England Runestones

(en.wikipedia.org)

35 points | by cl3misch 3 days ago

5 comments

  • eschulz 2 hours ago
    The voyages and sagas of the vikings are very interesting, but something I find to also be fascinating is the economic and cultural history that brought about the viking age and then several centuries later ended it. It does seem kind of sudden; there was a niche that suddenly caused vikings to travel everywhere, and then it was just over.
    • lukan 1 hour ago
      I think mainly it was, that they became civilized/baptized and christians were still free to plunder and enslave non christians, but not fellow christians.

      So the vikings did not just stop, but rather became crusaders:

      "In 1107, Sigurd I of Norway sailed for the eastern Mediterranean with Norwegian crusaders to fight for the newly established Kingdom of Jerusalem; the kings of Denmark and Sweden participated actively in the Baltic Crusades of the 12th and 13th centuries"

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vikings

      (But otherwise of course many factors contributed to the rise and fall of the vikings and there indeed seems to have been a niche, with a temporary weakness, no christian nordic fleets etc.)

      • teiferer 1 hour ago
        > they became civilized/baptized

        How are civilized and baptized comparable concepts? The vikings surely had a civilization before christianity took hold and ascribing sone kind of higher ethics to christianity is also quite a stretch.

        • vintermann 1 hour ago
          "Civilization" is ill-defined anyway. What's certain is that long before they embraced Christianity in a form other European Christians would recognize as such, they admired Europe. Europe had great buildings, castles, cathedrals, palaces, walled cities, places of learning, markets, unlike anything in Scandinavia at the time. They wanted those things. And they could only get so far as pirates and slavers.
        • lukan 1 hour ago
          Interesting that you see it as a higher ethics to be OK with only enslaving non christians, because I really did not mean anything like that, as I do not see it as a higher ethic.

          And like the other commenter pointed out, civilization is ill defined. I was mainly using it here from the christian point of view, where pagans are not civilized by definition. Not that the norse had not a complex society themself.

    • lokimedes 2 hours ago
      Maybe it was good weather [1] on the isles for once?

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_Warm_Period

  • petters 47 minutes ago
    Wikipedia is amazing. The Swedish articles are even longer.
  • designerarvid 1 hour ago
    Just reread this[0] classic piece that captures Viking life. It holds up so well.

    [0] https://www.amazon.com/Long-Ships-Review-Books-Classics/dp/1...

    • lukan 28 minutes ago
      The cover with the viking in a horned helmet does not hold up so well for me. The text is more historically accurate?
  • triyambakam 25 minutes ago
    It's very interesting how fascinating the Vikings still are to many people. They did a lot of amazing things, and a lot of horrible things.
  • vladsiu 1 hour ago
    [dead]