Gutland / Gotland, Uncategorized

CLAN CARRUTHERS – FIRST CHURCHES OF GOTLAND

CLAN CARRUTHERS INT SOCIETY CCIS

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First Churches of Gotland

 

 

The upper Christian social group did apparently still not have suffcient means to self-enforce that a Gotlandic Church is accepted. However, there are Byzantine-Christian motives in the tomb and from this period such as necklaces and painted eggs of clay found in graves on Gotland, on Helgö and on Björkö from the second half of the 800s. The first Gotlander, who built a Christian church on Gotland was, according to ‘Guta Saga’, Botair from Akebäck. But the time was not yet ripe and the Gutna Althingi had it burnt.
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The Church that stands in Akeback now
The place where the church had been built was thus named Kulstäde,i.e. the charcoal place. Akebäck, where the first church on Gotland is said to have been located, is in Dede Thing. It is one of the most important Things on Gotland.
Gotland Roma 03.jpg
Within its borders lies not only Visby, which apparently is the Thing’s original harbour, but also Roma, which is an important central place in the middle of Gotland and the place for the Gutna Althingi.
Through Dede Thing goes the old main road from Roma over Akebäck and Träkumla straight to Visby. The antiquity of the road is confirmed by the chain of Iron Age tombs lining the road between Träkumlaand Visby.
“Some time later, it was sacrifice in Visby. There he built a second church. What is depicted in this section is not a local incident linked to Visby, but an event of decisive importance in the Gotlandic history, namely the last final battle for and against Christianity. On the Christian side is Botair of Akebäck, one of the leaders in Dede Thing, who against the Gutna Althingi defends his newly built church in Vi. He may thereby be supported by his father in law Likkair, who might have been ‘landsdomare’ i.e. leader of the Gutna Althingi,as it is said about him: ‘He ruled most at that time’.
Sankt Olofs kyrka i Gamla hamn.JPG
The ruins of the small church or chapel traditionally called the Church of Saint Olaf are quite small, the remains of the wall not reaching higher than c. 0.6 metres (2.0 ft). Adjacent to the church ruins lie the remains of a cemetery. 
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He had most to say on Gotland. Perhaps he pointed out that the church stood in a holy place – it was in Vi – where violence was not allowed to be committed. We know that several religions were allowed on Gotland. This meant that the church could remain.“Some time after that, his father-in-law Likkair Snielli had himself baptised, together with his wife,his children, and all his household, and he built a church on his farm, in the place now called Stenkyrka.
Hamlingbo kyrka.JPG
It was the first church on the island up in the northern most third. After the Gotlanders saw the customs of Christian people, they then obeyed God’s command and the teaching of priests. Then they received Christianity generally, of their own free will, without duress. No one forced them into  Christianity. After the general acceptance of Christianity, a church was built in Atlingbo. It was the first in the middle third.
 Then a third was built in Fardhemin the southernmost third. From those, church

es spread everywhere in Gotland, since men built themselves churches for greater convenience.Both the events described by the final decision, that the Church would remain, are apparently linked to one time and one place, namely Visby. If we dare connect it to the Patriarc Photius circular letter of 867, the Kulstäde incident should have taken place in the 870s, and the church in Vi built in 897, as

ow sets the founding of Visby to that year.
( Portal from the original church)
St Per och St Hans.JPGThe decision can thus be compared with the later Icelandic Althing decision of the year 1000, when Christianity was offcially introduced in Iceland. The seafaring Arab al-Tartûschî visited Hedeby, Visby, about the year 973 and says that there were a few Christians and a small church. He should have recognized this for he came nearest from Christian countries. Didal-Tartûschî , Botair’s church?
Ruins of St Pers and St Hans which was the name given to Botair Church.
Solberga kloster.JPG
Solberga Abbey  was a Cistercian nunnery, founded circa 1246. It was the only nunnery on Gotland. It remains unclear when the nuns abandoned the convent, but they did so at latest at the time of the Reformation. Nearby a medieval cross marks the spot of the Battle of Visby, fought in 1361
 What al-Tartûschîmeans by big city seems to indicate that he calls a monastery, Fulda, in the Frankish country, for a large city. Fulda consisted of several houses and was walled, fenced. He describes Hedeby as a large but poor city in the world ocean’s outer edge. He took particular note of the good supply of drinking water, the women’s free status and that a number of the inhabitants were Christian.
One of the reasons why Visby grew was the good supply of drinking water. Some researchers have presumed it to be Schleswig. However, Ansgar had already in 849 got permission to build a church in Sliaswic. It is more logical that it is Hejdeby on Gotland. Hejdeby stretches to Visby and no one knows the name of the place for the sacrifcial place (Vi)in the Viking Age.At the outermost edge of the world ocean’ fits better in with the place Vi, Visby, than with Slie storp,the name of the place in Frankish royal annals from the year 804, founded latest in 770 CE. Sliestorp-Schleswig-Sliaswic is located inland and notated the extreme edge of the ocean, while Visby may well seem to. 

Cemetery finds

 

On Gotland is a find category, called cemetery finds. Since the 1800s, on a wide range of Gotland’s more than 90 rural cemeteries, the grave digging and excavation for lightning conductors, etc. have come across skeletons of corpses. These have been buried with full sets of costume buckles and other jewelry, combs, knives, keys, etc., all in late Viking Age forms. This find category has puzzled the scientific researchers. However the cemetery finds on Gotland seem to be Christian, as evidenced by the fact that one can observe a strict separation of the graves of women north of the church, and the men in the south. This can not be done until there has been a church building.Similar tombs are found on Björkö, usually locally separated from the usual non-Christian graves.

 

List of church ruins on Gotland

There are in total nineteen known ruined churches on the Swedish island of Gotland, in the Baltic Sea twelve of which lie in Visby, the island’s main town. Of these, ten lie within the medieval city walls. Three additional church ruins in Visby are known through written sources, but today completely vanished.

Gotland began to gradually abandon Norse religion and adopt Christianity during the 11th century. While the earliest churches were wooden, construction of stone churches began during the 12th century. The church building period was fairly short; in the countryside stone churches were erected between the early 12th and mid-14th centuries, while in Visby the last churches were inaugurated during the 15th century.

Some of these churches have since fallen into ruin. Of the 94 medieval parish churches in the countryside, 91 are still in use. Three were abandoned following the Reformation, when parishes were merged, and some churches became superfluous. There are in addition three chapel ruins, or ruins of small churches, in the countryside. There are also the ruins of two Cistercian abbeys, one in the countryside and one just outside the city wall of Visby.

Although the exact number of churches that existed in Visby during the Middle Ages is unknown, there were certainly more than in any other Swedish city, and at least twelve within the city walls. Visby grew to become an important trading port during the Middle Ages, and most of the churches in the city were built during the 12th and 13th centuries.The churches were not, as in the countryside, only parish churches. Some belonged to abbeys, alms houses or served groups of traders of a specific nationality, such as the Russian Church or present-day Visby Cathedral, which was originally a church used by German traders.

Following the Black Death, the invasion of Gotland by Valdemar IV of Denmark and the Battle of Visby in 1361, and a general decrease in trade, Gotland entered a period of decline. From about 1361, building activity therefore dropped. The inauguration of Sankta Karin in 1412 marks the end of church building activity in Visby. When troops from Lübeck pillaged the city in 1525, and probably damaged several of the churches, the social and economic rationale for sustaining them had vanished. With the advent of the Reformation soon afterwards, the religious rationale to sustain the upkeep of the many churches also permanently disappeared. All monasteries were abolished and all churches within the city walls except one (present-day Visby Cathedral) were abandoned and left to decay. During the following centuries, some church ruins were used as quarries. In 1805 the church ruins were protected by law and in 1863 the Swedish state for the first time allocated money for their conservation.

Gunfiauns kapell (Ardre ödekyrka) - kmb.16001000151626.jpgArdre Church Ruin, also known as the chapel of Gunfjaun, was built during the 14th century in the medieval marketplace. According to tradition, the church was built in memory of Gunfjaun, the son of a local chieftain named Hafder. It is doubtful whether the church building ever was completed

 

 

Bara odekyrka Gotland Sverige (15).jpgBara Church Ruin seems to have been abandoned already in the 16th century. In 1588 the local population demanded that it should be re-opened and repaired. The parish was however merged with that of Hörsne Church and Bara Church left to decay. The church was built in the 13th century and shares some characteristics with Anga Church.

 

 

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Ellinghem Church Ruin consists of the remains of a 13th-century church. The medieval altar has been preserved in place, and in 1923–24 the remains of the baptismal font were found during an archaeological excavation of the church. It is not known when the church was abandoned, but this probably happened at the beginning of the 17th century.

 

 

Ganns ödekyrka 10.jpgGann Church Ruin is a well-preserved ruin of a church probably abandoned during the 16th century. The choir and nave of the ruined church date from the middle of the 13th century, while the tower was added slightly later (late 13th century). The remains were renovated in 1924.

 

 

Helgeands ruin 2012-09-23 11-29-57.jpgThe ruins of the church dedicated to the Holy Spirit are one of the most unusual of the church ruins in Visby. They consists of an octagonal two-storeyed nave and a protruding choir. The church was erected during the 13th century. According to one theory, the church was built for Bishop Albert of Riga, who is known to have been on Gotland in the early 13th century to gather crusaders and missionaries to go with him to Livonia. The church became the almshouse of Visby in 1532, but by the early 17th century was apparently in a ruinous state and used as a barn.

 

Detail from map of Visby.jpgNo visible remains exist above ground of the so-called Russian Church. Archaeological excavations carried out in 1971 revealed the foundations of a small church under the floor of a house on Södra kyrkogatan street. It may have been one of possibly two churches for Russian traders in Visby during the Middle Ages

 

 

Sankta Karin Visby Gotland Sverige (6).jpgThe church of Saint Catherine was the church of a Franciscan convent. The convent was founded in 1233 and a first construction period took place c. 1235–1250. During the early 14th century reconstruction work on the church began, and was not finished until 1412, when the church was re-inaugurated. The abbey was disbanded during the 1520s, and the buildings were for a short while used as an almshouse before being completely abandoned.

 

Sankt Clemens Visby Gotland Sverige (4).jpgThe church dedicated to Saint Clement was probably erected during the middle of the 13th century, but its history remains opaque. It was probably preceded by a smaller, 12th-century church. In its present state, it is still considered a typical representative of 13th-century Visby churches

 

 

Ruine St.Drotten 2.jpgThe church was dedicated to the Holy Trinity but called Drotten after an old Norse word meaning Lord or King, i.e. referring to God. It is similar to Sankt Clemens but smaller and probably older. It seems to have been constructed mainly during the 13th and 14th centuries

 

 

Ruined church (3875572734).jpgThe church of Saint Nicholas was the abbey church of a Dominican abbey, founded before 1230. Its most famous prior was Petrus de Dacia. The church is possibly older than the abbey; the monks may have acquired an already existing church, or one under construction. Enlargement and reconstruction works were carried out until the late 14th century. The church and abbey were probably destroyed by troops from Lübeck in 1525

 

 

Sta Gertrud Visby.JPG

This small church or chapel was dedicated to Saint Gertrude of Nivelles. It is the smallest of the former churches in Visby. An excavation carried out in 1935 determined that it dates from the second half of the 15th century.

 

 

 

S-t Görans ruin 2012-09-23 11-14-35.jpgThe church was dedicated to Saint George and lies about 300 metres (980 ft) outside the city walls. It was originally tied to an almshouse for lepers nearby. The church is lacking in decorative elements and has therefore been difficult to date.   The choir and nave probably date from different periods. The choir is the oldest, perhaps from the late 12th or early 13th century, and the nave may date from the 13th century. The almshouse was shut down in 1542, but the cemetery continued to be used occasionally, e.g. during an outbreak of plague in 1711–12 and following an outbreak of cholera in the 1850s.

 

St Lars kyrkoruin.JPGThe patron saint of the church was Saint Lawrence. Construction of the church began during the second quarter of the 13th century. It was built by local stonemasons but in an unusual, cross-shaped form. Inspiration for this form probably came from Byzantine architecture and may have reached Gotland following the siege of Constantinople in 1204.

