Sunday, September 9, 2018

10 Things You May Not Know About Vikings


So…you think you know all about the Vikings?  Those seafaring Scandinavians who raided and settled coastal sites in the British Isles and beyond between the 9th and 11th centuries?  You've watched the movies and television shows, have been exposed to the caricatures and stereotypes.  But I'll bet there's a lot about the Vikings you don't know.

1)  Vikings Didn't Wear Horned Helmets
Forget all those Viking warrior costumes you've seen in those movies, television shows, and pictures seen with the characters wearing those elaborate horned helmets.  Descriptions from the Viking age don't mention it and the only authentic Viking helmet ever discovered is horn-free.  This concept seems to have originated with painters in the 19th century, possibly inspired by ancient Norse and Germanic priests who wore horned helmets for ceremonial purposes long before the Viking Age.

2)  Vikings Were Known For Their Excellent Hygiene
What with all that boat rowing and decapitating their enemies, the logical assumption would be that Viking men must have stunk.  However, excavations of Viking sites have revealed tweezers, razors, combs and ear cleaners made from animal bones and antlers.  Vikings also bathed at least once a week, much more often than other Europeans of that time period.

3)  Vikings Used A Unique Liquid To Start Fires
The Vikings collected a fungus called touchwood from tree bark and boiled it for several days in urine then pounded it into a substance similar to felt.  The sodium nitrate in urine allowed the material to smolder instead of burn.  This gave the Vikings the availability of taking the fire with them on the go.


4)  Vikings Buried Their Dead In Boats
The Viking's boats were very important to them so it was a great honor to be buried in one.  It was believed that the vessels that served them well in life would see them safely to their final destination.

5)  Vikings Were Active In The Slave Trade
Many Vikings became rich through human trafficking.  They captured and enslaved women and young men while rampaging through Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Slavic settlements then sold them in giant slave markets in Europe and the Middle East.

6)  Viking Women Enjoyed Some Basic Rights
Viking girls married at age 12 and took care of the household while their husbands sailed off on adventures.  However, they had more freedom than other women of their era.  They could inherit property, request a divorce and reclaim their dowries if their marriage ended.

7)  Viking Men Spent Most Of Their Time Farming
Most Viking men swung scythes rather than swords.  True, some were callous pirates who only left their boats long enough to burn villages but most planted crops and raised cattle, goats, pigs and sheep on their small farms.

8)  Vikings Skied For Fun
Scandinavians developed primitive skis approximately 6000 years ago.  By the Viking age, Norsemen regarded skiing as an efficient way to get around and a popular recreation activity.  They even worshiped Ullr, the god of skiing.

9)  Viking Men Preferred Being Blond
Brunette Vikings, usually men, used strong soap with a high lye content to bleach their hair and in some regions also their beards.  These treatments also helped with a health and hygiene problem—head lice.

10)  Vikings Were Never Part Of A Unified Group
They probably didn't even call themselves Vikings.  The term simply referred to all Scandinavians who took part in overseas expeditions.  During the Viking Age, the land that is now Denmark, Norway and Sweden was a patchwork of tribes that often fought against each other…when they weren't busy creating havoc on foreign shores.

12 comments:

Jean M. Grant said...

Great post! Love it. I have several Viking/Norse books at my desk here for my own research (plus I did some online) (I am in the final edits phase now with my editor for that book). I found myself nodding to your top ten list! :) I was intrigued by #3 and #9! Thansk for sharing! BTW if you are on the east coast, I recommend a tour of the Draken Harald Harfagre - a real (recreated and sailed) Viking longship!

JENNIFER WILCK said...

Interesting. I didn't know that about the helmets.

Sandra Dailey said...

I've always been a little suspicious of those silly horned helmets. I love that they were clean. But, it's sad they didn't do the funerals on the water you see in the movies. They kind of seemed romantic.

Mary Morgan said...

Fantastic post, Samantha! I've been researching Viking history/lore for my next series. There were several on your list that I did not know. I've bookmarked this for future reference. :)

Mary Gillgannon said...

I've written two Viking romances, so I knew all of this except about the fungus touchwood. That is fascinating. Great research and thanks for sharing!

Ilona Fridl said...

There was one other thing I learned when I worked at Old World Wisconsin, where many Scandinavians were farmers, there wasn't enough flat land in those countries to feed all the people. That's the reason they had to go out and plunder. Great post!

Samantha Gentry said...

Jean: Is that the one where the father was building the boat and intended to sail it to Norway but died before he finished it? His children completed the construction and then sailed it across the Atlantic to Norway in his honor? I saw something about that on television--probably Mysteries at the Museum.

Thanks for your comment.

Samantha Gentry said...

Jennifer: Even knowing that about the helmets, when Vikings are mentioned I immediately flash on an image of those horned helmets but usually being worn by the female opera singer with long blond braids--the incorrect stereotype.

Thanks for your comment.

Samantha Gentry said...

Sandra: Those horned helmets always looked like they would be an inconvenience --the horns banging into and catching on things.

Thanks for your comment.

Samantha Gentry said...

Mary Morgan: Glad you found my blog post helpful.

Thanks for your comment.

Samantha Gentry said...

Mary Gillgannon: I found that bit about them being able to take their fire with them to be interesting, too. Very inventive on their part.

Thanks for your comment.

Samantha Gentry said...

Ilona: I hadn't thought of that. But now that you mention it, that makes a lot of sense. Just flashed on an image of the high cliffs and fjords of Norway--definitely not flat farm land.

Thanks for your comment.