|
Vikings
I.
Introduction
Vikings,
Nordic peoples—Danes, Swedes, and Norwegians—who raided
and settled in large areas of eastern and western Europe
during a period of Scandinavian expansion from about 800
to 1100.
The
raids of the Vikings in the 9th and 10th centuries are among
the best-known episodes of early medieval history. These
fierce attacks from Scandinavia fell on the British Isles,
the Atlantic and North Sea shoreline of the Carolingian
Empire, which included most of what are now France,
Germany, and the Low Countries, and to the east on what
became Russia.
They
took a heavy toll on the fragile political development and
stability of Europe, although the damage caused by the Vikings
may well have been exaggerated by the main historians of
the period. These historians were usually priests who looked
upon the pagan Vikings with particular horror.
|

©
Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
|
The
Vikings were both a warrior and farming society
from the region now known as Scandinavia. They were
also seafaring explorers who sailed beyond their
homelands not only to raid, but also to build settlements
in other parts of the world. The Danish Vikings
went south toward Germany, France, England, Spain,
and into regions on the northwestern Mediterranean
coast. Swedish Vikings went to eastern Europe, while
the Norwegians sailed to Greenland and North America.
|
In addition,
the Church, as a wealthy and relatively defenseless target,
may have suffered more heavily than many other sectors of
European society. Despite the notoriety the Vikings attracted
because of their ferocity, within a century or two they converted
to Christianity and settled in the lands they had raided.
At the same time, the Vikings were developing new outposts
of settlement in Iceland, Greenland, North America, and the
North Atlantic, and establishing kingdoms in Scandinavia along
the lines of the European kingdoms to the south. As they became
assimilated in their new lands, they became farmers and traders
as well as rulers and warriors.
II. The Nordic Peoples
Few written records exist
of the Vikings before their conversion to Christianity.
As a result, knowledge of the Germanic peoples of Scandinavia
in the pre- and early-Viking period is limited. It rests
on chronicles and records created by those who were frequently
their enemies and victims, on archaeological and physical
evidence, and on their own later literary reconstructions
of their heroic past.
The social structure of pre-Viking
and Viking Scandinavia depended on the links of extended
families and ties made by marriage. Blood feuds and diplomatic
marriages were a part of upper-class life. Though slavery
played a significant part in the economy, as it did in the
domestic society of the great households, the basic social
structure was that of small, free farmers who owed loyalty
(along with taxes) to the headman or patriarch of the family,
or to the regional chief or noble. Such chiefs and petty
nobles differed from their followers in wealth and power,
but the distinction was more of degree than of rigid social
boundaries or of hereditary nobility. When the chiefs became
Viking leaders, their client farmers became their sailors
and, on land, their soldiers.
Because of the harsh climate
and the many enterprises that took men away from home for
extended periods, free-born women possibly enjoyed a base
of power and responsibility for family and economic affairs
not matched by women elsewhere in Western Europe.
In the harsh climate of Scandinavia
the thinly scattered population lived by farming, fishing,
and trading—mostly by sea. Viking political organization
resembled that of other early Germanic peoples: a society
of warrior chiefs and loyal followers. However, the Scandinavian
world had never come under Roman or Christian influence,
and its population was small and dispersed. As a result,
these groups did not consolidate into kingdoms until around
the time the Vikings began to venture on their raids in
about 800.
For several generations after
the raids began, the bands of Danes or Vikings or Northmen,
as they were known in Western Europe, arrived mostly as
separate and small-scale undertakings, not as royal expeditions
or large invasions.
The pre-Christian religion
of the Vikings was similar to that of other Germanic tribes.
They worshiped a number of gods, including Odin,
the god of war and leader of the Norse gods; Thor,
the god of thunder; and Balder,
the god of light. Viking warriors believed that if they
died heroically they would be called to dwell with Odin
in Valhalla, his palace in the
realm of the gods. Opposing the Norse gods were a host of
evil giants, led by Loki. Vikings
believed that both gods and men would eventually be destroyed
in the Ragnarok, a mighty battle against the giants,
but that a new, peaceful world would emerge from this disaster.
|
Typical Viking settlements
were centered around the longhouse, a large barnlike
building in which the family lived. Other buildings
included storehouses, where grain and food supplies
were kept, and workshops, where weapons and farming
tools were made. Because the Vikings were skilled
seafarers, many of their settlements were near water,
and they used their well-constructed boats for fishing,
for trade, and to raid other settlements and villages.
©
Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
|
The basic economy of Scandinavia was agricultural. The
short growing season sufficed to meet the demand for grain,
for cattle and stock grazing. Because the people of this
world mostly lived along the coasts, fishing played a
significant part in their lives, as did sea trade. Even
before the Viking raids began, the markets of Europe to
the south were always interested in the raw goods of the
North Sea and the Baltic. Furs, timber, amber, and slaves
(mostly from Slavic regions) were primary commodities.
-
next page -
"Vikings,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
Contributed
By: Joel T. Rosenthal, B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of History,
State University of New York at Stony Brook. Editor of Medieval
Women and the Sources of Medieval History. Author of Patriarchy
and Families of Privilege in 15th-Century England and other
books.
-
return to index
Vikings -
|