 

St Olofs kyrka.jpg

 

Three walls of a medieval chapel dedicated to Saint Olaf have been incorporated into a 19th-century barn. North east of the church a memorial cross was erected in 1959

 

 

Sankt Olofs kyrkoruin, Botaniska Trädgården, Visby.jpg

Very little remains of the church once dedicated to Saint Olaf in Visby.   It was probably a basilica built at the beginning of the 13th century

 

 

 

 

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CLAN CARRUTHERS – 13 HORRIFYING GOTLAND CHRISTMAS TROLLS – THE YULE LADS

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13 Horrifying Gotland Christmas Trolls

yule lads

They leave the nice children gifts and the naughty children ROTTING POTATOES.

Stekkjarstaur (Sheep Cote Clod)

Sheep Cote Clod gets his name because of his affinity for harassing sheep. He’s easily identified by his stiff peg legs.

Fear Level: Standing over a subway grate.

Giljagaur (Gully Gawk)

Giljagaur (Gully Gawk) | Community Post: The 13 Horrifying Christmas Trolls Of Iceland

Gully Gawk is famous for hiding in gullies and waiting for his chance to sneak into the cowshed to steal milk.

Fear Level: Running into an ex.

Stúfur (Stubby)

Icelandic Santa Claus - the 13 Yule Lads - Iceland with a View

He’s called Stubby because he’s really short. But what he’s really known for is stealing pans to eat the crust out of them.

Fear Level: Watching Pee-Wee Herman’s Big Adventure.

Þvörusleikir (Spoon Licker)

Guess who might be passing by your window tonight? ⠀ Þvörusleikir (Spoon-Licker) is on his way to town and estimated time of arrival is unknown! 😛⠀ ⠀ He steals "Þvörur" or some sorts of wooden spoons to lick. Poor guy is extremely thin due to malnutrition. So, if you want to be nice, you should just give him a wooden spoon if you have one with your open heart 💓⠀ ⠀ It's Christmas after all right? 🎄Image via Brian Pilkinton from the book The Yule Lads •⠀ •⠀ •⠀ •⠀ #Iceland #Icelandic #inspiredby

This sticky-fingered troll steals wooden spoons for the purpose of licking them. He’s easily identified by his malnourished appearance.

Fear Level: Waking up right before your alarm goes off.

Pottaskefill (Pot Licker)

<img class="aligncenter" src="https://i.pinimg.com/236x/60/b4/9d/60b49d9989099a36e73e2f046caadc9c.jpg&quot; alt="They leave the nice children gifts and the naughty children ROTTING POTATOES.” width=”574″ height=”435″>

Not to be confused with Spoon Licker, Pot Licker steals leftovers out of pots. Also not to be confused with Stubby, who steals PANS.

Fear Level: Jaywalking.

Askasleikir (Bowl Licker)

Askasleikir (Bowl Licker) | Community Post: The 13 Horrifying Christmas Trolls Of Iceland

Not to be confused with Spoon Licker or Pot Licker, Bowl Licker hides under your bed until you put your bowl down. Then he steals it and then, presumably, licks it.

Fear Level: Waiting for test results.

Hurðaskellir (Door Slammer)

7. Hurðaskellir - door slammer

He slams doors. Especially at night.

Fear Level: Doors slamming. Especially at night.

Skyrgámur (Skyr Gobbler)

<img class="aligncenter" src="https://i.pinimg.com/236x/d5/cf/d2/d5cfd27b2b4d70b40840f3d5e2489b67.jpg&quot; alt="They leave the nice children gifts and the naughty children ROTTING POTATOES.” width=”526″ height=”414″>

Skyr is a traditional Icelandic dairy product similar to strained yogurt.

Fear Level: Broken escalators.

Bjúgnakrækir (Sausage Swiper)

Bjúgnakrækir (Sausage Swiper) | Community Post: The 13 Horrifying Christmas Trolls Of Iceland

Sausage Swiper hides in the rafters and pilfers pork links while they’re smoking.

Fear Level: Standing under scaffolding.

Gluggagægir (Window Peeper)

Gluggagægir (Window Peeper)

This troll looks through your windows in search of things to steal. Pretty sure this is a felony.

Fear Level: Driving with the doors unlocked.

Gáttaþefur (Doorway Sniffer)

Gáttaþefur (Doorway Sniffer)

Easily identified by his abnormally large nose, Doorway Sniffer uses his acute sense of smell to find Laufabrauo, a traditional Icelandic bread.

Fear Level: Sniff-testing the milk.

Ketkrókur (Meat Hook)

#12. Iceland Christmas troll arrives Dec. 23 - Meat Hook - he steals meat with his hook.

Meat Hook uses a hook to steal meat. Pretty self explanatory.

Fear Level: Standing really close to a large animal.

Kertasníkir (Candle Stealer)

Kertasníkir (Candle Stealer)

This troll follows children so he can steal their candles and then eat them. Pretty sure this is also a felony.

Fear Level: Clowns.

Have a Very Happy Holiday and Be Good…

Or Gryla, the mother of all the Yule Lads, will abduct you!  And EAT YOU!

YOU CAN READ ABOUT GRYLA AT :  https://clancarruthers.home.blog/2018/12/15/clan-carruthers-gryla-the-gruesome-christmas-witch/

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carruthersclan1@gmail.com

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Gutland / Gotland, The History of Gutland, The Viking Age, Uncategorized

Hoards of the Vikings From Gutland

Clan Carruthers Int Society CCIS                                        Promptus et Fidelis

 

Hoards of the Vikings

 

There were various waves of Aachen-men or Ashmen that carried the Carruthers DNA markers that came from Gutland to Scotland, one wave in 450 AD and one 900 AD.  This article gives you a good idea of what their life was like based on archaeological findings.

Evidence of trade, diplomacy, and vast wealth on an unassuming island in the Baltic Sea.

The accepted image of the Vikings as fearsome marauders who struck terror in the hearts of their innocent victims has endured for more than 1,000 years. Historians’ accounts of the first major Viking attack, in 793, on a monastery on Lindisfarne off the northeast coast of England, have informed the Viking story. “The church of St. Cuthbert is spattered with the blood of the priests of God,” wrote the Anglo-Saxon scholar Alcuin of York, “stripped of all its furnishings, exposed to the plundering of pagans….Who is not afraid at this?” The Vikings are known to have gone on to launch a series of daring raids elsewhere in England, Ireland, and Scotland. They made inroads into France, Spain, and Portugal. They colonized Iceland and Greenland, and even crossed the Atlantic, establishing a settlement in the northern reaches of Newfoundland.

 

But these were primarily the exploits of Vikings from Norway and Denmark. Less well known are the Vikings of Sweden. Now, the archaeological site of Fröjel on Gotland, a large island in the Baltic Sea around 50 miles east of the Swedish mainland, is helping advance a more nuanced understanding of their activities. While they, too, embarked on ambitious journeys, they came into contact with a very different set of cultures—largely those of Eastern Europe and the Arab world. In addition, these Vikings combined a knack for trading, business, and diplomacy with a willingness to use their own brand of violence to amass great wealth and protect their autonomy.

 

Gotland Viking Frojel Site

(Daniel Weiss)

At Fröjel, a Viking Age site on the west coast of Gotland, archaeologists search for evidence of a workshop that included a silver-smelting operation.

Gotland today is part of Sweden, but during the Viking Age, roughly 800 to 1150, it was independently ruled. The accumulation of riches on the island from that time is exceptional. More than 700 silver hoards have been found there, and they include around 180,000 coins. By comparison, only 80,000 coins have been found in hoards on all of mainland Sweden, which is more than 100 times as large and had 10 times the population at the time. Just how an island that seemed largely given over to farming and had little in the way of natural resources, aside from sheep and limestone, built up such wealth has been puzzling. Excavations led by archaeologist Dan Carlsson, who runs an annual field school on the island through his cultural heritage management company, Arendus, are beginning to provide some answers.

 

Traces of around 60 Viking Age coastal settlements have been found on Gotland, says Carlsson. Most were small fishing hamlets with jetties apportioned among nearby farms. Fröjel, which was active from around 600 to 1150, was one of about 10 settlements that grew into small towns, and Carlsson believes that it became a key player in a far-reaching trade network. “Gotlanders were middlemen,” he says, “and they benefited greatly from the exchange of goods from the West to the East, and the other way around.”

 

Hoards of the Vikings

Gotland Viking Brooch

Situated between the Swedish mainland and the Baltic states, Gotland was a natural stopping-off point for trading voyages, and Carlsson’s excavations at Fröjel have turned up an abundance of materials that came from afar: antler from mainland Sweden, glass from Italy, amber from Poland or Lithuania, rock crystal from the Caucasus, carnelian from the East, and even a clay egg from the Kiev area thought to symbolize the resurrection of Jesus Christ. And then, of course, there are the coins. Tens of thousands of the silver coins found in hoards on the island came from the Arab world.

 

Many Gotlanders themselves plied these trade routes. They would sail east to the shores of Eastern Europe and make their way down the great rivers of western Russia, trading and raiding along the way at least as far south as Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire, via the Black Sea. Some reports suggest that they also crossed the Caspian Sea and traveled all the way to Baghdad, then the capital of the Abbasid Caliphate.

 

Entire Viking families are believed to have made their way east. “In the beginning, we thought it was just for trading,” says Carlsson, “but now we see there was a kind of settlement. You find Viking cemeteries far away from the main rivers, in the uplands.” Other evidence of Scandinavian presence in the region is plentiful. As early as the seventh century, there was a Gotlandic settlement at Grobina in Latvia, just inland from the point on the coast closest to Gotland. Large numbers of Scandinavian artifacts have been excavated in northwest Russia, including coin hoards, brooches, and other women’s bronze jewelry. The Rus, the people that gave Russia its name, were made up in part of these Viking transplants. The term’s origins are unclear, but it may have been derived from the Old Norse for “a crew of oarsmen” or a Greek word for “blondes.”

 

Gotland Viking Comb

(Courtesy Dan Carlsson)

Combs such as this one, excavated at Fröjel, were made locally of antler imported from mainland Sweden.

To investigate the links between the Gotland Vikings and the East, Carlsson turned his attention to museum collections and archaeological sites in northwest Russia. “It is fascinating how many artifacts you find in every small museum,” he says. “If they have a museum, they probably have Scandinavian artifacts.” For example, at the museum in Staraya Ladoga, east of St. Petersburg, Carlsson found a large number of Scandinavian items, oval brooches from mainland Sweden, combs, beads, pendants, and objects with runic inscriptions, and even three brooches in the Gotlandic style dating to the seventh and eighth centuries. Scandinavians were initially drawn to the area to obtain furs from local Finns, particularly miniver, the highly desirable white winter coat of the stoat, which they would then trade in Western Europe. As time went on, Staraya Ladoga served as a launching point for Viking forays to the Black and Caspian Seas.

Gotland Viking Spillings Hoard

These journeys entailed a good deal of risk. The route south from Kiev toward Constantinople along the Dnieper River was particularly hazardous. A mid-tenth-century document by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus tells of Vikings traveling this stretch each year after the spring thaw, which required portaging around a series of dangerous rapids and fending off attacks by local bandits known as the Pechenegs. The name of one of these rapids—Aifur, meaning “ever-noisy” or “impassable”—appears on a runestone on Gotland dedicated to the memory of a man named Hrafn who died there.

People from the East may have traveled back to Gotland with the Vikings as well. At Fröjel, Carlsson has uncovered two Viking Age cemeteries, one dating from roughly 600 to 900, and the other from 900 to 1000. In all, Carlsson has excavated around 60 burials there, and isotopic analysis has shown that some 15 percent of the people whose graves have been excavated—all buried in the earlier cemetery—came from elsewhere, possibly the East.

 

In their voyages, the Vikings of Gotland are thought to have traded a broad range of goods such as furs, beeswax, honey, cloth, salt, and iron, which they obtained through a combination of trade and violent theft. This activity, though, doesn’t entirely account for the wealth that archaeologists have uncovered. In recent years, Carlsson and other experts have begun to suspect that a significant portion of their trade may have consisted of a commodity that has left little trace in the archaeological record: slaves. “We still have some problems in explaining what made this island so rich,” says Carlsson. “We know from written Arabic sources that the Rus—the Scandinavians in Russia—were transporting slaves. We just don’t know how big their trading in slaves was.”

