A Viking Town

A Viking Town
Author: Fiona Macdonald
Publisher:
Total Pages: 48
Release: 1995
Genre: Cities and towns, Viking
ISBN: 9780750015851

Text and illustrations depict the inside of a Viking town and various aspects of Viking life.

Viking Town

Viking Town
Author: Jacqueline Morley
Publisher: Turtleback
Total Pages: 45
Release: 2000-03-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780613515214

Takes the reader through a typical Viking town in the ninth or tenth century, describing the different areas, major buildings, and the daily occupations of the people.

Make This Viking Settlement

Make This Viking Settlement
Author: Iain Ashman
Publisher: Cut-out Model
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2009-05
Genre:
ISBN: 9781409505426

Printed on stiff card, this book contains templates to cut out and construct a model of a Viking settlement. It contains over 40 cut-out figures including merchants, traders and townspeople to recreate scenes of everyday life in a bustling riverside settlement.

Life in a Viking Town

Life in a Viking Town
Author: Jane Shuter
Publisher: Capstone Classroom
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781403464477

Presents an illustrated description of Viking settlements and describes how the Vikings lived and worked, including family life, education, religion, and food and drink.

Life in a Viking Town

Life in a Viking Town
Author: Jane Shuter
Publisher: Heinemann-Raintree Library
Total Pages: 36
Release: 2005
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781403464408

Have you ever wondered what it was like to live in ancient times? In Life in a Viking Town, discover how people lived in towns in Viking times. Look at the different buildings in the towns and what they were used for. Learn about the houses Vikings lived in, the clothes they wore, and what they did for fun. Then use a recipe to make a popular food from the time-berry pudding! Book jacket.

Towns in the Viking Age

Towns in the Viking Age
Author: Helen Clarke
Publisher: Burns & Oates
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1991
Genre: History
ISBN:

The view of the Vikings as raiders and pillagers is gradually being eroded through the success of publications and museum exhibitions where the Vikings are shown as craftsmen and merchants. Recent archaeological findings and historical sources are used in this study of urban Viking life.

Kaupang in Skiringssal

Kaupang in Skiringssal
Author: Dagfinn Skre
Publisher:
Total Pages: 512
Release: 2007
Genre: History
ISBN:

In this, the first of six volumes, the main results of the excavations that the University of Oslo carried out at Kaupang from 1998 to 2003 are presented. A completely new picture is put forward of the port that Ottar visited in c.890. It is now clear that Kaupang was one of the four Scandinavian towns that were founded around the year 800. Kaupang is connected to the power centre of Skiringssal, to the Ynglings - the legendary Norwegian royal lineage, and to the King of the Danes - the dominant political actor in south-west Scandinavia. In nine of the book's 20 chapters, the excavations' finds, analyses and results are presented. Kaupang is shown to have had several of the same features revealed in Birka, Hedeby and Ribe - i.e., a compact permanent settlement, divided into small plots, each with a dwelling. The town could have had 400-800 inhabitants. Substantial traces of trade and craftwork are proof of the main areas of occupation. Advanced geo- and environmental-archaeological analyses have played a large role in interpreting the finds. In three chapters, 200 years of research on Kaupang and Skiringssal are summarised, while in the remaining eight chapters an endeavour is made to re-establish the holistic approach to Skiringssal that dominated research during the first 100 years. Documentary sources indicate that Skiringssal was an important royal seat in the 700s and 800s. In this volume, these sources are put together with the archaeological and toponymical sources which, united, show a centre of power with a clear likeness to similar places in Denmark and Sweden. A hall or sal building, presumably the Skirings-sall itself, was excavated at Huseby, near Kaupang. Nearby, a thing site is situated by a holy lake. In this, the Yngling kings' centre of power, to which many people came to attend thing meetings and sacrificial feasts, the town Kaupang was founded.

Lincoln

Lincoln
Author: Lincolnshire Museums
Publisher:
Total Pages: 8
Release: 1980
Genre: Great Britain
ISBN:

Things from the Town

Things from the Town
Author: Dagfinn Skre
Publisher: Aarhus Universitetsforlag
Total Pages: 483
Release: 2011-12-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 877124431X

In this third volume deriving from the 2000-2003 excavations of the Viking town of Kaupang, a range of artefacts is presented along with a discussion of the town's inhabitants: their origins, activities, and trading connections. The main categories of artefact are metal jewellery and ornaments, gemstones, vessel glass, pottery, finds of soapstone, whetstones, and textile-production equipment. The artefacts are described and dated, and their areas of origin discussed. The volume is lavishly illustrated. An exceptional wealth and diversity of artefacts distinguishes sites such as Kaupang from all other types of site in the Viking World. Above all, they reflect the fact that a large population of some 400-600 people lived closely together in the town, engaged in a comprehensive range of production and trade. The stratigraphically distinct layers from the first half of the 9th century allow us to put precise dates to the finds, and to the buildings and evidence of activities associated with them. The finds and structural remains make it possible to identify the activities that took place within the six buildings excavated. We can distinguish between some buildings that were only temporarily in use and others that were permanently occupied. Several of the temporary buildings were used by a variety of craftsmen while those under permanent occupation were houses, and only to a secondary degree, workshops. Throughout the life of the town from c. AD 800-930, trade links with southern Scandinavia, the Baltic, and the Irish Sea would appear to have been strong. In the earliest phases of the town there was considerable trade with the Frisian regions, probably with Dorestad, but this link faded markedly in the second half of the 9th century, probably because of the abandonment of Dorestad. Within what is now Norway, Kaupang seems to have been supplied with goods from the interior of eastern Norway. Goods from around the western coasts of Norway, however, are practically invisible. Finds of personal equipment show that the inhabitants of the town were of diverse origins. Many of them were from southern and western Scandinavia, but there were also Frisians there. One house can be identified as that of a Frisian household engaged in trade. There were also Slavs in Kaupang, although it is not clear whether they were long-term residents.