OUR FOREFATHERS IMMIGRATION 



no traces of any great change of the people inhabiting Sweden. The other was, 

 that mo5.t of the skulls found in graves of the later Stone»Age, are of the charac* 

 teristic Teiitpnictype. 



This opinion is now generally considered to be correct. An important que« 

 stion arose however: Were our forefathers the first inhabitants of the country, or 

 was it peopled previously? 



In 1884, through the then accessible though insufficient material, I found it 

 probable that a people of another race lived here before our forefathers. On the 

 other hand, from the knowledge at our disposal in this moment, I gather that 

 our forefathers were the first, who, after the end of the Glacial Period, occup* 

 ied Sweden. 



During the last forty years, indefatigable investigations have brought to light 

 many important circumstances which tend to ultimately solve this problem. 



We can all quite understand that the solution of it is enticing, inasmuch as 

 we, like other people, naturally wish to know our origin, and when our fore« 

 fathers immigrated here. 



The whole of the Scandinavian peninsula was, as is generally known, for 

 many thousand years, the last Glacial Period, covered by a tremendous mass of 

 ice and snow. 



When the climate became warmer, and the ice«boundary retreated towards 

 the North from the South coast of Scania, it was not long before plants and 

 animals from Central Europe spread over the parts of our country which had 

 been delivered from ice, and soon man followed. 



Who were the primitive inhabitants* of our country? Where did they come from? 

 \ It is apparent that they, as well as vegetation and animals, must have come 



from Central Europe, over North Germany and Denmark. 



It is also apparent that this people belon ged to the race, which then lived 

 in C entral Europe. 



Do we know anything of the inhabitants of Central Europe at that time? 

 Yes, we know that a long-headed (dolichocephalic) race then inhabited Central 

 Europe, and, what is very important, that in the whole of Central Europe no 

 ^^y •^ remains have been found of any short^headed (brachycephalic) race who could 

 have lived immediately after the end of the last Glacial Period. The first rests of 

 such a brachycephalic race have been met with many thousand years afterwards. 



The long-headed race, who, at the end of the Glacial Period, lived in Central 

 Europe, is known as the »Cro»Magnon»»race, so called after a place in France 

 where remains of the same were found, or the »Aurignacian»«race, because the 

 same has been identified in remains from the »Aurignacian» Period, which imme« 

 diately followed the Glacial Age.** 



It was a superior, rather cultivated, race. 



♦ That is to say, naturally, the first inhabitants of Sweden after the last Glacial Period. It is another question, whether 

 ythe North was peopled during the Inter.Glacial Period, between the penultimate and the ultimate Glacial Age. In the southern 

 ■ PSrts of the Scandinavian countries, traces of an. IntMjGlacial people probably have been met with, which would not be surprising, 

 as Central Europe was inhabited during the whole of the same Inter-Glacial Period, and even previous to this. 



•• It is not necessary to discuss here the relations between the Cro-Magnon and other similar types. Here, this name 

 is used as a common designation of the long-headed peoples who lived in Central Europe during the time in question. 



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