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Friday, December 28, 2018






Anglo-Saxons were WORSE than the Vikings! Disgruntled English monks spread 'fake news' about the invaders (and earlier Germanic tribes carried out 'ethnic cleansing' against Britons)

  • The claims come from Mads Ravn head of research at Vejle Museums in Denmark
  • He traces the beginnings of scholarly hyperbole over Viking raids to 793 AD,
  • Dr Ravn believes the Viking reputation for savagery is in fact undeserved
  • He argues the Anglo-Saxons carried out a kind of apartheid against the Celts
Tales of vicious Vikings may be greatly exaggerated according to a Danish academic who believes disgruntled English monks spread 'fake news' about his ancestors.
The earlier Anglo-Saxons carried out 'ethnic cleansing' against native Britons, while the Vikings ushered in a Scandinavian multi-cultural society, he claims.
Traces of Viking influence on the language can be found in modern English, for example the use of 'bairn' to refer to a child in the North.
However, the Anglo-Saxons worked hard to wipe out all trace of the earlier Celtic language in the same way American English replaced Native American dialects.
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Tales of vicious Vikings may be greatly exaggerated according to a Danish academic who believes disgruntled English monks spread 'fake news' about his ancestors. The earlier Anglo-Saxons carried out 'ethnic cleansing' against native Britons, while the Vikings ushered in a Scandinavian multi-cultural society, he claims (stock image)
Tales of vicious Vikings may be greatly exaggerated according to a Danish academic who believes disgruntled English monks spread 'fake news' about his ancestors. The earlier Anglo-Saxons carried out 'ethnic cleansing' against native Britons, while the Vikings ushered in a Scandinavian multi-cultural society, he claims (stock image)
Traces of Viking influence on the language can be found in modern English, for example the use of 'bairn' to refer to a child in the North. However, the Anglo-Saxons worked hard to wipe out all trace of the aearlier Celtic language in the same way American English replaced Native American dialects
Traces of Viking influence on the language can be found in modern English, for example the use of 'bairn' to refer to a child in the North. However, the Anglo-Saxons worked hard to wipe out all trace of the aearlier Celtic language in the same way American English replaced Native American dialects


WHO WERE THE ANGLO-SAXONS?

The Anglo-Saxons were a people who inhabited Great Britain from the 5th Century AD. 
They were made up of Germanic tribes who emigrated from continental Europe, as well as indigenous Britons who adopted their cultural practices.
The Anglo-Saxons were fierce warriors, and tribes often battled one another for territory.
They ruled over Britain from 500 years until 1066 when they were conquered by the Normans. The claims are made by Mads Ravn, head of research at Vejle Museums in Denmark in an in-depth article for ScienceNordic.

Dr Ravn traces the beginnings of scholarly hyperbole over Viking raids to 793 AD.
In that year a Northumbrian monk named Alcuin described a raid on Lindisfarne, a holy island off the northeast coast of England.
He wrote: 'The heathens poured out the blood of saints around the altar, and trampled on the bodies of saints in the temple of God, like dung in the streets.'
Despite this reputation for ferocity, Dr Ravn believes it is undeserved.
Writing in ScienceNordic, he said: 'The reported plundering and ethnic cleansing are probably overrated. 
'The Vikings simply had worse "press coverage" by frustrated English monks, who bemoaned their attacks.' 
Dr Ravn claims modern studies of DNA, archaeology and linguistics depict a more complicated Viking history. 
'They indicate that the Vikings were not the worst invaders to land on English shores at that time. That title goes to the Anglo-Saxons, 400 years earlier,' he added.
. The earlier Anglo-Saxons carried out 'ethnic cleansing' against native Britons, while the Vikings ushered in a Scandinavian multi-cultural society, he claims The Sutton Hoo helmet is a decorated Anglo-Saxon helmet which was discovered during the 1939 excavation of the Sutton Hoo ship-burial. This image shows a recreation made in the 1970s
The Sutton Hoo helmet is a decorated Anglo-Saxon helmet which was discovered during the 1939 excavation of the Sutton Hoo ship-burial. This image shows a recreation made in the 1970s
This image shows a British Museum recreation of the Sutton Hoo helmet
This image shows a British Museum recreation of the Sutton Hoo helmet
The Anglo Saxons were a people who inhabited Great Britain from the 5th Century AD until 1066 when they were conquered by the Normans. This map shows where they invaded from
The Anglo Saxons were a people who inhabited Great Britain from the 5th Century AD until 1066 when they were conquered by the Normans. This map shows where they invaded from
The Anglo-Saxons were a people who inhabited Great Britain from the 5th Century AD. 
They were made up of Germanic tribes who emigrated from continental Europe, as well as indigenous Britons who adopted their cultural practices.
The Anglo-Saxons were fierce warriors, and tribes often battled one another for territory.
Dr Mavn says their reign, which he compares to an apartheid against the celts, was far more brutal than that of the Vikings.
Evidence of this can be found in their attempts to eradicate the languages they encountered. 


