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Greetings.
There is a peer review started on Wikipedia:Peer review/Viking/archive1 and any interested party is invited to take part in reviewing the article. If you know the history of scandinavia, then please stop by and help the peer review of the artile Viking
Thank you for your time. -- OrbitOne Talk| Babel 22:35, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
As a vote is one of the steps of wikipedias guide to resolve disputes let's try one. Add your four~ under the solution you support. Please also add a short reasoning after your name and (if you want) larger comments under the comments sections.
LOL, this is pathetic. Just keep to the facts. And don´t rename him. --Comanche cph 14:28, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Rollo was known as Rollo(later Robert) and not Hrolf! And its very very doubtful that Hrolf from the Icelandic saga writed 300 years later, is that Rollo. I don't believe it myself. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Rollo_of_Normandy#Still_kicking_to_Rollo
But that´s not the issue here, because Rollo was NOT known as Hrolf.
So why a voting? And its pretty easy to make 20 acounts and vote on the same. What will be next from you? A voting about, the Norwegians conquered the hole world in 15 days? --Comanche cph 14:06, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Because he was not called Hrolf by any script, other to a saga from Iceland writed 300 years later.
If you look at those who has reverting it, its all Norwegians or Icelandics, who just properly just WANTS to keep claiming that the "Hrolf" (from the Icelandic saga) IS Rollo of Normandy.
Look here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Rollo_of_Normandy#Still_kicking_to_Rollo
When calling him "Rollo" as he WAS called in Normandy, France and England, -and not "HROLF". We have a neutral, and right view on him, that agres with BOTH Theory´s, about who Rollo is, -and NOT the only very doubtful Icelandic saga theory.
Rollo was not known as Hrolf
--Comanche cph 09:12, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
In order to quell this problem, I will put myself in the possition of mediator. Before an admin says I am not qualified, few people on Wiki can read scandinavian languages and I have a feeling the sources will be in either swedish, danish or norweigen. I also have no idea or opinion of which version it really is, so this will be new knowledge to me, so I can be neutral. I ask both sides to give me sources which I can find in a library. Please note, I am in Denmark, so the large library in Cph can send any book to my local library in Roskilde. Please include page number and line numbers which I must read. -- Orbit One Talk| Babel 17:38, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
First. This saga is not from 900, but from the 1200-1300 ac.
But this is interesting. It does not says that, "Rolf the walker (Gange Hrolf)" WAS the Rollo of Normandy. But as it is writed;
acording to norwegian-icelandic tradition identical to the Rollo who in 911 founded Normandy
Gange Hrolf is only found identical with Rollo of Normandy, and does not say that he was the Rollo of Normandy.
____
While British, French and Norwegian researchers/scholars have faith in the norwegian-icelandic account
Where do you get this from? Because it´s not right. There are both British and French, who believe Dudo´s account is more trustable than the Icelandics saga. As i also qouted in the discussion in rollo of Normandy.
____
It, says here from a Danish history site. http://www.fortidensjelling.dk/jelling84.htm: Normandiets egen hjemlige overlevering peger på Danmark og gør vikingernes overanfører Rollo til en dansk kongesøn
Translated: The tradition in Normandy points at Rollo, as being from Denmark, and son of a Danish king.
____
Inge wrote: Dudos account both of Rollo and of Denmark is however highly imaginative and partly wrong
Why do you think that? So that means this all the work from Dudo´s is highly imaginative? :oD. Dudo from Normandy wroted the history of Rollo, only 60 years later as a request of Rollo´s grandson, and was alot closer the events. Don´t know about you, but i would say Dudo is more trustable.
I gues this problem will never be solved.
But then i must ask you Inge and Barend. Why are you keep claiming on other articles that Rollo IS the "Gange Rolf (Rolf the walker)". When it´s unsolved? --Comanche cph 16:24, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
I have never heard of the name "Salomonsens". Only Salomon bagpacks. The biggest Danish encyclopedia´s is either "Lademann" or "Gyldendal". I think it says in Danish encyclopedia that Rollo is Danish, because that is what Danish scholars learn.
But what does it matter? Some believe the version from Iceland, other believe the version from Normandy.
This article tells about both version. So let me ask you again.
What is your problem? --Comanche cph 18:41, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
-- Orbit One Talk| Babel 01:30, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
"Dudos account both of Rollo and of Denmark is however highly imaginative and partly wrong. The question of Rollos nationality remains unsolved. While British, French and Norwegian researchers/scholars mostly have faith in the norwegian-icelandic account, Danish, Swedish and German historians have followed Dudo."
If that is what that Norwegian encyclopedia says. It just shows ones again the ignorance of the Norwegians historians. There are both British and French researchers/historians, who believe Dudo´s work more than, the Icelandic saga -(wroted 300 years later and by a guy who probably never have been other places that in Iceland).
"Dudo work is highly imaginative and partly wrong"
This is pathetic, and there is no sources, and no explaining why it is so partly wrong. -Because he can´t.
But what there has been showed as imaginative (by researchers), is the Orkney saga/Snorre-Heimskringla. Just look at the discussion in Oslo etc. or here; http://www.orkneyjar.com/history/saga.htm. Or what about this with Hrolf Ganger, who was so fat that no horse could carry him. That´s why he got his name "Ganger" (the walker). This are way more imaginative i think. And Dudo also said that they were riding. (Rollo and Gurim was Riding). And on his grave, he doesn't looks big at all :D. http://www.the-orb.net/orb_done/dudo/chapter11.html
>>Remember folks. A Encyclopedia is not a source, it is always wroted by a anorther person.<<
But now you all talk about Gyldendal and Salmonsens. Then look at this.
They points both theories, and keeping their opinion neutral, like a real encyclopedia does. (and call him Rollo(Robert) -not Hrolf ganger).
Who has wroted that "Rollo is a latinized name"? It´s not. Some also spell him like Roulo and other names. -cant remember where i readed that. I don´t even know how Dudo spell his name(i have only readed the translation). But i think that must be the "Rollo". Since the name Rollo is wroted on his grave. I will try to find out --Comanche cph 18:19, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
What website do you talk about? And what do you mean? There is taken photos of the two biggest Danish Encyclopedia´s. And the text in the Gyldendal is identical with what user:valentinian writes. --Comanche cph 20:15, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
I'm not going to read through this entire dispute, but here is the relevant article from Store Danske Encyklopædi (the Great Danish Encyclopedia), published in 1994-2002 (a new supplementary volume will be published soon.) On a side note: Salomonens Konversationsleksikon was a lexicon in more than 20 volumes (1st edition: 1891-1911 (19 volumes), 2nd edition: 1915-1930 (26 volumes). A third but less inclusive version was printed 1937.40. Store Danske Encyklopædi is the first Danish lexicon in more than 70 years to rival this work, especially the second edition.)
Anyway, here's the entry from Store Danske Encyklopædi (CD-rom version): "Rollo, Robert 1., d. 927, vikingehøvding, stamfader til det normanniske dynasti i Normandiet og England. Rollo anførte en vikingehær, som i begyndelsen af 900-t. opererede i Nordfrankrig. I 911 overlod Karl 3. den Enfoldige ham områderne omkring Seinens nedre løb mellem floderne Bresle, Epte og Risle, mod at han beskyttede riget mod andre vikinger; Rollo blev i denne forbindelse døbt. Han omtales herefter som greve af Rouen. 924 fik han også landet mellem Risle og Vire, det centrale Normandiet. Rollos nationalitet, norsk eller dansk, er omstridt."
(rough translation: "Rollo, Robert I, d. 927, Viking chief, founder of the Norman dynasty in Normandy and England. Rollo commanded a Viking army which operated in Northern France in the early 900s. In 911, Charles the Simple awarded him the areas near the lower stream of the Seine, between the rivers Bresle, Epte and Risle, on the condition that he protected the realm against other Vikings; Rollo was baptised in connection with these events. From then on, he was referred to as the Count of Rouen. In 924, he was also awarded the land between Risle and Vire; the central part of Normandy. Rollo's nationality, Norwegian or Danish, is disputed.")
From what I've read, it's pretty apparent that we must have (at least) two independent traditions about him. I wouldn't be surprised if Saxo had written about him as well.
The solution seems pretty simple to me: write that both theories exist and that his nationality is a matter of dispute. Valentinian (talk) 19:26, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
Yup, i agree, that is the issue here. But it seems like some users in here don´t wanna accept that.--Comanche cph 20:18, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
And exactly what i said the hole time. And that's why his name is being changed to Rollo or Rollon. --Comanche cph 14:10, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
Excerpt from article on "Gange-Rolv Ragnvaldsson, or Rollo (?)" in "Norsk Biografisk leksikon" (Norwegian biographical encyclopedia), article written by Claus Krag, 2001:
"Norwegian-Icelandic histories were in medieval times in agreement that Gange-Rolv and Rollo were the same person. The oldest written mention of this is in the latin Historia Norvegiæ (ca. 1180), which was written in Norway. Snorre, in his kings' sagas, relate that Gange-Rolv conquered Normandy after first having plundered in the area Hebrides-Irish Sea-France, and that many Norwegians settled in Normandy with him.
At the end of the 19th century, a lively debate arose about who Rollo was. The discussion, which partly followed national divisions (with danish and norwegian historians on opposite sides), gathered pace in the time leading up to the great millennial celebrations of Normandy in 1911. An important point in the debate was how one should understand terms like "Norwegians" and "Danes" in the medieval sources, and also how "Danish" or "Norwegian" the settlement in Normandy had been.
Danish historian Johannes Steenstrup started the debate. His main argument was clear statements from the French historian Dudo of Saint-Quentin, that Rollo was Danish. Since Dudo wrote his work on the Norman dukes around 1020, he seemed to stand closer to events than the saga writers, so that his version should be preferred. At the same time Steenstrup emphasized, with arguments similar to later saga criticism, how little one could build on the norse sagas.
Norwegian historians - foremost among them Gustav Storm, Alexander Bugge and Ebbe Hertzberg - doubted Dudo's value as a source, pointing at how totally unreliable his accounts are in the rest of what he writes about Rollo and Denmark, with historic and geographic information which are not at all correct. They also emphasised that Rollo was to have had a daughter, Gerloc (Geirlaug), whose name seemed to indicate a Norwegian connection, and that there also on French soil, in writings younger than Dudo's, existed a tradition that Rollo was Norwegian.
The question of who Rollo was can never be fully answered. But among Norwegian, as well as French and British historians, it is now commonly held that judged from the sources - choosing between the two extant possibilities - there is more to indicate a Norwegian connection."
Excerpt from article on "Rollo, also called Rolf, or Rou, French Rollon" from The New Encyclopædia Britannica, 1998:
"Scandinavian rover who founded the duchy of Normandy. Making himself independent of King Harald I of Norway, Rollo sailed off to raid Scotland, England, Flanders, and France onpirating expeditions and, about 911, established himself in an area along the Seine River..."
-- Barend 10:45, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
Funny that you keep saying that English and Frence historicans are pointing on the icelandic saga. When i have copy pasted some stuff that rollo was from fakse writed by and English. ANd all the old Frence historicans, points on Dudo's account.
French soil? writings? younger than dudo's? Don't think so. You have to prove it mister. --Comanche cph 14:24, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
This is not right. The only source that tells Rollo=Hrolf is from the Orkneyinga saga. Dudo's book is the most trustable source.
His name is Rollo of Normandy. Not Hrolf of Normandy. End of discussion. -- Hypster 15:40, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
-- Orbit One Talk| Babel 18:13, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Yes, and both theories are also well mentered in " Rollo of Normandy" ;o). The thing is that we don't know for sure who his was. But we know that he was called Rollo, and Rollon in French. --Comanche cph 19:38, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
This was writed by user:Inge
___
He is being the possibly founder of Normandy ;o) --Comanche cph 20:17, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
I don't really think that most scholars care about were he is from. But its known there is two theories, and two possibilities. --Comanche cph 20:36, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Ok im sorry. He was to tall for his horse could carry him, since this not sounds more weird. And you know that people general was smaller that time, that we are today. I don't know what scholars you keep talking about. I have always known him as Rollo from Fakse. The link will take people to see two theories, and it still does. This should be nautral, as we have agreed on. --Comanche cph 21:09, 11 July 2006 (UTC)--Comanche cph 21:09, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Ofcouse both theories is very notable. I really can't see what's your problem with possibly. Likely means. This is what its like.
