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Vikings

Page 38

by Neil Oliver

early raids, 148–9, 151–2

  end of Viking supremacy, 162

  settlement of, 155–9, 161–3

  slave trade, 158–61

  trade, 162

  Viking burials, 156

  wealth, 162

  iron, 42–4

  Iron Age, 42–5, 48–54, 62

  boats, 52–3

  human sacrifice, 48–52

  raiding, 52–3

  settlements, 44–5

  Shetland Islands, 183

  transition to, 44

  weapons, 52–3

  Islam, 72–5, 80

  Italy, 148

  Ivarr the Boneless, 162, 172, 176, 197, 225

  Iversen, Kaare, 165

  Izborsk, 130

  James III, King of Scots, 189

  Jarlshof, 182–5

  Jarrow, 8, 84, 115, 117

  Jelling, 234

  monuments, 226–9, 234, 242

  rune stones, 228–9

  Jensen, Troels Bo, 232–3

  Jerusalem, 73–4

  John of Islay, 190–1

  John XII, Pope, 231

  John XIX, Pope, 248

  Jomsvikings, the, 245–6

  Jorvik, Scandinavian kings of, 178–9

  Justinian, Emperor, 72, 159

  Jutes, 78

  Kanhave Canal, 225

  Kaul, Flemming, 34

  Kelly, Eamonn ‘Ned’, 152–5

  Kenneth MacAlpin, 193–4

  Kent, 168

  Kiev, 130, 133, 136, 139, 224

  Kivik, 36–7

  knarr, 103–4

  Knytlinga saga, 250

  Kongemose culture, 21

  Kristiansen, Kristian, 37

  Lake Ladoga, 120

  Lambay Island, 148

  Landnámabók, the, 201, 202

  language, 81, 179, 181

  L’Anse aux Meadows, 217–18

  Largs, Battle of, 191

  Last Great Maximum Refugia, 14

  Latvia, 119

  Leif Eriksson, 4, 216–18, 219–20

  Lek, River, 146

  Leo III, Pope, 77

  Lerwick, 6–7, 181

  Liber de Mensura Orbis Terrae (Dicuil), 199

  Liber Vitae, the, 249–50

  Liffey, River, 152, 155

  Limerick, 155, 162

  Limfjord, 16–17

  Lincoln, 178

  Lindisfarne, 7–8, 62, 84–5, 97, 111–15, 117, 168, 196

  Lindisfarne Gospels, 112–13

  Lindow Man, 51

  Linearbandkeramik culture, 23

  Ljungkvist, John, 86

  Loire estuary raid, 115–16

  London, 246

  long ports, 155

  long ships, 21, 34–7, 83–4, 99–100

  longhouses, 44–5, 45–8, 68–9, 184

  Longphort-Rothlaibh, 154

  Lord of the Isles, 189–91

  Lothar II, King of the Franks, 154

  Louis the Pious, 145

  Louvain, 154

  Luna, 147

  Lundeborg, 86

  lurs, 33–4

  Maas, John, 152–5

  Máel Sechnaill, King of Tara, 156

  Maes Howe, 5, 189

  Maglemosian, the, 22

  Magnus of Orkney, Earl, 190

  Mälaren, Lake, 141

  Malcolm III, King of Scots, 190

  Maldon, Battle of, 240, 241

  Marius, Gaius, 57

  Markland, 216

  mass burial, Dorset, 3

  Mediterranean Sea, 53–4, 62

  Mercia, 168, 172–7, 194, 196

  Merovingian dynasty, 75

  Mesolithic, the, 10–11, 14–23

  Michael III, Emperor, 134

  Midgard, 203

  migration, Mesolithic, 15–16, 17

  Mildenhall hoard, 78

  Milfield, 114

  Modern Gutnish, 81

  motivation, 119–20, 170–1

  Muawiyyah, Caliph, 74, 75

  Muhammad, the Prophet, 72–3, 74

  Mycenae, 37

  Naddodd, 200–1, 202

  Naismith, Rory, 240–1

  Napoleonic Wars, 7

  narwhals, 215

  National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, 31–3, 51

  National Museum of Ireland, Dublin, 159–60

  navigational techniques, 102–3, 118

  Neflaug, 123–4

