The Viking Age: A Time of Many Faces

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With T. Douglas Price, Bengt Jacobsson, Maria Cinthio, Leena Drenzel, Bibiana Agustí Farjas and Jonny Karlsson. Illustrated by Staffan Hyll. The majority of literature about the Viking period, based on artifacts or written sources, covers battles, kings, chiefs and mercenaries, long distance travel and colonization, trade, and settlement. Less is said about the life of those that stayed at home or those that immigrated into Scandinavia, whether voluntarily or by force. This book uses results from the examination of a substantial corpus of Swedish osteological material to discuss aspects of demography and health in the Viking period – those which would have been visible and recognizable in the faces or physical appearances of the individuals concerned. It explores the effects of migration, from the spread of new diseases such as leprosy to patterns of movement and integration of immigrants into society. The skeletal material also allows the study of levels of violence, attitudes towards disablement, and the care provided by Viking communities. An overview of the worldwide phenomenon of modified teeth also gives insight into the practice of deliberate physical embellishment and body modification. The interdisciplinary approach to questions regarding ordinary life presented here will broaden the knowledge about society during the Viking Age. The synthesis of the Swedish unburnt human skeletal remains dated to the Viking age will be a valuable resource for future research and provides an in-depth view on Viking age society.

Author(s): Caroline Ahlström Arcini
Publisher: Oxbow Books
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: VIII+120
City: Oxford

Preface and acknowledgment vii
1. The bare bones 1
2. Eight Viking Age burial grounds in south-east Sweden 5
Trinitatis: an early Christian graveyard in Lund 5
Vannhög: a burial place near an old Viking fortress 9
Fjälkinge: a remarkable burial ground on the fertile plain 13
Kopparsvik: a cemetery south of Visby 17
Slite Square: with a view of sailing routes to the east 20
Fröjel: a burial ground beside a Viking Age harbour 21
Birka: a well-known trading place in the realm of the Svear 28
Skämsta: a farm cemetery 34
A wide range of burial practices 34
Everyone was buried 37
3. Immigrants or locals? 39
A geological signature can be detected in dental enamel 40
Different patterns emerge 46
Someone knew how the deceased wanted to be buried 49
Did everyone come here voluntarily? 53
4. Health and care for the frail 55
'Tall as palm trees' 55
Toothless or shining white? 57
Joint problems 58
Everyday accidents and battle traumas 60
The dwarf 64
Leprosy: noseless and numb 67
Health in Viking Age society 70
5. Markers of identity? 73
Filed grooves on the teeth 74
Young, old, short, and tall 77
Buried like other people? 77
Was Gotland the gathering point? 79
A Nordic custom or inspiration from elsewhere? 80
Why file grooves in teeth? 82
6. Burial grounds designated for particular purposes? 85
The infl uence of Christianity or division into special areas? 87
Market places and harbours? 88
7. A time of many faces 91
Appendix: Strontium values 95
Notes 109
References 113