town...) Sigtuna. In the days of Snorri, this town existed (and is archeologically proven to have existed around 1000 A.D.) to the north of Mälaren.
  5. The same location is pointed out by Adam of Bremen, who was a bishop in Hamburg that wrote the history of the domain of northern Europe, including Scandinavia until Lund was given an archbishop seat in the 12th century. However, he did not explicitly state that the temple was located in Uppland.



This kind of promoting serves no purpose on Wikipedia. / Fred-Chess 21:51, 9 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Tone of this article[edit]

I don't know a lot of this "Götaland hypothesis" (which might be a better name for it than calling it a theory?), but as science mostly is right, I suppose it is right with regard to this question too. However, I find the tone of the article problematic. Between the lines I see tendencies of the author mainly wanting to ridicule and pointing fingers to the theory's supporters, rather than only presenting historical facts. It is hard for me to prove this feel though, partly as English is only my 3rd or 4th language, but I would appreciate a rewrite of some of the text's sentences/paragraphs, with regard to this issue. Even articles on the worst forms of misleading scientific nonsense (if that characterizes the Götaland hypothesis), should be written in a neutral tone. Fomalhaut76 (talk) 09:47, 9 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I don't know about the tone, but it certainly is badly structured. I'm not versed enough in the actual claims of the proponents to actually fix it, but in some cases the article is very vague.
Andejons (talk) 19:59, 9 April 2015 (UTC)[reply]
It should probably be clarified from the start that it is a conspiracy theory, and the name "theory" is not really a problem here since many crackpot ideas are called "theories", like Out of India Theory, Moon landing conspiracy theories, Masonic conspiracy theories, and so on. As for the tone of the article, I have no idea about how to give the subject a more neutral sounding tone.--Berig (talk) 15:39, 24 November 2020 (UTC)[reply]