 

According to an early tenth-century account by Ibn Rusta, a Persian geographer, the Rus were nomadic raiders who would set upon Slavic people in their boats and take them captive. They would then transport them to Khazaria or Bulgar, a Silk Road trading hub on the Volga River, where they were offered for sale along with furs. “They sell them for silver coins, which they set in belts and wear around their waists,” writes Ibn Rusta. Another source, Ibn Fadlan, a representative of the Abbasid Caliph of Baghdad who traveled to Bulgar in 921, reports seeing the Rus disembark from their boats with slave girls and sable skins for sale. The Rus warriors, according to his account, would pray to their gods: “I would like you to do me the favor of sending me a merchant who has large quantities of dinars and dirhams [Arab coins] and who will buy everything that I want and not argue with me over my price.” Whenever one of these warriors accumulated 10,000 coins, Ibn Fadlan says, he would melt them down into a neck ring for his wife.

 

It is unclear whether the Vikings transported Slavic slaves back to Gotland, but the practice of slavery appears to have been well established there. The Guta Lag, a compendium of Gotlandic law thought to have been written down in 1220 includes rules regarding purchasing slaves, or thralls. “The law says that if you buy a man, try him for six days, and if you are not satisfied, bring him back,” says Carlsson. “It sounds like buying an ox or a cow.” Burials belonging to people who came from places other than Gotland are generally situated on the periphery of the graveyards with fewer grave goods, suggesting that they may have occupied a secondary tier of society—perhaps as slaves.

Gotland Arab Coin VerticalFor the Gotland Vikings, accumulation of wealth in the form of silver coins was clearly a priority, but they weren’t interested in just any coins. They were unusually sensitive to the quality of imported silver and appear to have taken steps to gauge its purity. Until the mid-tenth century, almost all the coins found on Gotland came from the Arab world and were around 95 percent pure. According to Stockholm University numismatist Kenneth Jonsson, beginning around 955, these Arab coins were increasingly cut with copper, probably due to reduced silver production. Gotlanders stopped importing them. Near the end of the tenth century, when silver mining in Germany took off, Gotlanders began to trade and import high-quality German coins. Around 1055, coins from Frisia in northern Germany became debased, and Gotlanders halted imports of all German coins. At this juncture, ingots from the East became the island’s primary source of silver.

 

Interestingly, when a silver source from the Arab or German world slipped in quality, Jonsson points out, and the Gotlanders rapidly cut off the debased supplies, their contemporaries on mainland Sweden and in areas of Eastern Europe did not. “Word must have spread around the island, saying, ‘Don’t use these German coins anymore!’” says Jonsson. To test imported silver, Gotlanders would shave a bit of the metal with a knife so its contents could be assessed based on color and consistency, says Ny Björn Gustafsson of the Swedish National Heritage Board. He notes that many imported silver items found on Gotland were “pecked” in this way, and that Gotlanders may also have tested imported coins by bending them. By contrast, silver items thought to have been made on Gotland—including heavy arm rings with a zigzag pattern pressed into them—were not generally pecked or otherwise tested. “My interpretation,” Gustafsson says, “is that this jewelry acted as a traditional form of currency and was assumed to contain pure silver.”

 

These arm rings are among the most commonly found items in Gotland’s hoards, along with coins, and experts had long assumed they were made on the island, but no evidence of their manufacture had been found until Carlsson’s team uncovered a workshop area at Fröjel. “We found the artifacts exactly where they had been dropped,” says Carlsson. There are precious stones: amber, carnelian, garnet. There are half-finished beads, cracked during drilling and discarded. There is elk antler for crafting combs. There is also a large lump of iron, as well as rivets for use in boats, coffins, and storage chests. And, providing evidence of a smelting operation, there are drops of silver.

 

Researchers found that the metalworkers of Fröjel used an apparatus called a cupellation hearth to transform a suspect source of imported silver, such as coins or ingots, into jewelry or decorated weapons with precisely calibrated silver content. They would melt the silver source with lead and blow air over the molten mélange with a bellows, causing the lead and other impurities to oxidize, separate from the silver, and attach to the hearth lining. The resulting pure silver would then be combined with other metals to produce a desired alloy. The cupellation technique is known from classical times, says Gustafsson, but so far this is the first and only time such a hearth has been found on Gotland. Only one other intact example from the Viking Age has been found in Sweden, at the mainland settlement of Sigtuna.

 

Gotland Viking Imported Silver

(Photo by: Ny Björn Gustafsson/The Swedish History Museum)

This imported silver piece found on Gotland shows signs of “pecking,” where a bit of metal was gouged out to test its purity.

Traces of lead and other impurities were found embedded in pieces of the cupellation hearth among the material excavated from the workshop area at Fröjel. The hearth has been radiocarbon dated to around 1100. Also unearthed from the workshop area were fragments of molds imprinted with the zigzag patterns found on Gotlandic silver arm rings, establishing that they were, in fact, made on the island—and that the workshop was the site of the full chain of production, from metal refinement to casting. “We have these silver arm rings in many hoards all over Gotland,” says Carlsson. “But we never before saw exactly where they were making them.”

 

During the Viking Age, Gotland seems to have been a more egalitarian society than mainland Sweden, which had a structure of nobles led by a king dating from at least the late tenth century. On Gotland, by contrast, farmers and merchants appear to have formed the upper class and, while some were more prosperous than others, they shared in governance through a series of local assemblies called things, which were overseen by a central authority called the Althing. According to the Guta Saga, the saga of the Gotlanders, which was written down around 1220, an emissary from Gotland forged a peace treaty with the Swedish king, ending a period of strife with the mainland Swedes. The treaty, believed to have been established in the eleventh century, required Gotland to pay an annual tax in exchange for continued independence, protection, and freedom to travel and trade.

Stratification did increase on the island as time passed, though. Archaeologists have found that, throughout the ninth and tenth centuries, silver hoards were distributed throughout Gotland, suggesting that wealth was more or less uniformly shared among the island’s farmers. But around 1050, this pattern shifted. “In the late eleventh century, you start to have fewer hoards overall, but, instead, there are some really massive hoards, usually found along the coast, containing many, many thousands of coins,” says Jonsson. This suggests that trading was increasingly controlled by a small number of coastal merchants.

 

This stratification accelerated near the end of the Viking Age, around 1140, when Gotland began to mint its own coins, becoming the first authority in the eastern Baltic region to do so. “Gotlandic coins were used on mainland Sweden and in the Baltic countries,” says Majvor Östergren, an archaeologist who has studied the island’s silver hoards. Whereas Gotlanders had valued foreign coins based on their weight alone, these coins, though hastily hammered out into an irregular shape, had a generally accepted value. More than eight million of these early Gotlandic coins are estimated to have been minted between 1140 and 1220, and more than 22,000 have been found, including 11,000 on Gotland alone.

 

Gotland Minted Coin Horizontal

(Nanouschka Myrberg Burström)

An example of one of the earliest silver coins minted on Gotland (obverse, left; reverse, right) dates from around 1140.

 

Gotland is thought to have begun its coinage operation to take advantage of new trading opportunities made possible by strife among feuding groups on mainland Sweden and in western Russia. This allowed Gotland to make direct trading agreements with the Novgorod area of Russia and with powers to the island’s southwest, including Denmark, Frisia, and northern Germany. Gotland’s new coins helped facilitate trade between its Eastern and Western trading partners, and brought added profits to the island’s elite through tolls, fees, and taxes levied on visiting traders. In order to maintain control over trade on the island, it was limited to a single harbor, Visby, which remains the island’s largest town. As a result, the rest of Gotland’s trading harbors, including Fröjel, declined in importance around 1150.

 

Gotland remained a wealthy island in the medieval period that followed the Viking Age, but, says Carlsson, “Gotlanders stopped putting their silver in the ground. Instead, they built more than 90 stone churches during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries.” Although many archaeologists believe that the Gotland Vikings stashed their wealth in hoards for safekeeping, Carlsson thinks that, just as did the churches that were built later, they served a devotional purpose. In many cases, he argues, hoards do not appear to have been buried in houses but rather atop graves, roads, or borderlands. Indeed, some were barely buried at all because, he argues, others in the community knew not to touch them. “These hoards were not meant to be taken up,” he says, “because they were meant as a sort of sacrifice to the gods, to ensure a good harvest, good fortune, or a safer life.” In light of the scale, sophistication, and success of the Gotland Vikings’ activities, these ritual depositions may have seemed to them a small price to pay.

 

Daniel Weiss

Preserving Our Past, Recording Our Present, Informing Our Future

Ancient and Honorable Clan Carruthers Int Society CCIS  LLc

carruthersclan1@gmail.com

 

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Gutland / Gotland, The History of Gutland, The Viking Age, Uncategorized

CLAN CARRUTHERS – ANCIENT HISTORY OF GUTLANDERS/ CARRUTHERS

CLAN CARRUTHERS INT SOCIETY CCIS

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Ancient History of Gutlanders / Carruthers

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There is strong evidence that one group of Swedish/ Gutland predecessors were migratory Thracians, an aggressive refugee “boat-people” who came from the ancient city of Troy.  Located in northwest Asia Minor (present-day northwest Turkey), the ruins of Troy were discovered in 1870.  In the period beginning about 2500 BC, Troy was populated by an “invasion of peoples on the sea” according to the Egyptians.  These people were called Thracians by the Greeks, and were early users of ships, iron weapons and horses.  Troy (also called Troi, Toas or Ilium) was known as a center of ancient civilizations.  Its inhabitants became known as Trojans (also Trajans/Thracians, later called Dardanoi by Homer, Phrygians or Anatolians by others), and their language was Thracian or Thraco-Illyrian.  Evidence shows the city of Troy endured years of war, specifically with Greek and Egyptian armies.  The famous Trojan War was fought between the Greeks and Trojans with their allies.  Troy was eventually laid in ruins after 10 years of fighting with the Greeks, traditionally dated from around 1194 to 1184 BC, and is historically referred to as the Fall of Troy.  The city was completely devastated, which is verified by the fact that the city was vacant to about 700 BC.

Thousands of Trojans left Troy immediately after the war, beginning about 1184 BC.  Others remained about 30 to 50 years after the war, when an estimated 30,000 Trojans/Thracians suddenly abandoned the city of Troy, as told by Homer (Greek writer/poet, eighth century BC) and various sources (Etruscan, Merovingian, Roman and later Scandinavian).  The stories corroborate the final days of Troy, and describe how, after the Greeks sacked the city, the remaining Trojans eventually emigrated.  Over half of them went up the Danube river and crossed over into Italy, establishing the Etruscan culture (the dominating influence on the development of Rome), and later battled the Romans for regional dominance.  The remaining Trojans, mainly chieftains and warriors, about 12,000 in all with their clans, went north across the Black Sea into the Mare Moetis or “shallow sea” where the Don River ends (Caucasus region in southern Russia), and established a kingdom called Sicambria about 1150 BC.  The Romans would later refer to the inhabitants as Sicambrians.  The locals (nomadic Scythians) named these Trojan conquerors the “Iron people,” or the Aes in their language.  The Aes (also As, Asa, Asas, Asen, Aesar, Aesir, Aesire, Æsir or Asir) soon built their famous fortified city Aesgard or Asgard, described as “Troy in the north.”  Various other sources collaborate this, stating the Trojans landed on the eastern shores with their superior weaponry, and claimed land.  The area became known as Asaland (Land of the Aesir) or Asaheim (Home of the Aesir). 

Some historians suggest that Odin, who was later worshipped as a god by pagan Vikings, was actually a Thracian/Aesir leader who reigned in the Sicambrian kingdom and lived in the city of Asgard in the first century BC.  He appointed chieftains after the pattern of Troy, establishing rulers to administer the laws of the land, and he drew up a code of law like that in Troy and to which the Trojans had been accustomed.  Tradition knows these Aesir warriors as ancient migrants from Troy, formidable fighters who inspired norse mythology and as the ancestors of the Vikings.  They were feared for their warships, as well as their ferocity in battle, and thus quickly dominated the northern trades using the Don river as their main route to the north.