I mean. You can have 2 possibly, but only one likely. --Comanche cph 22:05, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
I am not being rude, but could you try to refrase your last entry because I really didn't understand what you wanted to say. Do you think that likely means "this is what it's like"? Inge 22:12, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Herre, at være ærlig, du er ikke godt til engelsk, så måske du skulle ladevære at sige hvad 'likely' betyder, fordi du tager fejl. -- Orbit One Talk| Babel 22:13, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
"Likely" is kind of the same as "probably". witch means sannsynlig. So it's not neutral.
Possibly is the word to use. --Comanche cph 22:19, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Maybe there is something in the common usage of the word that makes you not want it? I don't know, but it really is the most neutral alternative. It is possible to have two likely theories and the word leaves the reader to believe that the information is not certain. Inge 22:32, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Let me make it easy. Possibly just means there is more possibilities. So does likely. But it says what should be most trustable. --Comanche cph 23:13, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
gosh! you never give up. So you your likely in that 860 article. :o) --Comanche cph 07:07, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
I see you love to revert, Comanche. I just want to point out that simply reverting or removing text you don't agree with isn't good behaviour. You know that there is a dispute yet you constantly try to keep your side of the story the current one via reverts. When you see one of your edits being changed the second time around a bell should ring signaling it's time to go to the talk page. Then it is common procedure that the original text remain until the dispute is resolved. Inge 23:49, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Ok why should why put the name "Hrolf Ganger", when it's only supporting one theory? Just link to Rollo, and the name Hrolf Ganger is explained there and everybody is happy ;o)
And i trough we had a agreement --Comanche cph 23:59, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
You did't answar the question?
Why are you keep putting the name Hrolf Ganger back. Hrolf Ganger was his prename according what some historicans think about one theory. Witch tells about a man who sailed to Normandy.
So leave it, we had a agreement. --Comanche cph 07:05, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
I appreciate your attemts to negotiate a solution and I think you have good suggestions. I fear however that Comanche will continue his reverting tactics pushing unreasonable consessions until the Gange-Rolf theory is mostly discredited and hardly mentioned. I am sure you have noticed how more and more counterpoints have had to be added to every mention of the theory. The agrement we had was that there was two theories equally worthy of note in wikipedia. One of which was a prominent theory regarding Rollo being the same person as Gange-Rolf. Any other agreement must be between Comanche and himself. Comanche seems to want to remove all connections between the two, not even permitting the mention of Normany in texts mentioning Gange-Rolf. He has since allowed us to mention a possibility of a Normandy connection. I see now that he is taking these tactics and disruptive behaviour with him to other articles and I fear the consequenses. Behaving brutishly until you get your way is not the wikipedia way of doing things. Inge 12:52, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
Inge stop you attacking tactic on me. We have two equal theories, and both should be mentored as equal. The term "Gange hrolf" was not used in Normandy. And why will you have it changed to it??? --Comanche cph 13:07, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
What the heck "likely" or "possibly", i don't care :). --Comanche cph 13:24, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
Well congratulations to us, that's another problem solved :) Inge 13:26, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
The article has previously been subject of reverts wars. Now it would need serious reference check and inline quotations. There are also a lot of {{ Fact}} tags. / Fred- Chess 19:57, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
How can you found a city through raiding? Inge 15:05, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
Rurik most certainly did not found Novgorod in 859. In fact, archaelogy seems to suggest this town existed before Rurik was born. Goliath74 17:56, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
Even for an amateur historian of the Viking age it is quite apparent that this article generally is of rather low quality. Some of the more striking faults:
Osli73 16:17, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
The article states:
"The traditional definition is no longer accepted by most Scandinavian historians and archaeologists."
This describes all. Danish-Scandinavian "Experts" would not accept any negative statement. The really convincing, radical cleaning of any negative aspects in the viking age, but also ALL related articles violates neutrality. See for example Annales Vedastini, who described cruelty, mass-murder, raping and kidnapping, stealing and a simply not seen violence.
Compared to the difficulty to accept this, it seems not too difficult to change all content in Wikipedia.
Before the friends of Denmark and Scandinavia edit-war started, there were for example the introduction:
The Viking Age is the name of the period between
793 and
1066 AD in
Scandinavia and
Britain, following the
Germanic Iron Age (and the
Vendel Age in Sweden). During this period, the
Vikings, Scandinavian warriors,
leidangs and traders, raided and explored most parts of
Europe, south-western
Asia, northern
Africa and north-eastern
North America. Apart from exploring Europe by way of its oceans and rivers with the aid of their advanced navigational skills and extending their trading routes across vast parts of the continent, they also engaged in warfare and looted and enslaved numerous Christian communities of Medieval Europe for centuries, contributing to the development of feudal systems in Europe, which included castles and barons (and was a defense against Viking raids).
Compare this to the current version. Include negative facts! It is important, to explain information neutral. Even if its negative. Please help. W.
Wispanow
19:54, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
rere
Probably someone can translate the dates related to the viking attacks in french:
Other sources:
This are FACTS. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which tries to focus on the positive reign of Alfred the Great, didn´t state cruelty. W. Wispanow 20:24, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
PS. Regarding the previous introduction that mostly referred to the negative then this indeed was not a neutral way to start an article. Please refer to any source that would back up the claim: the current opening of the article could be interpreted as being not neutral. Thanks! -- Termer 08:29, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
the destruction of the Abbey church on Lindisfarne for example reads like a whitewash? So far I haven't seen any specific arguments supporting "keep it real" claims. Please feel free to point out specific issues, in case not replied, the tag is going to be removed. Thanks-- Termer 03:07, 15 October 2007 (UTC)
FYI, you can add a link to Portal:Norway in this article, by placing {{Portal|Norway}} at the top of the see also section (or the external links section if the article has no see also section). This will display
Cirt ( talk) 09:26, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
There is a troll on this page. Some one has inserted references to Kobe Bryant and radiator caps at random. These need to be removed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.26.212.72 ( talk) 12:22, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
'Most of the English kingdoms, being in turmoil, could not stand against the Vikings, but Alfred of Wessex managed to keep the Vikings out of his country.'
The Vikings did infact take most of Wessex, except for the marshland around Athelny. It was here that Alfred the Great sat out the winter before mustering an army and defeating the Danes at the Battle of Ethandune, which most likely took place in Wiltshire, around the area of Westbury Hillfort, which would have been far inside to boundaries of the old kingdom of Wessex, infact the entire county of Wiltshire which also includes Chippenham would have been deep inside the boundaries of the old Kingsom of Wessex during the Viking invasions.
After defeating the Danes at Ethandune (Edington), Alfred pirsued the Danes to Chippenham and beseiged them in his own town. After being forced into starvation, the Danes sued for peace and signed the Treaty of Wedmore which lead to the setting up of the Danelaw. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by VelaPulsar ( talk • contribs) 15:09, 9 May 2007 (UTC).
I agree. This paragraph as well sounds rather strange :
"The Vikings did not get everything their way. In one situation in England, a small Viking fleet attacked a rich monastery at Jarrow. The Vikings were met with stronger resistance than they expected: their leaders were killed, the raiders escaped, only to have their ships beached at Tynemouth and the crews killed by locals. This was one of the last raids on England for about 40 years. The Vikings instead focused on Ireland and Scotland"
This should be cleaned up. 155.55.60.110 ( talk) —Preceding undated comment was added at 10:41, 8 January 2009 (UTC).
This article has problems which won't go away, unless rethought from the start: There is something called "the viking age", whether or not certain people like the term. However, in writing an article called "Viking Age", one has to have some rather well-defined idea of what to describe. Wouldn't a large part of the current article be better off in a separate article named "Viking Conquests", while others would fit better under "Viking Exploits" or some such?
The Viking Age is a period of time in Scandinavian history, the transition between the Iron Age with its Vanetro (a shamanistic-pantheistic sort of religion) to the Dark Ages' Kristendom (litteraly "Christianity", but shouldn't be confused with the present day variety; it was at best a mystic-monotheistic religion, its rituals conducted in latin, which nobody -sometimes not even the priest- understood). From a time without letters or writing, to one in which written documents (the law, say) were of the utmost importance. A time where indivdual physical prowess gave way to tactics and technology.
It was in many ways the transition from a "me-and-you" mindset to an "us-and-them" mindset.
There's a lot of reasons this period is so important to us Scandinavians. But when it comes to Wikipedia, there's one overriding concern: Does this article enlighten, or confuse, people who've never heard of the viking age before? As it stands, I wouldn't blame someone who went away thinking the vikings were slavic scots that sailed up and down the Seine in order to trade with Constantinople. And burn down an irish monastery on the way.
So, what do I suggest? Situating the time and place (Scandinavia, 8th-11th century AD) and sticking to it. Mentioning/listing the vikings' conquests, and linking to separate articles of the vikings' exploits in present day countries. Describing the religion (well, what we know of it), the building style(s), the everyday tools possessed, and possibly listing the notables (the kings and queens, as well as the major failed usurpers).
Basically, I think it's best to follow Lucan's advice: Keep it simple. Keep the end in sight. Better to omit what's of questinable usefulness, than to toss in an old norse parleur for good measure...
Smolk ( talk) 05:04, 10 January 2009 (UTC)
OK guys, lets clean this thing up. It doesn't seem to me like the problem is that much of the Neutrality but some sections are just...It might be me but these read like written by a grade school student. (sorry) The first thing I'd do, get rid of the Historical background and Probable causes of Viking expansion...Actually everything below that seems to be another not that well written article that dubs the Viking. So, once it's about the Viking age, it should be about the Viking age only, meaning just an article like Middle age or Iron Age. What could be here would be a section of archeology perhaps. So if it was up to me, I'd get rid of everything that's starts from Historical background. If anything additionally informative (Not that I noticed anything) can be found, it should be added to Viking article. The text in the article from Historical background on doesn't cite any sources anyway so it's easy to be challenged and simply removed if felt necessary. So, please let me know what you think! thanks -- Termer 07:08, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
Absolutely, since a lot of the article in viking does not exactly refer to vikings, but to scandinavian people in general during viking age. Dan Koehl ( talk) 18:12, 21 February 2009 (UTC)
There is no age called "viking age" The time of the vikings were during the Germanic iron age. Also in Scandinavian languages there is nothing called viking age. Now I'm Danish, and in Danish it's called "vikingetiden (the viking time)" or just "jernalderen (the iron age)"
This should be merged with the article "Vikings" or atleast changed the name, i think
-- Missip1 ( talk) 20:35, 24 May 2008 (UTC)
It doesn't matter what it's called in Scandinavia, it's called "Viking Age" in English, and this is English Wikipedia ( WP:NAME). -- dab (𒁳) 21:04, 14 October 2008 (UTC)
"Google :S. Is that a souce now." -- it is impossible to discuss anything on such an abysmal level. No, google isn't a source. It is an index which may be used for finding sources. You may also use a library catalogue, or a spirit medium, it really doesn't matter how you found the source just as long as you can cite it properly. -- dab (𒁳) 18:50, 21 February 2009 (UTC)
"words which used sk- sounds, such as skirt, sky, and skin; other words appearing in written sources at this time included again, awkward, birth, cake, dregs, fog, freckles, gasp, law, moss, neck, ransack, root, scowl, sister, seat, sly, smile, want, weak and window.[25] Some of the words that came into use are among the most common in English, such as both, same, get, and give. The system of personal pronouns was affected, with they, them, and their replacing the earlier forms. Old Norse influenced the verb to be; the replacement of sindon by are is almost certainly Scandinavian in origin, as is the third-person-singular ending -s in the present tense of verbs."
