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Norse Culture and Its Influence on the World

Norse Culture and Its Influence on the World. Background for all squads. Our dates are roughly 790-1066. The earliest recorded Viking raids begin in the 790s and the Normans conquer England in 1066. 790-1066 basically bookend the Viking Age. What areas are we talking about?.

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Norse Culture and Its Influence on the World

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  1. Norse Culture and Its Influence on the World Background for all squads

  2. Our dates are roughly 790-1066. The earliest recorded Viking raids begin in the 790s and the Normans conquer England in 1066. 790-1066 basically bookend the Viking Age.

  3. What areas are we talking about?

  4. The Vikings mostly lived in present day Scandinavia. However, they were highly mobile, so they sailed all over the place.

  5. What’s going on in the rest of the world between 790-1066? • 9th Century • The 9th Century is considered the Dark Ages in Europe. • Charlemagne is crowned Roman Emperor. • China persecutes Buddhists.

  6. 10th Century • Regarded as a low point in European history. • Byzantine Empire reaches its height. • Rise of the Toltecs and collapse of the Maya.

  7. 11th Century • Great Schism takes place between Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox. • Normans invade Britain. • Song Dynasty rules China.

  8. 790-1066 is • 760 years after the death of Jesus Christ. • 570 years after the fall of the Chinese Han Dynasty. • 453 years after Constantinople is made the capital of the Roman Empire. • 339 years after Attila the Hun defeats the Romans. • 220 years after the birth of Muhammad.

  9. 790-1066 is • 96 years before the birth of Genghis Khan. • 149 years before King John signs the Magna Carta. • 259 years before Tenochtitlan is founded. • 284 years before the beginning of the Italian Renaissance. • 432 years before Columbus “discovers” America.

  10. Vikings lived in and settled • Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Danelaw, • Northumbria, Mercia, East Anglia, • Shetland, Orkney, Faroe Island, Iceland • Greenland, Vinland

  11. The Vikings sailed most of the North Atlantic. • They made it all the way to Baghdad and Constantinople. • They made it all the way to Newfoundland, Canada.

  12. Viking Ships • Science: How were Viking ships made to go fast? How were they built to be light? • Social Studies: How were they used in exploration, raids, and warfare? • English: What roles do Viking ships play within the poetry and sagas? How did ships help spread Viking literature? • Fine Arts: How can we see the Viking ship as a piece of art? How is it decorated? How was it used for funerary purposes?

  13. Oseburg

  14. Oseburg www.youtube.com/watch?v=-kKBYHrsydA http://

  15. Gokstad

  16. knarr

  17. Faering http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvIDyvjMqtM

  18. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RcuZ9hb1Odo&feature=related

  19. Viking Religion • Pre-Christian and Christian • Norse Mythology

  20. The Norse believed in nine worlds. Humans lived in Midgard. Asgard was heaven. Hel was hell. Norse Mythology

  21. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS1qiHQX1w0&feature=related

  22. The Christianization of Scandinavia began in the 8th century and was basically complete by the 12th century. Often, Vikings agreed to “be” Christian because their king said they should be. Christian Vikings

  23. Viking Expansion • The Vikings sailed all over the place, but they only settled certain areas. • We are mostly interested in England, Iceland, Greenland, and Vinland.

  24. Expansion to England • The Vikings sailed from Norway to Dorset, England in 789. • They attacked the monastery at Lindisfarne in 793. The Vikings repeatedly raided this monastery until the monks fled in 875. • England was backward at this time. When the Vikings came to a farming village to settle, there was little anyone could do about it.

  25. Some of the Vikings who came to England came as raiders. Some came with their families and livestock. After a while, the cultures assimilated.

  26. In 1066, the Normans invade England and defeat the Vikings. The Normans take over England. But the Normans were from France.

  27. The Vikings had been to France, and the Normans had Viking blood. • Your materials argue that 1066 was a case of one Viking culture throwing another Viking culture out of England.

  28. Naddoddr was looking for the Faroe Islands, but he got lost and drifted to Iceland. The first Scandinavian who deliberately sailed to Iceland was Floki Vilgerdardson. He named it Iceland. Iceland

  29. Norwegian Ingolfur Arnarson maintained the first permanent settlement in 874. Iceland is the best example of Viking culture today because nobody lived in Iceland before the Vikings.

  30. Greenland • The Vikings colonized Greenland beginning in 986. • Inuits were already in Greenland, and they were much better adapted to the environment. • The Viking population reached a height of 5,000, and they stayed for about 500 years.

  31. The Vikings arrived in Greenland during a global warming phase. When the planet began to cool, the Vikings left.

  32. Vinland (a.k.a. North America) • Bjarni Herjolfsson came here in 985. He was headed for Greenland, but got blown off course. • Vikings explored Newfoundland, Canada for about one generation, but they never permanently settled.

  33. Leif Eriksson was responsible for at least one trip to North America. They left behind huts and cooking utensils.

  34. Viking Jewelry

  35. Arm rings

  36. Viking hoards

  37. Viking Coins

  38. Stave Churches

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