Chapter

National Romantic Heritage Revival & Institutionalization

The European national-romantic heritage movement reached Gotland in 1875 when Pehr Arvid Säve and the Friends of Gotland's Antiquity (Gotlands Fornminnesförening) founded Gotlands Fornsal—now Gotland Museum—to preserve the island's archaeological and cultural heritage, including the picture stones and silver hoards that had made Gotland internationally significant. The museum became the institutional custodian of the Visby church ruins and the island's medieval artifacts. In 1936, Gotlands Hembygdsförbund was founded as an umbrella for approximately 90 local heritage societies (hembygdsföreningar), which became custodians of village-level traditions—midsummer celebrations, folk costumes (gotlandsdräkt), and parish heritage. The tar-burning tradition (sojdesbränning), still surrounded by rituals 'to scare off evil powers and promote a successful burn,' was documented as a living heritage practice with explicit pre-Christian ritual survival. In 1945, Gutamålsgillet was founded by Herbert Gustavson to preserve the Gutnish language. Browse the Gotland Museum's collections from prehistory through the Middle Ages; find a local hembygdsförening hosting a village midsummer or tar-burning event.

1875 - 1984
Range
3
Places
0
Celebrations
0
Threads
See current celebrations

Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

knowledge

Gotland Museum

The county museum (formerly Fornsalen, founded 1875) in Visby houses the world's largest collection of Gotlandic picture stones, the Spillings Hoard (world's largest Viking silver treasure), and a dedicated '1361 – Battle for Gotland' exhibition. It also manages the Visby church ruins and publishes the annual Gotländskt arkiv. As the primary institutional custodian of Gotlandic heritage, it makes every era of the island's history legible through its collections and publications. Anchor modes: custodian; signal; material_layer | Search hooks: Gotland Museum; Fornsalen; picture stones bildstenar; Spillings Hoard; Viking silver; archaeological exhibition; Gotländskt arkiv

View the world's largest collection of Gotlandic picture stones, the Spillings Hoard (world's largest Viking silver treasure), and the 1361 Battle for Gotland exhibition.

knowledge

Gotlands Hembygdsförbund

The umbrella organization (founded 1936) coordinating approximately 90 local heritage societies (hembygdsföreningar) across Gotland's parishes and settlements. These societies are the custodians of village-level traditions—midsummer celebrations, harvest events, folk costume (gotlandsdräkt) traditions, and parish heritage—and hold local knowledge of which traditions are continuous versus revived. As the organizational network connecting parish-level festival organizers across the island, the Hembygdsförbund is a key search anchor for discovering village-level celebrations that may not appear in tourism listings. Anchor modes: custodian; signal | Search hooks: Gotlands Hembygdsförbund; hembygdsförening; heritage society; folk costume gotlandsdräkt; midsummer organization; parish heritage; village celebration

Connect with the umbrella organization coordinating ~90 local heritage societies across Gotland's parishes, custodians of village-level midsummer celebrations, folk costume traditions, and parish heritage.

continuity vault

Tar Burning Sites (Gotland)

The Gotlandic tar-burning tradition (sojdesbränning) is a living heritage practice combining practical craft with ritual observance—tar burning is still surrounded by rituals 'to scare off evil powers and promote a successful burn,' and burning events serve as community gatherings with food, drinks, and live music. This tradition demonstrates how pre-Christian ritual practices could survive by embedding in economically essential craft traditions—tar was too important for shipbuilding to be suppressed, and the associated rituals were maintained. Several active groups still practice, and events are listed on helagotland.se. Anchor modes: living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Tar burning Gotland; sojdesbränning; tjärsörning; tar valley; ritual craft; community gathering; Tjärsörningsdagen; sojde

Attend a traditional sojdesbränning where locals burn tar in ancient earth kilns, surrounded by rituals to ward off evil powers, with community food, drinks, and live music.

Celebrations and traditions

Only reviewed Historical Anthropology projections appear here.

No reviewed festival relations are projectable for this chapter yet.

Historical worlds

Historical worlds connect this chapter to wider cross-border context.

No public historical world is connected to this chapter yet.

Related threads

Threads appear only from approved Cultural Thread memberships.

No public threads are connected to this chapter yet.

More chapters in Gotland

Adjacent chapters stay inside the same cultural region.

