Archeologists have get tracing of a Viking hall in Denmark that once stood at the clip of Harald " Bluetooth " Gormsson , the ancient king of Denmark whose nickname inspired the name of the engineering that wirelessly tie your smartphone to speaker .

The hall was recently reveal by archeologists near the village of Hune in North Jutland , Denmark , agree to anannouncementfrom the Historical Museum of Northern Jutland . Based on imprint leave behind from the structure , they figure the construction once measured close to 40 m ( 131 feet ) farseeing and 8 to 10 meters ( 26 to 32 foot ) wide .

" This is the largest Viking long time find of this nature in more than ten year , and we have not seen anything like it before here in North Jutland , even though it has only been part turn up , " Thomas Rune Knudsen , dig leader and archeologist at the North Jutland Museums , said .

Archeology excavations of a Viking hall in Hune, Denmark.

Another shot of the recent excavations near Hune, Denmark. Image courtesy of Nordjyske Museer

" We only had the opportunity to excavate part of the anteroom , but there are plausibly several houses hidden under the mulch to the E . A foyer building of this nature rarely stands alone . "

It ’s recognise that hoi polloi in the Norse landslived in longhouses(langhús ) throughout theVikingera , just as they have in many cultures across time and quad . However , they believe this fussy building was more potential to be a honored construction that suffice as a shoes for political meetings and ceremonies . It perhaps also had another daily communal use when it was n’t being used for raucous Viking gatherings .

Its anatomy and design seem to bear close similarities with structures from thelate Viking Age , array from the first half of the ninth century CE to the end of the eleventh century . To get a good grip on its age , the team will continue excavation throughout 2023 and canvas the site with carbon 14 dating .

A Viking rune dated to 970 to 1020 CE found in Denmark.

The rune reads: “Hove, Thorkild, Thorbjørn set their father Runulv den Rådnilde’s stone". Image courtesy of Nordjyske Museer

Another clue about the hall ’s age come from a fascinating runic letter that was previously discovered in the nearby area . date stamp from 970 to 1020 CE , it reads : “ Hove , Thorkild , Thorbjørn set their sire Runulv den Rådnilde ’s stone " . Along with providing a tighter time figure , the rune show the complex body part was perhaps link up to a local leader known as Runulv lair Rådsnilde .

" It is difficult to prove that the found Viking hall belong to the family of Runulv den Rådsnilde , but it is certainly a possibility . If nothing else , the runic letter Harlan Stone and hall be the same societal class and both belong to society ’s elite , " explainedKnudsen .

If all this is on the money , it would show that the hall was being used during the time of Harald " Bluetooth " Gormsson , king of Denmark from 958 to 986 CE . His name reportedly come from his receive a " dead " tooth which was a grey / dismal coloring material , and his reign was especially notable as he was the first swayer to put up the bedspread of Christianity across Denmark .

As for ol' Bluetooth ’s connection with theprolific wireless technologywe use today , it ’s pronounce to be a reference work to the king ’s relationship with Norway . Just as Bluetooth technology allows cross - communication between gadget of all form , this Billie Jean King united Denmark and Norway in 958 CE .