Historians refer to the Aesir people as the Thraco-Cimmerians, since the Trojans were of Thracian ancestry.  The Cimmerians were an ancient people who lived among Thracians, and were eventually absorbed into Thracian culture.  Greek historian Herodotus of Halicarnassus noted about 440 BC that the Thracians were the second most numerous people in the world, outnumbered only by the (East) Indians, and that the Thracian homeland was huge.  Ancient maps describe the region as Thrace or Thracia, present-day southeast Europe and northeast Greece.  Thracian homelands included the Ukrainian steppes and much of the Caucasus region.  According to Flavius Josephus, Jewish & Roman historian in the 1st century AD, the descendants of Noah’s grandson Tiras were called Tirasians.  They were known to the Romans as Thirasians.  The Greeks called them Thracians and later Trajans, the original people of the city of Troas (Troy), whom they feared as marauding pirates.  History attests that they were indeed a most savage race, given over to a perpetual state of “tipsy excess”, as one historian put it.  They are also described as a “ruddy and blue-eyed people.”  World Book Encyclopedia states they were “…savage Indo-Europeans, who liked warfare and looting.”  Russian historian Nicholas L. Chirovsky describes the arrival of the Thracians, and how they soon dominated the lands along the eastern shores of the river Don.  These people were called Aes locally, according to Chirovsky, and later the Aesir (plural).

Evidence that the Aesir (Iron people) were Trojan refugees can be confirmed from local and later Roman historical sources, including the fact that the inner part of the Black Sea was renamed from the Mare Maeotis to the “Iron Sea” or “Sea of Aesov”, in the local tongue.  The name remains today as the Sea of Azov, an inland sea in southern European Russia, connected with the Black Sea.  The Aesir were known for their fighting with iron weapons.  They were feared for their warships, as well as their ferocity in battle, and thus quickly dominated the northern trades, using the Don river as their main route for trading. 

The Aesir people dominated the area around the Sea of Azov for nearly 1000 years, though the surrounding areas to the north and east were known as the lands of the Scythians.  The Aesir fought with the Scythians for regional dominance, but eventually made peace.  They established trade with the Scythians, and even strong cultural ties, becoming united in religion and law.  The Aesir began trading far to the north as well. 

The land far north was first described about 330 BC by the Greek explorer Pytheas of Massalia.  He called the region “Thule,” which was described as the outermost of all countries, probably part of the Norwegian coast, where the summer nights were very short.  Pytheas translated Thule as “the place where the Sun goes to rest”, which comes from the Germanic root word “Dhul-” meaning “to stop in a place, to take a rest.”  Pytheas described the people as barbarians (Germanic/Teutonic tribes) having an agricultural lifestyle, using barns and threshing their grains.  These people had already established trade with the Aesir who later began migrating north around 90 BC from the Caucasus region, during the time of Roman expansion in Europe.  The Germanic/Teutonic tribes first made a name for themselves about 100 BC after aggressively fighting against the Romans.  Not much is known about the Germanic tribes prior to this.  When writing the “Gallic Wars,” Julius Caesar described encounters with those Germanic peoples and distinguishes them from the Celts.  During this time period, many Germanic tribes were migrating out of Scandinavia to Germany and the Baltic region, placing continuous stress on Roman defenses. 

Migrating groups were normally smaller groups of different people or tribes, often following a strong leader.  The “nationality” of the leaders would usually appear as the nationality of the migrating group, until later when the group was separated again.  The migrations could take place over several decades, and often when the Germanic tribes were mentioned in the written sources, the Romans had only met raiding groups occupying warriors or mercenaries operating far away from their people.

Around the same time, about 90 BC, the Aesir began their exodus from the Black Sea/Caucasus region.  Their arrival at the Baltic Sea in Scandinavia has been supported by several scholars and modern archaeological evidence.  As told by Snorri Sturluson (a 13th century Nordic historiographer) and confirmed by other data, the Aesir felt compelled to leave their land to escape Roman invasions by Pompeius, and local tribal wars.  Known as Thracian warrior tribes, the aggressive Indo-European nomadic Aesir came north, moving across Europe, bringing all their weapons and belongings in their boats on the rivers of Europe, in successive stages.  Historians note that Odin, who was a very popular Thracian ruler, led a migration about 70 BC with thousands of followers from the Black Sea region to Scandinavia.  It is also told that another Thracian tribe came along with them, a people called the Vanir (also Vaner ,Vans, Vanargians or Varangians).  Odin’s first established settlement became known as Odense (Odin’s Sanctuary or Odin’s Shrine), inspiring religious pilgrimages to the city through the Middle Ages.  These tribes first settled in present-day Denmark, and then created a power-center in what is now southern Sweden / Gutland.  About 800 years later during the Viking era, Odin, the Aesir and Vanir had become gods, and Asgard/Troy was the home of those gods—the foundation for Viking religion.  The Aesir warrior gods, and the religious deities of Odin (also Odinn, Wodan, Woden, Wotan Vodin) and Thor, were an integral part of the warlike nature of the Vikings, even leading them back down the waterways of Europe to their tribal origins along the Black Sea and Asia Minor. 

Aesir became the Old Norse word for the divine (also, the Old Teutonic word “Ase” was a common word for “god”), and “Asmegir” was the Icelandic term for “god maker”—a human soul on its way to becoming divine in the course of evolution.  The Vanir represented fertility and peace gods.  Not unlike Greeks and Romans, the Scandinavians also deified their ancestors.  The Egyptians adopted the practice of deifying their kings, just as the Babylonians had deified Nimrod.  The same practice of ancestor worship was passed on to the Greeks and Romans and to all the pagan world, until it was subdued by Christianity.

Snorri Sturluson wrote the Prose Edda (Norse history and myths) about 1223 AD, where he made an interesting comparison with the Viking Aesir gods to the people in Asia Minor (Caucasus region), particular to the Trojan royal family .  The Prose Edda is one of the first attempts to devise a rational explanation for mythological and legendary events of the Scandinavians.  Unfortunately, many historians acknowledge only what academia accepts as history, often ignoring material that might be relevant.  For example, Snorri wrote that the Aesir had come from Asia Minor, and he compared the Ragnarok (Norse version of the first doom of the gods and men) with the fall of Troy.  Sturluson noted that Asgard, home of the gods, was also called Troy.  Although Snorri was a Christian, he treated the ancient religion with great respect.  Snorri was writing at the time when all of Scandinavia (including Iceland) had converted to Christianity by 11th century, and he was well aware of classical Greek and Roman mythology.  Stories of Troy had been known from antiquity in many cultures.  The Trojan War was the greatest conflict in Greek mythology, a war that was to influence people in literature and arts for centuries.  Snorri mentioned God and the Creation, Adam and Eve, as well as Noah and the flood.  He also compared a few of the Norse gods to the heroes at the Trojan War. 

The Aesir/Asir were divided into several clans that in successive stages emigrated to their new Scandinavian homeland.  Entering the Baltic Sea, they sailed north to the Scandinavian shores, only to meet stubborn Germanic tribes who had been fighting the Romans.  The prominent Germanic tribes in the region were the Gutar, also known as the GutaGutansGautsGotarne or Goths by Romans.  These Germanic tribes were already known to the Aesir, as trade in the Baltic areas was well established prior to 100 BC.  The immigrating Aesir had many clans and tribes, and one prominent tribe that traveled along with them were the Vanir (the Vanir later became known as the Varangians, and subsequently the Guts, Guta, GutansGautsGotarne or Goths , who settled in what is now present-day Gutland).  They were, the most prominent clan to travel with the Asir , the Eril warriors or the “Erilar,” meaning “wild warriors.”  The Asir sent Erilar (or Irilar) north as seafaring warriors to secure land and establish trade (these warriors were called “Earls” in later Scandinavian society, then became known as JarlarEruls and Erils or Heruls and Heruli by Romans, also Eruloi or Elouroi by Greek historian Dexippos, and Heruler, Erullia and Aerulliae by others).  The clans of Erilar enabled the Asir clans (later called Svi, SviarSvea, Svear or Svioner by Romans) to establish settlements throughout the region, but not without continuous battles with other migrating Germanic tribes.  The Eruls/Heruls eventually made peace with those who ruled the region.  The tribes of Svear, Vanir, and Heruli soon formed their own clans and dominated the Baltic/Scandinavian region.  The Gothic historian Jordanes (or Jordanis), who was a notary of Gothic kings, told about 551 AD that the Erils were from the same stock as the Svear, both taller and fairer than any other peoples of the North.  He called the Svear, “Sve’han.”

The Svear population flourished, and with the Heruls and Goths, formed a powerful military alliance of well-known seafarers.  The Svear and Heruls then gradually returned to their ancestral land, beginning in the 2nd century AD.  Sometimes sailing with the Goths, they terrorized all of the lands and peoples of the Black Sea and parts of the Mediterranean, even the Romans.  They were the pre-Vikings.  Roman annals tell of raids of Goths and Heruli in 239-266 AD in the territory of Dacia (where the Danube river runs into the Black Sea).  Having built a fleet of 500 sailing ships, the Heruls completed their raids in 267-268 AD, and controlled all of the Roman-occupied\ Black Sea and parts of the eastern Mediterranean.  There are several accounts about how the Herul warriors returned to ravage the shores of the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, alone and together with the Goths.  The Romans noted that “the Heruls, a Scandinavian people, together with the Goths, were, from the 3rd century AD, ravaging the Black Sea, Asia Minor and the Mediterranean.”  While the the Romans called the Scandinavian region “Thule” (after Pytheas), the Greeks called it “Scandia” (from ancient times), and others called the area “Scandza.”  The term Scandia comes from the descendants of Ashkenaz (grandson of Noah in the Bible).  Known as the Askaeni, they were the first peoples to migrate to northern Europe, naming the land Ascania after themselves.  Latin writers and Greeks called the land Scandza or Scandia (now Scandinavia).  The peoples in that region would be called Scandians or Scandinavians.  Germanic tribes, such as the Teutons and Goths, are considered the descended tribes of the Askaeni and their first settlements.

The first time Thule (Scandinavia) was mentioned in Roman written documents was in the 1st century (79 AD) by the Roman citizen Plinius senior.  He wrote about an island peninsula in the north populated by “Sviar,” “Sveonerna” or “Svearnas” people, also called “Sveons,” Svianar,””Svetidi or Suetidi” by others.  Later in 98 AD the learned civil servant Cornelius Tacitus wrote about northern Europe.  Tacitus writes in the Latin book Germania about tribes of “Sviones” or “Suiones” (Latin Sviones was derived from Sviar) in Scandinavia, who live off the ocean, sailing in large fleets of boats with a prow at either end, no sail, using paddles, and strong, loyal, well-armed men with spikes in their helmets.  They drove both the Goths and Lapps out of Scandinavia.  Archaeological finds have provided a vivid record of the evolution of their longships from about the 4th century BC.  Tacitus further wrote, “And thereafter, out in the ocean comes Sviones (also “Svionernas” or “Svioner”) people, which are mighty not only in manpower and weaponry but also by its fleets”.  He also mentions that “the land of Svionerna is at the end of the world.”  In the 2nd century (about 120 AD) the first map was created where Scandinavia (Baltic region) could be viewed.  Greek-Egyptian astronomer and geographer Ptolemaios (Ptolemy of Alexandria) created the map, and at the same time wrote a geography where he identified several different people groups, including the “Gotarne,” “Heruls,” “Sviar” and “Finnar” who lived on peninsula islands called “Scandiai.”  During the Roman Iron Age (1-400 AD), evidences are convincing for a large Baltic seafaring culture in what is now Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Estonia.

Many clans of Aesir and Germanic peoples were united by settlements.  For example, the Aesir clan Suevi (also Suebi) settled among Germanic peoples in a region called Swabia (named after themselves), which is now southwest Germany.  Those clans became known as the Alemanni, first mentioned about 213 AD after attacking the Romans.  Called Suevic tribes by historians, they formed an alliance for mutual protection against other Germanic tribes and the Romans, and retained their tribal designation until the late Middle Ages.  They settled as far south as present-day Spain and Portugal.

