On 8 June 793 C.E., a band of foreign warriors attacked the
Christian monastery of Lindisfarne on the English coast, wrecking the
church, killing the monks, and making off with all the treasure their
ships could hold. This brutal attack has long been thought to mark the
start of Viking aggression. But archaeo logist Neil Price of Sweden’s
Uppsala University suspects that the roots of the Viking era go back
long before this raid.
Armed with a $6 million grant—a princely sum in archaeology—Price and
his colleagues want to know the extent to which a need for captive
labor and overseas wives helped drive Viking expansion, transforming the
provincial Scandinavian sailors and fur traders of the earlier Vendel
period into international explorers and marauders. “The social processes
are going on long before” the Lindisfarne raid, Price said after his
talk at a symposium on Vikings at the annual meeting of the Society for
American Archaeology here last week. “We can erase this boundary between
the Vendel and Viking eras.”
A few kilometers from Price’s office at Uppsala, Viking leaders and
warriors gathered each spring to plan raids on distant lands. Now, Price
plans his own assault, gathering specialists from across Europe to nail
down the social and economic forces that spurred the Viking phenomenon.
At the meeting, he and his colleagues laid out research plans and
discussed preliminary finds. Rather than excavate, the team intends to
use the Swedish Research Council’s largest ever archaeo logical grant to
reexamine spectacular existing finds using modern methods such as
isotopic analysis.
“Price’s project goes to the core of the question that all Viking
scholars ask: Why the Vikings?” says Jan Bill, an archaeologist at
Oslo’s Museum of Cultural History. “Just putting some order into the old
excavations and publishing them properly will tell us a lot about the
background to the Viking age,” adds archaeologist Marek Jankowiak of the
University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, who specializes in the
period but also is not part of the project.
The sudden and dramatic breakout by the Vikings has long puzzled
scholars. The Lindisfarne raid inaugurated 3 centuries of expansion that
led to settlement of Iceland, Greenland, and, briefly, Newfoundland in
Canada. To the east, Vikings dominated the rivers of today’s western
Russia and Ukraine, sent diplomats to Constantinople, and traded as far
afield as Baghdad and North Africa.
But although previous scholars identified the raids as the start of
the Viking era, Price stresses that their way of life began long before.
In the Vendel period from about 550 C.E. to 790 C.E., Scandinavians
exported iron and furs and developed impressive seafaring skills. And
between 2008 and 2012, researchers discovered two ship burials on the
edge of the Baltic Sea in Estonia, 250 kilo meters from the Swedish
coast. The burials are “the most significant Viking discovery of the
last hundred years,” Price says—and they apparently predate the
Lindisfarne raid by nearly a century, according to dating by
radio carbon and artifact styles.
Doubled-edged swords like this one from
an Estonian ship burial show that Scandinavians far from their homeland
fought fiercely before the accepted start of the Viking era.
LIINA MALDRE
Found on the island of Saaremaa in the town of Salme, the two war
boats served as graves for 40 men. In one, 33 men were stacked atop one
another and covered with wooden shields. Elite soldiers were buried with
elaborately decorated double-edged swords, and a man who appeared to be
the chieftain clasped a sword with a jeweled hilt and held a gaming
piece made of walrus ivory in his mouth.
Working with Estonian collaborators, “we plan to throw massive
science” at these ancient vessels to glean everything possible about
this period, Price said. He’ll also focus on some spectacular ship
burials at Valsgärde, just outside of Uppsala, dated from the sixth
century to the 11th century. The area includes 60 tombs, including those
of women, and hundreds of artifacts yet to be carefully analyzed.
Price and his colleagues wonder whether the burials will yield
evidence of slavery, which they increasingly see as a powerful factor
driving the Viking expansion. Price said the need for slaves may have
begun during the Vendel era, when the fast-growing fleet of ships
demanded an enormous number of massive woolen sails. This required
transforming land into pasture for sheep, producing wool, and making
sails—a labor-intensive craft. A single 90-square-meter sail might take a
single person up to 5 years to produce, said Ben Raffield, an
archaeologist at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, Canada, who is
involved in the project. Price adds that “each ship needed two sails,
and there were hundreds of ships,” raising the possibility that slave
labor was needed to maintain the fleet.
Historical sources make it clear that the “Vikings were taking,
transporting, and selling slaves,” Raffield said in his talk. He
estimates that slaves comprised as much as 25% of Scandinavia’s
population. Norse sagas mention slaves—“thralls” in Old Norse—who were
often given pejorative names like Stinky, Stumpy, and Stupid. But
compelling archaeological evidence has been elusive. Iron manacles and
collars hint at slavery, but might have been used for prisoners or dogs.
Raffield plans to search for evidence of special vessels designed to
carry captives.
Other archaeologists have found tantalizing hints of slavery in
existing remains. About one in 25 male Viking burials in Sweden and
Norway includes teeth incised with deep grooves. The marks were long
thought to indicate a warrior class, but at least some of these men were
decapitated and placed in a burial with another man, said Anna
Kjellström of Stockholm University, who is also part of the project.
“You can make a strong argument that these were special slaves who were
ritually killed” upon the death of their master, she said in her talk.
“The slaves may have been in front of us all the time.” The team plans
extensive isotopic analysis to discover whether the victims were local
or recent, perhaps involuntary, arrivals.
The research program also will analyze changes in Viking society as
shown by land use. For example, by the 10th century, architectural clues
to slavery become clear. At a site outside Stockholm near today’s Ikea,
a small round hut dug into the ground sits on a slope above a large
manor house. The hut appears to have been the living quarters for slaves
at the height of Viking prosperity, said Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson
of Stockholm University. At another Swedish site, Sanda, a large house
is surrounded by much smaller structures, possible slave quarters. “It’s
not going too far to see these as the big house on a plantation,” Price
said.
Other researchers praise the team’s integration of details into a
fuller picture of Vendel and Viking society. “It is now clear that we
cannot fully understand the Vikings without taking into account slave
hunting and slave trade,” Oxford’s Jankowiak said. “The ‘business model’
of the Baltic Vikings appears to have depended on it.”
The team also will tackle the disturbing issue of sexual slavery.
There are hints of polygyny in Germanic cultures from this time, though
researchers aren’t sure of its extent in Viking society or in the Vendel
era. But if it were prevalent, Price speculates, poorer men would have
been eager to seek wives outside Scandinavia. Researchers hope to
understand more by pulling together DNA and other data to determine
relations and origins among Viking dead.
The argument that Vikings set out to capture women gets tantalizing
support from recent genetic studies of living people in Iceland, which
has not experienced a significant migration since the Vikings settled it
more than a thousand years ago. About three- quarters of male Icelandic
settlers hailed from what is today Norway, although well over half of
the women were from the British Isles, according to genetic studies of
today’s Icelanders. That suggests that Viking men partnered with British
women on a massive scale. “We must be talking about some degree of
coercion,” Price said. His team will emphasize examining the remains of
Viking women—long understudied—to understand their origins.
Price adds that much more work is required to understand the
emergence of the Vikings’ raiding society. “This is just the start of a
decade of research,” he says.
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