By comparing archaeological finds with literary evidence this article seeks to reconstruct the role of drinking horns during the Viking Age. After an overview of drinking horns as represented in archaeology, several literary texts, predominantly Medieval Icelandic sagas, will be studied to shed further light on how drinking horns were seen and used. Drinking horns were used as a literary motif in these texts, but it can be demonstrated that they can also be linked to the archaeological evidence from the Viking Age, thus improving our understanding of the archaeological record
Viking Age art is dominated by animal motifs. In particular, the so-called ‘gripping-beasts’ spread ...
In the past two decades human representational art in migration-period Scandinavia and early Anglo-S...
Most written evidence regarding warfare in Viking Age Scandinavia originates either fromcontemporane...
This article discusses a find that is arguably one of the most important Anglo-Scandinavian objects ...
This article discusses a find that is arguably one of the most important Anglo-Scandinavian objects ...
This thesis is the first comprehensive study of ritual drinking vessels of horn and wood from later ...
The Icelandic sagas are a major source of information on the Vikings and their fighting prowess. In ...
Drinking ceremonies played a very important social role in Viking Age Scandinavia and Anglo-Saxon En...
This thesis aims to investigate with an interdisciplinary approach the role that the beverage “ale” ...
Horses have played an essential practical role in society since their domestication. In addition to ...
A study of hair in the Viking Age. The article draws on medieval Icelandic and Scandinavian texts fo...
Absract In the field of medieval Icelandic studies, "the oral tradition" refers to the accumulated a...
The archaeological study of coins has many applications for the study of the Viking Age in Iceland. ...
The Viking Age has long been understood to be a time of great violence. However, research in the las...
This article explores the ways in which medieval Icelanders imagined the food and culinary practices...
Viking Age art is dominated by animal motifs. In particular, the so-called ‘gripping-beasts’ spread ...
In the past two decades human representational art in migration-period Scandinavia and early Anglo-S...
Most written evidence regarding warfare in Viking Age Scandinavia originates either fromcontemporane...
This article discusses a find that is arguably one of the most important Anglo-Scandinavian objects ...
This article discusses a find that is arguably one of the most important Anglo-Scandinavian objects ...
This thesis is the first comprehensive study of ritual drinking vessels of horn and wood from later ...
The Icelandic sagas are a major source of information on the Vikings and their fighting prowess. In ...
Drinking ceremonies played a very important social role in Viking Age Scandinavia and Anglo-Saxon En...
This thesis aims to investigate with an interdisciplinary approach the role that the beverage “ale” ...
Horses have played an essential practical role in society since their domestication. In addition to ...
A study of hair in the Viking Age. The article draws on medieval Icelandic and Scandinavian texts fo...
Absract In the field of medieval Icelandic studies, "the oral tradition" refers to the accumulated a...
The archaeological study of coins has many applications for the study of the Viking Age in Iceland. ...
The Viking Age has long been understood to be a time of great violence. However, research in the las...
This article explores the ways in which medieval Icelanders imagined the food and culinary practices...
Viking Age art is dominated by animal motifs. In particular, the so-called ‘gripping-beasts’ spread ...
In the past two decades human representational art in migration-period Scandinavia and early Anglo-S...
Most written evidence regarding warfare in Viking Age Scandinavia originates either fromcontemporane...