By the 5th century, the Aesir Heruls were in great demand as soldiers in the Roman Imperial Guards.  The Romans were impressed with the war-like Heruls, and recruited them to fight as mercenaries in the Roman Army.  About 459 AD Bishop Hydatius (Idacius) of the Roman province of Gallaecia (present day Spain and Portugal) wrote that the Heruls were Vikings (from Viking raids on the coast of Spain).  Herul factions were making settlements throughout Europe, fighting and battling everywhere they went.  Their pay in gold coins tell of their Scandinavian history, even battling Attila the Hun.  In the late 5th century, the Heruls formed a state in upper Hungary under the Roman ruler Cæsar Anastasius (491-518 AD).  Later they attacked the Lombards, but were beaten, according to Greek-Roman author Prokopios (born at the end of the 5th century).  He was a lawyer in Constantinople and from the year 527 private secretary to the Byzantine military commander Belisarius on his campaigns against the Ostrogoths.  Prokopios says by the early 6th century (about 505), the remaining Heruls in upper Hungary were forced to leave.  Some of them crossed the Danube into Roman territory, where Anastasius allowed them to settle.  Historians mention that remaining clans of Heruls (Herulians) sailed northwards, back to Thule to reunite with their Svear brethren.  Prokopios noted that there were 13 populous tribes in Thule (the Scandinavian peninsula), each with its own king.  He said, “A populous tribe among them was the Goths, next to where the returning Heruls settled.”  Prokopios also mentions that “the Heruls sent some of their most distinguished men to the island Thule in order to find and if possible bring back a man of royal blood.  When they came to the island they found many of royal blood.” 

Evidence of their existence during this time period can be found on the frequent appearance of runic inscriptions with the name ErilaR “the Herul.”  While it is thought that the ancient Scandinavian alphabet, called futhork or runes, is of Latin origin, the evidence suggests that it was used far to the northeast of Rome where Roman influence did not reach.  The runes are a corruption of an old Greek alphabet, used by Trojans along the northwest coast of the Black Sea.  From examples of Etruscan, Greek, and early Roman scripts, it is not difficult to see that earlier runes resemble archaic Greek and Etruscan rather than Latin.  The Heruls used runes in the same way their ancestors did, which have been discovered throughout Europe and Scandinavia.  Scandinavian sagas tell us that the Scandinavian languages began when men from central Asia settled in the north.  Sometime after 1300 AD runes were adjusted to the Roman alphabet.

The Heruls brought with them a few Roman customs, one being the Julian calendar, which is known to have been introduced to Scandinavia at this time, the early 6th century AD.  When the Heruls returned to join again with the Svear in Scandinavia, the Svear state with its powerful kings suddenly emerges.  Their ancestors were the warring bands of Aesir (sometimes called Eastmen) who became known as the Svear or Suines.  They became the dominant power and waged war with the Goths, winning rule over them.  By the middle of the 6th century, the first all-Swedish kings emerged.  This royal dynasty became immensely powerful and dominated not only Sweden but also neighboring countries.  Gothic historian Jordanes writes of the Suines or Suehans (Sve’han) of Scandinavia, with fine horses, rich apparel and trading in furs around 650 AD.  The Swedish nation has its roots in these different kingdoms, created when the king of the Svenonians (Svears) assumed kingship over the Goths.  The word Sweden comes from the Svenonians, as Sverige or Svearike means “the realm of the Svenonians”.  The English form of the name is probably derived from an old Germanic form, Svetheod, meaning the Swedish people. 

By the 7th century, the Svear and Goth populations dominated the areas of what is now Sweden, Denmark and Norway.  However, the term Norway came later.  Latin texts from around 840 AD called the area Noruagia, and Old English texts from around 880 AD used Norweg.  The oldest Nordic spelling was Nuruiak, written in runes on a Danish stone from around 980 AD.  The Old Norse (Old Scandinavian) spelling became Nordvegr, meaning “the country in the north” or “the way to the north,” and the people were called Nordes.  All of the names were given by people south of Norway to signify a place far to the north.  The people of Norway now call themselves Nynorsk, a name decided by linguists in the 1880s.  The name Denmark originated from the people called the Vanir (or Vaner) who settled the region with the Aesir in the first century BC.  The Vanir were later called Danir (or Daner), and eventually Danes.  By the 9th century AD, the name Danmark (Dan-mörk, “border district of the Danes”) was used for the first time.  In Old Norse, mörk meant a “forest,” and forests commonly formed the boundaries of tribes.  In Modern Danish, mark means a “field,” “plain,” or “open country.”   Hence, Denmark once meant  literally “forest of the Danes.”  During this period, their language Dönsk tunga (Danish tongue) was spoken throughout northern Europe, and would later be called Old Norse or Old Scandinavian during the Viking period.  Old Norse was spoken by the people in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Iceland, and parts of Germany.

The ancestor of all modern Scandinavian languages, beginning with the Germanic form, was developed from the languages of the Aesir (Thracian tribes) and Goths (Germanic tribes).  When the Aesir integrated with the people of the lands, their families became so numerous in Scandinavia and Germany that their language became the language of all the people in that region.  The linguistic and archaeological data seem to indicate that the final linguistic stage of the Germanic languages took place in an area which has been located approximately in southern Sweden, southern Norway, Denmark and the lower Elbe river which empties into the North Sea on the northwest coast of Germany.  Germanic tribes began arriving in the area about 1000 BC.  Later, the Aesir brought their language to the north of the world, to Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Germany.  The future rulers of Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Iceland trace their names and genealogies back to the Aesir.  The most ancient inscriptions in Old Norse/Scandinavian are from the 3rd and 5th century centuries AD, with other inscriptions dating up to the 12th century.  They were short signs written in the futhork runic alphabet, which had 24 letters (though many variations were used throughout the region).  By the end of the Viking era (11th century AD), the Old Norse language dialect varieties grew stronger until two separate languages appeared, Western Scandinavian, the ancestor of Norwegian and Icelandic, and Eastern Scandinavian, the the ancestor of Swedish and Danish.  Many Old Norse words were borrowed by English, and even the Russian language, due to expansion by Vikings.

The next Svear conquests began in the early 8th century.  By 739 AD the Svear and Goths dominated the Russian waterways, and together they were called Varyagans or Varangians, according to written records of the Slavs near the Sea of Azov.  Like their ancestors, the Svear lived in large communities where their chiefs would send out maritime warriors to trade and plunder.  Those fierce warriors were called the Vaeringar, which meant literally “men who offer their service to another master”.  We later know them by their popularized name, the Vikings.  Thus began the era known as the Viking Age, spanning more than 300 years from about 700 AD to 1066 AD.  Once again the Svear began returning to the places of their Thracian ancestors in the Caucasus region, sailing rivers which stretched deep into Russia and the Black Sea, establishing trading stations and principalities.  They often navigated the Elbe river, one of the major waterways of central Europe.  They also navigated, as a primary route, the Danube river, a vital connection between Germany and the Black Sea.  Their ships were the best in all of Europe—sleek, durable and could travel by both sail or oars.  To the east of the Elbe they were known as Varangians, and west of the Elbe they were called Vikings.  Many called them Norse, Norsemen or Northmen—those from the Scandinavian countries, which consisted of Sweden, Norway and Denmark.  In northern France they would later be called Normans, eventually recognized as the rulers of what became Normandy.  In England they were known as Danes, although some may well have been from Norway, where they became rulers of the Danelaw.  Vikings raids in western Europe and the British Isles are noted in this Old English prayer:  “A furore Normannorum libra nos, Domine” (From the fury of the Northmen deliver us, Oh Lord). 

Vikings never called themselves Vikings.  Unlike Varangian, the term Viking probably originated from Frankish chroniclers who first called them “Vikverjar” (travelers by sea), Nordic invaders who attacked the city of Nantes (in present-day France) in 843 AD.  The word “vik” or “vic” (from “wic”) meant river estuary, bay or fjord in Old Norse (a popular avenue for attack), and later meant “one who came out from or frequented inlets to the sea”.  Viking and Varangian eventually became synonymous, meaning “someone who travels or is passing through,” whether merchant, mercenary, or marauder.  Their activities consisted of trading, plundering and making temporary settlements .  Finnish peoples referred to the Swedish voyagers as RuotsiRotsi or Rus in contrast with Slavic peoples, which was derived from the name of the Swedish maritime district in Uppland, called “Roslagen,” and its inhabitants, known as “Rodskarlar.”  Rodskarlar or Rothskarlar meant “rowers” or “seamen.”  Those Swedish conquerors settled in eastern Europe, adopted the names of local tribes, integrated with the Slavs, and eventually the word “Rusi,” “Rhos” or “Rus” came to refer to the inhabitants.  The Arab writer Ibn Dustah wrote that Swedish Vikings were brave and valiant, utterly plundering and vanquishing all people they came against.  Later, the Arabic diplomat Ibn Fadlan, while visiting Bulgar (Bulgaria) during the summer of 922 AD, saw the Swedish Vikings (Rus) arrive, and he wrote:  “Never before have I seen people of more perfect physique; they were tall like palm trees, blonde, with a few of them red.  They do not wear any jackets or kaftaner (robes), the men instead wear dress which covers one side of the body but leaves one hand free.  Every one of them brings with him an ax, a sword and a knife.”  Their descriptions mirror the physique, dress and armor of Trojan warriors—the Viking ancestors.  The various ancestors of the Vikings included the Thracian tribes (Asir) and the Gutland tribes (Goths).

The Vikings included many tribes and kingdoms from around the Baltic Sea, including the Svear from Sweden, the Norde from Norway, the Danes from Denmark, the Jutes from Juteland (now part of Denmark), the Goths from Gotland (now part of Sweden), the Alands from Åland (now part of Finland), the Finns from Finland, and others.  The Svear Vikings traveled primarily east to the Mediterranean (what is now Russia and Turkey), where they had been returning regularly since leaving the region 900 years earlier.  Subsequent Viking raids and expeditions covered areas deep into Russia, the Middle East, Europe and America, ending in the 11th century (about 1066 AD) after the introduction of Christianity around the year 1000 AD.  Dudo of Saint Quentin, a Norman historian, wrote between 1015 and 1030 AD “The History of the Normans” where he called the Vikings “cruel, harsh, destructive, troublesome, wild, ferocious, lustful, lawless, death-dealing, arrogant, ungodly and more monstrous than all the rest.”  When Christianity ended the Viking Age, kingships and provinces of Sweden combined to form one country.  The dominant king during the Viking Age was from the Erik family of Uppsala.  One of the first Swedish monarchs in recorded history was Olof Skotkonung, a descendant of the Erik family.  Olof and his descendants ruled Sweden from about 995 to 1060 AD.  Sweden’s first archbishop arrived in the 12th century (1164).                          http://www.osterholm.net

*** Not to make this article too long, we are stopping here since we do know that the Carruthers DNA shows two large groups came to Scotland, one in the 400 AD and one in the 900 AD.

 

Preserving Our Past, Recording Our Present, Informing Our Future

Ancient and Honorable Carruthers Clan Int Society CCIS

carruthersclan1@gmail.com

 

COAGRAYwide

Disclaimer Ancient and Honorable Carruthers Clan International Society CCIS LLC is the official licensed and registered Clan of the Carruthers Family.  This Clan is presently registered in the United States and Canada, and represents members worldwide.  All content provided on our web pages is for family history use only.  The CCIS is the legal owner of all websites, and makes no representation as to the accuracy or completeness of any information on these sites or by following any link provided. The CCIS will not be responsible for any errors or omissions or availability of any information. The CCIS will not be liable for any losses, injuries, or damages from the display or use of this information. We do not sell, trade or transfer to outside parties any personal identifications. For your convenience, we may provide links to various outside parties that may be of interest to you. The content on CCIS is design to support your research in family history.      ( CCIS -LLC copyright 2017 - 2020)
Gutland / Gotland, Uncategorized

CLAN CARRUTHERS-THE BATTLE OF GOTLAND 1361

Carruthers Clan Int Society                                                      Promptus et Fidelis

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The Battle of Gotland 1361

 

With the help of unique objects and newly achieved knowledge the exhibition “Medieval Massacre – the Battle of Gotland 1361” tell the story about a horrifying medieval battle between the farmers of Gotland and the well trained soldiers of the Danish army.

It was at the end of July 1361 that 1,800 Gotland farmers lost their lives in a brutal clash with Danish troops under King Valdemar Atterdag. He was intent on subjugating Gotland after conquering parts of Skåne and Öland. He had now landed on the island with a professional army and was preparing to march on Visby. Part way there, in the marshlands of Mästerby, the Gotland farmers tried, unsuccessfully, to halt his advance. Bits of weapons, lost horse shoes and battered fragments of armour from the action are on display here.

The last battle was fought beneath the Visby town wall. Both children and old people among Gotland’s farming population had joined in the defence of their island. Visby was forced to surrender on 29th of July. King Valdemar was victorious, and more than half the farmers of Gotland had been killed in battle. Valdemar’s son Kristoffer served with the Danish army, and his reconstructed armour and accoutrements are pictured here.