I think or, at least, ask this question: Aren't there many things wrong in that paragraph about the influence on the English language?
For instance, words like "both" or "give" appear to be common Germanic words and not specifically Scandinavian (north germanic) ones. The same is true for "birth" (German: Geburt), "cake" (German: Kuchen), "sister" (German: Schwester, but with dialectal forms like "süster" etc.), "weak" (German: schwach) etc. I highly doubt, these are good examples for something specifically Scandinavian... And moreover, isn't the ending -s a result of a phonetic change from -eth to -s in order to have a somewhat easier pronounciation? That's what we learned at school (though this does not mean that it was correct). Other examples are better: like "sky" or "law".
I teach medieval history at De Anza College (which doesn't necessarily establish my credibility, I realize); however, various sources suggest that trade between the Vikings and Muslim Ummayad and Abbasid Caliphates via the Caspian Sea produced large inflows of high-quality silver Dirham coins (as evidenced by large caches of Islamic coins found in Scandinavia).
There is a possible correlation (established by the mining dates on the coins found in buried Scandinavian caches) of the tapering off of these specie inflows with an increase of Viking raids.
In other words, as the Abbasid 'Empire' started to fragment (losing control of precious metals and tax revenue from different areas, (i.e. Spain, Egypt, Khorasan) and as output from existing mines dropped, so did the volume of money reaching the Vikings, which may have caused them to seek other sources of gold and silver...
This is probably too tidy, too linear in outline: 'no silver from Islamic world, so attack Western Europe', BUT, to a certain extent there might be a little bit of truth to it, perhaps it was a contributing factor.
In my opinion, it does deserve some mention. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Guerre1859 ( talk • contribs) 03:08, 5 February 2010 (UTC)
You're right, citation is needed, however, the source you cite does not, as far as I see, contradict a linkage between a breakdown in Islamic-Viking trade and invasions, as Dr. Hussain writes of the Dirhams: "They are thin, made from silver and date from the Abbasid caliphate, which existed from the 8th to 13th century"; if the first Viking attack is usually given as the raid on Lindisfarne in 793 but attacks continued well into the 900s, there is considerable overlap in time.
Finally, the argument that they were not the same people (raiding in the West and trading in the East) is no logical impediment to the theory, because the Dirhams still circulated within the Norse cultural zone and there is no necessary logic why the traders have to be directly involved in raiding...Economic shocks can be communicated across large distances and at second, third, or fourth hand, that is true today and was true in the past, just like Chinese trade with the USA can impact Australia, without the USA necessarily having contact with Australia (eg. American capital investment fueling a boom in China causing massive importation of Australian iron ore--or to make the analogy even more explicit: the cessation or drastic tapering off of US investment in China having a knock-on effect on Australia, leading to great changes in the Australian economy, which would not be directly restricted to the iron extraction, because the money inflows generated by the trade in its heyday would have rippled outwards across many sectors of the Australian economy, so that, perhaps, at the end of the day, we would find Australian prostitutes leaving the now impoverished mining ghost towns, and emigrating to a new 'El Dorado', say, Angola...just as Swedish Rus Vikings trading with the Muslims across the Caspian, could have had knock-on effects on their Norwegian and Danish brethren.
A thoughtful comment should also be thoughtfully dismissed, and with adequate, serious documentation, not a 'fluff' feature article. If Hussain presented statistical correlations and analyses of the Dirhams based on date, purity, location of minting, then he would be authoritative. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 153.18.112.37 ( talk) 23:09, 16 February 2010 (UTC)
It's a little bit odd to demand citations as if the history of silver circulation in the Viking age is contentious. It isn't. It is very well known indeed that there are 3 major stages in the circulation of silver in the viking world from the mid-C8th to the end of the C11th. This should be apparent from a cursory reading of standard text books (most recently Stefan Brink and Nield Price, ed., The VIking World (2008), pp. 159-69). Islamic silver began to flow into Scandinavia shortly before 800. Since access to silver was a principal means to acquiring and displaying prestige and political authority, the increased flow may have had the effect of destabilising the rudimentary power structures in some parts of Scandinavia as rival dynasties and magnate groups competed for power, encouraging some to use their resources to carve out territories for themselves outside Scandinavia, in the west (see Peter Heather, Empires and Barbarians (2009), pp. 510-12). Alternatively, as you note, the intensification of raids may have been linked with the temporary disruption of flow in the mid-C9th (the theory of Klavs Randsborg in The Viking Age in Denmark (1980), pp. 137-66). In the last quarter of the C10th, Islamic dirhams disappear. They are replaced at first by pennies from Germany and Anglo-Saxon England. One common interpretation is that at this point, the reduction in the flow of silver into the kingdom favored elite groups that had now emerged in a dominant position, like the Danish dynasty. It is at precisely this point that the centralised kingdom of Denmark emerges under Harald Bluetooth and Sven Forkbeard. But the Danish kings (and others) did still desperately need silver to maintain their positions, and Sven Forkbeard himself undertook raiding and extortion in Anglo-Saxon England (the first ruling king in the Scandinavian homelands known to have done so). When Sven's political rival Thorkell the Tall, who evidently did not recognise his overlordship, exposed the weakness of England in the great raids of 1009-12, Sven -- it has been argued -- was forced to act lest Thorkell or someone other Scandinavian warlord should benefit too much from the wealth of England, and be able to use it to underwrite a power grab at home. In 1013 he took the initiative and invaded. It was in these years around 1000 that the third major shift in the circulation of silver took place, as national coinages began to emerge in Scandinavia, because the now more powerful kings of Scandinavia were able more effectively to manage and administer the use of silver flowing into their kingdoms. This is not simply my opinion, but a statement of the picture in current scholarship. Interpretations of the impact of these changes vary in the writings of Peter Sawyer and other historians interested in the economic background to viking activities, but the fluctuations in the circulation of silver are well known. See D.M. Metcalf's overviews on 'Viking-Age numismatics' in the 1997 and 1998 issues of the Numismatic Chronicle on the circulation of Islamic, German and Anglo-Saxon silver in the Scandinavian world (pp. 296-335, and 347-71, respectively). For another classic statement, see Peter Spufford's Money and Its Use in Medieval Europe (1988), pp. 55-73. It's all very well demanding that people cite their sources: but it's just plain rude to assume they don't have any. Effective contribution depends on knowledge of authoritative scholarship (including James Barrett's article from Antiquity, which you cite): you can't do much with ad hoc inferences from magazine articles that happen to be available online 86.7.18.117 ( talk) 10:23, 27 July 2010 (UTC)!
What on earth is all the hocus pocus in the article about Christianity and preferential trading as a stimulus to the Viking Age? This is complete nonsense: it in no way represents the present scholarly consensus (or indeed any other expert consensus at any time). It seems to reflect the interests of someone with an contemporary ideological axe to grind. It will completely mislead anybody who refers to this article who has no previous knowledge of the Vikings. The entire passage should go -- unless someone can show that some authority has demonstrated how it was that Scandinavian seasonal emporia at sites like Ribe and Hedeby were already flourishing in the C8th if religious differences were a genuine impediment to trade between Scandinavians and their north-western European neighbours. The theory that religious confrontation explains Vikings has been articulated recently by the archaeologist Bjorn Myhre, but not on the terms expressed here, and few other scholars have been convinced by his views. It's easy to show that the 'religious confrontation' theory is weak, because it can't account for continued raiding as Christianity spread through Scandinavia in the C10th/11th. The common theme underlying viking activity, as most scholarship seems to accept, is clearly the pursuit of profit--whether in the form of moveable or landed wealth. What's unusual about the Vikings as opposed to other early medieval groups is the degree of private enterprise and mobility harnessed in the acquisition of wealth by violence. This tells us something about social and political conditions in the homelands, and the impact of the late adoption of the sail in Scandinavia for use on ship types designed to negotiate shallow inland waterways as well as coastal waters. CubeDigit ( talk) 12:16, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
There seems to be a lot of vandalism on this page. Is there any way that it can be tagged to prevent this? Brendandh ( talk) 17:25, 21 September 2010 (UTC)
This makes no sense. Ireland is not one of the British isles now, and it certainly wasn't when Dublin and Waterford were founded. 193.178.95.4 ( talk) 15:13, 8 June 2011 (UTC)
I'm doing a project, but I can't find this particular piece of information. Could anyone help me? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.125.5.117 ( talk) 17:13, 20 November 2011 (UTC)
It is a pity, I think that the Viking age usually is seen as an isolated period that began during the 8'th century and ended in the eleventh century.
I would rather see it as a continuation of the Migration Period, when many tribes from Scandinavia, such as the Goths and Anglo-Saxons invaded the colapsing Roman Empire and other areas. Is it not likely that the Viking Age Scandinavians already had contacts and trade links with these earlier migrants wich they later came to invade or plunder? Maybe they had heard stories told of past heroes' deeds around the camp fires. Maybe there were even maps and route descriptions preserved. Is not the oldest written text in Saxon, Beowulf set in Scandinavia and in Sweden there's a runestone (Rökstenen) that suggests that the Geats may have felt a strong fellowship with the Goths.1
Looking at Vikings from that angle it may not be completely illogical to think of Viking raids more like planned military expedititions with clear goals and objectives, rather than as occasional forays where they captured what they came over (although this may have been the case sometimes). Perhaps some of the Viking leaders where even well versed in Roman thinking about strategy and tactics. An indication of this is that the Vikings sometimes appears to have used Roman battleformations such as shieldcastles and pig head's array. These are more or less identical to the formations that the latter-day Roman legions used.
With this in mind, it is perhaps not more correct to ask what happend outside Scandinavia during the viking age that made the norsemen do what they did, than to ask what happend inside Scandinavia during this period.
I am looking forward to your comments on this thread.
(And there are uch more evidence to support this, but this text is not about The Goths) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dadalado ( talk • contribs) 22:14, 27 August 2012 (UTC)
The viking age timeline on the page had overlapping black and blue text and you couldn't actually read the text so I went ahead and fixed it and made the events that are on there actually stand out when as far as when they happened on the timeline instead of just the words being centered on the year which no one could visually see on the graph the year they happened. Basically made it more legible and aesthetically pleasing. If anyone needs any help with messing with it in the future just leave me a message on my talk page and I'll get right on it. — dain- talk 06:25, 10 January 2013 (UTC)
Hi there, just to throw some oil on the burning waves ...
IMHO the concept of a VA conflates three issues: - Nordic Culture (and its history) - British History - World History
1. Nordic Culture (and its history) The culture from which the Vikings emerged constitutes - probably - a continuum (albeit a developing one) from, say, the Merowingian Age, and, arguably*, up to the Black Death, which was a major incision especially for the Norse, with their higher-than-average depopulation; practically the end of civilization as they knew it. 1066 notwithstanding, e.g. vikings emerged from the north to go raiding in the British Isles (Magnus Barefoot, slain, IIRC, on a raid in Ireland in 1103); and the "Realm of Norway" ("Norgesveldet"), Norway's greatest expansion and political heyday was around the reign of this 13. century guy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haakon_IV_of_Norway. Et cetera.
Hanseatic League, combined with the expansion of the church and of royal authority, leading to a thorough restructuring of society and economy; classic "Norse Society"-stuff, IMHO.
2. British History Of course the period between the Lindisfarne raid and the battle of Stamford Bridge saw a lot of viking influence on the history of the British Isles. No doubt about it.
