Culture Goodbye to the Vikings - Surprisingly rational revisionism

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There was no such thing as a ‘Viking’ in the medieval period. Use of the term emerged in the 19th century. The word wicing occurred in Old English and víkingr in Old Icelandic, but were used very differently, to mean something like ‘pirate’. Academics nod to this when we assert that ‘viking’ was a job description rather than an ethnicity, but we don’t always take on board the full implications of this distinction. In Old Icelandic víkingr could be applied to any pirate regardless of where they came from or when, or what language they spoke; they might be Estonians or Saracens, for example. It is also noteworthy that it is almost never used to describe the people who we today call ‘Vikings’. Many of the men labelled ‘Vikings’ in textbooks and popular histories were warriors led by kings on military expeditions with clear political objectives, such as the Great Heathen Army that fought Alfred the Great or the Norwegian force that accompanied Harald Hardrada to his death at Stamford Bridge in 1066. Calling such people ‘Vikings’ would be like calling 18th century British, French or Dutch naval officers ‘pirates’ simply because they wore vaguely similar hats and sailed vaguely similar ships to Blackbeard.

The word ‘Viking’ seems to have entered modern English in the early 19th century, when medieval Icelandic literature was beginning to be translated into major European languages. Initially it was used in the original medieval sense, but by the 1860s it was starting to be used to describe all early medieval warriors from Scandinavia. The final development, the ‘ethnicisation’ of the word that allows the use of terms such as ‘Viking farms’, ‘Viking towns’ and ‘Viking women and children’, is much more recent and has gradually crept up since the Second World War. This is insidious; by linking military prowess and savagery to an entire ethnic group, it encourages its appropriation by racial supremacists.

No such thing


The issue with the term is not merely semantic. This conception of ‘the Vikings’ seriously distorts our understanding of European history. We have tended to group almost all Scandinavian activity between the 790s and the mid-11th century together under the ‘Viking’ label, creating a distinct ‘Viking Age’ and an imagined ‘Viking’ culture and identity. The evidence, however, does not support this analysis.

First, the Scandinavian homelands were extremely varied in environment, social structure and history. Denmark is flat and fertile, its islands cleared, by the year 800, of predators for millennia. It had a complex settlement pattern that was at least as sophisticated as anything found in England. Danish soldiers and settlers coming into ninth-century eastern England found landscape and settlement patterns very like those with which they were familiar and people who shared very similar economic and social structures. They were not savage barbarians penetrating a more civilised realm. The Danish lands had the greatest capacity to sustain population in Scandinavia and it is likely that the majority of Scandinavians lived in Denmark in this period. Norway, whose western fjords provide the stereotypical backdrop to the ‘Vikings’, was a relative backwater with a tiny population and was most important as a route, the ‘North Way’, to the Arctic regions and the luxury goods, such as furs and walrus ivory, that they provided.

Heathens


The surviving textual sources for the period all come from outside Scandinavia, but some fairly consistent patterns emerge. In the late eighth and the ninth century Irish, English and Frankish chronicles generally refer to Scandinavian aggressors as ‘heathens’ and this, rather than any ethnic identity, seems to have been what struck the victims of these attacks as significant. The 793 raid on Lindisfarne, often said to herald the ‘Viking Age’, is described in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle thus: ‘The ravages of heathen men miserably destroyed God’s church on Lindisfarne with plunder and slaughter.’ In the following year the Annals of Ulster recorded ‘the devastation of all the islands of Britain by the gentiles’.

The previous two or three centuries had witnessed what seemed to be the unstoppable growth of Christendom, both East and West. This had been interpreted as part of God’s plan and its apparent reversal caused consternation among the ecclesiastical writers who have provided us with the record. As Alcuin of York wrote: ‘Never before has such terror appeared in Britain as we have now suffered from a pagan people, nor was it thought that such an inroad from the sea could be made.’

From the surviving evidence from Britain and Ireland it is, at first, quite hard to distinguish opportunistic raiding, to which the term ‘Viking’ might have been applied by contemporaries, from political action. The attack on Lindisfarne is often presented as an opportunistic raid, but in fact the force that executed it remained in Northumbria over the winter and was defeated in a pitch battle the following year, some of their ships having been destroyed by a storm.

