Transcript The Vikings

The Vikings
Who were they?
• Norse (Scandinavian) explorers, warriors,
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merchants, and pirates
raided and colonized wide areas of Europe from
the late eighth to the early eleventh century
They reached: Constantinople, the Volga River in
Russia, Iceland, Greenland, and Newfoundland
(Canada), Britain, Ireland, Sicily and some ports
of the Mediterranean
Reasons for travels and colonization
• Outgrowth of farm lands in Scandinavia
• Weakness of other kingdoms and
settlements all over Europe
• Supreme navy and expertise in warfare
• Treasure and adventure
Weapons and warfare
• All free Norsemen were allowed to carry weapons
• helmet, shield, chain mail shirt, sword, axe, knife, spear
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and bows and arrows
Typical battle:
attack the ports from ships with inflamed arrows
create confusion
land and quickly siege
destroy defense
raid, kill and take everything moveable
board back on ship and
leave (with booty, women, young boys, animals)
Ships
• the longship (called "drakkar", "dragon" in
Norse)
• the knarr (merchant vessel designed to
carry cargo)
Society
• High lords
• Warrior lords
• Warriors
• Priests
• Women
• Slaves
Characteristics
• They were literate (runes)
• Heroic tales
• Mysticism
• Burial sites
• Legends
• mythology
Norse gods and goddesses
• Odin - the ruler of the gods, and the god of magic, poetry and
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war.
His wife was the motherly Frigg
their son was Balder, who was kind and gentle.
Freyja was goddess of love and fertility, and wept golden
tears when she was unhappy.
She had a twin brother Freyr, and their sacred animal was the
boar.
Red-headed Thor ruled the skies, storms and thunder. He had
iron gloves, a magic belt and a hammer
People loved Thor but did not trust Loki, the mischievous
'trickster god'. By a trick, Loki caused the death of Balder.
The dead and the Valhalla
• A dead person was buried or cremated (burned)
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with some of their belongings
Some Viking chiefs were given ship-burials, with
treasure, weapons, and favourite dogs and
horses buried with them.
Vikings believed that a warrior killed in battle
went to Valhalla, a great hall where dead heroes
feasted at long tables
Odin sent his warror-maidens, the Valkyries to
take them to Valhalla
Stories and legends
• Midgard or Middle Earth, along with giants, elves and
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dwarfs
The gods and goddesses lived in a sky world called
Asgard. Linking Midgard with Asgard was a rainbow
bridge.
tales of monsters, trolls, dragons, sea serpents, and the
fierce wolf Fenrir (which the gods tried to keep chained
up).
Odin rode a magical horse named Sleipnir, which had
eight legs.
did not want to die in bed, because they were afraid
they'd go to a foggy underworld called Niflheim
Other beliefs
• Vikings believed a flash of lightning meant Thor had
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flung his hammer.
People left gifts of milk for the elves in little bowls
Odin gave up one of his eyes to drink from a magical
fountain of wisdom.
Odin had two ravens. Mugin and Hugin, who flew around
to bring him news of the world.
Vikings believed the world was flat and surrounded by
sea; it was held up by a giant tree called Yggdrasil.
Legacy
• 35% of European men and 40% of
women have Viking genetic origin
• The fascist imagery (blond, Arian, brave
fighters, supreme of others)
• Music (Wagner)
• pop culture: Viking metal shows modern
influence of the Viking myths. It was a
popular sub-genre of heavy metal music,
originating in the early 1990s connected to
the black metal sub-genre.
Common misconceptions
• Horned helmets – no preserved
helmets with horns
• Skull cups – used regular wooden or
metal cups
• Uncleanliness - bathing every
Saturday and combing their hair
often.