Poging GOUD - Vrij
FIVE THINGS YOU (PROBABLY) DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT...The Vikings
BBC History UK
|March 2024
Ryan Lavelle, who is teaching our new History Extra Academy course, shares five surprising facts about the raiders, pirates and traders from medieval Scandinavia

1 A Viking wedding involved a bed and eight people
The people of medieval Iceland are best known for their sagas-vivid stories written about their Viking ancestors. Yet they also possessed a lawcode, and these laws reveal a curious marriage custom that shines a light on gender relations in Icelandic society.
For a marriage to be legitimate, a groom had to be seen by six witnesses entering the same bed as his new wife, "without concealment". The idea that marriage was witnessed ensured that children from the union were seen as legitimate - an important matter for the descent of property and for family honour. After all, the keeping of mistresses was far from uncommon and the sexual mistreatment of female slaves so widespread it appears that it was barely worth recording in sagas.
All this is worth bearing in mind when considering the Viking cemetery in Birka, Sweden - in which a skeleton buried with an array of weapons turned out to be biologically female. Many Viking women enjoyed greater freedoms than their counterparts across Europe. But there were still limits to their power. Did the person buried at Birka express their identity like that of a male warrior because of such limits?
2 Vikings converted to Christianity earlier than we thought
In c965 AD, King Harald Bluetooth made a bold - and striking - claim. On a runestone erected at Jelling on the Jutland peninsula, the Danish monarch declared that he had "made all the Danes Christian". It was the earliest 'official' statement on Christianity made in Viking Scandinavia.
Dit verhaal komt uit de March 2024-editie van BBC History UK.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN BBC History UK

BBC History UK
The stories we tell
LIZANNE HENDERSON enjoys a new history of folklore through the ages that explores some lesser-known avenues
1 mins
November 2025

BBC History UK
"Africa exerted a profound influence on cultures of resistance to slavery, yet its role is often overlooked"
SUDHIR HAZAREESINGH speaks to Danny Bird about how enslaved people, who needed no lessons in freedom from white abolitionists, organised themselves to fight their oppressors
9 mins
November 2025

BBC History UK
The first British curry
ELEANOR BARNETT prepares a dish with Indian influences that was designed to appeal to Georgian English tastes
2 mins
November 2025
BBC History UK
Emperor Jahangir and Shah Abbas literally bestride the world like colossi
WATCHING THE RECENT SPECTACLE OF THOSE latter-day emperors President Xi of China and India's Narendra Modi hugging each other at the summit in Tianjin, my mind cast back to an earlier image of a pan-Asian summit.
3 mins
November 2025

BBC History UK
THE SLIPPERY TRUTH OF THE DREYFUS AFFAIR
The wrongful conviction for treason of a Jewish army captain in France in the late 19th century not only tore the country apart, but also, as Mike Rapport reveals, sparked a flood of ‘fake news’ that has echoes in our own turbulent times.
10 mins
November 2025

BBC History UK
Spectral beasts and hounds from hell
From infernal black dogs attacking churches to ravening, red-eyed brutes on remote roads, Britain has long been haunted by fearsome canine phantoms.
8 mins
November 2025
BBC History UK
Of ruins and revenants
Across Britain, hundreds of once-thriving medieval settlements were abandoned for reasons ranging from disease to economic collapse.
2 mins
November 2025

BBC History UK
Why are we so hung up with historical dates?
From 1066 to 1918, our obsession with battles, elections and even voyages of discovery risks distorting a true understanding of the past
11 mins
November 2025
BBC History UK
The physicist as hero
JIMENA CANALES argues that a new study of Einstein misses some of the complexity in his story
2 mins
November 2025
BBC History UK
Different class
MILES TAYLOR is absorbed by a study of how Britain's hereditary peers have negotiated changing times
2 mins
November 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size