The Vikings earned their success through their ships and their skills in their chosen weapon. Then how did this successful pirates, raiders, and explorers quietly faded in history?
How did the Vikings
Faded in History?
The
Vikings did not disappear as a defeated people – annihilated and subjugated.
But rather they assimilated to become the modern people we now know today as
Norwegians, Swedes, and Danes. They adopted many of Western Europe’s culture –
powerful monarchies and off course, Christianity.
The
one thing that led to sporadic Viking attacks that Europe dreaded was the lack
of Kings and fledgling of hundreds if not thousands of Viking chiefs and
village leaders. Starting in the 9th century, almost a hundred years after the
early attacks in Lindisfarne. Vikings in Norway started to consolidate and
establish a united Norwegian Kingdom.
In
872, King Harald Fairhair declared himself King of Norway. He got his nickname
for his oath that he would not cut his hair until he unified Norway. And he
succeeded in his quest, after winning the Battle of Hafrsfjord, he defeated the
last resistance to his rule. Those who loved their freedom had no option but to
leave Norway and settle in the islands of Britain, Iceland and Greenland.
Harald Bluetooth in Sid Meir's Civilization V |
These
Kings limited the authority of local Viking warlords, resulting to decrease in
number of raids. But another factor led to subtle the Vikings – Christianity.
Rise of Christianity
In
the 9th century, German missionaries went to Scandinavia to convert the Viking
heathens with little success. Only in the following century did number of
converts rose. In 960, Harald Bluetooth converted to Christianity. The same
happened to King Olaf I Tryggvasson of Norway. And in 1000, King Olaf the Tax
King followed the line of first Christian Kings.
Many
factors led to the rise of Christianity among the Vikings. Exposure to Western
Europe was one. The Vikings saw adaptation of Christianity as a means to
improve commercial and political transaction. It became a way to blend in or
fit in among the Europeans and avoid being called barbarians. Contacts between
Vikings and Western Europeans in by then flourishing Viking centers, such as
Hebedy, Birka, and Oslo, led many to be aware of the benefits of converting to
Christianity.
Another
and more fundamental reason was the huge difference between the Nordic religion
and Christianity.
Nordic
religion placed emphasis in becoming a great warriors while Christianity only
promoted becoming a great individual. Norse version of paradise called Valhalla
only had a place for warriors who died in battle and no other else.
Christianity on the other hand had heaven open for all human beings provided
they lived as good persons in Earth. This afterlife for all won converts who
also felt weary of a place in the afterlife. Another contrast was between God
and Norse gods. Christianity preached God as the almighty, invincible, and the
judge at the end of the world. As for the Vikings, among the main tenants of
their religion was the knowledge of Ragnarok, the death of the gods. This
difference to whom they believed also allowed many Vikings to abandon their
mortal gods for an immortal and more powerful God. Although Christianity rose,
much to the credit to the sponsorship of Kings, some resisted and maintained
the old religion. Nevertheless by the end of the 12th century, all
of Scandinavia had been Christianized.
Christianity,
with its Ten Commandments stating not to steal and kill, led the Vikings to
mellow down. Generations of Vikings who grew up with Christianity started to
abandon raiding and pirating, following the teachings of Christianity for mercy
and compassion. Nonetheless, many Vikings remained the most terrifying and
feared warrior in Europe.
Harald Hardrada
Battle of Stamford Bridge from The Life of King Edward the Confessor |
Ironically,
however, Harold Godwinson followed Harald as a fallen King in the hands of Duke
William of Normandy, whose ancestors were Vikings. Harald’s death marked the
end of the Viking Era, but their legacy lived on as Vikings themselves became
Europeans and shaped the history of that continent and of the world.
Summing Up
The Vikings gave another color to Medieval Europe. They came up hampering Europe's recovery of their civilization from the fall of Rome, thus earned a reputation as ruthless barbarians.
But they were not outright barbarians. Their ferocity came in battle. They had a culture shown by the richness of their crafts, literature, and religion. They knew to govern themselves through community institutions like the Thing. They made themselves into master shipbuilders and explorers.
Their ingenuity of their longship led to their success as raiders, pirates, and explorers. Through the fear towards them, they acquired riches and lands, some of which grew to become influential powerhouses of Europe.
For example, the Duchy of Normandy that conquered Europe and Southern Italy descended from Vikings. Russia itself traced its roots to the Rus who were Vikings.
in the end, the Vikings adapted the ways of their Western European victims, being open to their institution, culture, and most importantly, their religion, which led to their evolution from Vikings to modern Norwegian, Danes, and Swedes. They did not walked into the dusk as a ruined people, but rather these people that captured the imaginations of so many even to this lived on as a part of European society.
See also:
Who were the Vikings? (Part 1)
Who were the Vikings? (Part 2)
Bibliography:
Summing Up
The Vikings gave another color to Medieval Europe. They came up hampering Europe's recovery of their civilization from the fall of Rome, thus earned a reputation as ruthless barbarians.
But they were not outright barbarians. Their ferocity came in battle. They had a culture shown by the richness of their crafts, literature, and religion. They knew to govern themselves through community institutions like the Thing. They made themselves into master shipbuilders and explorers.
Their ingenuity of their longship led to their success as raiders, pirates, and explorers. Through the fear towards them, they acquired riches and lands, some of which grew to become influential powerhouses of Europe.
For example, the Duchy of Normandy that conquered Europe and Southern Italy descended from Vikings. Russia itself traced its roots to the Rus who were Vikings.
in the end, the Vikings adapted the ways of their Western European victims, being open to their institution, culture, and most importantly, their religion, which led to their evolution from Vikings to modern Norwegian, Danes, and Swedes. They did not walked into the dusk as a ruined people, but rather these people that captured the imaginations of so many even to this lived on as a part of European society.
See also:
Who were the Vikings? (Part 1)
Who were the Vikings? (Part 2)
Bibliography:
Backman, Clifford. The Worlds of Medieval Europe. New York, New York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
"VIkings." In Encyclopedia of European Peoples. Edited by Carl Waldman et. al. New York, New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2006.
"Vikings." In Encyclopedia of World History. Edited by Marsha Ackermann et. al. New York, New York: Facts On File, Inc., 2008.
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