The Carolingian sources clearly distinguish diplomatic and military interaction between the Franks and the Danish kings from seaborne raids, over which the latter had little or no control. The Royal Frankish Annals record Charlemagne establishing a fleet and coastal defences against pirates in 800, for example. But by the later ninth century most of the recorded action in the British Isles seems to be political and led by kings looking to conquer territory.

The decades around 900 see polities established by Scandinavian dynasties in Britain and Normandy and the adoption of Christianity by their leaders at least. Contemporary sources cease to describe the attackers as ‘heathens’ and tend to name leaders and refer to armies by their place of residence, whether that be East Anglia or Dublin.

In about 903, shortly after the contested start of Edward the Elder’s reign, for example, the Chronicle tells us that his cousin and rival Æthelwold ‘induced the army among the East Angles to break the peace and they harried over all Mercia until ... they crossed the Thames’. Eventually they were pursued home and their king, Eohric, was killed. East Anglia was, at this date, part of the Danelaw. This group’s forebears had come to Britain from Scandinavia in 865 and they had been settled in East Anglia for more than 20 years, so it is likely that Eohric and most of his warriors had been born and brought up in England as Christians.

The ‘Viking’ dynasty that ruled Dublin and contested rule of Northumbria with the descendants of Alfred in the tenth century were descended from men who had left Scandinavia in the middle of the ninth century. On the maternal side most of them probably had local ancestors. They had very little in common in behaviour, genetics or belief systems with the raiders of the 790s. Indeed one of their greatest kings, Óláfr Cúarán, who had at times been king in Northumbria as well as Dublin, retired to the monastery of Iona in 980. At least one of his granddaughters was a nun.

Age old


What is usually seen as the final phase of the ‘Viking Age’, from the 990s to the 1070s, saw military and diplomatic relations between Christian kings in both the West and in Scandinavia. By this date Denmark at least had become part of Latin Christendom. Characterising a ruler like Cnut as a ‘Viking’ is nonsensical. He attended the imperial coronation of Conrad II in Rome in 1027 and founded and endowed churches across both his English and Danish realms. Similarly, Harald Hardrada, often termed ‘the last of the Vikings’, was the brother of a saint and spent much of his career in Byzantium. His invasion of England in 1066 was a political action in which he was supported by factions within the kingdom he was invading. Eleventh-century Scandinavian kings such as Cnut and Harald had far more in common with their successors in the 12th and 13th century than they had with eighth- and ninth-century heathen raiders.

Sporadic seaborne raiding on Britain and Ireland by small groups unconnected to any political or military action continued into the 12th century. Indeed, activity of this sort, classic ‘Viking’ behaviour, is perhaps more characteristic of this later period than it is of what we might consider the ‘Viking Age’ proper. These raiders originated from the Scandinavian diaspora in the Scottish islands. Hebrideans, and even Orcadians, like the infamous Sveinn Ásleifarson, plagued the coast of Ireland and western Britain for a century after the Norman Conquest; it was only the English invasion of Ireland that put an end to it. The Western Isles in particular had little capacity for supporting anything beyond subsistence farming and predation on rich lands was the key to local chieftains maintaining their position at home.

Goodbye!


The construct of the ‘Vikings’ conflates and blurs the distinction between eighth- and 12th-century pirates. Tenth-century kings based in Dublin and Christian rulers such as Cnut, all of whom lived in very different societies, had different belief systems and political and economic objectives. Each of these contexts needs to be dealt with on its own terms and not within a 19th-century construct that has more than a hint of racist essentialism to it. It is high time that historians, both academic and popular, ditched the Vikings as an outmoded and dangerous way of thinking. The Vikings never existed; it is time to put this unhealthy fantasy to bed.


Alex Woolf is a senior lecturer in History at the University of St Andrews.
 
Article in a nutshell: The Viking Age is a nuanced period of history and it wasn't just all raid this, raid that. I am sorry to Alex Woolf but "Vikings" and "Viking Age" are pretty useful broad terms. What's next, some historian thinks the Dark Ages should get its name changed because it wasn't a time of economic, intellectual and cultural decline for everyone?
Dark ages is a bit of a misnomer pushed by salty romeaboo historians of the time.
 
I imagine a monk would, understandably, talk mad shit about the raiders who kept attacking him for no reason while trying to painstakingly deliver painstakingly written Bibles/other books at a time when the printing press didn't exist.
They were just seething because they were sworn to chastity while all the nice irish girls wanted to be with the cool, buff vikings.
 
