Eketorp is an Iron Age fort, located on southeastern Öland, Sweden, and extensively reconstructed and enlarged in the Middle Ages. Throughout the ages the fortification has served a variety of somewhat differing uses: from defensive ringfort, to medieval safe haven and thence a cavalry garrison. In the 20th century it was further reconstructed to become a heavily visited tourist site and a location for re-enactment of medieval battles. Eketorp is the only one of the 19 known prehistoric fortifications on Öland that has been completely excavated, yielding a total of over 24,000 individual artifacts. The entirety of southern Öland has been designated as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO. The Eketorp fortification is often referred to as Eketorp Castle.
The indigenous peoples of the Iron Age constructed the original fortification about 400 AD, a period known to have engendered contact between Öland natives with Romans and other Europeans. The ringfort in that era is thought to have been a gathering place for religious ceremonies and also a place of refuge for the local agricultural community when an outside enemy appeared. The circular design was believed to be chosen because the terrain is so level that attack from any side was equally likely. The original diameter of this circular stone fortification was about . In the next century the stone was moved outward to construct a new circular structure of about in diameter. At this juncture there were known to be about fifty individual cells or small structures within the fort as a whole. Some of these cells were in the center of the fortified ring, and some were actually built into the wall itself.
In the mid 600s AD, the ringfort was mysteriously abandoned, and it remained unused until the early 11th century. This 11th century work generally built upon the earlier fort, except that stone interior cells were replaced with timber structures, and a second outer defensive wall was erected.
Presently the fort is used as a tourist site for visitors to Öland to experience a fortification for this region.
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Stora Alvaret est une plaine calcaire (alvar), couvrant une grande partie du sud de l'île d'Öland dans le comté de Kalmar en Suède. Elle s'étale sur environ de long et de large, et est constitué de calcaires datant de l'ordovicien couvert d'une très fine couche de sol, ce qui lui confère une flore très caractéristique, avec en particulier un grand nombre d'orchidées. Les humains sont présents dans la région depuis l'âge de la pierre, et l'alvar est surtout un terrain de pâture.
Öland (Œlandia en latin et Œlande francisé) est une grande île du sud-ouest de la mer Baltique. Large de , elle s'étire sur le long de la côte sud-est de la Suède, dont elle n'est distante, en son point le plus rapproché, que de . Les extrémités de l'île sont plus éloignées, vingt-deux kilomètres séparant chacune d'elles du continent. Surnommée « l'île du soleil et des vents », elle est une des vingt-cinq provinces historiques suédoises, bien qu'elle dépende aujourd'hui du comté de Kalmar (en suédois Kalmar län).