Viking Age
The Viking Age is the name of the period between 793 A.D and 1066 A.D in Scandinavia. This corresponds to the latter half of the early Iron Age. During this period, Scandinavian warriors and traders, called Vikings, traded, raided, plundered, and explored large parts of Europe, the Middle East, and northern Africa, and even reached North America.
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The beginning of the Viking Age is commonly given as 793, when Vikings attacked the British island Lindisfarne, and its end is marked by the failed invasion attempt on England by Harald Hårdråde in 1066.
The Viking longships were uniquely suited to both deep and shallow waters, and thus extended the reach of Viking raiders not only along coastlines, but also to areas along the banks of major rivers. Rurik founded the first Russian state with a capital at Novgorod. Vikings continued south on rivers to the Black Sea and then on to Constantinople. France was particularly hard-hit by these raiders, who could sail down the Seine with near impunity. The region now known as Normandy was rendered practically uninhabitable by the depradations of these recurring raids. Eventually, the French king Charles the Simple was able to make an agreement with Hrolf Ganger, later named Rollo. Charles gave Hrolf the title of Duke and granted him and his followers possession of the ravaged land of Normandy. In return, Hrolf swore fealty to Charles, converted to Christianity, and undertook to defend the northern region of France against the incursions of other Vikings. The results were, in a historical sense, rather ironic: several generations later, the Norman descendants of these Viking settlers not only identified themselves as French, but carried the French language and culture into England during the Norman Conquest.
Technology
There is an archeological find in Sweden of a bone fraction that has been fixated with in-operated material, and it is dated to ????. These bones might possible be the remains of a trader from the Middle East.
The nautical achievements of the Nordic (or Vikings) were quite exceptional. For instance they made distance tables for sea voyages that were so exact that they only differ 2-4% from modern satellite measurements, even on long distances such as across the Atlantic Ocean.
There is a finding at the island Gotland in Sweden that might possible components from a telescope, although the "telescope" was invented in the 1600. See Visby lens.
The Nordic had a, for that time, superior technology of ship construction.
Trading Cities
Important trading ports during the period include both existing and ancient cities such as Birca (Sweden), Hedeby (Denmark), Kaupang (Norway), Staraja Ladoga (Russia) and Jorvik (England).
See also
da:Vikingetid sv:Vikingatiden
