two essays on the fascinating world of the Vikings
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Who were the vikings and why did they disappear almost as abruptly as they appeared, more than two centuries after the attack on the monastery at Lindisfarne, Northumberland, on June 8, 793?
The question is inexhaustible and it contributes to maintain the media fascination for these warriors from the North, who were at the same time cunning traders, seasoned explorers and inspired poets.
Read alsoOur review of Robert Eggers’ The Northman: Storm in the Land of the Vikings
That is to say the curiosity that can arouse The Children of Ash and Ash. A history of the Vikings, by Neil Price, archaeologist who teaches at Uppsala University, Sweden. A book in which he attempts a new synthesis of what he calls the “Viking Phenomenon”. It is also to say the disappointment that this book produces, which does not bring anything very new compared to what we already knew. And this despite the recent archaeological discoveries that the author comments on here and there. In particular the “reconstitution”, in 2017, of a person buried in a mortuary room in Birka, in…
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