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DANEVIRKE


Thyra Dannebod ordering the foundation of the Danevirke.

The Dannevirke (shown in red) on the 16th-century Carta Marina

The Dannevirke today

The 'Danevirke' (Old Norse, ''Danavirki'' ; modern Danish, ''Dannevirke'' ; German, ''Danewerk'' – all meaning "Danes' works") is an important linear defensive earthwork which was constructed across the neck of the Jutland peninsula during Denmark's Viking Age. It was last used for military purposes in 1864.
The Dannevirke stretches from the marshes of west Jutland to the town of Schleswig, which lies beside the Schlei (Danish: ''Slien'') on the Baltic Sea coast, near the former Viking trade centre of Hedeby. Another wall, between the Schlei and the town of Eckernförde, defended the Schwansen peninsula.
According to written sources, work on the Dannevirke was started by the Danish King Gudfred in 808. Fearing an invasion by the Franks, who had conquered heathen Frisia and Saxony over the previous 100 years, Godfred began work on an enormous structure to defend his realm, separating the Jutland peninsula from the northern extent of the Frankish empire.
Archaeological excavations in 1969-75 established, with the help of dendrochronology, that the main structure of the Dannevirke had been built in three phases between 737 and 968 AD. ''It is, therefore, contemporary with Offa's Dyke, another Germanic defensive structure of the late 8th century.''
The Dannevirke is about 30 km long overall, with a height varying between 3.6 and 6 m. During the Middle Ages, the structure was reinforced with palisades and masonry walls, and was used by Danish kings as a gathering point for Danish military excursions, including a series of crusader raids against the Slavs of the south Baltic. In particular, the 12th century King Valdemar the Great reinforced parts of the Dannevirke with a brick wall, which enabled a continued military use of the strategically important structure. The reinforced parts of the structure are consequently known in Danish as ''Valdemarsmuren'' (''Valdemar's wall'').
During the prolonged nineteenth century political and military struggles between Danes and Germans over possession of the territory variously known as ''Sønderjylland'' or ''Slesvig'' by the one side and ''Schleswig'' by the other, the Danevirke was used as a potent symbol of Danish nationalism. Specifically, it was a symbol of the Danish historical claim for the whole of this territory - nonwithanding that during the centuries since its construction the linguistic frontier has moved gradually northwards, so that in the 19th century the territory for a considerable distance north as well as south of the Danevirke was predominantly German-speaking. The fiefdom itself remained as a Danish fief.
The last military use of the Dannevirke was during the Second War of Schleswig in 1864. Due especially to the above-mentioned emotive nationalist symbolism, public opinion in Denmark had expected the coming battle to take place here, and the Dannevirke was already under siege, although no battle actually took place there, as the Danish commander in Chief, General de Meza, withdrew to the trenches at Dybbøl. His arguments for doing so rested on the threat of being outflanked, the Schlei and the wetlands between the Dannevirke and Husum having frozen solid; also, the territory immediately in front of the Dannevirke had already fallen into German hands. This retreat came as a surprise to the Austro-Prussian army, and almost all of the Danish army succeeded in completing the evacuation. It resulted, however, in the abandonment of important pieces of heavy artillery, and it remains a matter of historical debate why the railway to Flensburg was never properly used for the evacuation. News of the retreat came as a great shock to Danish public opinion which had considered the Dannevirke to be impregnable, and General de Meza was promptly relieved of his command.

Contents
Stages in the building of the Dannevirke
The Dannevirke in World War II
The Dannevirke in popular culture
See also
External links

Stages in the building of the Dannevirke


Map showing Dannevirke and the Danish army road

See the map at
★ http://www.danskmiddelalder.dk/dan-oversigt.gif. The stippling on the map marks water and marsh areas, including some (such as those along the Rheider Au) which have since been drained.
'Dannevirke 1' – Hovedvolden ("the main rampart"), Nordvolden ("the north rampart"), Østervolden ("the east rampart")

Building work started about 650, according to carbon-14 dating. Work said to have been started by Angantyr, and continued by "Siegfried" (= Sigurd Snake-in-the-Eye?), and ended by Guðfrið about 737.

★ Hovedvolden: From (now called Rheider Au) to a small lake called Dannevirke Sø. It was the main segment of the dannevirke. About 2 m high and 12 m wide.