WHAT WAS THE VIKING GREAT ARMY?

The Viking Great Army, also known as the Great Heathen army, was a coalition of Norse warriors originating from Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
They came together under a unified command to invade the four Anglo-Saxon kingdoms that constituted England in AD 865.
They came to avenge the death of Ragnar Lothbrok, a legendary Danish and Swedish Viking hero and ruler, in 816 AD. 
Thousands of them arrived in East Anglia in 865 AD and quickly overran Northumbrian forces.
They then spread across the country, wreaking havoc as they went during the 14 year long campaign. 
Thousands of them arrived in East Anglia in 865 AD and quickly overran Northumbrian forces. They then spread across the country, wreaking havoc as they went during the 14 year long campaign
Thousands of them arrived in East Anglia in 865 AD and quickly overran Northumbrian forces. They then spread across the country, wreaking havoc as they went during the 14 year long campaign
Repton was a significant royal and ecclesiastical centre in the Anglo-Saxon kingdom Mercia. 
However, it became a Viking stronghold for the army after they seized it.
Historical records state the Viking Great Army wintered in Repton in 873 AD and drove the Mercian king into exile to Paris.
Guthrum, King of the Danish Vikings, made several attacks on Wessex from 875, and by early 878, his army occupied parts of the east and north east of England. 
In Spring 878 AD, King Alfred marched to Edington with West Saxon soldiers to take on Guthrum.
The West Saxon troops won the battle and King Alfred cut off supplies to Guthrum's army who had taken refuge in Chippenham.
The Vikings asked King Alfred for a truce, which was granted as long as they left his kingdom immediately. This later became known as the Peace of Wedmore. 
This is when Viking leader Guthrum was baptised and accepted King Alfred as his adoptive father. King Alfred accepted Guthrum's surrender. 'In the 5th and 6th centuries, old English wiped out the earlier Celtic language in a similar way that modern English eradicated the language of the Native Americans in US in the 19th and 20th centuries,' he added.

'The Vikings’ impact was significantly less. Linguists do see some influence from the old Norse of the Vikings in old English. But it doesn’t come close to the eradication of Celtic by the Anglo-Saxons.' 
DNA studies also suggest that the Anglo-Saxons came over in large numbers and contribute a large part of the genetic inheritance of British people.
The Vikings, however, settled in smaller numbers and likely married with Anglo-Saxons, rather than replacing them.
They also left their own mark on the language, with the word 'bairn' from the Old Norse barn, meaning child, still used widely in the North of England. 
Other similarities include ’armhole’, from the Danish armhole, for armpit and ‘hagworm’ from the Danish hugorm, meaning adder, which can be found in Old English.

WHAT WERE THE VIKING VOYAGES OF DISCOVERY?

The Vikings made many many voyages of discovery during their history, including stops across Europe and North America. 
789AD Vikings begin their attacks on England
840AD Viking settlers found the city of Dublin in Ireland
844AD Vikings raid Seville but are repulsed
860AD Rus Vikings attack Constantinople
866AD York is captured by a Viking army
870AD Vikings colonise Iceland
981AD Erik the Red discovers Greenland
986AD Bjarni Herjolfsson sights North America after being blown off course
1002AD Leif Ericsson, son of Erik the Red, explores the coast of North America, named them Karland, Helluland and Vinland
1492AD Italian explorer Christopher Columbus lands in the New World when he stumbles across the islands now known as The Bahamas

Vikings conquered treacherous seas and created a formidable navy thanks to mass-production of TAR which was used to waterproof their ships