  Nestor’s Chronicle, 224

  Neva River, 120

  Newfoundland, 216–18

  Noirmoutier, Island of, 147

  Nonnebakken, 235

  Normandy, 148, 161

  Normans, the, 148, 251–2

  North America, 216–18

  North Sea, 149, 164–6

  Northern Isles, settlement of, 181–9

  Northmen, xvii, 116

  Northumbria, 111–12, 114, 168, 196, 197

  Eirik Bloodaxe in, 237

  foundation of kingdom, 79

  Great Heathen Army in, 169–70, 176–7

  Norway

  conditions, 167, 202

  Mesolithic colonisation of, 11

  Mesolithic landscape, 18

  Olaf Tryggvasson siezes, 242–3

  origin of name, 117–18

  royal elites, 96

  unification of, 237

  Norwegian Vikings, 131–2, 145–6, 165, 166–8, 180, 192, 202

  return to British shores, 240

  settlement of Northern Isles, 181–9

  settlement of the Hebrides, 189–91

  Nøstvet culture, 22

  Novgorod, 129–30, 136, 139

  Oder River, 120

  Odin, 89, 91, 174, 203, 210–11

  Olaf Guthfrisson, 195, 197

  Olaf Sigtryggsson, 162, 196–7

  Olaf the White, 162, 172, 197

  Olaf Tryggvasson, 219–20, 240–3

  Öland, 18

  Oldcroghan Man, 51

  Oleg of Kiev, Prince, 136

  Olesen, Martin, 42–3

  Olof Eriksson, 242–3

  Ongendus, King of Denmark, 96, 226

  Oram, Richard, 57–8, 59–60

  Orkney Islands, 5, 118, 149–50, 165–6, 180–1, 182, 185, 186–7, 189

  Orkneyinga saga, 5, 149, 182, 189, 190

  O’Rourke, P.J., 151

  Osberht, King of Northumbria, 170

  Oseberg Ship, the, 104–5

  Oslo, Viking Ship Museum, 104–5

  Oswald, King of Northumbria, 111

  Othere’s Mound, 93

  Ottar, 12, 63

  Otto I, the Great, King of Germany, 230–1, 248

  Oxford

  Ashmolean Museum, 171–2, 239

  St Fridewide’s Church, 245

  paganism, 72, 234

  Paris, raid on, 146–7

  Patrick, St, 150

  Paulinus, 111

  Pedersen, Frederik, 57–8, 59–60

  Pevsner, Nikolaus, 173

  Phoenicians, 53

  Photios, Patriarch, 134–5

  Picts, 77, 78, 79, 182, 183, 186–8, 192–4

  Pisa, 148

  place names, 4–5, 179, 186–7, 199

  Plakun, 122, 136

  poetry, xvii, 190, 209–11

  Poland, 119

  Poppo (priest), 230

  Procopius of Caesarea, History of the Wars, 13–14

  Ragnar Lodbrok, 225

  Ragnarok, 210

  raids and raiding, range, 146–9

  ransom, 160, 245–6

  Rathlin Island, 8, 115, 148–9

  rauks, 82

  Ravning Edge bridge, 234–5

  Repton, 172–7, 197

  Repton mass burial, 175–6

  Repton Warrior, the, 174–5

  Res Gestae Saxonicae Sive Annalium Libri Tres (Widukind), 229–30

  Reykjavik, 201, 202

  Rhine, the, 59, 146, 148, 154–5

  Ribble Valley, 239

  Ribe cemetery, 231–3

  rickets, 185–6

  ritual bloodletting, 91

  rock ar
t, 25–6, 82–4, 97

  Roesdahl, Else, 64

  Rognvald, 189

  Rollo, 161

  Roman Army, Scandinavian recruits, 60

  Romans, the, 12–13, 56–62, 65–9, 71–2

  Rome, 54, 248–9

  Roscommon, sack of, 149

  Roskilde, 246

  Roskilde boats, 100

  Rothlaibh/Rodolf, 154–5

  Rouen, 146

  royal fortresses, 235–6

  royal palaces, 87

  runes, 5, 63, 123

  Rus, the, 125–33, 236

  Byzantine trade treaty, 136–7

  contact with Byzantine Empire, 132–3, 135

  conversion to Christianity, 223–4