★ Nordvolden: From the northeastern side of Dannevirke Sø, and further north about 7 km.

★ Østervolden: About 3.3 km long, and protecting Schwansen.
These ramparts had one simple palisade of wood.
'Dannevirke 2' – Kovirke ("cow-work")

Built either by Guðfrið or by Harald Bluetooth (if it is the work mentioned as newly made in the Frankish royal annals in 808, then Harald did not build it). It stretched from the Rheide Å about 7 km to a south extension of the Schlei which has now been drained. Its palisade was about 3 m high, and was a little more solid than that on the first ramparts. The bank of earth behind the palisade was about 2 m high and 7 m wide. It had a V-shaped moat, 4 m wide and 3 m deep.
'Dannevirke 3' – Hovedvolden, Krumvolden ("the curved rampart"), Buevolden ("the bow rampart"), Dobbeltvolden ("the double rampart"), Forbindelsesvolden ("the connecting rampart")
Hovedvolden was expanded, so that it was now about 5 m high and about 20 m wide. Krumvolden was built through the Rheide Å, and overlapped with Hovedvolden. Forbindelsesvolden closed a gap between Halvkredsvolden ("the semicircle rampart", a bank that protected Hedeby) and Hovedvolden near Dannevirke Sø. Buevolden and Dobbeltvolden protected an important road junction. Most of the building work is attributed to Harald Bluetooth. Forbindelsesvolden was attacked by Germans in 974.
'Dannevirke 4' – Forbindelsesvolden, Krumvolden, and Hovedvolden
Under Canute IV of Denmark (1080-1086) Denmark was at war with the German empire. The Dannevirke was strengthened at the beginning of the 12th century: the moats were deepened and the ramparts were made higher. A granite boulder palisade wall was built on a part of Hovedvolden.
'Dannevirke 5' – Hovedvolden and Thyraborg)
Valdemar I fortified the rest of Hovedvolden with the famous "Valdemar-wall", a 7-m high wall of stones in mortar on a granite boulder base, propped up with buttresses and covered with tiles. This was a large reinforcement, and doubtless deterred many who tried to send an army northwards through Jutland. It was the last true reinforcement of the ramparts. Later Thyraborg castle was built.
The Dannevirke began to lose its purpose in the 14th century, owing both to the expense of manning it and to the development of ballistas, trebuchets, and similar siege engines.

The Dannevirke in World War II


Following the Allied invasion of Normandy during World War II, the Wehrmacht feared that a second Allied invasion might take place through Denmark, and contemplated converting the earthen wall into an anti-tank trench to counter this threat. Had the proposal been implemented, it would have destroyed the structure.
Hearing of the plans, Danish archaeologist Søren Telling – aware that all archaeological investigation was under the ultimate jurisdiction of SS chief Heinrich Himmler – immediately telephoned both the head of the SS's archaeological department, ''Amt für Ahnenwerte'', and Himmler himself. Telling argued strongly against the destruction of an important remnant of "Aryan civilization" and Himmler authorized him to stop the construction of the anti-tank trench. He informed Telling that a written order would be dispatched but that it would take several days to arrive. Telling then drove to the site and ordered the commanding Wehrmacht officers to immediately stop the construction process. When the local Wehrmacht commander refused, Telling threatened him with reprisals from the SS. Construction was called off and Himmler's written order arrived two days later countering the Wehrmacht's original instructions. Telling later settled near the site and considered himself a custodian of it until his death in 1968.

The Dannevirke in popular culture


As a symbol of Danish autonomy from Germany, ''Dannevirke'' was adopted as the title of several Danish journals during the nineteenth century. The most notable of these was published by Nikolaj Frederik Severin Grundtvig from 1816-1819.
The town of Dannevirke in New Zealand was founded by Danish, Norwegian and Swedish settlers in 1872, when the site's loss to the Germans was a recent and very painful memory.

See also



Götavirke (Geatish Dyke)

History of Denmark

History of Schleswig-Holstein

Offa's Dyke

Separation barrier

External links



Dansk Middelalder Danish website with map, history and reconstructions.

[1] Danish to English autotranslater
''Parts of this article are based on the articles and on the Danish Wikipedia, accessed on 23 July 2006.''

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