  • Pits in Sweden were found which produced up to 300 litres of tar per batch 
  • This was ten times the volume of tar being created elsewhere in Europe 
  • Vast amounts of the substance allowed for the Vikings to grow their Navy fleet
  • It was used to coat the timber of their longships and waterproof the vessels 
Viking civilisations produced tar on an industrial scale and coated their longships in the sticky substance to help waterproof the vessels. 
A series of pits in Sweden are thought to make tar in batches of 45 - 65 gallons (200 - 300 litres), ten times the volume of the substance being produced anywhere else at the time.  
Experts believe this helped turn the Nordic society into a European powerhouse and allowed them to traverse the treacherous waters of the Baltic and North Sea.
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Viking civilisations produced tar on an industrial scale and coated their longships in the sticky substance to help waterproof the vessels. In order to adequately waterproof all the timber in a single Viking ship the Navy would have required about 500 litres of tar (stock)
Viking civilisations produced tar on an industrial scale and coated their longships in the sticky substance to help waterproof the vessels. In order to adequately waterproof all the timber in a single Viking ship the Navy would have required about 500 litres of tar (stock)
Andreas Hennius, from Uppsala University, found that the pits appear in the archaeological record at the same time that Viking society became a maritime power.
In order to adequately waterproof all the timber in a single Viking ship the Navy would have required about 100 gallons (500 litres) of tar, making production of the substance essential to the society's success.
It was made in deep pits filled with pine wood, covered with turf and set on fire. This process was up-scaled around 680AD after smaller pits were discovered that date back to around 100AD and 400AD.
Mr Hennius, a PhD candidate at the Swedish University, found the funnel-shaped pits with a cavity underneath to capture the resin. 
Further analysis of the soil around the pit confirmed they were used in tar production but it remained unexplained how the process was industrialised by the Vikings. 
Production of the substance was essential to the society's success and was made in deep pits filled with pine wood, covered with turf and set on fire. Experts believe this helped turn the Nordic society into a powerhouse and allowed them to traverse treacherous waters (stock)
Production of the substance was essential to the society's success and was made in deep pits filled with pine wood, covered with turf and set on fire. Experts believe this helped turn the Nordic society into a powerhouse and allowed them to traverse treacherous waters (stock)
During excavations, Mr Hennius said: 'It is a clear change from small-scale household production to large-scale production.'
'To go out into the forest and stay there for probably several months is a big thing. It means a change in how you organise the whole of the region, with people removed from ordinary agrarian production. 
'That will influence the whole structure of life.' 
The research was published in the journal Antiquity.  
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DID THE VIKINGS DISCOVER NORTH AMERICA?

Some experts believe  the Vikings may have discovered North America nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus made his famous journey to the New World. 
L'Anse aux Meadows was the first Viking settlement believed to have been found in North America in the 1960s.
In 2016, scientists claimed to have uncovered another Viking settlement in Newfoundland that was built between 800AD and 1300AD.
Some experts believe the Vikings may have discovered North America nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus made his famous journey to the New World
Some experts believe the Vikings may have discovered North America nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus made his famous journey to the New World
The site, discovered in an area called Point Rosee in southern Newfoundland, is 400 miles (643km) south west of a Viking settlement found in L'Anse aux Meadows during the 1960s.
Now, one expert claims to have found a mysterious location known as 'Hop'.
Based on Viking descriptions, three key things identify this mystical settlement - an abundance of grapes, salmon and canoes made from animal hide. 
An archaeologist claims the only place that matches this description is the Miramichi-Chaleur bay area in northeastern New Brunswick in Canada.
This would be the third Viking settlement claimed to have been found in North America, although it could be hard to ever prove it for once and for all.
It is thought the Vikings first discovered America by accident in the autumn of 986AD, according to one historical source, the Saga of the Greenlanders.
It tells how Bjarni Herjolfsson was stumbled across North America after being blown off course as he attempted to sail from Norway to Greenland, but he did not go ashore.
Inspired by his tales, however, another Viking Leif Ericsson then mounted his own expedition and found North America in 1002.
Finding it a fertile land, rich in grapes and berries, he named it Vinland.
Eriksson also named two further 'lands' on the North American coast - one with flat stones, which he called Helluland, and one that was flat and wooded, named Markland.


Powerful Icelandic Vikings were buried with their male horses - while females were eaten for a feast

  • Study analyzed about 150 samples of horse bones and teeth from Viking graves
  • Of the 19 total horses in the study, they found all but one of them were male
  • The team says slaughter and burial of male horses was likely a symbol of power 