"We shouldn't use this word because of this etymological fallacy and because I'm a splitter, not a lumper."

I wonder if he rails against the Anglo-Saxons because well akshually a number of them were Jutes and Frisians.
 
Dark ages is a bit of a misnomer pushed by salty romeaboo historians of the time.
~375 to ~900 was a really shitty time to live in western Europe with a few shining exceptions, salty romeaboos were right but they dont like to talk about how things were shitty well before Odoacer got rid of Romulus Augustulus
 
Who of the church philosophers can you name from that period? Colombanus, St Martin of Tours maybe? Of the secular philosophers, I can name maybe Procopius, Boethius, and (EDIT= Jordanes). That's a pretty short list imo.
Seeing as Martin of Tours died in 397...

Isidore of Seville? Maximus the Confessor? John of Damascus? John Climacus? John Cassian? Benedict of Nursia? Athanasius the Great? Anthony the Great? Athanasius the Great biographing Anthony the Great? I'm trying to cite people who've written stuff or had biographies written of them.

How do you even miss Augustine? The West is wild about Augustine-- western Christianity got absolutely fractalized because of two or three Augustine fanboys.

The Synaxarion (or... martyrology, if you're Catholic, I guess) is full of 'em.

You can get pretty far saying that the European Early Middle Ages lacked thinkers and philosophers if you rule out the one place where most of Europe's thinking power was concentrated just because the thinking was either explicitly religious or religiously inspired...and if you deny the indelible, pervasive, and severe influence said religion had on several cultures in addition to all European ones, on top of that.
 
Seeing as Martin of Tours died in 397...

Isidore of Seville? Maximus the Confessor? John of Damascus? John Climacus? John Cassian? Benedict of Nursia? Anthony the Great? Athanasius the Great? Athanasius the Great biographing Anthony the Great? I'm trying to cite people who've written stuff or had biographies written of them.

How do you even miss Augustine? The West is wild about Augustine-- western Christianity got absolutely fractalized because of two or three Augustine fanboys.

The Synaxarion (or... martyrology, if you're Catholic, I guess) is full of 'em.

You can get pretty far saying that the European Early Middle Ages lacked thinkers and philosophers if you rule out the one place where most of Europe's thinking power was concentrated just because the thinking was either explicitly religious or religiously inspired...and if you deny the indelible, pervasive, and severe influence said religion had on several cultures in addition to all European ones, on top of that.
Sorry I meant Gregory of Tours. Okay, and what exactly did they contribute to global culture? I can freely admit St Augustine, Pierre Abelard, Thomas Aquinas, and St Paul are positive influences on human philosophy because I'm not a reddit atheist, but I feel like this era was still fairly sparse in terms of philosophical contributions, especially in comparison to later wras.
 
Why do some people worship the vikings so much? They were a bunch of inbred, mushroom-piss drinking savages who raided unarmed villages and monasteries because they got their guts stomped in when they faced a real army, and eventually cucked out to the Catholic Church when they got offered land that wasn't in a frozen hellscape.

Some "fearsome warrior culture" they were, basically just being the Medieval-era's version of Somali pirates.
Because 1,000 years later we're still talking about them and their exploits from African to North America. Even Rus, the root word of Russia means Men Who Row.

PS, nobody will remember your name.
 
You act like that's a ridiculously high bar
Putting aside it's not the one we started with, it's pretty high up there. We're talking about the world and its myriad cultures, with-- broadly and generally speaking-- a chunk of the world still operating on a drastically different religious and philosophical paradigm.

And even then, if I wanted, I could argue that contributing to the world's most ubiquitous religion that shaped and dominated several major European cultures that proceeded to spread through large swaths of the world reaches that bar.
 
Putting aside it's not the one we started with, it's pretty high up there. We're talking about the world and its myriad cultures, with-- broadly and generally speaking-- a chunk of the world still operating on a drastically different religious and philosophical paradigm.

And even then, if I wanted, I could argue that contributing to the world's most ubiquitous religion that shaped and dominated several major European cultures that proceeded to spread through large swaths of the world reaches that bar.
I was using that as a general figure of speech. Setting that aside, please tell me what exactly each of them contributed? And at a time when the power of the faith was in overall decline in power as Eastern Rime was bleeding itself dry and subsequently lost its wealthiest provinces, I would argue that those Christian scholars didn't contribute to the spread of Christianity.