3. World History While Nordic history is part of World History, and Norsemen pop up in places surprisingly far from home, they play a role in World history only inasmuch as World History is somewhat identical to British Historiography; and a case for this view permeating history writing here and there could be made. Although The Norse ranged from America to Armenia, they didn't make much of an impact on either place, and few places in between - what they did there is more of a "who were these guys?" question. But had William lost the battle of Hastings, the "Viking Age" would have been much, much less important, historically, even given the trials of Alfred the Great. Then we wouldn't have to ponder when this Viking Age began and ended, because then there wouldn't have been one, as little as there is
an Age of Wendish and Saxon Raiders, Age of Barbary Pirates or Age of Huns, Mongols, Tartars,
Magyars, Bulgars, Turks .... a horde (and a mass noun, too) of savage ... well, hordes bothering their betters intent on enjoying a good ballad and a goblet of wine in the castle's great hall. Or ... the Viking Age is a markedly North-European (North Sea, even) affair, politically and historically.
Conclusion? Perhaps one should not start with the concept and look for a corresponding reality. Perhaps this concept also should be picked apart somewhat. Yes, there was a period when chronicles reflected some vigorous seasonal labour migration out of Scandinavia, but OTOH this had been going on since the Cimbrians and Teutones, well over thousand years. They just hadn't invented the keel at the time, so they didn't litter the piers in Brighton so much. And the same phenomenon continued after 1066, but with so many waves of Angles, Saxons, Danes, Normans ... the chroniclers experienced a kind of "invasion ennui", couldn't be bothered anymore, really. Attention shifted elsewhere.
In the spirit of contribution
Laborious version - retain most, yet make specific /EN is not my mother tongue, so all text here should probably be rewritten/: "The Viking Age is the name given by historians to a period especially in Northern European History, spanning the late 8th to late 11th centuries /the dates in the article vary from 1030 to 1263, btw; which is about as long as the 9. - 11. century. Interesting./. Norse rovers appeared as traders, invaders, conquerors and colonists in neighbouring regions within reach of their seafaring capabilities, their access to trade goods, their ability to wage war and to sustain emigration.
/The following headings could have separate sections; I'd reccommend keeping them short, and link to relevant, established Wiki articles expanding on the subject./
Historical considerations /- seems to be "the history of the history of the Vikings ...?/
Historical background /- a hodgepodge of politics, geography, culture, technology ...
would perhaps be better covered with a reference to "Norse Society" ?/
Historic overview /consists of "important dates" + "areas of expansion"/
Important dates /for beginning or actually first mention to end or disappearance from chronicles/ Scope of expansion /areas, and degrees of influence there/
Norse Society /- "See main article" /
Politix Economics Religion Technology Etceterics
Vikings /- "See main article" /
Viking Expansion /- "See main article" /
Probable causes of Norse expansion Norse Expansion Enablers (Technology, Law (who gets to inherit whom), foes in political unrest) Viking Itinerary - Areas visited (by region, as today) Viking invasions (by region, as today) Area Events (battles and such) Political consequences Legacy Viking colonisations (e.g. Britain, Normadie) Impact Influence of Norse (X) on (e.g.) English (X) (Language, law, technology, cuisine, fashion ...)(at the time) Legacy (today /maybe not a practical division.../) Probable causes of the end of Norse expansion
...
Perhaps easier version: Rename the whole article "Viking Expansion", redirect from "Viking Age", agressive linking to sub-articles as above.
Hoping to sign this right,
T 83.109.180.48 ( talk) 04:09, 14 February 2013 (UTC)
There's something funny with the timing in this article. The lede says the Viking age covers the late 8th to late 11th century, i.e up to almost 1100 AD. Yet the (very nice) table and they text itself indicate the death of Harald Hardrada as the end, at least in Britain. This certainly is the traditional endpoint. In Norway, the end is traditionally set to the Battle of Stiklestad of 1030 AD. This gives a somewhat different time endpoint from "late 11th century". Wouldn't "mid 11th century" be an better description of the endpoint? The sources are the Encyclopædia Britannica articles on Norway, Denmark and Sweden respectively. The article on Norway gives no time bracket. The article on Sweden cites "in the 11th century", the text indicating again around 1060 (Christening of Sweden). The article on Denmark is not open. Since Wikipedia shoild ideally not cite other encylopædiae, i suggest 1) adjusting the time bracket, and 2) finding printed sources for the bracket. Petter Bøckman ( talk) 08:28, 17 February 2013 (UTC)
The Viking Age is a historical period for Scandinavia. Even though the effects of Vikings' influences and affairs around Europe is interesting, and an important part of the overall story, the Viking Age entry contains very little of Scandinavian Society, economics, politics, culture or anything else regarding life in the area. Archaeologically, the Viking Age is more of a contuination of earlier periods, but mark altogheter the start of the transition of Scandinavia into medieval christian states. The currrent page is more about in what way and what effects migration and travels of Scandinavians had on other parts of Europe, than about the Scandinavians of the Viking Age itself... —The preceding unsigned comment was added by St12357 ( talk • contribs) 15:44, 12 May 2007 (UTC).
Hello. This is still an important issue today. Too much of what is presented about the Vikings or the Scandinavians of that period, is based on British sources, with an exclusively British angle on the events and this period in European history. We need much more information from other sources, with a more universal angle. Sources that describe the people, their everyday life, etc.. On the page Vikings, it has been discussed to initiate a whole article on "The Norse" to fill this gap, because to some people it is to ground-breaking to accept, that the word Viking also includes "normal people" and "normal activities" like farming, etc.. No matter what the people of that period is called, I hope more information on their culture and daily lives will be presented here on wikipedia. I have done my part on the page Vikings. RhinoMind ( talk) 01:28, 12 May 2014 (UTC)
The first few segment of the Historical Considerations section is almost word for shot of what happens in the History Channels 'Vikings' TV series. A show that is incredibly historically inaccurate and isn't backed by the sources provided. Delete immediately, it's clearly some idiot editing this article because he watched a TV show. 124.169.184.30 ( talk) 10:28, 14 July 2013 (UTC) Harlequin
It's time this article underwent serious reappraisal - this should be a Featured Article! As a general history topic, it's in a bad state: poor organisation and inadequate referencing. Checking today, the article leads with four overlapping and highly confusing historical overviews:
1 Historical considerations 2 Historical background 3 Probable causes of Norse expansion 4 Historic overview
Time for a tidy up! Paul James Cowie ( talk) 05:57, 6 June 2014 (UTC)
The articles Viking age and Vikings cover almost identical issues and should be merged. Any comments? Cheers Osli73 21:53, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
I agree. The article " Viking" should only short describe what a Viking was, Modern revivals and Popular misconceptions and stuff like that. -- Arigato1 22:43, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
Disagree. They should not be merged. Vikings should be about the people. Viking Age should be a historical discussion that focuses on the events. -- Einar 20:40, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
I'll add another Nooooo and agree with Einar. Brendandh 21:11, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
No merge, but there is allot in " Vikings" like historical event witch should be deleted and removed to " Viking age". -- Arigato1 21:19, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
They were indeed not. the majority of people from scandinavia were actually not vikings. The term has been misunderstodd in english language, and although a populair belief, Vikings wre not of a special gegraphical origin, it was an activity, which very few scandinavians really took part of. No ethinical group can be labelled vikings. In fact, in some icelandic sagas, arabian pirats are refered to as vikings, and they were not born in scandinavia. Dan Koehl 23:31, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
Yes, technically I guess the Viking age was a part of the Iron age. However, at least in Sweden, the Viking age is an accepted term for the period 800-1050. However, I'm not so sure it was an 'age' in European history. Cheers Osli73 21:12, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
Disagree-- The " Viking" article covers a completely different aspect, and as such, should not be merged. Nol888( Talk)( Review me please) 21:14, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
There is a thing called the Viking Age. I'm from Denmark and we use the term: Viking Age. Not Iron Age or Dark Ages. I guess this is because we're kind of proud of our past as vikings. We're proud that a little nation like Denmark were able to conquer all the big nations of the time (England, Norway, Sweden). Just a thought :-) Simon 16:12, 9 April 2007
-- Vchorozopoulos ( talk) 22:37, 28 May 2009 (UTC)
I too find it hard to see how the parameters of this article are distinct from the parallel articles on the Viking Expansion and the Vikings. Perhaps the difference should be that the Viking Expansion article discusses Scandinavian activities outside their homelands during the Viking Age, while the Viking Age article talks about the situation within Scandinavia itself (where the term is indeed in very regular use as a meaningful periodisation of the late Scandinavian Iron Age). If so, the title of the latter needs to be changed to 'Viking Age Scandinavia', and the entire thing needs to be rewritten. At the same time, it is not clear why there should be a separate article that talks about the Vikings. There's a conceptual circularity here. It's the activities of Vikings that defines the notion of a Viking Age, whether in Scandinavia, or outside it. Yet the popularisation of the terms Viking and Viking Age, means that the noun Viking is now regularly applied to all Norse-speaking people who originated in Scandinavia in the whole period 700/750-1050/1100, and the related adjective is equally applied to all aspects of the culture connected with these people in the same period. The problem is then compounded by the additional presence of an article on Norsemen. In general a consensus seems to have emerged that it's a good thing to have separate entries for the people and the history of their activities. But I would note that there is no similar distinction made on Wikipedia between 'Romans' and the history of their activities and cultural institutions in the articles on ancient Roman civilization and the Roman Empire. Personally, I think a great deal of muddle would be avoided by having a single article, so that the difficulties inherent in the use of noun and adjective Viking can be made absolutely clear, and an appropriate historical perspective developed in identifying who these people were. Otherwise the alternative articles (all of which are still marred by partisan, incomplete, or non-authoritative contributions) will continue to overlap and repeat one another, as new contributors add information to one without seeing that the others exist. The present articles either need to be massively re-edited, or else merged. This comment is cross-posted on all three of the most relevant pages. Dala-Freyr ( talk) 10:44, 29 July 2010 (UTC)
The best solution here might be to merge Viking Age and Viking expansion, since they are practically identical. The Viking article could then refer to these briefly (as it already does) but be developed by concentrating more on cultural matters than the strictly historical. So one could have more on social structure (law, the role of women, and slavery), houses and settlement types, production and exchange, weapons and warfare, religious belief and practice in the pagan period and the early Christian era, language, art (including skaldic poetry). This would mean the merged Viking Age / Viking expansion article could concentrate more on historical processes and events, from the causes of the Viking Age to the reasons for the cessation of these activities, and the two resulting articles would be mutually supportive rather than repetitive. But the pages on the Viking Age and Viking expansion should definitely be merged. CubeDigit ( talk) 15:59, 29 July 2010 (UTC)
I agree. t The "Viking Age" and "Viking expansion" articles should be merged. There is a lot of overlap, so merging would eliminate the redundancies, while preserving the best of each article. For example Viking expansion contains a much more thorough coverage of the Vikings in Ireland, while the Viking Age article also covers Ireland, but much more briefly. The more detailed coverage of the Viking expansion article could be retained, and the Ireland section of the Viking Age article could be deleted. 180.190.67.2 ( talk) 14:27, 21 March 2016 (UTC)
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I was wondering why the Viking Age is considered part of History and not Pre-history. My answer is, that even though the Vikings were did not produce any literary legacy, they described themselves on runestones with their alphabet of runes. Is that the reason perhaps?
I vaguely remembers though, that runes were in use in Scandinavia before the Viking Age and that runestones were erected in the Nordic Iron Age as well. Is this correct or not?
Maybe someone knows more than me about this and wants to help? I think its important.
RhinoMind ( talk) 02:26, 24 June 2014 (UTC)
T 2001:4610:A:5E:0:0:0:9915 ( talk) 13:35, 9 January 2015 (UTC)
"Many Slavic scholars are opposed to this theory of Germanic influence on the Rus' (people) and have suggested alternative scenarios for this part of Eastern European history." Germanic? Shouldn't that be Scandinavian or Viking or Varangian or something similar? Allens ( talk) 17:08, 31 October 2011 (UTC)
This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 | Archive 3 |
Greetings.
