
VIKINGS ongships on the horizon. The glint of sharpened axes. Blood on the altars. Pagan pillagers. Across the British Isles, the image of the marauding Viking is a stereotype so engrained in Lour cultural consciousness that it’s hard to shake. In some ways it’s a fair stereotype. After all the word ‘viking’ simply means ‘raider’, a job description rather than a cultural label. No one from the medieval Nordic world was a viking all the time. When the first attacks from Scandinavia began at the end of the 8th century, they took the form of hit-and-run summer raids. A successful raiding party would be looking to get back home for winter with a boatload of booty, hoping for enhanced social prestige and maybe a shot at finding a wife. COASTAL RAIDERS The British Isles were badly hit. In 793 AD, the Norsemen attacked the wealthy monastery of Lindisfarne, a tidal island off the coast of Northumberland. These sea-hardened raiders from across the North Sea chose their targets well – they struck at monasteries located on islands and coastlines: vulnerable, undefended and easily accessible by boat. As the Anglo-Saxon scholar Alcuin wrote after the Lindisfarne raid, “never was it thought that such an inroad from the sea could be made”. A short walk down to the shore from the ruined monastery, it’s easy to see why this location was chosen. The wide bay is flat and sandy, perfect for landing shallow-bottomed longships and for loading them with ill-gotten gains. Lindisfarne wasn’t the only place to be hit: the Irish annals record for the year 794 ‘the devastation of all the islands of Britain by the pagans’. For Scandinavians with their advanced ship technology, seas and rivers were the equivalent of today’s motorways: a convenient transport network to carry them around the coast and deep inland. Unlike other waves of invaders—the Romans VIKINGS AT LARGE with Hadrian’s Wall and their sophisticated Vikings on FINDING VIKINGS IN BRITAIN IN THE COUNTRYSIDE the airwaves 1 LINDISFARNE Eleanor Rosamund The first raid on ‘Holy Island’ in 793 AD is seen as the start of the Waves of Vikings brought terror to the British Isles over 1,000 years ago Barraclough explores the Viking Age. Visit the museum and see the ‘raider stone’, a Isle of Lewis’s Viking history and they left a deep mark on the landscape, as Eleanor Rosamund for Radio 4’s Open Country 9th-century grave-marker linked to the attacks. On one side are on 25 January, 3pm. carved seven men with weapons raised. On the other side little Barrclough discovers for a new BBC Radio 4 programme figures kneel before a cross, the sun and moon hang in the sky, and two arms encircle the world. Judgement Day has arrived. 56 www.countryfile.com 57 BATS WHERE TO FIND THE VIKINGS IN BRITAIN 1. LINDISFARNE rents out ‘City Wall Space’, a state-of See page 57. the-art conference facility featuring what 2 is described on their website as “the 2 YORK original Hiberno Norse (Viking) City Wall”. York is England’s premiere Viking Age city and home to the Jorvik Viking Centre, 7 LONDON Town or village names ending in ‘-by’, ‘-thwaite’ or which was built in 1984 to showcase the Few traces remain of the Norse who raided ‘-thorpe’ are indicators of Viking origins results of the archaeological excavation at and settled London, but if you look hard Coppergate. Visit Jorvik to experience the enough you’ll find them. Tooley Street near villas, the Normans with their imposing castles sites, sounds and smells of 10th-century London Bridge is a corruption of ‘St Olaf’s and cathedrals—the Norse didn’t leave many York and meet its animatronically Street’, named for the Norse church first physical structures in the landscape of the recreated inhabitants. documented there in 1035. The Museum of British Isles. But in areas where they settled, London is home to a Norse grave marker 3 4 their presence is embedded in a far more 3 ORKNEY found near St Paul’s Cathedral. Decorated enduring, tangible form: place names. Under Scandinavian rule until the 15th with a lion fighting a serpent, the runes 6 When I’m hiking or driving through such century, Orkney’s landscape is packed read ‘Ginna and Toki had this stone laid’. regions, place names help me to see the terrain with reminders of its Nordic past. Top of as the Norse would have done – a mental map of the list is Maeshowe, a 5,000-year-old 8 ST JOHN’S COLLEGE, the farms, resources and settlers who came to chambered cairn covered with runic OXFORD call this country home. In England, the East graffiti made by Norse men and women During preparations for building work at Midlands and Yorkshire are particularly fertile who broke into the mound. The runes give St John’s College in Oxford, a mass grave ground, because they were the heart of what