The remains are unique

The dead soldiers and their equipment were swiftly buried in large mass graves after the battle. The remains of the dead, the armour and the weapons are internationally unique in the sense of so much remaining in a state of preservation when archaeologists excavated the site in the 1920s.

Items on display include mail shirts (hauberks) and coifs (headgear), chain mail gauntlets, maces, swords, crossbows and arrowheads. Together, the artefact finds and human remains give us an insight into the nature of medieval warfare.

In this exhibition you can follow the progress of three Gotlanders and two Danish soldiers. New findings are presented about their living conditions. Diseases, height, build and age are some of the things which can be detected by analysing their skeletons. From injuries and bone incisions we can also reconstruct fighting techniques and identify the weapons used, just as in a modern crime scene investigation. The soldiers’ armour presents modern but also antiquated features by the standards of the time. It looks heavy to wear, but the mobility of the plates in relation to each other made it easy to move about in. There are reconstructions of the soldiers’ gear which you can touch or try on.

Skull of a young man.

One of the armours on display may have belonged to Bavo or Schelto Roorda. They were two brothers of a noble family in what we now call the Netherlands. We don’t know how they fared. The different bronze heraldic emblems on the armour represent different branches of the clan. A leather pouch containing a small fortune in coins was found together with another soldier who probably served in Valdemar’s army.

Attacked from behind

Take a look also at the young, quite heavily built Gotlander, aged between 30 and 35. He was probably attacked from behind, sustaining several blows to the head from both axe and mace.

This exhibition gives us an opportunity of pondering war in a historical perspective. The battle beneath the town wall demonstrates that acts of violence and war are recurrent, destructive phenomena through the ages. The strikingly well-preserved skeletons, the photographs of mass graves, and the weapons on display here remind us of acts of cruelty occurring in the present. Children and sensitive adults may find some parts of this exhibition frightening.

All finds originate from the Visby town wall in 1361 unless otherwise indicated.

Armoured glove

 

Preserving Our Past, Recording Our Present, Informing Our Future

Ancient and Honorable Carruthers Clan Int Society CCIS

carruthersclan1@gmail.com

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Disclaimer Ancient and Honorable Carruthers Clan International Society CCIS LLC is the official licensed and registered Clan of the Carruthers Family.  This Clan is presently registered in the United States and Canada, and represents members worldwide.  All content provided on our web pages is for family history use only.  The CCIS is the legal owner of all websites, and makes no representation as to the accuracy or completeness of any information on these sites or by following any link provided. The CCIS will not be responsible for any errors or omissions or availability of any information. The CCIS will not be liable for any losses, injuries, or damages from the display or use of this information. We do not sell, trade or transfer to outside parties any personal identifications. For your convenience, we may provide links to various outside parties that may be of interest to you. The content on CCIS is design to support your research in family history.      ( CCIS -LLC copyright 2017 - 2020)
Gutland / Gotland, Uncategorized

CLAN CARRUTHERS- A VISIT OF ST OLAF

CLAN CARRUTHERS INT SOCIETY CCIS

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CLAN CARRUTHERS – A VISIT OF ST OLAF TO TREATY WITH THE KING

The Visit of St Olaf

 

 

 

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1 BACKGROUND TO THE VISIT
The history of the conversion of Gotland has been extensively
studied and there are several theories concerning its approximate
date.2 One of the central episodes in Guta saga is that concerning
2 Both Ochsner (1973) and Pernler (1977) have produced detailed analyses of the evidence surrounding the conversion of Gotland to Christianity.
While they both consider the role played by St Olaf to be exaggerated,
Pernler rejects all suggestion of a full conversion to Christianity before the
eleventh century. The fact that Guta saga gives an inconsistent account
and chronology, however, seems to support such a possibility. First Olaf
arrives and converts Ormika, then Botair, in a seemingly totally heathen
community, builds two churches, which are followed by others when
Gotland becomes generally Christian. Finally, after a delay, Gotland is
incorporated into the see of Linköping. Ochsner (1973, 22) points to
graves without grave goods dating from the eighth century as an indication
of the possible commencement of conversion and this view is also put

St Olaf’s visit. The story, as it is told, contradicts the explicit
statement in Heimskringla, Óláfs saga helga (ÍF XXVII, 328), that
Olaf travelled um sumarit ok létti eigi, fyrr en hann kom austr í
Garðaríki á fund Jarizleifs konungs ok þeira Ingigerðar dróttningar,
although Bruno Lesch (1916, 84–85) argues that Olaf did stop in
Gotland on that journey and that his stay was simply unknown to
Snorri. Guta saga does not, understandably, mention the visit in
1007, during which the twelve-year-old Olaf intimidated the Gotlanders
into paying protection money and subsequently stayed the winter;
see Óláfs saga helga (ÍF XXVII, 9). On that occasion he proceeded
eastwards on a raid on Eysýsla (Ösel), the Estonian Saaremaa. It
has been suggested that the visit described in Guta saga is actually
the one mentioned in Óláfs saga helga (ÍF XXVII, 343), when Olaf
is said to have visited Gotland on his way home from Russia in the
spring of 1030, a view supported by Finnur Jónsson (1924, 83) as
the correct one. It does not seem very likely, however, that Olaf
would make a prolonged break in his journey at that time. Other
sources do not mention Gotland at all in this connection (e. g.
Fagrskinna, ÍF XXIX, 198–199), and in those that do, Olaf only
seems to have stopped for news of Earl Hákon’s flight and to await
a favourable wind. Clearly not all the accounts of the journey to
Russia can be correct and it is probably impossible to discover
which, if any them, is the true one. It is, however, very likely that
St Olaf visited Gotland while he was king, since a coin with his
image on it was found at Klintehamn, Klinte parish, on the west
coast of Gotland, and that this visit would have given rise to
forward by Nerman (1941a, 39–40), who argues from artefacts that have
been found that there was a conversion, albeit not a complete one, in the
eighth or ninth century, as a result of a missionary effort from Western
Europe, followed by a reversion, such as occurred at Birka, in the tenth,
and a re-introduction of Christianity in the eleventh century; cf. Stenberger,
1945, 97. Holmqvist (1975, 35–39) has also noted possible Christian
motifs in early artefacts; cf. Note to 2/8. It is remarkable that neither
Rimbert’s biography of Ansgar nor Adam of Bremen’s writings mention
Gotland, which could mean that the Hamburg–Bremen mission did not
take any substantial part in the conversion of Gotland; cf. Holmqvist,
1975, 39, 51, 55; Pernler, 1977, 43–44. Pernler, throughout, argues for a
gradual conversion, culminating in the incorporation of Gotland into the
see of Linköping, rather than a concerted mission; see Notes to 8/1–10,
8/7–8, 8/14, 8/28–29, 10/21.

traditions; cf. Dolley, 1978. The missionary visit to Gotland, if it
occurred, can be placed between 1007 or 1008, when Olaf made
his earlier visit, and 1030. Given the discrepancy between the
accounts in Heimskringla and Guta saga, it seems unlikely that
Snorri was the author’s source for this episode and there is internal
evidence that some sort of oral tale was the primary inspiration;
see pp. xl–xli. Cf. also SL IV, 306–311 and references; Note to 8/4.
Akergarn, in Hellvi parish, where Olaf is said to have landed, is
now called S:t Olofsholm. Although the account in Guta saga may
have originated in an early oral tradition, other traditions exist,
which make it difficult to identify those which were current at the
time Guta saga was written. For example, there is a tradition from
S:t Olofsholm, recorded by Säve (1873–1874, 249), of Olaf either
washing his hands or baptising the first Gotlanders he came across
in a natural hollow in a rock. This hollow is still visible and is
called variously Sankt Oles tvättfat and Sankt Oläs vaskefat; see
Gotländska sägner 1959–1961, II, 391; Palmenfelt, 1979, 116–
118; Sveriges Kyrkor: Got(t)land, 1914–1975, II, 129. Tradition
further holds that there is always water in the hollow, but such tales
are common in relation to famous historical figures.
Strelow (1633, 129–132) includes a number of elements in his
account of St Olaf’s visit that in all probability had their origins
later than Guta saga. He mentions (1633, 132) the apparent existence at Kyrkebys, in the parish of Hejnum, of a large, two-storey,
stone house, called Sankt Oles hus, in which Olaf’s bed, chair and
hand basin (Haandfad ), set in the wall, could be seen. According
to Wallin (1747–1776, I, 1035) these were still visible in the
eighteenth century, although Säve (1873–1874, 249–250) admits
that by the nineteenth century the original building was no longer
there, the stone having been used for out-buildings. Wallin also
says in the same context that for a long time one of Olaf’s silver
bowls, his battle-axe and three large keys could be found, but this
contention is in all probability secondary to Guta saga. Of the
wall-set hand basin mentioned by Wallin, Säve (1873–1874, 250)
says that what was intended was probably a vessel for holy water
but that the object that was referred to in his time was a large
limestone block with a round hollow in it, which was much more
likely to have been an ancient millstone.
On the west coast of Fårö, south of Lauter, there is also a S:t
Olavs kyrka and there was a tradition amongst the local population,

recorded by Säve (1873–1874, 252), that Olaf landed near there, at
Gamlehamn (Gambla hamn). This is now shut off from the sea by
a natural wall of stones, boulders and gravel. The stone includes
gråsten, which is not otherwise found in the area, and which Olaf
is said to have brought with him. Some 70 metres south of the
harbour, Säve continues, there was a nearly circular flattened low
dry-stone wall surrounding Sant Äulos körka, or a remnant of it.
The church-shaped wall was still visible with what could have been
the altar end pointing more or less eastwards and human remains
in the north of the enclosure. Fifty metres to the east and up a slope
was, according to Säve, Sant Äulos kälda, which is also said never
to dry up, and which was traditionally said to have been used to baptise
the first heathens Olaf encountered. Nearby on the beach are two
abandoned springs, Sant Äulos brunnar. They are about two metres
apart and the saint is said to have been able to lie with a hand in
each, which feat put an end to a severe drought; see Säve, 1873–1874,
253, after Wallin. A further addition to this folklore is the mention
of a hollow in the chalk cliff a little to the north of this area, about
1.8 × 0.9 metres, called Sant Äulos säng. Säve saw all these
features and discussed them with the local people. They are considered by Fritzell (1972, 40) to be related to a heathen cult associated
with a local spring, which has a depression resembling a bed or a bath.
There is no mention in Guta saga of any of these traditions, and
it seems probable that they are later inventions to give, in W. S.
Gilbert’s words, ‘artistic verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and
unconvincing narrative’. The wealth of tradition on Fårö, as recorded by Säve, and the fact that the more natural landing-site for
Olaf would be on the west coast if he were coming from Norway
as Guta saga states, could mean, however, that he did at some time
land in Gotland and effect a number of conversions.
Strelow (1633, 131) carries an altogether more violent version of
the conversion and gives an account of a battle at a place he calls
Lackerhede (Laikarehaid in the parish of Lärbro, about 10 kilometres north-west of S:t Olofsholm), which resulted in the acceptance of Christianity by the Gotlanders. This account has been
generally rejected by scholars, and was certainly not a tradition
that the author of Guta saga used, although Säve (1873–1874, 248)
suggests that Olaf might have applied some force to convert a
small number of the islanders on his way eastwards. The legend could,
as Pernler (1977, 14–15) suggests, have arisen through confusion
xl Guta saga
with the battle between the Gotlanders and Birger Magnusson at
Röcklingebacke, both sites being just east of Lärbro parish church.
Many of the details mentioned, such as the existence of the iron
ring to which Olaf was said to have tied up his ship, are clearly not
factual; cf. Strelow, 1633, 130.
The greatest mystery surrounding the missionary visit relates to
the fact that nowhere in the mainstream of the Olaf legend is the
conversion of so important a trading state as Gotland mentioned,
either in Snorri or elsewhere. This seems strange, if Olaf did in fact
convert Gotland, and points to the episode in Guta saga being the
product of local tradition, centred around a number of place-names
and other features, as well as the likelihood that Olaf did actually
visit Gotland at least once, if not twice, and that he was taken as
Gotland’s patron saint. The importance of St Olaf to the medieval
Gotlanders is emphasised by their dedicating their church in Novgorod
to his name. There is also a suggestion that the church laws in Guta
lag resemble those of Norway and that they could have been formulated
under the direct or indirect influence of St Olaf; cf. SL IV, 310.

