AS HUBS IN STABLE ECONOMIC NETWORKS, mountain1 marketplaces are seen as integral to the increase and eventual mass production of iron in the Viking period and Middle Ages. The amount of iron produced exceeded local and regional demands, and constituted a valuable commodity from the inland areas of Norway and Sweden. This paper shows a dynamic trade network — one that was adaptable to trade patterns and surplus production. The marketplaces enabled an inland population to obtain both the products they needed and those they wanted, and gave the populous communities along the coast — the medieval towns, the royal and ecclesiastical elites — access to the resources and commodities from the hinterland via trade networks flowing through these mark...
– During the Viking Age, the Trondheimsfjorden in Central Norway emerges as a hub of maritime commun...
Between AD c.860 and c.970, hundreds of thousands of silver coins (dirhams) from Central Asia reache...
The nature and operation of medieval trade in Iceland over seven centuries is examined in this paper...
The thousands of iron production sites scattered across the mountain and valley regions of Norway ar...
The period from the late Viking Age to the High Middle Ages, c. 950–1350, was an era of economic exp...
This study demonstrates how routes over mountain plateaus and passes connected farms, hamlets and re...
The Viking Age soapstone vessel production and trade in Norway was a spatially allocated enterprise ...
In the High Middle Ages Kinsarvik in Hardanger was ideally situated as a hub, where iron and other o...
Viking Age ironmaking in Norway has often been distinguished from previous periods through the techn...
An aim of this paper is to explore exploitation of outlying resources within a socio-political and e...
This study presents the first comprehensive mapping of a type of assembly site in South Norway for c...
The driving force behind agrarian settlement colonisation in the forested Scandinavian inlands in th...
This paper deals with iron extraction sites from the Iron Age and the Medieval period in Rogaland co...
Resources from outland regions of the Scandinavian Peninsula have been the topic of several studies ...
During the Middle Ages, bakestones, or stone griddles, were an important part of Norwegian household...
– During the Viking Age, the Trondheimsfjorden in Central Norway emerges as a hub of maritime commun...
Between AD c.860 and c.970, hundreds of thousands of silver coins (dirhams) from Central Asia reache...
The nature and operation of medieval trade in Iceland over seven centuries is examined in this paper...
The thousands of iron production sites scattered across the mountain and valley regions of Norway ar...
The period from the late Viking Age to the High Middle Ages, c. 950–1350, was an era of economic exp...
This study demonstrates how routes over mountain plateaus and passes connected farms, hamlets and re...
The Viking Age soapstone vessel production and trade in Norway was a spatially allocated enterprise ...
In the High Middle Ages Kinsarvik in Hardanger was ideally situated as a hub, where iron and other o...
Viking Age ironmaking in Norway has often been distinguished from previous periods through the techn...
An aim of this paper is to explore exploitation of outlying resources within a socio-political and e...
This study presents the first comprehensive mapping of a type of assembly site in South Norway for c...
The driving force behind agrarian settlement colonisation in the forested Scandinavian inlands in th...
This paper deals with iron extraction sites from the Iron Age and the Medieval period in Rogaland co...
Resources from outland regions of the Scandinavian Peninsula have been the topic of several studies ...
During the Middle Ages, bakestones, or stone griddles, were an important part of Norwegian household...
– During the Viking Age, the Trondheimsfjorden in Central Norway emerges as a hub of maritime commun...
Between AD c.860 and c.970, hundreds of thousands of silver coins (dirhams) from Central Asia reache...
The nature and operation of medieval trade in Iceland over seven centuries is examined in this paper...