Ancient Icelandic Viking burial ceremonies for powerful members of society often included the slaughter of a male horse, which would then be buried alongside the deceased.
In a DNA study on horse remains collected from more than 350 Viking Age graves, researchers found all but one of the animals were male.
While healthy male horses were killed and put in the grave, female horses served a different purpose in burial ceremonies; according to the experts, female horses may have been eaten.
In a DNA study on horse remains collected from more than 350 Viking Age graves, researchers found all but one of the animals were male. These horses were likely ancestors of today's Icelandic horses. File photo
In a DNA study on horse remains collected from more than 350 Viking Age graves, researchers found all but one of the animals were male. These horses were likely ancestors of today's Icelandic horses. File photo
‘It is reasonable to believe that a Viking who received a horse in the grave must have had a certain amount of power and influence,’ says Ph.D. student Albína Hulda Pálsdottir at CEES, Department of Biosciences at the University of Oslo.
‘We would therefore like to know more about these horses, for example, of which sex they were.’
In the study published to the Journal of Archaeological Science, researchers analyzed DNA from about 150 samples of horse teeth or bones found in Icelandic Viking graves.
At more than 1,000 years old, it isn’t easy to determine the sex of the animals using the bone fragments alone.
‘These morphological sexing methods can’t always be used when the skeletons are badly preserved,’ says says Sanne Boessenkool, from the CEES Department of Biosciences.
‘Often, the burial remains don’t contain any canines or pelvic bones. We have therefore sexed the remains of 19 horses from Viking age graves in Iceland by analyzing the ancient DNA preserved in the fragments. Then it turned out that 18 of them were male.’
The team also says the horses were in their prime at the time they were killed.
‘It is natural to imagine that the slaughter of the virile and to some extent aggressive male animals must have been part of a burial ritual that was intended to convey status and power,’ explains archaeologist Rúnar Leifsson from The Cultural Heritage Agency of Iceland.
‘In addition to the 19 buried horses, we have examined the remains of three horses that were found outside graves,’ Boessenkool adds, noting that they had not been given a ceremonial funeral and were likely eaten.
‘All of these were female.’
In some cases, the horses were dealt a killing-blow to the forehead, while others were beheaded, the researchers say.
Much about Iceland’s Viking graves remains a mystery, in large part because many were uncovered during roadworks and construction in the last century, rather than through excavation.
Ancient Icelandic Viking burial ceremonies for powerful members of society often included the slaughter of a male horse, which would then be buried alongside the deceased. File photo showing the grave tumulus of Egill Skallagrímsson, Viking chief, Iceland
Ancient Icelandic Viking burial ceremonies for powerful members of society often included the slaughter of a male horse, which would then be buried alongside the deceased. File photo showing the grave tumulus of Egill Skallagrímsson, Viking chief, Iceland
Many were never examined by an archaeologist.
Of the roughly 350 graves found so far, most were men, and researchers say there should be far more burials given the estimated population of around 9,000 Vikings in the region by the year 930.
‘It is striking that we find almost exclusively middle-aged men in the graves on Iceland,’ Pálsdottir says.
‘There are almost no infants or children, and very few women. We don’t know how the rest of the population was buried.
‘Perhaps they were laid in swamps or lakes, or sunk in the sea.’
The researchers say they’ve found no traces of cremation, which would have helped to explain the lack of burials.
This may suggest that the Vikings developed their own customs.


DID THE VIKINGS DISCOVER NORTH AMERICA?

Some experts believe  the Vikings may have discovered North America nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus made his famous journey to the New World. 
L'Anse aux Meadows was the first Viking settlement believed to have been found in North America in the 1960s.
In 2016, scientists claimed to have uncovered another Viking settlement in Newfoundland that was built between 800AD and 1300AD.
Some experts believe the Vikings may have discovered North America nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus made his famous journey to the New World
Some experts believe the Vikings may have discovered North America nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus made his famous journey to the New World
The site, discovered in an area called Point Rosee in southern Newfoundland, is 400 miles (643km) south west of a Viking settlement found in L'Anse aux Meadows during the 1960s.
Now, one expert claims to have found a mysterious location known as 'Hop'.
Based on Viking descriptions, three key things identify this mystical settlement - an abundance of grapes, salmon and canoes made from animal hide. 
An archaeologist claims the only place that matches this description is the Miramichi-Chaleur bay area in northeastern New Brunswick in Canada.
This would be the third Viking settlement claimed to have been found in North America, although it could be hard to ever prove it for once and for all.
It is thought the Vikings first discovered America by accident in the autumn of 986AD, according to one historical source, the Saga of the Greenlanders.
It tells how Bjarni Herjolfsson was stumbled across North America after being blown off course as he attempted to sail from Norway to Greenland, but he did not go ashore.
Inspired by his tales, however, another Viking Leif Ericsson then mounted his own expedition and found North America in 1002.
Finding it a fertile land, rich in grapes and berries, he named it Vinland.
Eriksson also named two further 'lands' on the North American coast - one with flat stones, which he called Helluland, and one that was flat and wooded, named Markland. ...

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The horse burials, however, likely played a significant ceremonial role for people of power.
‘Today, we think of death and a funeral as an ending, and then it may seem wasteful to slaughter a great stallion just to bury it,’ suggests Boessenkool.
‘But if the people at the time believed in a life after death, they maybe thought that the horse had a function.’
‘Nowadays, it is easy to imagine such rituals as a form of demonstrating power, perhaps as 'conspicuous consumption' that was intended to demonstrate wealth and status, rather than to cover real needs,’ Pálsdóttir adds.
‘But maybe the Vikings thought totally different.’