Farms: Viking ships, Oseberg and Gokstad ships
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The Oseberg ship is a well-preserved Viking ship discovered in a large burial mound at the Oseberg farm near Tønsberg in Vestfold county, Norway.[1] The burial mound contained numerous grave goods and two female human skeletons. The ships internment into its burial mound dates from 834, but parts of the ship date from around 800, and the ship itself is thought to be older. It was excavated by Norwegian archaeologist Haakon Shetelig and Swedish archaeologist Gabriel Gustafson in 1904-1905. This ship is widely celebrated and has been called one of the finest finds to have survived the Viking Age. The ship and some of its contents are displayed at the Viking Ship Museum, Bygdøy, Oslo. The Gogstad ship is a Viking ship found beneath a burial mound at Gogstad farm in Sandar, Sandefjord, Vestfold, Norway. Excavation of Gogstadhaugen or Kongshaugen (from the Old Norse words kong meaning king and haugr meaning mound) revealed a ship burial dated back to 9th century. The site was excavated in 1880 by Nicolay Nicolaysen. The Gogstad ship is clinker-built, constructed largely of oak. The ship is 24 m long and 5 m wide. It is the largest in the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo. The ship was built to carry 32 oarsmen, and the oar holes could be hatched down when the ship was under sail. It utilized a square sail of c. 110 square meters, which, it is estimated, could propel the ship to over 12 knots. While the ship was traveling in shallow water, the rudder could be raised. Dendrochronological dating suggests that the ship was built of timber that was felled around 890 AD. The ship's design has been demonstrated to be very seaworthy. The Viking, an exact replica of the Gogstad ship crossed the Atlantic Ocean from Bergen, Norway to be exhibited at the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago during 1893. Other known replicas include the Gaia, which currently has Sandefjord as its home port, and the Munin, (a half scale replica) located in Vancouver, BC.
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Vikings were nowhere enarly the last pagans in Europe. The Samis were still worshipping pagan deities well into 18th century.
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7 g
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hello
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- not to mention that people openly refusing to convert was killed by order of the king. Norse paganism had been under influence from christianity for centuries before scandinavia was officially christened. Norsemen travelled widely abroad, and came in contact with christianity both in Britain and in the east. There were also christian missionaries working in Scandinavia. Reasons for the official conversion are largely seen as a mixture of (typical viking) pragmatism and local power politics.
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Fueron increibles exploradores y pioneros comparables a los romanos porque dejaron historia en diferentes paises de europa incluyaendo rRusia, Ynglaterra y Estados Unidos, solo fueron superados por los romanos porque estos dejaron huellas de cultura e ingenieria para la posteridad.
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This is Thrand!!! Many Scandinavian peoples claimed to be Christian because they were offered gifts to convert So I truly Question how many really were converted early on.
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There is an error in this video. It starts out saying that the vikings were the last pagans in Europe, but that is not true. Christian crusaders conquered the pagan slavic tribes in North Germany (the Wends) in the 12th century. And in the 13th and 14th centuries Estonian and Lithuanian pagans were converted by force aswell. The last pagans to be converted were probably the Samic nomads living in northern Scandinavia in the 17th and 18th centuries.