There is a peer review started on Wikipedia:Peer review/Viking/archive1 and any interested party is invited to take part in reviewing the article. If you know the history of scandinavia, then please stop by and help the peer review of the artile Viking
Thank you for your time. -- OrbitOne Talk| Babel 22:35, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
As a vote is one of the steps of wikipedias guide to resolve disputes let's try one. Add your four~ under the solution you support. Please also add a short reasoning after your name and (if you want) larger comments under the comments sections.
LOL, this is pathetic. Just keep to the facts. And don´t rename him. --Comanche cph 14:28, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Rollo was known as Rollo(later Robert) and not Hrolf! And its very very doubtful that Hrolf from the Icelandic saga writed 300 years later, is that Rollo. I don't believe it myself. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Rollo_of_Normandy#Still_kicking_to_Rollo
But that´s not the issue here, because Rollo was NOT known as Hrolf.
So why a voting? And its pretty easy to make 20 acounts and vote on the same. What will be next from you? A voting about, the Norwegians conquered the hole world in 15 days? --Comanche cph 14:06, 26 June 2006 (UTC)
Because he was not called Hrolf by any script, other to a saga from Iceland writed 300 years later.
If you look at those who has reverting it, its all Norwegians or Icelandics, who just properly just WANTS to keep claiming that the "Hrolf" (from the Icelandic saga) IS Rollo of Normandy.
Look here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Rollo_of_Normandy#Still_kicking_to_Rollo
When calling him "Rollo" as he WAS called in Normandy, France and England, -and not "HROLF". We have a neutral, and right view on him, that agres with BOTH Theory´s, about who Rollo is, -and NOT the only very doubtful Icelandic saga theory.
Rollo was not known as Hrolf
--Comanche cph 09:12, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
In order to quell this problem, I will put myself in the possition of mediator. Before an admin says I am not qualified, few people on Wiki can read scandinavian languages and I have a feeling the sources will be in either swedish, danish or norweigen. I also have no idea or opinion of which version it really is, so this will be new knowledge to me, so I can be neutral. I ask both sides to give me sources which I can find in a library. Please note, I am in Denmark, so the large library in Cph can send any book to my local library in Roskilde. Please include page number and line numbers which I must read. -- Orbit One Talk| Babel 17:38, 27 June 2006 (UTC)
First. This saga is not from 900, but from the 1200-1300 ac.
But this is interesting. It does not says that, "Rolf the walker (Gange Hrolf)" WAS the Rollo of Normandy. But as it is writed;
acording to norwegian-icelandic tradition identical to the Rollo who in 911 founded Normandy
Gange Hrolf is only found identical with Rollo of Normandy, and does not say that he was the Rollo of Normandy.
____
While British, French and Norwegian researchers/scholars have faith in the norwegian-icelandic account
Where do you get this from? Because it´s not right. There are both British and French, who believe Dudo´s account is more trustable than the Icelandics saga. As i also qouted in the discussion in rollo of Normandy.
____
It, says here from a Danish history site. http://www.fortidensjelling.dk/jelling84.htm: Normandiets egen hjemlige overlevering peger på Danmark og gør vikingernes overanfører Rollo til en dansk kongesøn
Translated: The tradition in Normandy points at Rollo, as being from Denmark, and son of a Danish king.
____
Inge wrote: Dudos account both of Rollo and of Denmark is however highly imaginative and partly wrong
Why do you think that? So that means this all the work from Dudo´s is highly imaginative? :oD. Dudo from Normandy wroted the history of Rollo, only 60 years later as a request of Rollo´s grandson, and was alot closer the events. Don´t know about you, but i would say Dudo is more trustable.
I gues this problem will never be solved.
But then i must ask you Inge and Barend. Why are you keep claiming on other articles that Rollo IS the "Gange Rolf (Rolf the walker)". When it´s unsolved? --Comanche cph 16:24, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
I have never heard of the name "Salomonsens". Only Salomon bagpacks. The biggest Danish encyclopedia´s is either "Lademann" or "Gyldendal". I think it says in Danish encyclopedia that Rollo is Danish, because that is what Danish scholars learn.
But what does it matter? Some believe the version from Iceland, other believe the version from Normandy.
This article tells about both version. So let me ask you again.
What is your problem? --Comanche cph 18:41, 28 June 2006 (UTC)
-- Orbit One Talk| Babel 01:30, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
"Dudos account both of Rollo and of Denmark is however highly imaginative and partly wrong. The question of Rollos nationality remains unsolved. While British, French and Norwegian researchers/scholars mostly have faith in the norwegian-icelandic account, Danish, Swedish and German historians have followed Dudo."
If that is what that Norwegian encyclopedia says. It just shows ones again the ignorance of the Norwegians historians. There are both British and French researchers/historians, who believe Dudo´s work more than, the Icelandic saga -(wroted 300 years later and by a guy who probably never have been other places that in Iceland).
"Dudo work is highly imaginative and partly wrong"
This is pathetic, and there is no sources, and no explaining why it is so partly wrong. -Because he can´t.
But what there has been showed as imaginative (by researchers), is the Orkney saga/Snorre-Heimskringla. Just look at the discussion in Oslo etc. or here; http://www.orkneyjar.com/history/saga.htm. Or what about this with Hrolf Ganger, who was so fat that no horse could carry him. That´s why he got his name "Ganger" (the walker). This are way more imaginative i think. And Dudo also said that they were riding. (Rollo and Gurim was Riding). And on his grave, he doesn't looks big at all :D. http://www.the-orb.net/orb_done/dudo/chapter11.html
>>Remember folks. A Encyclopedia is not a source, it is always wroted by a anorther person.<<
But now you all talk about Gyldendal and Salmonsens. Then look at this.
They points both theories, and keeping their opinion neutral, like a real encyclopedia does. (and call him Rollo(Robert) -not Hrolf ganger).
Who has wroted that "Rollo is a latinized name"? It´s not. Some also spell him like Roulo and other names. -cant remember where i readed that. I don´t even know how Dudo spell his name(i have only readed the translation). But i think that must be the "Rollo". Since the name Rollo is wroted on his grave. I will try to find out --Comanche cph 18:19, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
What website do you talk about? And what do you mean? There is taken photos of the two biggest Danish Encyclopedia´s. And the text in the Gyldendal is identical with what user:valentinian writes. --Comanche cph 20:15, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
I'm not going to read through this entire dispute, but here is the relevant article from Store Danske Encyklopædi (the Great Danish Encyclopedia), published in 1994-2002 (a new supplementary volume will be published soon.) On a side note: Salomonens Konversationsleksikon was a lexicon in more than 20 volumes (1st edition: 1891-1911 (19 volumes), 2nd edition: 1915-1930 (26 volumes). A third but less inclusive version was printed 1937.40. Store Danske Encyklopædi is the first Danish lexicon in more than 70 years to rival this work, especially the second edition.)
Anyway, here's the entry from Store Danske Encyklopædi (CD-rom version): "Rollo, Robert 1., d. 927, vikingehøvding, stamfader til det normanniske dynasti i Normandiet og England. Rollo anførte en vikingehær, som i begyndelsen af 900-t. opererede i Nordfrankrig. I 911 overlod Karl 3. den Enfoldige ham områderne omkring Seinens nedre løb mellem floderne Bresle, Epte og Risle, mod at han beskyttede riget mod andre vikinger; Rollo blev i denne forbindelse døbt. Han omtales herefter som greve af Rouen. 924 fik han også landet mellem Risle og Vire, det centrale Normandiet. Rollos nationalitet, norsk eller dansk, er omstridt."
(rough translation: "Rollo, Robert I, d. 927, Viking chief, founder of the Norman dynasty in Normandy and England. Rollo commanded a Viking army which operated in Northern France in the early 900s. In 911, Charles the Simple awarded him the areas near the lower stream of the Seine, between the rivers Bresle, Epte and Risle, on the condition that he protected the realm against other Vikings; Rollo was baptised in connection with these events. From then on, he was referred to as the Count of Rouen. In 924, he was also awarded the land between Risle and Vire; the central part of Normandy. Rollo's nationality, Norwegian or Danish, is disputed.")
From what I've read, it's pretty apparent that we must have (at least) two independent traditions about him. I wouldn't be surprised if Saxo had written about him as well.
The solution seems pretty simple to me: write that both theories exist and that his nationality is a matter of dispute. Valentinian (talk) 19:26, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
Yup, i agree, that is the issue here. But it seems like some users in here don´t wanna accept that.--Comanche cph 20:18, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
And exactly what i said the hole time. And that's why his name is being changed to Rollo or Rollon. --Comanche cph 14:10, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
Excerpt from article on "Gange-Rolv Ragnvaldsson, or Rollo (?)" in "Norsk Biografisk leksikon" (Norwegian biographical encyclopedia), article written by Claus Krag, 2001:
"Norwegian-Icelandic histories were in medieval times in agreement that Gange-Rolv and Rollo were the same person. The oldest written mention of this is in the latin Historia Norvegiæ (ca. 1180), which was written in Norway. Snorre, in his kings' sagas, relate that Gange-Rolv conquered Normandy after first having plundered in the area Hebrides-Irish Sea-France, and that many Norwegians settled in Normandy with him.
At the end of the 19th century, a lively debate arose about who Rollo was. The discussion, which partly followed national divisions (with danish and norwegian historians on opposite sides), gathered pace in the time leading up to the great millennial celebrations of Normandy in 1911. An important point in the debate was how one should understand terms like "Norwegians" and "Danes" in the medieval sources, and also how "Danish" or "Norwegian" the settlement in Normandy had been.
Danish historian Johannes Steenstrup started the debate. His main argument was clear statements from the French historian Dudo of Saint-Quentin, that Rollo was Danish. Since Dudo wrote his work on the Norman dukes around 1020, he seemed to stand closer to events than the saga writers, so that his version should be preferred. At the same time Steenstrup emphasized, with arguments similar to later saga criticism, how little one could build on the norse sagas.
Norwegian historians - foremost among them Gustav Storm, Alexander Bugge and Ebbe Hertzberg - doubted Dudo's value as a source, pointing at how totally unreliable his accounts are in the rest of what he writes about Rollo and Denmark, with historic and geographic information which are not at all correct. They also emphasised that Rollo was to have had a daughter, Gerloc (Geirlaug), whose name seemed to indicate a Norwegian connection, and that there also on French soil, in writings younger than Dudo's, existed a tradition that Rollo was Norwegian.
The question of who Rollo was can never be fully answered. But among Norwegian, as well as French and British historians, it is now commonly held that judged from the sources - choosing between the two extant possibilities - there is more to indicate a Norwegian connection."
Excerpt from article on "Rollo, also called Rolf, or Rou, French Rollon" from The New Encyclopædia Britannica, 1998:
"Scandinavian rover who founded the duchy of Normandy. Making himself independent of King Harald I of Norway, Rollo sailed off to raid Scotland, England, Flanders, and France onpirating expeditions and, about 911, established himself in an area along the Seine River..."
-- Barend 10:45, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
Funny that you keep saying that English and Frence historicans are pointing on the icelandic saga. When i have copy pasted some stuff that rollo was from fakse writed by and English. ANd all the old Frence historicans, points on Dudo's account.
French soil? writings? younger than dudo's? Don't think so. You have to prove it mister. --Comanche cph 14:24, 9 July 2006 (UTC)
This is not right. The only source that tells Rollo=Hrolf is from the Orkneyinga saga. Dudo's book is the most trustable source.
His name is Rollo of Normandy. Not Hrolf of Normandy. End of discussion. -- Hypster 15:40, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
-- Orbit One Talk| Babel 18:13, 10 July 2006 (UTC)
Yes, and both theories are also well mentered in " Rollo of Normandy" ;o). The thing is that we don't know for sure who his was. But we know that he was called Rollo, and Rollon in French. --Comanche cph 19:38, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
This was writed by user:Inge
___
He is being the possibly founder of Normandy ;o) --Comanche cph 20:17, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
I don't really think that most scholars care about were he is from. But its known there is two theories, and two possibilities. --Comanche cph 20:36, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Ok im sorry. He was to tall for his horse could carry him, since this not sounds more weird. And you know that people general was smaller that time, that we are today. I don't know what scholars you keep talking about. I have always known him as Rollo from Fakse. The link will take people to see two theories, and it still does. This should be nautral, as we have agreed on. --Comanche cph 21:09, 11 July 2006 (UTC)--Comanche cph 21:09, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Ofcouse both theories is very notable. I really can't see what's your problem with possibly. Likely means. This is what its like.
