di;.\ r/:. 



309 



Among the most remarkable and not uncommon stone- 

 set graves are those of the so-called "ship-form " setting ; they 

 belong both to the earlier and later iron age. This peculiar 

 form of grave is found on the peninsula of Scandinavia and on 



\fc&00 



Fig. 723. Blekinge. Diameter, 30 feet. Fig. 724.-Listerby ridge, Blekinge. 



Diameter, 18 feet. 

 Stone-set graves. 



" "--"" 'Lf- % ^*-'- 



. 



- 



ec**^ 





*5fe?s-r.v>?-- v " " s^^~;"/\*"'^-^~^>m5?K- 



i".'f*T'"~' a ,'.c/".- r "" ' ''"V,t J ''' *''-' 'v'"""^"'"'''*"^^'" "'?*'? 



.^xrmf'P^-- .; - ."-'c^^gftfSS^Ji :> ^ -,' -S^i"upr' %'^sg?^J*> a 



J ; ^-" ;::; : : "^?S^^ 



^^^^ii^^-:-|;?^4i^^^S 



Fig. 725. Graveyard with mounds and stone-set graves at Ashy, Sodermanland. 



the islands of Gotland, Oland, and other islands of the Baltic, 

 in Courland and Livonia, and was also erected in England 

 and Scotland by the people of the North. 



One of the most interesting is that where the rowers' seats 



