Our summer holidays during the weekends continue. A month ago we went to Frilandsmuseet that is located at the outskirts of Copenhagen.
Frilandsmuseet
is all about Danish agricultural history and countryside life between
1650 and 1950. It is, what you call, an Open air museum. You are walking
through open plains and small forest areas as you are moving from one
exhibition to the other. Older buildings are located closer to the
entrance and the further you go the closer you get to the modern age. We
were lucky that the route we took at the end led us to the buildings
from the 20th century, after the Second World War, so we indeed had the feeling of walking through time.
The
buildings in Frilandsmuseet are from all over Denmark and that includes:
Southern Sweden (it used to be Danish territory), Bornholm and Faeroe
Islands. As you are walking around the exhibitions you can see next to
the every building where was it located, in what time period and who
used it and for what.
Most
of the building where residential buildings, but one can also see
various types of farm buildings, production buildings and one windmill.
We even saw a set of a bit bigger stones assembled in a circle and they
were used for the village council meetings.
As
I had the opportunity to see something similar before in Croatia, a lot
of exhibits didn't surprise me at first but when I gave it a second
thought, they did. Even though there is 1700 km between Denmark and
Croatia and living conditions differ, the solutions people reached are
strikingly similar between the two cultures and that was a surprise in itself.
As
my archeology friend explained. Some inventions were so practical that
after they appeared, they spread around like wildfire, stayed for a long
time and they were not changing much. That is why you can see a lot of
similar living solutions in cultures that are so far away from each
other.
Closet beds
But
there were a couple of things that I haven't seen in other places.
First thing that stood out, and it was present in all the houses up until
19 century were beds.
Beds weren't placed in rooms that would then have the function as
bedrooms but they were built into something we would call today, a built
in closet.
So, we were
walking through the house and watching different rooms and then suddenly
on the wall you see a small closet doors and behind them wasn't a built
in closet but a tiny bed. Tiny, for modern day humans but if we take
into consideration how tall humans were couple of hundreds years ago,
tiny beds were all they needed. Bed doors could be closed from
the inside, so you could have closed yourself into the bed. At first I
was surprised but as I started thinking about the living conditions in
Denmark it started to make sense.
Denmark
is cold, even today. In the warmest part of the year you need to wear
at least a thin shirt with sleeves. There is a couple of days a
year that are warm enough so one could walk outside without clothes. And
days in the summer are very long, with sunset coming as early as 4:30.
With these two things combined, maybe they made closet beds in order to
preserve the heat and darkness? Since I moved to Denmark, when the days
become long, with the beginning of May, it takes me at least two weeks
to stop waking up too early, with the sunset, so I can see the benefit
of sleeping in the closet in Denmark, especially during the summer months.
Sea weed rooftops
Second
unique thing that we saw in Frilandsmuseet were roofs made out of sea
weed. Which also surprised me at first but after giving it a bit of
thought, it didn't. If you walk around any Danish coast, you will see
that a lot of beaches is covered with sea weed. It is just washed ashore
smelling bad. With resources being scarce, back in the day and people
having to go by with what little was available, sea weed roofs start to
make sense. If there is a lot just lying there on the beach and it will
keep the house dry, why not. But I recon it was a fire hazard at the
same time.
Faereo Islands houses
As
the whole buildings, I found the Faereo Island houses as unique.
They were built on the slopes, half-way dug into the ground. When you
would be walking around the house, you would see only one long wall with
a grass rooftop, two shorter walls were visible only half way, the
other half was just disappearing into the ground. If you would walk
behind the house, you would be standing above it and in theory you could
walk on the natural grass roof. Very special indeed and most likely an
adaptation to the sloppy terrain of the Faeroe Islands (I have never been there, so it is possible that I am wrong).
Hay beehives
We
also had an opportunity to see at least in part how people were making
honey between 17th and 19 century. Next to one of the houses beehive was displayed. It was shaped as a cone, made out of wood and hay.
Conclusion
If
you are interested in seeing and learning how people used to live in
this part of the world in the past Frilandsmuseet is indeed a place to
see and it will feel like a walk through the past. In addition you
will get a healthy workout since the area is big and you will need to
walk far. There is also an opportunity to ride in a real horse carriage
if one fancies that.
The
whole experience made me thinking how wasteful we have become, how far
away we have moved from living in sync with the environment around us
and how incompetent we have become for a life outside of the modern
society.
I am not trying
to romanticize now. I am fully aware that it was a harsh, short life
with not much creature comfort. And I acknowledge that our quality of
life today has radically improved in all aspects. With that being said it
still used to be a life where people where living from what was around
them and using it to the best of their abilities. People didn't have
much and what little they had was valuable. Not like today, when things are so
cheap that we change out our clothes, phones and cars like they are
perishable goods and with that lifestyle causing the unprecedented trash
pollution of the planet.
In
the same time we live so far out of sync with nature and environment
around us that most of us have become completely incompetent to live "off
the land". Ask yourselves the following, if modern civilization
collapsed for one reason or another, would you be capable to grow, hunt
or pick your food? Would you be capable of preserving your food for the
winter? Would you be capable of building and maintaining your house? Would you
be capable of making your own clothes and shoes? I think that most of
you, including me, would answer these questions with a no.
Well
those people were capable of doing all these things and they were
capable of withstanding much harsher living conditions, than we can even
start imagine. Now ask yourself- what does that tell about us?
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