I mean. You can have 2 possibly, but only one likely. --Comanche cph 22:05, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
I am not being rude, but could you try to refrase your last entry because I really didn't understand what you wanted to say. Do you think that likely means "this is what it's like"? Inge 22:12, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Herre, at være ærlig, du er ikke godt til engelsk, så måske du skulle ladevære at sige hvad 'likely' betyder, fordi du tager fejl. -- Orbit One Talk| Babel 22:13, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
"Likely" is kind of the same as "probably". witch means sannsynlig. So it's not neutral.
Possibly is the word to use. --Comanche cph 22:19, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Maybe there is something in the common usage of the word that makes you not want it? I don't know, but it really is the most neutral alternative. It is possible to have two likely theories and the word leaves the reader to believe that the information is not certain. Inge 22:32, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Let me make it easy. Possibly just means there is more possibilities. So does likely. But it says what should be most trustable. --Comanche cph 23:13, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
gosh! you never give up. So you your likely in that 860 article. :o) --Comanche cph 07:07, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
I see you love to revert, Comanche. I just want to point out that simply reverting or removing text you don't agree with isn't good behaviour. You know that there is a dispute yet you constantly try to keep your side of the story the current one via reverts. When you see one of your edits being changed the second time around a bell should ring signaling it's time to go to the talk page. Then it is common procedure that the original text remain until the dispute is resolved. Inge 23:49, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
Ok why should why put the name "Hrolf Ganger", when it's only supporting one theory? Just link to Rollo, and the name Hrolf Ganger is explained there and everybody is happy ;o)
And i trough we had a agreement --Comanche cph 23:59, 11 July 2006 (UTC)
You did't answar the question?
Why are you keep putting the name Hrolf Ganger back. Hrolf Ganger was his prename according what some historicans think about one theory. Witch tells about a man who sailed to Normandy.
So leave it, we had a agreement. --Comanche cph 07:05, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
I appreciate your attemts to negotiate a solution and I think you have good suggestions. I fear however that Comanche will continue his reverting tactics pushing unreasonable consessions until the Gange-Rolf theory is mostly discredited and hardly mentioned. I am sure you have noticed how more and more counterpoints have had to be added to every mention of the theory. The agrement we had was that there was two theories equally worthy of note in wikipedia. One of which was a prominent theory regarding Rollo being the same person as Gange-Rolf. Any other agreement must be between Comanche and himself. Comanche seems to want to remove all connections between the two, not even permitting the mention of Normany in texts mentioning Gange-Rolf. He has since allowed us to mention a possibility of a Normandy connection. I see now that he is taking these tactics and disruptive behaviour with him to other articles and I fear the consequenses. Behaving brutishly until you get your way is not the wikipedia way of doing things. Inge 12:52, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
Inge stop you attacking tactic on me. We have two equal theories, and both should be mentored as equal. The term "Gange hrolf" was not used in Normandy. And why will you have it changed to it??? --Comanche cph 13:07, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
What the heck "likely" or "possibly", i don't care :). --Comanche cph 13:24, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
Well congratulations to us, that's another problem solved :) Inge 13:26, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
The article has previously been subject of reverts wars. Now it would need serious reference check and inline quotations. There are also a lot of {{ Fact}} tags. / Fred- Chess 19:57, 29 September 2006 (UTC)
How can you found a city through raiding? Inge 15:05, 26 September 2006 (UTC)
Rurik most certainly did not found Novgorod in 859. In fact, archaelogy seems to suggest this town existed before Rurik was born. Goliath74 17:56, 7 December 2006 (UTC)
Even for an amateur historian of the Viking age it is quite apparent that this article generally is of rather low quality. Some of the more striking faults:
Osli73 16:17, 19 March 2007 (UTC)
The article states:
"The traditional definition is no longer accepted by most Scandinavian historians and archaeologists."
This describes all. Danish-Scandinavian "Experts" would not accept any negative statement. The really convincing, radical cleaning of any negative aspects in the viking age, but also ALL related articles violates neutrality. See for example Annales Vedastini, who described cruelty, mass-murder, raping and kidnapping, stealing and a simply not seen violence.
Compared to the difficulty to accept this, it seems not too difficult to change all content in Wikipedia.
Before the friends of Denmark and Scandinavia edit-war started, there were for example the introduction:
The Viking Age is the name of the period between
793 and
1066 AD in
Scandinavia and
Britain, following the
Germanic Iron Age (and the
Vendel Age in Sweden). During this period, the
Vikings, Scandinavian warriors,
leidangs and traders, raided and explored most parts of
Europe, south-western
Asia, northern
Africa and north-eastern
North America. Apart from exploring Europe by way of its oceans and rivers with the aid of their advanced navigational skills and extending their trading routes across vast parts of the continent, they also engaged in warfare and looted and enslaved numerous Christian communities of Medieval Europe for centuries, contributing to the development of feudal systems in Europe, which included castles and barons (and was a defense against Viking raids).
Compare this to the current version. Include negative facts! It is important, to explain information neutral. Even if its negative. Please help. W.
Wispanow
19:54, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
rere
Probably someone can translate the dates related to the viking attacks in french:
Other sources:
This are FACTS. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, which tries to focus on the positive reign of Alfred the Great, didn´t state cruelty. W. Wispanow 20:24, 29 August 2007 (UTC)
PS. Regarding the previous introduction that mostly referred to the negative then this indeed was not a neutral way to start an article. Please refer to any source that would back up the claim: the current opening of the article could be interpreted as being not neutral. Thanks! -- Termer 08:29, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
the destruction of the Abbey church on Lindisfarne for example reads like a whitewash? So far I haven't seen any specific arguments supporting "keep it real" claims. Please feel free to point out specific issues, in case not replied, the tag is going to be removed. Thanks-- Termer 03:07, 15 October 2007 (UTC)
FYI, you can add a link to Portal:Norway in this article, by placing {{Portal|Norway}} at the top of the see also section (or the external links section if the article has no see also section). This will display
Cirt ( talk) 09:26, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
There is a troll on this page. Some one has inserted references to Kobe Bryant and radiator caps at random. These need to be removed. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 192.26.212.72 ( talk) 12:22, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
'Most of the English kingdoms, being in turmoil, could not stand against the Vikings, but Alfred of Wessex managed to keep the Vikings out of his country.'
The Vikings did infact take most of Wessex, except for the marshland around Athelny. It was here that Alfred the Great sat out the winter before mustering an army and defeating the Danes at the Battle of Ethandune, which most likely took place in Wiltshire, around the area of Westbury Hillfort, which would have been far inside to boundaries of the old kingdom of Wessex, infact the entire county of Wiltshire which also includes Chippenham would have been deep inside the boundaries of the old Kingsom of Wessex during the Viking invasions.
After defeating the Danes at Ethandune (Edington), Alfred pirsued the Danes to Chippenham and beseiged them in his own town. After being forced into starvation, the Danes sued for peace and signed the Treaty of Wedmore which lead to the setting up of the Danelaw. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by VelaPulsar ( talk • contribs) 15:09, 9 May 2007 (UTC).
I agree. This paragraph as well sounds rather strange :
"The Vikings did not get everything their way. In one situation in England, a small Viking fleet attacked a rich monastery at Jarrow. The Vikings were met with stronger resistance than they expected: their leaders were killed, the raiders escaped, only to have their ships beached at Tynemouth and the crews killed by locals. This was one of the last raids on England for about 40 years. The Vikings instead focused on Ireland and Scotland"
This should be cleaned up. 155.55.60.110 ( talk) —Preceding undated comment was added at 10:41, 8 January 2009 (UTC).
This article has problems which won't go away, unless rethought from the start: There is something called "the viking age", whether or not certain people like the term. However, in writing an article called "Viking Age", one has to have some rather well-defined idea of what to describe. Wouldn't a large part of the current article be better off in a separate article named "Viking Conquests", while others would fit better under "Viking Exploits" or some such?
The Viking Age is a period of time in Scandinavian history, the transition between the Iron Age with its Vanetro (a shamanistic-pantheistic sort of religion) to the Dark Ages' Kristendom (litteraly "Christianity", but shouldn't be confused with the present day variety; it was at best a mystic-monotheistic religion, its rituals conducted in latin, which nobody -sometimes not even the priest- understood). From a time without letters or writing, to one in which written documents (the law, say) were of the utmost importance. A time where indivdual physical prowess gave way to tactics and technology.
It was in many ways the transition from a "me-and-you" mindset to an "us-and-them" mindset.
There's a lot of reasons this period is so important to us Scandinavians. But when it comes to Wikipedia, there's one overriding concern: Does this article enlighten, or confuse, people who've never heard of the viking age before? As it stands, I wouldn't blame someone who went away thinking the vikings were slavic scots that sailed up and down the Seine in order to trade with Constantinople. And burn down an irish monastery on the way.
So, what do I suggest? Situating the time and place (Scandinavia, 8th-11th century AD) and sticking to it. Mentioning/listing the vikings' conquests, and linking to separate articles of the vikings' exploits in present day countries. Describing the religion (well, what we know of it), the building style(s), the everyday tools possessed, and possibly listing the notables (the kings and queens, as well as the major failed usurpers).
Basically, I think it's best to follow Lucan's advice: Keep it simple. Keep the end in sight. Better to omit what's of questinable usefulness, than to toss in an old norse parleur for good measure...
Smolk ( talk) 05:04, 10 January 2009 (UTC)
OK guys, lets clean this thing up. It doesn't seem to me like the problem is that much of the Neutrality but some sections are just...It might be me but these read like written by a grade school student. (sorry) The first thing I'd do, get rid of the Historical background and Probable causes of Viking expansion...Actually everything below that seems to be another not that well written article that dubs the Viking. So, once it's about the Viking age, it should be about the Viking age only, meaning just an article like Middle age or Iron Age. What could be here would be a section of archeology perhaps. So if it was up to me, I'd get rid of everything that's starts from Historical background. If anything additionally informative (Not that I noticed anything) can be found, it should be added to Viking article. The text in the article from Historical background on doesn't cite any sources anyway so it's easy to be challenged and simply removed if felt necessary. So, please let me know what you think! thanks -- Termer 07:08, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
Absolutely, since a lot of the article in viking does not exactly refer to vikings, but to scandinavian people in general during viking age. Dan Koehl ( talk) 18:12, 21 February 2009 (UTC)
There is no age called "viking age" The time of the vikings were during the Germanic iron age. Also in Scandinavian languages there is nothing called viking age. Now I'm Danish, and in Danish it's called "vikingetiden (the viking time)" or just "jernalderen (the iron age)"
This should be merged with the article "Vikings" or atleast changed the name, i think
-- Missip1 ( talk) 20:35, 24 May 2008 (UTC)
It doesn't matter what it's called in Scandinavia, it's called "Viking Age" in English, and this is English Wikipedia ( WP:NAME). -- dab (𒁳) 21:04, 14 October 2008 (UTC)
"Google :S. Is that a souce now." -- it is impossible to discuss anything on such an abysmal level. No, google isn't a source. It is an index which may be used for finding sources. You may also use a library catalogue, or a spirit medium, it really doesn't matter how you found the source just as long as you can cite it properly. -- dab (𒁳) 18:50, 21 February 2009 (UTC)
"words which used sk- sounds, such as skirt, sky, and skin; other words appearing in written sources at this time included again, awkward, birth, cake, dregs, fog, freckles, gasp, law, moss, neck, ransack, root, scowl, sister, seat, sly, smile, want, weak and window.[25] Some of the words that came into use are among the most common in English, such as both, same, get, and give. The system of personal pronouns was affected, with they, them, and their replacing the earlier forms. Old Norse influenced the verb to be; the replacement of sindon by are is almost certainly Scandinavian in origin, as is the third-person-singular ending -s in the present tense of verbs."