we us the names of several culprits including was discovered containing 37 today call the ‘Danelaw’, the area that came Hlif, Benedikt and Helgi, and hint at some Scandinavian skeletons. Mostly males under Norse control during the 9th century. If naughty activities that took place inside. between the ages of 16-25, their cracked you find a ‘by’ at the end of a place name, you can skulls, stab wounds and signs of burning be pretty sure there was once a Norse farm (so 4 SHETLAND suggested they had been attacked by a Grimsby began life as a farm owned by a man Like its Northern Isle twin, Shetland was mob and killed. Given that they died called Grimr, while Wetherby was a sheep farm). also colonised by the Norse in the 9th between 960 and 1020, they may have century, and a form of their language — been victims of a royal proclamation in VIKING CENTRAL Norn — was spoken here up to the 1800s. 1002, ordering the deaths of “all the Today you can walk around the city of York— The Shetlanders are proud of their Viking Danish men who were in England”. once the viking stronghold of Jorvik—and heritage, which they celebrate every follow in the footsteps of its earlier Norse January at Up Helly Aa, a riotous fire 9 ISLE OF MAN inhabitants through its street names. Once you festival culminating in torch-lit The Isle of Man sits at the centre of a know what the names mean, you can construct processions and the burning of a longship. cultural and economic network that stretched across Viking Britain. Its rich 7 a sort of ‘virtual reality’ map of the city as it 5 would have appeared to its Scandinavian 5 MALDON concentration of archaeology and art residents: Goodramgate (Guthrum’s Street), Located on the Blackwater estuary in reflects this position, and the hybrid 8 10 Micklegate (Big Street), Skeldergate (Shield- Essex, the tidal causeway that connects nature of Manx society. Across the island Makers’ Street), Coppergate (Cup-Makers’ Northey Island to the mainland was the you can find carved stones that mix Norse Street), Coney Street (King’s Highway). Jorvik setting for a bloody battle between and Celtic elements, such as Thorwald’s had close ties with another viking stronghold Anglo-Saxon locals and Scandinavian Cross, one side covered in Christian across the Irish Sea: Dublin, which also held the raiders in 991. The clash is imagery and the other depicting the Norse dubious distinction of being the biggest slave commemorated in an Old English poem apocalyptic myth of Ragnarok. market in Northern Europe. From Dublin, The Battle of Maldon. slaves from the British Isles would be 10 ST GREGORY’S MINSTER, transported to all corners of the known world. 6 WOOD QUAY, DUBLIN KIRKDALE, YORKSHIRE Further north in Orkney and Shetland, the Back in the 70s when Dublin Corporation Built into the wall is a sundial made just majority of the place names are of Norse origin, announced plans to build offices at Wood before the Norman conquest, by which because it was part of the Scandinavian Quay on Dublin’s riverside, they became time Norse settlers had been in England for cultural sphere until the 15th century. Orkney public enemy number one. Archaeological almost 200 years. Written in Anglo-Saxon, and Shetland were the Northern Isles excavations revealed beautifully it states that Orm son of Gamal bought and (Norðreyjar), just like today. But to the west of preserved remains of the Viking Age rebuilt the church “when it was tumbled the Scottish mainland, the Hebrides were the settlement. Despite protests, and ruined”. Orm and Gamal are Southern Isles (Suðreyjar), which gives us a construction went ahead and the site was quintessentially Norse names, but this man Xxxxxxxx sense of their place in the Norse world view. destroyed. Today, Dublin City Council is a pillar of the local Christian community. Photos: 58 www.countryfile.com www.countryfile.com 8 59 CLOCKWISE FROM The Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides is gold and silver trading ingots, an Anglo-Saxon ABOVE Terror from the home to some of the most famous artefacts of cross, a delicate golden pin shaped like a bird, sea – Viking raiders the Viking Age: the Lewis Chessmen. Around Anglo-Saxon and Irish brooches, and an exotic depicted in a Victorian 78 pieces were found, fashioned from walrus crystal jewellery box wrapped in silks, possibly illustration; a ivory and whalebone. Beautifully crafted and from the Byzantine Empire or Middle East. The recontructed medieval almost cartoonish in style, they were the hoard was bought by National Museums croft on Lewis; the Lewis Chessmen – a whalebone inspiration for Noggin the Nog, gentle king of Scotland for £2 million.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages3 Page
-
File Size-