  funerary rites, 126–9

  origin of name, 129

  origins of, 120–5

  raids on Constantinople, 134–7

  territory, 138–40

  Rusiyyah, the, 109–11, 125–30

  Russia, 120–5, 130

  Russian Primary Chronicle, The, 129–30, 136, 139

  Saami, the, 11–14, 242

  Saga of Eirik the Red, 216

  Saga of the Greenlanders, 216

  sagas, xvii, 64, 119–20, 180, 182

  Sahlberg, Anders, 36

  St Brice’s Day Massacre, 243–5

  St Cuthbert, Church of, Lindisfarne, 7–8

  St Fridewide’s Church, Oxford, 245

  St John’s College, Oxford, 244

  St Ninian’s Isle babies, 185–6

  St Ninian’s Isle treasure, 187–8

  St Petersburg

  Church of Our Saviour of the Spilled Blood, 140–1

  Hermitage, 122–4, 140

  Saxons, 66–7, 78, 166

  Scandinavia, experience of the Ice Age, 9–11

  Scheldt, River, 148

  Schleswig, 145–6

  Scone, 194

  Scotland

  Aethelstan’s invasion of, 195

  conversion to Christianity, 151

  foundation of kingdom, 192–4

  Gaels colonisation of, 79

  kingdoms of, 168

  Scottish identity, 181

  Viking settlement, 188–9

  Scott, Sir Walter, 182–3

  Scyflings, 93

  Scythians, 41

  Sea Stallion, the, 100–2

  sea unicorns, 215

  Second World War, 140, 165–6, 200

  Seine, River, 146, 148

  Senchus fer nAlban, 79

  Senones, the, 56

  settlements

  Bronze Age, 29

  Iron Age, 44–5

  layout, 141–2

  Roman period, 68–9

  Shetland Bus, the, 165, 179

  Shetland Islands, 6–7, 118, 149, 165–6, 179–81, 181–8, 189

  ship settings, 35–6, 81–2, 234

  ships and boats, 2–3

  Bronze Age, 26, 34–7

  currachs, 198–9

  decoration, 101–2, 104

  development of, 97–9

  dragon ships, 97, 99–100, 100

  the Gokstad Ship, 105

  influence of design, 105–6

  Iron Age, 52–3

  the keel, 98–9

  knarr, 103–4

  the mast, 99

  the Oseberg Ship, 104–5

  portage, 124–5

  propulsion, 98, 99, 100

  reconstruction, 100–2

  sails, 99

  steer-board, 99

  shoes, 123

  Sicga, 114

  Sihtric, 194–5

  Silius Aulus Caecina Largus, Gaius, 61–2

  silk, 109, 136, 144, 162

  silver

  Arabic, 130–1, 144, 167, 236

  Cuerdale hoard, 239

  Danegeld, 240–1, 241–2, 243

  Sjæelland, 20–1, 235

  Skateholm, 20

  Skoglund, Peter, 35–6

  skraelingar, 217

  Skreen, battle of, 156

  Skrydstrup Woman, 31

  Skuldelev, 100

  Skye, 8, 115

  slaves, 126–9, 152, 158–61

  Slavs, 132

  sledges, 104–5

  Snæbjörn Galti, 212–13, 213

  Snorri Sturlson, 86, 209–11, 242–3

  Somerled, 190

  sources, xvi–xviii, 63–4

  South Orkney, xix–xx

  Southern Ocean, xix–xx

  Stainmore, battle of, 237

  Stamford Bridge, Battle of, 251

  Staraya Ladoga, 120–4, 136, 139, 140

  status, 1–2

  Stirling, 5–6

  Stockholm Museum, 143–5

  Stone Age hunters, 9–11

  Stone of Scone, 194

  Storebælt (Great Belt) Bridge, 56

  Storegga Slide, the, 10

  surströmming, 208

  Sussex, 168

  Sutton Hoo ship burial, 78

  Svear, the, 86, 96

  Svein Asleifsson, 149

  Svein Forkbeard, 101–2, 235, 240, 241, 242, 246

  Sweden

  kings, 96

  Mesolithic, 11, 17–18

  origin of name, 86

  Swedish nationalism, 88