I think or, at least, ask this question: Aren't there many things wrong in that paragraph about the influence on the English language?
For instance, words like "both" or "give" appear to be common Germanic words and not specifically Scandinavian (north germanic) ones. The same is true for "birth" (German: Geburt), "cake" (German: Kuchen), "sister" (German: Schwester, but with dialectal forms like "süster" etc.), "weak" (German: schwach) etc. I highly doubt, these are good examples for something specifically Scandinavian... And moreover, isn't the ending -s a result of a phonetic change from -eth to -s in order to have a somewhat easier pronounciation? That's what we learned at school (though this does not mean that it was correct). Other examples are better: like "sky" or "law".
I teach medieval history at De Anza College (which doesn't necessarily establish my credibility, I realize); however, various sources suggest that trade between the Vikings and Muslim Ummayad and Abbasid Caliphates via the Caspian Sea produced large inflows of high-quality silver Dirham coins (as evidenced by large caches of Islamic coins found in Scandinavia).
There is a possible correlation (established by the mining dates on the coins found in buried Scandinavian caches) of the tapering off of these specie inflows with an increase of Viking raids.
In other words, as the Abbasid 'Empire' started to fragment (losing control of precious metals and tax revenue from different areas, (i.e. Spain, Egypt, Khorasan) and as output from existing mines dropped, so did the volume of money reaching the Vikings, which may have caused them to seek other sources of gold and silver...
This is probably too tidy, too linear in outline: 'no silver from Islamic world, so attack Western Europe', BUT, to a certain extent there might be a little bit of truth to it, perhaps it was a contributing factor.
In my opinion, it does deserve some mention. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Guerre1859 ( talk • contribs) 03:08, 5 February 2010 (UTC)
You're right, citation is needed, however, the source you cite does not, as far as I see, contradict a linkage between a breakdown in Islamic-Viking trade and invasions, as Dr. Hussain writes of the Dirhams: "They are thin, made from silver and date from the Abbasid caliphate, which existed from the 8th to 13th century"; if the first Viking attack is usually given as the raid on Lindisfarne in 793 but attacks continued well into the 900s, there is considerable overlap in time.
Finally, the argument that they were not the same people (raiding in the West and trading in the East) is no logical impediment to the theory, because the Dirhams still circulated within the Norse cultural zone and there is no necessary logic why the traders have to be directly involved in raiding...Economic shocks can be communicated across large distances and at second, third, or fourth hand, that is true today and was true in the past, just like Chinese trade with the USA can impact Australia, without the USA necessarily having contact with Australia (eg. American capital investment fueling a boom in China causing massive importation of Australian iron ore--or to make the analogy even more explicit: the cessation or drastic tapering off of US investment in China having a knock-on effect on Australia, leading to great changes in the Australian economy, which would not be directly restricted to the iron extraction, because the money inflows generated by the trade in its heyday would have rippled outwards across many sectors of the Australian economy, so that, perhaps, at the end of the day, we would find Australian prostitutes leaving the now impoverished mining ghost towns, and emigrating to a new 'El Dorado', say, Angola...just as Swedish Rus Vikings trading with the Muslims across the Caspian, could have had knock-on effects on their Norwegian and Danish brethren.
A thoughtful comment should also be thoughtfully dismissed, and with adequate, serious documentation, not a 'fluff' feature article. If Hussain presented statistical correlations and analyses of the Dirhams based on date, purity, location of minting, then he would be authoritative. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 153.18.112.37 ( talk) 23:09, 16 February 2010 (UTC)
It's a little bit odd to demand citations as if the history of silver circulation in the Viking age is contentious. It isn't. It is very well known indeed that there are 3 major stages in the circulation of silver in the viking world from the mid-C8th to the end of the C11th. This should be apparent from a cursory reading of standard text books (most recently Stefan Brink and Nield Price, ed., The VIking World (2008), pp. 159-69). Islamic silver began to flow into Scandinavia shortly before 800. Since access to silver was a principal means to acquiring and displaying prestige and political authority, the increased flow may have had the effect of destabilising the rudimentary power structures in some parts of Scandinavia as rival dynasties and magnate groups competed for power, encouraging some to use their resources to carve out territories for themselves outside Scandinavia, in the west (see Peter Heather, Empires and Barbarians (2009), pp. 510-12). Alternatively, as you note, the intensification of raids may have been linked with the temporary disruption of flow in the mid-C9th (the theory of Klavs Randsborg in The Viking Age in Denmark (1980), pp. 137-66). In the last quarter of the C10th, Islamic dirhams disappear. They are replaced at first by pennies from Germany and Anglo-Saxon England. One common interpretation is that at this point, the reduction in the flow of silver into the kingdom favored elite groups that had now emerged in a dominant position, like the Danish dynasty. It is at precisely this point that the centralised kingdom of Denmark emerges under Harald Bluetooth and Sven Forkbeard. But the Danish kings (and others) did still desperately need silver to maintain their positions, and Sven Forkbeard himself undertook raiding and extortion in Anglo-Saxon England (the first ruling king in the Scandinavian homelands known to have done so). When Sven's political rival Thorkell the Tall, who evidently did not recognise his overlordship, exposed the weakness of England in the great raids of 1009-12, Sven -- it has been argued -- was forced to act lest Thorkell or someone other Scandinavian warlord should benefit too much from the wealth of England, and be able to use it to underwrite a power grab at home. In 1013 he took the initiative and invaded. It was in these years around 1000 that the third major shift in the circulation of silver took place, as national coinages began to emerge in Scandinavia, because the now more powerful kings of Scandinavia were able more effectively to manage and administer the use of silver flowing into their kingdoms. This is not simply my opinion, but a statement of the picture in current scholarship. Interpretations of the impact of these changes vary in the writings of Peter Sawyer and other historians interested in the economic background to viking activities, but the fluctuations in the circulation of silver are well known. See D.M. Metcalf's overviews on 'Viking-Age numismatics' in the 1997 and 1998 issues of the Numismatic Chronicle on the circulation of Islamic, German and Anglo-Saxon silver in the Scandinavian world (pp. 296-335, and 347-71, respectively). For another classic statement, see Peter Spufford's Money and Its Use in Medieval Europe (1988), pp. 55-73. It's all very well demanding that people cite their sources: but it's just plain rude to assume they don't have any. Effective contribution depends on knowledge of authoritative scholarship (including James Barrett's article from Antiquity, which you cite): you can't do much with ad hoc inferences from magazine articles that happen to be available online 86.7.18.117 ( talk) 10:23, 27 July 2010 (UTC)!
What on earth is all the hocus pocus in the article about Christianity and preferential trading as a stimulus to the Viking Age? This is complete nonsense: it in no way represents the present scholarly consensus (or indeed any other expert consensus at any time). It seems to reflect the interests of someone with an contemporary ideological axe to grind. It will completely mislead anybody who refers to this article who has no previous knowledge of the Vikings. The entire passage should go -- unless someone can show that some authority has demonstrated how it was that Scandinavian seasonal emporia at sites like Ribe and Hedeby were already flourishing in the C8th if religious differences were a genuine impediment to trade between Scandinavians and their north-western European neighbours. The theory that religious confrontation explains Vikings has been articulated recently by the archaeologist Bjorn Myhre, but not on the terms expressed here, and few other scholars have been convinced by his views. It's easy to show that the 'religious confrontation' theory is weak, because it can't account for continued raiding as Christianity spread through Scandinavia in the C10th/11th. The common theme underlying viking activity, as most scholarship seems to accept, is clearly the pursuit of profit--whether in the form of moveable or landed wealth. What's unusual about the Vikings as opposed to other early medieval groups is the degree of private enterprise and mobility harnessed in the acquisition of wealth by violence. This tells us something about social and political conditions in the homelands, and the impact of the late adoption of the sail in Scandinavia for use on ship types designed to negotiate shallow inland waterways as well as coastal waters. CubeDigit ( talk) 12:16, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
There seems to be a lot of vandalism on this page. Is there any way that it can be tagged to prevent this? Brendandh ( talk) 17:25, 21 September 2010 (UTC)
This makes no sense. Ireland is not one of the British isles now, and it certainly wasn't when Dublin and Waterford were founded. 193.178.95.4 ( talk) 15:13, 8 June 2011 (UTC)
I'm doing a project, but I can't find this particular piece of information. Could anyone help me? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 109.125.5.117 ( talk) 17:13, 20 November 2011 (UTC)
It is a pity, I think that the Viking age usually is seen as an isolated period that began during the 8'th century and ended in the eleventh century.
I would rather see it as a continuation of the Migration Period, when many tribes from Scandinavia, such as the Goths and Anglo-Saxons invaded the colapsing Roman Empire and other areas. Is it not likely that the Viking Age Scandinavians already had contacts and trade links with these earlier migrants wich they later came to invade or plunder? Maybe they had heard stories told of past heroes' deeds around the camp fires. Maybe there were even maps and route descriptions preserved. Is not the oldest written text in Saxon, Beowulf set in Scandinavia and in Sweden there's a runestone (Rökstenen) that suggests that the Geats may have felt a strong fellowship with the Goths.1
Looking at Vikings from that angle it may not be completely illogical to think of Viking raids more like planned military expedititions with clear goals and objectives, rather than as occasional forays where they captured what they came over (although this may have been the case sometimes). Perhaps some of the Viking leaders where even well versed in Roman thinking about strategy and tactics. An indication of this is that the Vikings sometimes appears to have used Roman battleformations such as shieldcastles and pig head's array. These are more or less identical to the formations that the latter-day Roman legions used.
With this in mind, it is perhaps not more correct to ask what happend outside Scandinavia during the viking age that made the norsemen do what they did, than to ask what happend inside Scandinavia during this period.
I am looking forward to your comments on this thread.
(And there are uch more evidence to support this, but this text is not about The Goths) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dadalado ( talk • contribs) 22:14, 27 August 2012 (UTC)
The viking age timeline on the page had overlapping black and blue text and you couldn't actually read the text so I went ahead and fixed it and made the events that are on there actually stand out when as far as when they happened on the timeline instead of just the words being centered on the year which no one could visually see on the graph the year they happened. Basically made it more legible and aesthetically pleasing. If anyone needs any help with messing with it in the future just leave me a message on my talk page and I'll get right on it. — dain- talk 06:25, 10 January 2013 (UTC)
Hi there, just to throw some oil on the burning waves ...
IMHO the concept of a VA conflates three issues: - Nordic Culture (and its history) - British History - World History
1. Nordic Culture (and its history) The culture from which the Vikings emerged constitutes - probably - a continuum (albeit a developing one) from, say, the Merowingian Age, and, arguably*, up to the Black Death, which was a major incision especially for the Norse, with their higher-than-average depopulation; practically the end of civilization as they knew it. 1066 notwithstanding, e.g. vikings emerged from the north to go raiding in the British Isles (Magnus Barefoot, slain, IIRC, on a raid in Ireland in 1103); and the "Realm of Norway" ("Norgesveldet"), Norway's greatest expansion and political heyday was around the reign of this 13. century guy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haakon_IV_of_Norway. Et cetera.
Hanseatic League, combined with the expansion of the church and of royal authority, leading to a thorough restructuring of society and economy; classic "Norse Society"-stuff, IMHO.
2. British History Of course the period between the Lindisfarne raid and the battle of Stamford Bridge saw a lot of viking influence on the history of the British Isles. No doubt about it.
