Viking History

The Lost Art of Viking Granulation and Filigree Metalwork Explained
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The Lost Art of Viking Granulation and Filigree Metalwork Explained
The granulated silver beads of the Terslev hoard and the gold filigree crosses of the Hiddensee treasure represent Viking Age metalworking at its most technically demanding. Producing them required years of skill, silver of exceptional purity, and a mastery of temperature control that most modern jewellers would find challenging. This is how it was done.
How Were Viking Tortoiseshell Brooches Cast by Medieval Metalsmiths?
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How Were Viking Tortoiseshell Brooches Cast by Medieval Metalsmiths?
The oval brooch was the defining item of Viking Age female dress. Worn in pairs at both shoulders, produced by the thousand using the lost-wax casting method, and found wherever Norse women settled from Norway to Russia, these objects are the most archaeologically reliable marker of Norse female cultural identity in the entire Viking Age record.
The Terslev Hoard: The Peak of Viking Age Silver Filigree Pendants
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The Terslev Hoard: The Peak of Viking Age Silver Filigree Pendants
A hoard found in a Danish field in 1911 contains some of the most technically extraordinary silver jewellery ever recovered from the Viking Age. The Terslev pieces, with their granulated spherical beads and Carolingian-influenced disk pendants, represent 10th-century Danish smithing at its absolute peak and the moment when Norse jewellery absorbed the design vocabulary of the Frankish world entirely on its own terms.
Gungnir: Odin's Spear, the Valknut, and What the Weapon Actually Meant
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Gungnir: Odin's Spear, the Valknut, and What the Weapon Actually Meant
Gungnir was not simply Odin's weapon. It was the instrument by which the lord of the slain consecrated war and claimed the dead. This article covers the mythology of Odin's spear, what the Valknut and rune engravings alongside it actually meant, and the historical tradition this pendant carries.
Why Did Vikings Use the Lost-Wax Casting Method for Complex Pendants?
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Why Did Vikings Use the Lost-Wax Casting Method for Complex Pendants?
Lost-wax casting was the Viking Age solution to a specific technical problem: how to produce three-dimensional metal objects of great complexity without the limitations of a reusable mould. Understanding how the process worked transforms how you read the finest Norse jewellery, revealing the layers of skill and decision-making that produced what appears to be a single fluid object.
Close-up overhead view of an intricately cast Norse pendant resting on aged dark leather,
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Yggdrasil: The Norse World Tree, Its Symbols and What They Really Meant
Yggdrasil meant "Odin's Horse" long before it meant "Tree of Life." Its three roots, nine worlds and gnawing serpent told a story not of serene growth but of a cosmos under permanent threat. Combined with the Valknut and Horn Triskele, it formed the most complete symbolic argument in Norse tradition.
The Viking Axe and the Valknut: What the Warrior's Weapon Actually Meant
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The Viking Axe and the Valknut: What the Warrior's Weapon Actually Meant
The Viking axe was not the elite weapon. It was carried by everyone. The Valknut placed at the centre of this blade is Odin's symbol of the warrior dead, appearing in Norse burial contexts from Gotland to the Oseberg ship burial. Two things that belong together, on a single piece.
Understanding the Sejlflod Ring: The Mystery of Viking Spiral Finger Jewellery
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Understanding the Sejlflod Ring: The Mystery of Viking Spiral Finger Jewellery
Finger rings are the overlooked category of Viking Age jewellery. Found in burial assemblages from Birka to the Danelaw, worn by men and women across the entire Norse world, the coiled wire spiral ring represents something the great hoards cannot: the everyday reality of Norse personal ornament, and a jewellery tradition stretching back two thousand years before the Viking Age began.
Why Vikings Wore Mjolnir: The Hammer of Thor
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Why Vikings Wore Mjolnir: The Hammer of Thor
More than a thousand Mjolnir amulets have been recovered across the Viking world, from Iceland to Ukraine. Vikings wore Thor's hammer not as decoration but as protection, invoking divine power over storms, battle, and death. Understanding the Valknut, the knotwork, and what the hammer meant during Christianisation changes everything.
The Hiddensee Treasure: The Gold Cross Pendants That Blended Pagan and Christian Art
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The Hiddensee Treasure: The Gold Cross Pendants That Blended Pagan and Christian Art
In 1872 a German farmer turned up sixteen pieces of Viking Age gold on a Baltic island. The Hiddensee treasure is the finest surviving example of Norse goldsmithing, its cross-shaped pendants decorated in the late Viking animal style. It is also the most eloquent material record of a civilisation negotiating its own religious transformation in precious metal.
Gnezdovo Mjolnir Viking Rus amulet Norse knotwork: Famous Norse hammer amulet with intricate knotwork patterns from Viking Rus settlements
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The Gnezdovo Mjolnir: Intricate Knotwork of a Famous Viking Rus Amulet
On the upper Dnieper river in 10th-century Russia, Norse Varangian traders built one of the largest settlements in eastern Europe. The Thor's Hammer pendant they left behind at Gnezdovo is unmistakably Norse in form but unlike any Scandinavian example in its geometric knotwork decoration, a small silver object carrying the record of a cultural encounter across three civilisations.
Bredsatra Odin pendant Swedish Viking amulet: Rare Odin pendant amulet from Sweden revealing Norse religious practices and gods reverence
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The Bredsatra Pendant: The History Behind the Famous Swedish Odin Amulet
A small gold pendant from a Swedish island has divided Viking Age scholars for decades. The Bredsatra amulet depicts a masked or helmeted figure that most scholars read as Odin, making it one of the rarest survivals of Odinic iconography in precious metal and a direct window into the shamanic dimensions of Norse religious belief.
Gotland silver torsade Viking neck ring elite warrior: Intricate multi-wire twisted neck rings symbol of high status and wealth in Viking society
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The Silver Torsades of Gotland: The Elite Multi-Wire Viking Neck Rings
More than 700 Viking Age silver hoards have been found on a single Swedish island. Gotland's extraordinary accumulation of silver was no accident. It was the physical consequence of two centuries of Baltic Sea commercial dominance, and the multi-wire twisted torsade neck rings at its centre are the most technically ambitious objects in the entire Viking Age silver tradition.
Permian silver rings Viking trade routes Norse merchants: Precious metal currency used by Viking traders on Eastern European and Russian trade routes
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Permian Silver Rings: The Wearable Currency of the Eastern Viking Trade Routes
The Viking Age had an eastern dimension that almost no popular account reaches. Norse traders called Varangians carried furs and amber thousands of miles south along Russian river systems in exchange for Islamic silver. The Permian arm rings they brought back were not souvenirs. They were the physical record of a commercial world of extraordinary reach.
Viking ring money Norse traders medieval commerce: How cut and twisted silver rings functioned as currency in Viking trade networks
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What Is a Viking Ring Money Hoard and How Was It Traded?
The Viking Age economy did not run on coins. It ran on silver weighed in the hand, cut with a knife, and tested with a punch. Viking ring money, the open-ended penannular silver rings found in hundreds of Norse hoards, was the physical infrastructure of one of history's most sophisticated portable monetary systems.
Cuerdale Hoard silver arm rings Viking artifacts: Archeological treasure of ribbon-style silver rings used as currency and status symbols
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The Cuerdale Hoard: Unlocking the Secrets of Ribbon-Style Viking Arm Rings
In 1840, workmen in Lancashire pulled 40 kilograms of Viking silver from the ground. The Cuerdale Hoard was not a raider's loot pile. It was a sophisticated commercial treasury, and the broad ribbon arm rings inside it were not jewellery. They were money, worn on the body and cut apart in trade.