  Swedish Vikings, 166, see also Rus, the

  and Arabic silver, 130–1

  contact with Byzantine Empire, 132–3

  funerary rites, 126–9

  Gotland, 126

  range, 141

  remains, 140–5

  in Russia, 120–5

  swords, 48, 174–5

  Symeon of Durham, 96–7, 169–70

  Synod of Whitby, 112

  Tacitus, 12–13, 48–9, 58–9, 86, 195

  Tait, Ian, 184–5

  Tamdrup, 230

  1066, 251–2

  Teutoburg Forest, Battle of, 57–9

  Teutones, the, 57

  Thanet, 169

  Theodosius I, the Great, Emperor, 71

  Theodosius II, Emperor, 71

  Thor, 90–1, 175, 203, 210

  Thorfinn Karlsfeni, 217

  Thorgeirr, 231

  Thorkell the Tall, 245–6, 247

  Thyre, Queen, 222–3, 226, 228–9

  Tiberius, Emperor, 57

  Tollund Man, 49–50, 51, 51–2

  Tostig, 251–2

  trade

  Bronze Age, 41

  Byzantine treaty, 136–7

  trade–contd

  centres of, 120

  Ireland, 162

  pre-Viking era, 94–5

  Roman, 60, 67–9

  slave, 158–61

  travels

  first waves of, 118–19

  range, 85, 124, 132, 141, 146, 188

  Trelleborg, 235

  Trelleborgs, the, 235–6

  tribute, 117, 131

  Trindhoj Man, 31

  Turgesius, 160

  Tybrind Vig, 18–19

  unicorns, 215

  Up Helly Aa, 6–7

  Valhalla, 203

  Valkyries, the, 175

  Valsgärde, 92–3

  Vandals, 67

  Varangian Guards, 138, 251

  Varus, Publius Quinctilius, 58–9

  Vedbæk Mesolithic cemetery, 20–1

  Vejle River, 234

  Vendel, 92

  Verdun, Treaty of, 147

  Viborg, 234

  Vicarstown, 152

  Victor, Paul-Émile, 213

  Vienna, Hofburg Palace Treasury, 248–9

  Viking, origin of name, 116

  Viking Age

  start of, 64–5, 67–71

  end of, 252

  Viking Claw, 4

  Viking Empires (Forte, Oram and Pedersen), 57–8, 59–60

  Viking Ship Museum, Oslo, 104–5

  Vikings, The (film), 107–8

  Vikings, The (TV programme), 45

  Vinland, 216–18

  Vistula, River, 120, 124

  Vita Karoli Magni (Einhard), 76

  Vitamin D deficiency, 185–6


  Vladimir, King of the Rus, 132–3, 223–4

  Volkhov, 121

  Volkoff, Vladimir, 108

  Vortigern, 78

  Waterford, 154, 155, 162

  Wayland the Smith, 203

  wealth, 93, 110, 130–1, 166–7

  weapons, 110

  Bronze Age, 38–9

  grave goods, 93

  Iron Age, 52–3

  Roman, 68

  swords, 48, 174–5

  Wearmouth, 84

  Wehlin, Joakim, 35–6, 81–4

  Wessex, 168, 177–8

  West Mound, Gamla Uppsala, 88, 89, 90

  Wexford, 155, 162

  wheel-houses, 183

  whetstones, 184, 185

  Wicklow, 162

  Widukind, 229–30

  Wiglaf, King of Mercia, 173

  William I, the Conqueror, 251–2

  Willibrord, Apostle of the Frisians, 225–6

  Winchester Cathedral, 249–50

  Wittgenstein, Ludwig, 21

  women

  appearance, 108, 110

  dress, 109

  the Rus, 136

  Woolf, Alex, 117, 149, 167, 193

  Yeavering, 114

  Yggdrasil, 203

  Ynglinga, House of, 86–7, 96

  Ynglinga saga, 86, 89, 91

  York, 178–9, 194–5, 196, 237

  Younger Edda, the, 209–10

  All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  ‘The Tollund Man’ taken from Wintering Out © Seamus Heaney andreprinted by permission of Faber and Faber Ltd

  Copyright © 2013 by Neil Oliver

  978-1-4804-4806-3

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