In any case, are you really going to tell me that these guys are as influential as Aquinas, Machiavelli, or St Augustine?
 
I was using that as a general figure of speech. Setting that aside, please tell me what exactly each of them contributed? And at a time when the power of the faith was in overall decline in power as Eastern Rime was bleeding itself dry and subsequently lost its wealthiest provinces, I would argue that those Christian scholars didn't contribute to the spread of Christianity.

In any case, are you really going to tell me that these guys are as influential as Aquinas, Machiavelli, or St Augustine?
Your standards are fluctuating. You wanted to know about any thinkers and philosophers in the early Middle Ages, and I give you some. Then you ask about what they contributed to "global culture", and I can't quite follow why the bar shifted, but I argue that their contributions to a now widespread religion that also shaped all of Europe, which in turned shaped large swaths of the world would qualify.

But you don't follow, since you talk about how those scholars didn't contribute to the spread of Christianity-- which was never my contention.

I guess they weren't as influential as Aquinas or Augustine, even if Aquinas and Augustine weren't as influential as them in Eastern Europe. But the prompt for that answer not how this started.

I'm not too bothered, but it just seems like you're moving the goalposts because your concern is more about your investment in whatever thought was produced in that time period versus whether a sizable amount was produced at all.

And that's the kind of thinking that gave birth to the term "Dark Ages", in the first place.
 
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Sorry I meant Gregory of Tours. Okay, and what exactly did they contribute to global culture? I can freely admit St Augustine, Pierre Abelard, Thomas Aquinas, and St Paul are positive influences on human philosophy because I'm not a reddit atheist, but I feel like this era was still fairly sparse in terms of philosophical contributions, especially in comparison to later wras.
Roger Bacon, Robert Grosseteste, Nicole Orseme and the Oxford Calculators and a few other natural philosophers laid down the basis of the modern scientific method and of modern science at this time. You can kinda argue the Muslims like Averroes and Al-Khorazwim did this a bit too (they did give a lot of inspirarion to this movement no doubt), but the highly zealous and popular reaction to Islamic science shut down that avenue before it could grow too much. Basically, all modern scientific, mathematical and engineering advances have some basis in the thoughts of the above mentioned Franciscans in the 1200s-1400s.
 
Your standards are fluctuating. You wanted to know about any thinkers and philosophers in the early Middle Ages, and I give you some. Then you ask about what they contributed to "global culture", and I can't quite follow why the bar shifted, but I argue that their contributions to a now widespread religion that also shaped all of Europe, which in turned shaped large swaths of the world would qualify.

But you don't follow, since you talk about how those scholars didn't contribute to the spread of Christianity-- which was never my contention.

I guess they weren't as influential as Aquinas or Augustine, even if Aquinas and Augustine weren't as influential as them in Eastern Europe. But the prompt for that answer not how this started.

I'm not too bothered, but it just seems like you're moving the goalposts because your concern is more about your investment in whatever thought was produced in that time period versus whether a sizable amount was produced at all.

And that's the kind of thinking that gave birth to the term "Dark Ages", in the first place.
I'm not trying to move the goalposts, but if they have such great contributions, tell me what they contributed?

All I'm positing is that the sociopolitical situation of the early middle ages, the resulting social simplification and prolonged conflicts negatively impacted western thought and culture to the extent you see a significant decline. Even accounting for the fact that intellectual life began to shift towards the church, the systems that would later spawn Aquinas and Abelard were not yet in place for them to spread and proliferate to the extent they would later. This is the period when Italy was emptied of its people after two decades of war, the Roman Empire was almost extinguished by the Muslim invasions, the classical academies were shuttered while the medieval universities had yet to form, and the Germanic tribes had yet to fully settle down and establish the feudalistic structures that would dominate for the next hundreds of years. Of course you're going to see less of a vibrant intellectual exchange than in later or earlier periods, and it doesnt have to do with Christianity as you seem to suggest I'm implying.
 
There's something admirable in most early seafaring cultures. They managed to reliably navigate back and forth from Scandinavia all the way to Iceland, then Greenland, and even Labrador, just by looking at the stars and the sun and rudimentary compass bearings and dead reckoning. They managed to sustain settlements in all those lands for centuries, no mean feat given the climatic conditions and the population attrition.
While admirable, they pale in comparison to the achievements of purely seafarer civs like the polynesians and the phoenicians.
 
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