Johannes Brøndsted

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Johannes Brøndsted, (born 1890 in Jutland and died in 1965) was a Danish archaeologist and prehistorian.

Contents

[edit] Education

In 1920, he received his doctorate for his work on the relations between Anglo-Saxon and Nordic art in Viking times.

[edit] Field work

In 1922 and 1922, he worked in the field with E. Dyggve, and excavated early Christian monuments in Dalmatia. His account of this excavation was published as Recherches à Salone (1928).

[edit] Positions

From 1941 through 1951, Brøndsted was a professor of Nordic archeology and European prehistory at the University of Copenhagen. He left this position to become the director of the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen, a position he held from 1951 through 1960.

[edit] Major published works

  • Recherches à Salone (1928)
  • Danmarks Oldtid (three vols.; 2e; 1957-1959), a prehistory of Denmark
  • The Vikings (1960) (English edition: trans. Kalle Skov; Penguin, Harmondsworth; 1965; ISBN 0140204598)

[edit] Recognition and distinctions

  • 1952, Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy
  • 1953, gold medal of the Royal Society of Antiquities
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