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.

Towns in the Viking Age

Towns in the Viking Age
Author: Helen Clarke
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 207
Release: 1991
Genre: Cities and towns, Medieval
ISBN: 9780312060862

Exploring Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns

Exploring Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns
Author: Rebecca Boyd
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 329
Release: 2023-10-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000984397

Exploring Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns discusses the emergence of towns, urban lifestyles, and urban identities in Ireland. This coincides with the arrival of the Vikings and the appearance of the post-and-wattle Type 1 house. These houses reflect this crucial transition to urban living with its attendant changes for individuals, households, and society. Exploring Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns uses household archaeology as a lens to explore the materiality, variability, and day-to-day experiences of living in these houses. It moves from the intimate scale of individual households to the larger scale of Ireland’s earliest urban communities. For the first time, this book considers how these houses were more than just buildings: they were homes, important places where people lived, worked, and died. These new towns were busy places with a multitude of people, ideas, and things. This book uses the mass of archaeological data to undertake comparative analyses of houses and properties, artefact distribution patterns, and access analysis studies to interrogate some 500 Viking-Age urban houses. This analysis is structured in three parts: an investigation of the houses, the households, and the town. Exploring Ireland’s Viking-Age Towns discusses how these new urban households managed their homes to create a sense of place and belonging in these new environments and allow themselves to develop a new, urban identity. This book is suited to advanced students and specialists of the Viking Age in Ireland, but archaeologists and historians of the early medieval and Viking worlds will find much of interest here. It will also appeal to readers with interests in the archaeology of house and home, households, identities, and urban studies.

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: 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.

Everyday Life in Viking-Age Towns

Everyday Life in Viking-Age Towns
Author: Letty ten Harkel
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Total Pages: 562
Release: 2013-11-04
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1782970096

The study of early medieval towns has frequently concentrated on urban beginnings, the search for broadly applicable definitions of urban characteristics and the chronological development of towns. Far less attention has been paid to the experience of living in towns. The thirteen chapters in this book bring together the current state of knowledge about Viking-Age towns (c. 800–1100) from both sides of the Irish Sea, focusing on everyday life in and around these emerging settlements. What was it really like to grow up, live, and die in these towns? What did people eat, what did they wear, and how did they make a living for themselves? Although historical sources are addressed, the emphasis of the volume is overwhelmingly archaeological, paying homage to the wealth of new material that has become available since the advent of urban archaeology in the 1960s.

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.

Viking Warriors

Viking Warriors
Author: Ben Hubbard
Publisher: Cavendish Square Publishing, LLC
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2016-12-15
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 1502624559

In Viking Warriors, the Norse invaders, as infamous for their brutality as their exploration, come to life. Students will read about raids, battles, and key fighters and leaders. Illustrations, engravings, and relics depict the Norse culture, marine and combat technology, and fighting styles that gave them the advantage in battle. Maps and diagrams demonstrate their ambitious expansion and conquest of cities and people throughout the Northern hemisphere. With their far-reaching longships and fierce tactics, the influence and violence of the Vikings spread from America to the Middle East, leaving behind traces of an iconic culture and combative strategy.

Crafts and Social Networks in Viking Towns

Crafts and Social Networks in Viking Towns
Author: Stephen P. Ashby
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Total Pages: 451
Release: 2020-02-19
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1789251613

Crafting Communities explores the interface between craft, communication networks, and urbanization in Viking-age Northern Europe. Viking-period towns were the hubs of cross-cultural communication of their age, and innovations in specialized crafts provide archaeologists with some of the best evidence for studying this communication. The integrated results presented in these papers have been made possible through the sustained collaboration of a group of experts with complementary insights into individual crafts. Results emerge from recent scholarly advances in the study of artifacts and production: first, the application of new analytical techniques in artifact studies (e.g. metallographic, isotopic, and biomolecular techniques) and second, the shifted in interpretative focus of medieval artifact studies from a concern with object function to considerations of processes of production, and of the social agency of technology. Furthermore, the introduction of social network theory and actor-network theory has redirected attention toward the process of communication, and highlighted the significance of material culture in the learning and transmission of cultural knowledge, including technology. The volume brings together leading UK and Scandinavian archaeological specialists to explore crafted products and workshop-assemblages from these towns, in order to clarify how such long-range communication worked in pre-modern Northern Europe. Contributors assess the implications for our understanding of early towns and the long-term societal change catalysed by them, including the initial steps towards commercial economies. Results are analyzed in relation to social network theory, social and economic history, and models of communication, setting an agenda for further research. Crafting Communities provides a landmark statement on our knowledge of Viking-Age craft and communication

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.