Vikings: sea-raiders and traders
In AD 793, a daring raid across the North Sea on the monastery
of Lindisfarne by Norse pirates heralded the start of the Viking
period. Over the next two centuries swift sailing ships enabled the
Vikings to extend their attacks to the undefended, coastal and
riverine ports, towns and monasteries of western Europe and beyond.
The name Viking came to mean sea-raider, though today it is applied
to all the pagan peoples of Scandinavia who spoke dialects of Old
Norse. These peoples shared a similar material culture from the
late eighth to the eleventh century and comprised the Danes,
Norwegians, Swedes and the inhabitants of Gotland. At first they
lived in a number of small kingdoms. But, as the more aggressive
Viking rulers sought to increase their wealth and power with the
support of warrior elites, the smaller kingdoms were absorbed by
their more powerful neighbours.
To some extent, the destruction caused by the Vikings was
exaggerated by churchmen who wished to portray the Vikings as the
judgment of God on a people who had neglected their obligations to
the Church. Archaeological discoveries, however, tell a different
story. The Vikings were mainly farmers, fishers, hunters and
skilled craftsmen, restricted by natural resources: mountains,
forests and heathland. Many Vikings, therefore, turned to trade
with the countries of Europe, Russia and the Orient, when the
season was favourable. Hides, furs, walrus ivory, amber and slaves
were exchanged for silver and gold and luxury goods including wine,
fine textiles, pottery and glassware. In Scandinavia itself market
and manufacturing settlements such as Ribe, Hedeby, Birka and
Kaupang grew into centres of international trade. Viking longships
are preserved in the ship museums in Oslo (from Oseberg, Gokstad
and Tune) and Roskilde.