 

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ORMIKA’S GIFTS
The motif of important leaders who start as adversaries exchanging
gifts when their relationship changes is a common one, but it is
worth noting the iconographical connection between the braiþyx
and bulli and St Olaf, and the fact that the author of Guta saga
must have seen images of the saint with just those objects. The
description of the exchange of gifts between Olaf and Ormika of
Hejnum raises the possibility of one or a pair of drinking vessels
and/or a battle-axe being extant at some time, which the author was
led to believe had some connection with this incident. Perhaps he,
or someone known to him, had seen a bowl of the type called a
bulli, which was said to have been a gift from St Olaf to a Gotlander
on the occasion of his acceptance of Christianity. One of St Olaf’s
attributes, which he is depicted as carrying in some images, is a
ciborium (the lidded bowl in which the communion host is carried). Nils Tiberg (1946, 23) interprets the bulli as just such a
covered vessel, and Per Gjærder (KL, s. v. Drikkekar) states that the
bolli type of drinking-bowl not only had a pronounced foot but was
sometimes furnished with a lid. Such a vessel could have been in
the possession of the chapel at Akergarn and have been associated
with St Olaf’s visit. The braiþyx is the other attribute of St Olaf and

it would be even more natural that a connection should be made
between St Olaf and such a weapon. Perhaps one was kept in the
church at Akergarn at the time the author wrote the text, and he
linked the building to an earlier chapel on the site, one said to have
been built by Ormika. There might also have been a tradition that
a man named Ormika travelled the 20 kilometres from his home
south of Tingstäde träsk to meet St Olaf, some considerable time
after he had landed, at the request of the people of his district. The
fusing of the two traditions then produced the version of events that
survives. The interpretation of the name Ormika as a feminine
form, which led Strelow (1633, 132) to represent the character as
female, is almost certainly incorrect. It is possible that the Gotlandic
pronunciation of the feminine personal pronoun, which is more
like that of the masculine than on the Swedish mainland, combined
with the -a ending, led to confusion, particularly if the story had
been transmitted orally.
In the light of Heimskringla, however, another interpretation can
be put on the Ormika episode: the mention of the giving by Ormika
of 12 wethers ‘and other costly items’ to Olaf could possibly be
regarded as the payment of some sort of tribute, as described by
Snorri. It might be that the tradition that protection money was
paid to Olaf at one time or another was combined with a tradition
that he occasionally offered gifts in return, perhaps merely as a
pledge of good faith. A gift of sheep would no doubt be a natural
one from a Gotlander, but equally sheep have been a substitute for
money in many societies, ancient coins being marked with the
image of a sheep. Fritzell (1972, 30) points out that the number 12
is associated with taxes extracted by the Danes in the Viking
period. It may also be linked to the 12 hundari proposed by
Hyenstrand (1989, 119). The name Ormika occurs in an inscription
found at Timans in the parish of Roma; see Note to 8/3.

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THE ORATORY AT AKERGARN
According to Guta saga Ormika gierþi sir bynahus i sama staþ,
sum nu standr Akrgarna kirkia. A chapel was certainly in existence
at Akergarn by the thirteenth century, since it is mentioned in
several letters from bishops of Linköping; see Note to 8/9. It was
in ruins by the seventeenth century but had by that time become the
centre for a number of traditions about St Olaf to be found in
contemporary folklore, and in Strelow’s description of the conversion
xlii Guta saga
of Gotland; see SL IV, 308, 311; Sveriges Kyrkor: Got(t)land,
1914–1975, II, 128–130.

 

BOTAIR AND LIKKAIR - Google Search
P Church building
1 BOTAIR AND LIKKAIR
There is in Guta saga what might be considered to be an alternative
account of the conversion, not involving St Olaf and Ormika, but
Botair and his father-in-law, Likkair. In this version, Gotlandic
merchants come into contact with the Christian religion as a result
of their trading voyages, and some are converted. This intercourse
has been dated to the tenth century, that is before St Olaf’s first
visit to Gotland; cf. SL IV, 312. Priests are brought back to Gotland
to serve these converts and Botair of Akebäck is said to have had
the first church built, at Kulstäde. According to tradition, the
foundations of the church can still be discerned, lying SW–NE and
with dimensions of 30 metres by 12 metres; see Pernler, 1977, 20
and references. This identification was called into question as early
as 1801 by C. G. G. Hilfeling (1994–1995, II, 145–146) who
considers the remains to be comparable to that of a so-called
kämpargrav, and this opinion is to a certain extent supported by
Fritzell (1974, 14–16), on account of the generous dimensions and
the existence of a door in the west gable. Fritzell maintains that
Kulstäde was the site of the church mentioned in Guta saga, but
that it was also a cult site prior to this. Pernler, however (1977, 20),
and with some justification, is wary of making such an assumption,
when there is no evidence of the actual date of the event described.
Together with Gustavson (1938, 20), he suggests that the churchbuilding story could have its basis in a place-name saga. If this
were the case, it is possible that the saga formed the basis of the
account in Guta saga.
Botair builds another church near Vi, just when his heathen
countrymen are having a sacrifice there. Gustavson (1938, 36) cites
Lithberg as saying that no place of sacrifice existed near Visby and
that the passage in Guta saga is based on folk-etymology. Although Hellquist, despite his earlier doubts (1918, 69 note), noted
by Knudsen (1933, 34), accepts the traditional view and dismisses
other interpretations, it may still be disputed whether the name
Visby was connected with the existence of a pagan holy site or vi
in the area. It is possible that the author of Guta saga had heard a
tradition about the building of the first church that was allowed to

stand in Gotland and placed it, not unnaturally, in the neighbourhood of Visby; see Hellquist, 1980, s. v. Vi; 1929–1932, 673. This
argument seems defensible, despite Olsson’s assertion (1984, 20)
that it ‘förefaller inte särskilt troligt, att författaren skulle ha diktat
ihop dessa uppgifter, inspirerad av namnet Visby’. The idea that the
first Christian church that was allowed to stand should have been
built on the site of a pagan holy place has not been universally
accepted and, in his study of stafgarþr place-names, Olsson (1976,
115, note 58; 121) specifically rejects the link between cult places
and the later building of churches. In an earlier thesis (1966, 131–
133, 237–238, 275) based largely on sites in Denmark, Olaf Olsen
came to the conclusion that great care must be taken in assuming
a continuity in the use of sites for burial from the Bronze Age
through the Viking Age, particularly when based on place-names,
but that in certain cases, the church at Gamla Uppsala for example,
there might have been a transition from immediately pre-Christian
to Christian use; cf. Foote and Wilson, 1979, 417–418; Lindqvist,
1967, 236. There are, however, several examples of churches being
built on the sites of Stone-Age and Bronze-Age barrows. These
barrows might have been used by Viking-Age pagans as cult sites
(rather in the way that stafgarþar were possibly used), but when
churches were built there, it could have been the fact that they were
situated on high ground that led to the choice of site, rather than
any other reason; cf. Olsen, 1966, 274–275. Considerable rebuilding has taken place on the site of the churches of S:t Hans and
S:t Per in Visby and it is possible that some remains (graves,
for example) carried a tradition of there having been an older
church there; see Notes to 8/27 and 8/28. Any wooden church
would of course long since have disappeared and Wessén (SL IV,
312) suggests that it would probably have dated from a period prior
to the foundation of Visby itself. Cf. also Notes to 8/18 and
8/25–26.
The story in Guta saga of Likkair, and his success in saving both
his son-in-law and his church, contains certain inconsistencies.
The reason he gives to the heathens that they should not burn this
edifice is that it is in Vi, presumably a heathen holy place. This
would not seem to be a very plausible reason to give, and to be
even less likely for the heathens to accept; cf. Note to 8/18. The
fact that the church is said to be dedicated to All Saints, whereas
the church present in the author’s day, of which part of a wall is
xliv Guta saga
still visible as a ruin, incorporated into S:t Hans’s ruin, was called
S:t Pers also suggests that there may have been a half-understood
tradition, perhaps not related to Visby at all. It is possible, however, that the place-name Kulasteþar gave rise to oral tradition
about the building of a church there, which was reduced to charcoal, and that Stainkirchia relates to a later stone church of a more
permanent nature. Botair’s second church was also obviously wooden,
since it was threatened with the same fate as the first. Likkair
seems to have been a local hero, and there are other tales about
him; see Notes to 8/22 and 8/23. Conversion stories tend naturally
to be told about people who are presented as having the respect of
both the converted and heathen communities. Another example of
this is Þorgeirr Ljósvetningagoði in Njáls saga (ch. 105; ÍF XII,
270–272). Likkair’s soubriquet, snielli, is reminiscent of those
given to wise counsellors in the Icelandic sagas and he may have
been the equivalent of a goði, since he is said to have had ‘most
authority’ at that time.
There appear to be no place-names that might have suggested the
name Botair to the author and although the farm name Lickedarve
from Fleringe parish in the north-east of Gotland could be connected with someone called Likkair, he might not be the character
referred to in the story; cf. Olsson, 1984, 41, 131 and Note to 8/22.
In the churchyard of Stenkyrka church, however, there is an impressive slab which is known as Liknatius gravsten; see Hyenstrand,
1989, 129. It might indicate a medieval tradition connecting Likkair
to Stenkyrka. There is at least one other tale, certainly secondary
to Guta saga, told about Likkair Snielli, and several place-names
(e. g. Lickershamn, a harbour in the parish of Stenkyrka on the
north west coast of Gotland) are said to be associated with him.
The folk-tale, recorded by Johan Nihlén in 1929, concerns Likkair’s
daughter and the foreign captive, son of his defeated opponent,
whom he brought home as a slave. The daughter falls in love with
the foreigner and Likkair is violently opposed to the relationship,
not least because the young man is a Christian, and he has already
lost one of his daughters (Botair’s wife) to the new faith. He has his
daughter lifted up to the top of a high cliff and the prisoner is told
that if he can climb up and retrieve her, he will be given her hand,
otherwise he will be killed. The young man manages the climb, but
as he comes down with the girl in his arms, Likkair shoots him with
an arrow and they both fall into the sea. At Lickershamn there is

a cliff called Jungfrun which is said to be the one from which the
lovers fell; see Nihlén, 1975, 102–104. Wallin records a different
tale in connection with this rock, however, relating it to a powerful
and rich maiden called Lickers smällä, said to have built the church
at Stenkyrka; see Gotländska sägner, 1959–1961, II, 386. Lickershamn
is about five kilometres north-west of Stenkyrka itself but, although it is tempting to regard this as suggestive of a connection
between Stenkyrka and Likkair, it is probable that the name of the
coastal settlement is secondary to the tradition and of a considerably later origin than the parish name.

 

Stånga Church, Gotland, Sweden.  Photograph by: Carl Curman. Date: 1890s
2 OTHER CHURCHES
Church building is one of the categories of tale that Schütte (1907,
87) mentions as occurring in ancient law texts, forming part of the
legendary history that is often present as an introduction. In Guta
saga churches are assigned to the three divisions of the country,
followed by others ‘for greater convenience’. The three division
churches were clearly meant to replace the three centres of sacrifice and in fact were not the first three churches built. (The one
built by Botair in Vi was the first to be allowed to stand, we are
told.) There could well have been some oral tradition behind this
episode, linked to the division of the island, and it is hard to believe
that everything would have happened so tidily in reality. As no
bishops have been mentioned at this stage, it is difficult to understand who could have consecrated these churches, and it seems
more likely that they started off as personal devotional chapels,
commissioned by wealthy converts such as Likkair. There are no
authenticated remains of churches from the eleventh century, but
there were certainly some extant in the thirteenth century when
Guta saga was written. The tradition of rich islanders building
churches, and the relatively high number of those churches (97)
highlights the wealth of medieval Gotland; cf. SL IV, 313.
Church-building stories form an important part of early Christian literature and there is often a failed attempt (sometimes more
than one) to build a church followed by a successful enterprise at
a different site; cf. KL, s. v. Kyrkobyggnassägner and references.
The combination of these motifs with a possible oral tradition, and
the placing of the three treding churches, has been built by the
author into a circumstantial narrative, which to some extent conflicts
with the Olaf episode in accounting for the conversion of Gotland.
xlvi Guta saga
So far the possible sources discussed have been in the nature of
oral traditions or literary parallels as models. The remainder of
Guta saga is of a more historical character and the suggested
sources for these sections tend to be in the form of legal or ecclesiastical records, even if in oral form.

