The portrayal of the ‘Vikings’ as an archetypal barbarian ‘other,’ wreaking death and destruction wherever they went, was already current in the medieval period, but in England the depictions became more extreme in the centuries after the attacks. This paper will focus on the texts and archaeology of ninth- and tenthcentury England and argue that in many respects Scandinavians were not as ‘other’ as later medieval writers believed. Furthermore, once Scandinavian groups settled in England the notion of ‘otherness’ appears to have quickly disappeared. Particular attention will be paid to the burial record as a means of identifying probable Scandinavians, and for evidence of acculturation to Angl...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on October 21, 2010).The enti...
First paragraph: In speaking of Viking attacks and settlements, the primary historical records often...
Detailed analysis of the construction of gender identities has transformed our understanding of many...
This paper explores the messages conveyed by funerary rites in the wake of the Scandinavian settl...
When Vikings migrated to England they had an enormous impact on the Anglo-Saxon political system and...
YesHistorical, artefactual and place-name evidence indicates that Scandinavian migrants moved to eas...
The Viking Age lasted from approximately the 8th century CE to the 11th century CE, and throughout t...
Scandinavians, popularly known as Vikings, began to explore and settle in Europe from the ninth cent...
The thesis will discuss the variety and types of cemeteries and burials used during the late Anglo-...
This paper revisits the idea that there was a direct link between Sweden and the the rites and mater...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...
The Viking age as a time of adventures and violence never ceases to fascinate the public. Both aspec...
Open access journalThis paper investigates the origins of British Anglo-Saxon archaeology by focusin...
Written sources record the Scandinavian invasions of England but give no precise information as to t...
Historical, artefactual and place-name evidence indicates that Scandinavian migrants moved to easter...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on October 21, 2010).The enti...
First paragraph: In speaking of Viking attacks and settlements, the primary historical records often...
Detailed analysis of the construction of gender identities has transformed our understanding of many...
This paper explores the messages conveyed by funerary rites in the wake of the Scandinavian settl...
When Vikings migrated to England they had an enormous impact on the Anglo-Saxon political system and...
YesHistorical, artefactual and place-name evidence indicates that Scandinavian migrants moved to eas...
The Viking Age lasted from approximately the 8th century CE to the 11th century CE, and throughout t...
Scandinavians, popularly known as Vikings, began to explore and settle in Europe from the ninth cent...
The thesis will discuss the variety and types of cemeteries and burials used during the late Anglo-...
This paper revisits the idea that there was a direct link between Sweden and the the rites and mater...
It is often claimed that the mortuary traditions that appeared in lowland Britain in the fifth centu...
The Viking age as a time of adventures and violence never ceases to fascinate the public. Both aspec...
Open access journalThis paper investigates the origins of British Anglo-Saxon archaeology by focusin...
Written sources record the Scandinavian invasions of England but give no precise information as to t...
Historical, artefactual and place-name evidence indicates that Scandinavian migrants moved to easter...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on October 21, 2010).The enti...
First paragraph: In speaking of Viking attacks and settlements, the primary historical records often...
Detailed analysis of the construction of gender identities has transformed our understanding of many...