3. World History While Nordic history is part of World History, and Norsemen pop up in places surprisingly far from home, they play a role in World history only inasmuch as World History is somewhat identical to British Historiography; and a case for this view permeating history writing here and there could be made. Although The Norse ranged from America to Armenia, they didn't make much of an impact on either place, and few places in between - what they did there is more of a "who were these guys?" question. But had William lost the battle of Hastings, the "Viking Age" would have been much, much less important, historically, even given the trials of Alfred the Great. Then we wouldn't have to ponder when this Viking Age began and ended, because then there wouldn't have been one, as little as there is
an Age of Wendish and Saxon Raiders, Age of Barbary Pirates or Age of Huns, Mongols, Tartars,
Magyars, Bulgars, Turks .... a horde (and a mass noun, too) of savage ... well, hordes bothering their betters intent on enjoying a good ballad and a goblet of wine in the castle's great hall. Or ... the Viking Age is a markedly North-European (North Sea, even) affair, politically and historically.
Conclusion? Perhaps one should not start with the concept and look for a corresponding reality. Perhaps this concept also should be picked apart somewhat. Yes, there was a period when chronicles reflected some vigorous seasonal labour migration out of Scandinavia, but OTOH this had been going on since the Cimbrians and Teutones, well over thousand years. They just hadn't invented the keel at the time, so they didn't litter the piers in Brighton so much. And the same phenomenon continued after 1066, but with so many waves of Angles, Saxons, Danes, Normans ... the chroniclers experienced a kind of "invasion ennui", couldn't be bothered anymore, really. Attention shifted elsewhere.
In the spirit of contribution
Laborious version - retain most, yet make specific /EN is not my mother tongue, so all text here should probably be rewritten/: "The Viking Age is the name given by historians to a period especially in Northern European History, spanning the late 8th to late 11th centuries /the dates in the article vary from 1030 to 1263, btw; which is about as long as the 9. - 11. century. Interesting./. Norse rovers appeared as traders, invaders, conquerors and colonists in neighbouring regions within reach of their seafaring capabilities, their access to trade goods, their ability to wage war and to sustain emigration.
/The following headings could have separate sections; I'd reccommend keeping them short, and link to relevant, established Wiki articles expanding on the subject./
Historical considerations /- seems to be "the history of the history of the Vikings ...?/
Historical background /- a hodgepodge of politics, geography, culture, technology ...
would perhaps be better covered with a reference to "Norse Society" ?/
Historic overview /consists of "important dates" + "areas of expansion"/
Important dates /for beginning or actually first mention to end or disappearance from chronicles/ Scope of expansion /areas, and degrees of influence there/
Norse Society /- "See main article" /
Politix Economics Religion Technology Etceterics
Vikings /- "See main article" /
Viking Expansion /- "See main article" /
Probable causes of Norse expansion Norse Expansion Enablers (Technology, Law (who gets to inherit whom), foes in political unrest) Viking Itinerary - Areas visited (by region, as today) Viking invasions (by region, as today) Area Events (battles and such) Political consequences Legacy Viking colonisations (e.g. Britain, Normadie) Impact Influence of Norse (X) on (e.g.) English (X) (Language, law, technology, cuisine, fashion ...)(at the time) Legacy (today /maybe not a practical division.../) Probable causes of the end of Norse expansion
...
Perhaps easier version: Rename the whole article "Viking Expansion", redirect from "Viking Age", agressive linking to sub-articles as above.
Hoping to sign this right,
T 83.109.180.48 ( talk) 04:09, 14 February 2013 (UTC)
There's something funny with the timing in this article. The lede says the Viking age covers the late 8th to late 11th century, i.e up to almost 1100 AD. Yet the (very nice) table and they text itself indicate the death of Harald Hardrada as the end, at least in Britain. This certainly is the traditional endpoint. In Norway, the end is traditionally set to the Battle of Stiklestad of 1030 AD. This gives a somewhat different time endpoint from "late 11th century". Wouldn't "mid 11th century" be an better description of the endpoint? The sources are the Encyclopædia Britannica articles on Norway, Denmark and Sweden respectively. The article on Norway gives no time bracket. The article on Sweden cites "in the 11th century", the text indicating again around 1060 (Christening of Sweden). The article on Denmark is not open. Since Wikipedia shoild ideally not cite other encylopædiae, i suggest 1) adjusting the time bracket, and 2) finding printed sources for the bracket. Petter Bøckman ( talk) 08:28, 17 February 2013 (UTC)
The Viking Age is a historical period for Scandinavia. Even though the effects of Vikings' influences and affairs around Europe is interesting, and an important part of the overall story, the Viking Age entry contains very little of Scandinavian Society, economics, politics, culture or anything else regarding life in the area. Archaeologically, the Viking Age is more of a contuination of earlier periods, but mark altogheter the start of the transition of Scandinavia into medieval christian states. The currrent page is more about in what way and what effects migration and travels of Scandinavians had on other parts of Europe, than about the Scandinavians of the Viking Age itself... —The preceding unsigned comment was added by St12357 ( talk • contribs) 15:44, 12 May 2007 (UTC).
Hello. This is still an important issue today. Too much of what is presented about the Vikings or the Scandinavians of that period, is based on British sources, with an exclusively British angle on the events and this period in European history. We need much more information from other sources, with a more universal angle. Sources that describe the people, their everyday life, etc.. On the page Vikings, it has been discussed to initiate a whole article on "The Norse" to fill this gap, because to some people it is to ground-breaking to accept, that the word Viking also includes "normal people" and "normal activities" like farming, etc.. No matter what the people of that period is called, I hope more information on their culture and daily lives will be presented here on wikipedia. I have done my part on the page Vikings. RhinoMind ( talk) 01:28, 12 May 2014 (UTC)
The first few segment of the Historical Considerations section is almost word for shot of what happens in the History Channels 'Vikings' TV series. A show that is incredibly historically inaccurate and isn't backed by the sources provided. Delete immediately, it's clearly some idiot editing this article because he watched a TV show. 124.169.184.30 ( talk) 10:28, 14 July 2013 (UTC) Harlequin
It's time this article underwent serious reappraisal - this should be a Featured Article! As a general history topic, it's in a bad state: poor organisation and inadequate referencing. Checking today, the article leads with four overlapping and highly confusing historical overviews:
1 Historical considerations 2 Historical background 3 Probable causes of Norse expansion 4 Historic overview
Time for a tidy up! Paul James Cowie ( talk) 05:57, 6 June 2014 (UTC)
The articles Viking age and Vikings cover almost identical issues and should be merged. Any comments? Cheers Osli73 21:53, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
I agree. The article " Viking" should only short describe what a Viking was, Modern revivals and Popular misconceptions and stuff like that. -- Arigato1 22:43, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
Disagree. They should not be merged. Vikings should be about the people. Viking Age should be a historical discussion that focuses on the events. -- Einar 20:40, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
I'll add another Nooooo and agree with Einar. Brendandh 21:11, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
No merge, but there is allot in " Vikings" like historical event witch should be deleted and removed to " Viking age". -- Arigato1 21:19, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
They were indeed not. the majority of people from scandinavia were actually not vikings. The term has been misunderstodd in english language, and although a populair belief, Vikings wre not of a special gegraphical origin, it was an activity, which very few scandinavians really took part of. No ethinical group can be labelled vikings. In fact, in some icelandic sagas, arabian pirats are refered to as vikings, and they were not born in scandinavia. Dan Koehl 23:31, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
Yes, technically I guess the Viking age was a part of the Iron age. However, at least in Sweden, the Viking age is an accepted term for the period 800-1050. However, I'm not so sure it was an 'age' in European history. Cheers Osli73 21:12, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
Disagree-- The " Viking" article covers a completely different aspect, and as such, should not be merged. Nol888( Talk)( Review me please) 21:14, 21 March 2007 (UTC)
There is a thing called the Viking Age. I'm from Denmark and we use the term: Viking Age. Not Iron Age or Dark Ages. I guess this is because we're kind of proud of our past as vikings. We're proud that a little nation like Denmark were able to conquer all the big nations of the time (England, Norway, Sweden). Just a thought :-) Simon 16:12, 9 April 2007
-- Vchorozopoulos ( talk) 22:37, 28 May 2009 (UTC)
I too find it hard to see how the parameters of this article are distinct from the parallel articles on the Viking Expansion and the Vikings. Perhaps the difference should be that the Viking Expansion article discusses Scandinavian activities outside their homelands during the Viking Age, while the Viking Age article talks about the situation within Scandinavia itself (where the term is indeed in very regular use as a meaningful periodisation of the late Scandinavian Iron Age). If so, the title of the latter needs to be changed to 'Viking Age Scandinavia', and the entire thing needs to be rewritten. At the same time, it is not clear why there should be a separate article that talks about the Vikings. There's a conceptual circularity here. It's the activities of Vikings that defines the notion of a Viking Age, whether in Scandinavia, or outside it. Yet the popularisation of the terms Viking and Viking Age, means that the noun Viking is now regularly applied to all Norse-speaking people who originated in Scandinavia in the whole period 700/750-1050/1100, and the related adjective is equally applied to all aspects of the culture connected with these people in the same period. The problem is then compounded by the additional presence of an article on Norsemen. In general a consensus seems to have emerged that it's a good thing to have separate entries for the people and the history of their activities. But I would note that there is no similar distinction made on Wikipedia between 'Romans' and the history of their activities and cultural institutions in the articles on ancient Roman civilization and the Roman Empire. Personally, I think a great deal of muddle would be avoided by having a single article, so that the difficulties inherent in the use of noun and adjective Viking can be made absolutely clear, and an appropriate historical perspective developed in identifying who these people were. Otherwise the alternative articles (all of which are still marred by partisan, incomplete, or non-authoritative contributions) will continue to overlap and repeat one another, as new contributors add information to one without seeing that the others exist. The present articles either need to be massively re-edited, or else merged. This comment is cross-posted on all three of the most relevant pages. Dala-Freyr ( talk) 10:44, 29 July 2010 (UTC)
The best solution here might be to merge Viking Age and Viking expansion, since they are practically identical. The Viking article could then refer to these briefly (as it already does) but be developed by concentrating more on cultural matters than the strictly historical. So one could have more on social structure (law, the role of women, and slavery), houses and settlement types, production and exchange, weapons and warfare, religious belief and practice in the pagan period and the early Christian era, language, art (including skaldic poetry). This would mean the merged Viking Age / Viking expansion article could concentrate more on historical processes and events, from the causes of the Viking Age to the reasons for the cessation of these activities, and the two resulting articles would be mutually supportive rather than repetitive. But the pages on the Viking Age and Viking expansion should definitely be merged. CubeDigit ( talk) 15:59, 29 July 2010 (UTC)
I agree. t The "Viking Age" and "Viking expansion" articles should be merged. There is a lot of overlap, so merging would eliminate the redundancies, while preserving the best of each article. For example Viking expansion contains a much more thorough coverage of the Vikings in Ireland, while the Viking Age article also covers Ireland, but much more briefly. The more detailed coverage of the Viking expansion article could be retained, and the Ireland section of the Viking Age article could be deleted. 180.190.67.2 ( talk) 14:27, 21 March 2016 (UTC)
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I was wondering why the Viking Age is considered part of History and not Pre-history. My answer is, that even though the Vikings were did not produce any literary legacy, they described themselves on runestones with their alphabet of runes. Is that the reason perhaps?
I vaguely remembers though, that runes were in use in Scandinavia before the Viking Age and that runestones were erected in the Nordic Iron Age as well. Is this correct or not?
Maybe someone knows more than me about this and wants to help? I think its important.
RhinoMind ( talk) 02:26, 24 June 2014 (UTC)
T 2001:4610:A:5E:0:0:0:9915 ( talk) 13:35, 9 January 2015 (UTC)
"Many Slavic scholars are opposed to this theory of Germanic influence on the Rus' (people) and have suggested alternative scenarios for this part of Eastern European history." Germanic? Shouldn't that be Scandinavian or Viking or Varangian or something similar? Allens ( talk) 17:08, 31 October 2011 (UTC)