Chapter

Swedish Provincial Incorporation & Manor Estate Society

1645 - 1875

The Treaty of Brömsebro (1645) transferred Gotland from Danish to Swedish rule, formally ending nearly three centuries of foreign governance. The Gutalagen was replaced by Swedish law, and the Gutnaltinget's successor institution, the Landstinget, became a provincial administrative body under the Swedish crown. At Roma, the former Cistercian estate became a crown farm (kungsgård), with a manor house built in 1733 from the abbey's own stone. Agricultural estate society reshaped the countryside, but older rhythms persisted: the Gotlandsruss pony herd at Lojsta hed—Sweden's only wild horse population—continued to roam as it had since pre-modern times, managed by the Hushållningssällskapet. A brief Russian occupation in 1808 interrupted Swedish rule but left no lasting institutional change. Step into the 1733 manor house at Roma Kungsgård to see how the Swedish crown repurposed the monastic estate; watch the Gotlandsruss ponies at Lojsta hed for a living link to pre-modern agricultural Gotland.

Chapter

UNESCO Heritage Regime & Gutnic Language Revival

From 1984

Gotland's contemporary cultural identity is shaped by two forces: the heritage tourism industry centered on Visby's UNESCO World Heritage status (inscribed 1995), and a Gutnic revival movement asserting the island's distinct linguistic and cultural identity. Medieval Week (Medeltidsveckan), running annually since 1984 in week 32, is Sweden's largest historical festival—centered on the 1361 brandskattning narrative, though this framing can obscure the civil war between Visby's German merchants and the rural Gotlandic community, reducing complex memory to a costume drama. On Fårö, the Bergmancenter hosts the annual Bergman Week, and the island's Fårömål dialect—the most archaic form of Gutnish, closest to Old Gutnish—preserves linguistic features lost on mainland Gotland. Gutamålsgillet organizes Tjärsörningsdagen (tar-smearing day) connecting the sojdesbränning craft-ritual complex to language preservation. At Lojsta, midsummer has been celebrated in traditional style since 1921 with folk dancing, Gutnish songs, and the Gotlandsruss ponies nearby. Walk the UNESCO-listed Hanseatic town, attend Medieval Week, take the ferry to Fårö for Bergman Week, join a tar-burning gathering, or celebrate midsummer at Lojsta Hall—each experience reveals a different layer of what it means to be from Gotland.

Chapter

Danish Baltic Conquest & Protestant Reformation

1361 - 1645

In 1361, King Valdemar IV of Denmark invaded Gotland in a Baltic power contest. The rural Gotlandic army—farmers organized through the Gutnaltinget—marched to face the Danes outside Visby's walls and was destroyed; the city's merchants then opened the gates and paid the brandskattning (ransom). This was not a simple 'Gotland vs Denmark' story: the civil war between Visby and the countryside meant city and rural community were never united against the invader. Danish rule (interrupted by the Victual Brothers from 1394 and the Teutonic Knights from 1398) brought the Reformation in the 1530s, dissolving Roma Abbey and the other monasteries. When Lübeck troops pillaged Visby in 1525, the city's churches were gutted and left as roofless ruins—still standing today as evocative monuments to the violent end of Visby's medieval golden age. Yet remarkably, the Gutalagen remained practically in use throughout this entire period of foreign rule, evidence that Gutnic self-governance persisted under changing sovereignty. Walk among the Visby church ruins and read the physical scars of the Reformation; stand outside the Ring Wall where the 1361 battle took place.

Chapter

Hanseatic Coexistence & Gutnic Self-Governance

1050 - 1361

Between Christianization and conquest, Gotland existed as a self-governing Gutnic commonwealth under its own law code, the Gutalagen—written down c. 1220 but containing provisions likely pre-Christian, including bans on blót and worship at vé and stafgarðar. The law contained no reference to the Swedish king or state, and remained practically in use until 1645 despite changing sovereignty. The Gutnaltinget at Roma remained the highest court. St Olaf landed at Akergarn (now S:t Olofsholm) c. 1029, converting Ormika of Hejnum—the island's Christianization, presented in the Gutasaga as voluntary. Parish communities built 92 stone churches—more per capita than anywhere else in Scandinavia—each constructed by its own parish, not by a central authority, in a conservative 'counter-Gothic' (kontragotik) style that resisted outside architectural trends. But this era also saw the explosive conflict between Visby's German merchant oligarchy and the rural Gotlandic community. In 1288, the city built its ring wall to exclude country farmers from trade, sparking a civil war (stad mot landsbygd) requiring Swedish royal intervention. Stand at the Visby Ring Wall and see the physical barrier between two communities; sit inside any of the 92 parish churches and feel the continuity of rural Gutnic identity.