Egtved is a village with a population of 2,433 (as of 1 January 2025)[ BY3: Population 1st January by urban areas, area and population density The Mobile Statbank from Statistics Denmark] near Vejle, Denmark in Vejle municipality in the Denmark Region of Southern Denmark. Nearby is Tørskind Gravel Pit, a sculpture park.
The village has a Romanesque church built in 1170, to which a tower was added in 1863. The Egtved Runestone, found near the church in 1863, is now on display in the church.
Egtved Girl
Near the village is a
Bronze Age archaeological site (ca. 1370 BC) which contained an extremely well-preserved burial. It was discovered in 1921 and is one of the best preserved Bronze Age findings in Denmark. It contained the well preserved body of a girl known as the
Egtved Girl. On the site where she was found a
tumulus with a diameter of 22 metres and a height of 4 metres was built. The teenaged girl was dressed in a string skirt, a short sleeved shirt with a woven belt, and a bronze spiked belt disc. She was laid on a cow-hide and covered by a coarse
blanket. Lying next to her was a
birch-bark drink container with remnants of a drink made of
bog myrtle,
cranberry and
honey.
There is also a small museum describing the discovery of the rare find in detail and displaying copies of the Egtved Girl's clothing, jewellery and buckle. This has allowed a very close look at Nordic Bronze Age clothing and hairstyles.
Literature
Notable people
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Poul Steenstrup (1772 in Egtved – 1864) a businessman, industrial entrepreneur and politician
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Peter Sørensen Vig (1854 in Bøgvad, Egtved Sogn – 1929) a Danish-American pastor, educator and historian in the Lutheran church
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Olaf Pedersen (1920 in Egtved – 1997) an authority on astronomy in classical antiquity and the Latin Middle Ages
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Mette Gravholt (born 1984 in Egtved) a retired Danish handball player who played 53 games for Denmark
External links