 

 

CIAO AM530 TORONTO - CATHOLIC RADIO BROADCAST

Q Conversion of Gotland as a Whole
Within the description of the early church-building activity is a
short statement concerning the acceptance of Christianity by the
Gotlanders in general. It is reminiscent of the passage describing
the subjugation to the Swedish throne. The one states that gingu
gutar sielfs viliandi undir suia kunung, the other that the Gotlanders
toku þa almennilika viþr kristindomi miþ sielfs vilia sinum utan
þuang. The similarity leads one to presume that a written or oral
model lies behind both, particularly as the statements differ in style
from the surrounding narrative. The models do not, however, appear
to have survived.

 

Gotland für hipsters
R Ecclesiastical arrangements
1 TRAVELLING BISHOPS
The formula for the acceptance of Christianity mentioned above
appears to come out of sequence in the text since the next episode,
that of the travelling bishops, apparently takes place before the
general conversion. If, as has been suggested, the author was a
cleric, he might have felt it necessary to legitimise Gotland’s early
churches by inserting a tradition, of which he had few details, to
explain the consecration issue. Gotland was a stepping-stone on
the eastwards route as described in the Notes to 4/6, 8/10 and 10/16
and it would be more than likely that travelling bishops stopped
there. If so, they might have been unorthodox, of the type mentioned in Hungrvaka (1938, 77). Wessén (SL IV, 318) suggests that
the importance of Gotland as a staging post might have emerged at
the same time as its trading importance, in the twelfth century. The
consecration of priests is not mentioned, but there would be little
point in having hallowed churches and churchyards if there were
no priests to say holy office in the churches or bury the dead in the
churchyards. The priests whom the Gotlanders brought back with
them from their travels would hardly be sufficient to satisfy a
growing Christian community, however. The obvious explanations

for the omission are, either that the author did not know and had
no available source to help him, or did not think it of importance.
The possibility of there having been a resident bishop on Gotland in
the Middle Ages is discussed by Pernler (1977, 46–56), but he reaches
the conclusion that there is no evidence to support such an idea.
2 ARRANGEMENTS WITH THE SEE OF LINKÖPING
The formal arrangements made with the see of Linköping read like
a more or less direct copy of an agreement drawn up at the time.
There is a considerable amount of contemporary corroboration for
the arrangements, including a letter dated around 1221 from Archbishop Andreas Suneson of Lund and Bishops Karl and Bengt of
Linköping; cf. DS I, 690, no. 832; SL IV, 313–314. The letter
enables one to interpret more accurately the Gutnish text. Again,
the author of Guta saga lays emphasis on the voluntary nature of
the arrangement, a stress probably intended to demonstrate Gotland’s
effective independence from the Swedish crown. The fact that the
financial arrangements between the Gotlanders and the bishop of
Linköping were relatively lenient to the former, in comparison to
those with other communities in the same see, seems to support the
author’s claim; cf. Schück, 1945, 184. The actual dating of the
incorporation of Gotland into the see of Linköping is less certain,
but could not be much earlier than the middle of the twelfth
century. The manuscript Codex Laur. Ashburnham (c.1120) names
both Gotland and ‘Liunga. Kaupinga’, but there is some doubt as
to whether the latter refers to Linköping at all; cf. Delisle, 1886,
75; DS, Appendix 1, 3, no. 4; Envall, 1950, 81–93; 1956, 372–385;
Gallén, 1958, 6, 13–15. It seems probable that Gotland was incorporated into the see in the second half of the twelfth century,
during the time of Bishop Gisle, but there is no direct evidence of
the date, or of the relationship between this event and the absorption of Gotland into the Swedish kingdom; cf. Pernler, 1977, 65.
Bishop Gisle, in collaboration with King Sverker the Elder and his
wife, introduced the Cistercian order into Sweden. The Cistercian
monastery of the Beata Maria de Gutnalia at Roma was instituted,
although by whom is not known, on September 9th, 1164 as a
daughter house to Nydala in Småland; cf. Pernler, 1977, 57, 61–62;
SL IV, 306 and references; Note to 6/21–22. It seems possible that
Gisle was behind the foundation, and that Gotland had by that time
been included into the see of Linköping. It is not certain that Gisle
xlviii Guta saga
was the first bishop of the see, but there is no other contrary
evidence than a list of bishops, dating from the end of the fourteenth century and held in Uppsala University library. This list
mentions two earlier bishops (Herbertus and Rykardus) but nothing further is known of them; see Schück, 1959, 47–49; Pernler,
1977, 58; SRS III, 102–103, no. 5; 324, no. 15.

 

Crown of Queen Louisa Ulrika, consort of King Adolf Frederick, Sweden (1751; diamonds, enamel, silver, velvet). Crown of the queen consorts of Sweden.
S Levy arrangements
The establishment of an obligation to supply troops and ships to
the Swedish crown and the levy terms associated with this obligation have been dated by Rydberg (STFM I, 71) to around 1150, but
placed rather later by Yrwing (1940, 58–59). Once again, contemporary letters corroborate to a large degree the content of Guta
saga in respect of this material. Despite several protestations within
Guta saga of the independence of Gotland from foreign domination, the other statutes mentioned at the end of the text suggest that
this independence was being slowly eroded, and that Gotland was
gradually becoming a province of Sweden. The ledung was mainly
called out for crusades against the Baltic countries, and there are
several contemporary sources recording these expeditions and the
reaction of the Gotlanders to the summons; see Notes to 12/23.
Wessén points out (SL IV, 319) that Magnus Ladulås in 1285
established a different arrangement, according to which a tax was
payable annually, rather than merely as a fine for failing to supply
the stipulated ships when they were summoned; cf. DS I, 671–672,
no. 815; STFM I, 290–291, no. 141. Wessén and other scholars use
the fact that the author of Guta saga does not seem aware of this
change to postulate that he must have been writing before 1285,

 

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Gutland / Gotland, The History of Gutland, Uncategorized

CLAN CARRUTHERS – THE HISTORY OF GOTLAND

CLAN CARRUTHERS INT SOCIETY CCIS

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THE HISTORY OF GUTLAND

 

 

 

The Discovery of Gotland

Sinking Island

Hallowing with Fire

Mythical or Mystical Ancestors

The Settlement of the Island

Dreams About Snakes

Predictive Verse

The Division of the Island

Emigration as a remedy for over population

Torsburgen and Faro

Tricking of the King

Heathen Beliefs and Practices

Treaty with Sweden

The Longship Éibhear Lug
The story of the discovery of Gotland and the name Þieluar pose
the first problem: to determine who Þieluar might have been, and
what historical or traditional connection, if any, he had with Gotland.
A variant of the name is known from a pair of runic inscriptions
found on stones in Öster Skam in Östergötland; cf. Note to 2/1.
These runestones presumably predate the original text of Guta
saga, although according to Brate (ÖR, 25–27) doubt has been
placed on their antiquity, and it was suspected that they were the
work of a seventeenth-century antiquarian, although Brate himself
considers the inscriptions as recorded to be genuine. P. A. Säve
writes (1862, 59) that he was unable to find evidence of the stone
or stones and that no one in the parish could offer any information,

even the local dean, who was of the opinion that they did not exist
and had never existed. There might seem to be no great similarity
between the Þieluar of Guta saga and Þjálfi, Thor’s servant in
Snorri Sturluson’s Edda (1982, 37, 40, 43, 177), although it has
been suggested by several scholars, including Läffler (1908–1909,
Part 1, 170–171) and Gordon (1962, 255), and has been taken up
by Uwe Lemke (1986, 14), who sees Þieluar as the representative
of Thor, the thunder, lightning and life god. In that role, he would
be an appropriate agent to free the island of its enchantment. Olrik
(1905, 136–138) wonders if there is not a mystical aspect to Þieluar/
Þjálfi, despite the fact that he is usually in Thor’s shadow, but
points out that fire is so commonly called upon to dispel spirits that
the world of the gods need not be involved. Olrik notes also that the
name is thought to be related to a presumed Icelandic *þjálf,
‘work’, leading to speculation that he might be a work-god, but
dismisses much of this as mere conjecture. No such form occurs in
Old Icelandic, but it is worth noting that Þjálfi could be a weak
form of Þieluar; cf. ÍO, s. v. þjálfa; de Vries, 1956–1957, II, 129.
The existence of oral traditions in connection with Þieluar is
perhaps shown by the fact that a later Bronze Age grave (1000–300
BC), near the east coast of Gotland and lying almost directly east of
Visby, in the parish of Boge, is called Tjelvars grav. This is not,
however, the oldest grave in Gotland, which was inhabited prior to
the Bronze Age, and even if it were, the name could be secondary
to Guta saga, so it cannot be regarded as a source.

Moon Set
B Sinking islands
In relation to the legend of the island of Gotland sinking by day and
rising up by night, there is geological evidence to support a number
of changes in sea level and these could well have been compressed
in folk memory into a diurnal change, followed by the final fixing
of Gotland above sea level. Gotland was below sea level at the end
of the last Ice Age, having been above it previously, and it appears
that the sea level then slowly fell, resulting in a series of steps in
the coastline; cf. Klintberg, 1909, 33, 35–36. What is certain,
geologically, is that the sea was once very much higher than it is
today and there could therefore have been a period during which
parts of the island at least were sometimes above sea level and
sometimes below it. The various levels of sea-wall testify to this
and geologists point to the movements in the Baltic basin and the

sinking of the land in the Ice Age as a cause; cf. Lemke, 1970, 4.
Gotland itself is relatively flat, so if the sea level were near to the
top of the present cliffs, it might well seem as if the island were
disappearing and re-appearing in a mysterious manner, especially
in bad weather. That being the case, it is not surprising that some
folk memory remained of this period and that it was included in a
legendary history of the island.
There are, however, legends from Iceland and other parts of
Scandinavia, Ireland, Finland and England, which can be cited as
related to the motif of a floating island. Particularly fertile islands
were frequently the subject of legends concerning their magical
origins; cf. Gordon, 1962, 255–256. Several islands are deemed to
have been disenchanted by fire or steel. Svínoy, the most easterly
of the Faeroe Islands, is one of a number mentioned by Strömbäck
(1970, 146–148) in this connection. Svínoy is described by Lucas
Debes (1673, 21–22) as a flydøe bewitched by the devil, which had
to be ‘fixed’ with steel. A similar tale from 1676 is told of the
mythical island Utröst, west of Lofoten in Nordland, and from later
times of Sandflesa (west of Træna), Utvega (to the west of Vega),
Hillerei-øi, Ytter-Sklinna (in Nord-Trøndelag), and other islands in
Norway; cf. Storm, 1895, 208; Nansen 1911, 286. Steel would have
rendered them visible and thus disenchanted, but they were too far
out to sea to have been reached by a domestic animal needed to
carry it, so they remained submerged. The ‘lucky’ island O’Brasil
or Hy Breasail, off the west coast of Ireland, was said only to appear
every seven years and would stay in sight if someone could throw
fire on it; cf. Nansen 1911, 287. Giraldus Cambrensis (1867, Part 2,
94–95) writes in the twelfth century of an island off the coast of
Ireland, which disappeared as a group of young men attempted to
disembark, but was ‘fixed’ by an arrow of red-hot iron being
thrown on it as they approached. Another island off the west coast
of Ireland, Inishbofin, ‘white cow island’, was ‘fixed’ when two
sailors landed on it and lit a fire; cf. Palmenfelt, 1979, 128. William
of Malmesbury (1981, 44–47, 52–53) tells the story of Glasteing
being led by his sow to the island of Avalon at Glastonbury and
there are tales of islands, including Svínoy, being disenchanted by
tying steel to a sow that was in the habit of visiting the island.
Whether any of these tales could have been known to the author of
Guta saga is difficult to assess, although such stories were clearly
common, at least throughout Europe. Spegel (1901, 22) lists several more of them in his account of the history and geography of
Gotland. First, the island of Delos in the Aegean, which was said
by the Greek poet Callimachus, in his Hymn to Delos (c.275–262
BC), to have sailed to and fro over the sea, being sometimes visible
and sometimes not; see Mineur, 1984, 75–95. In legend, the mysterious Delos was said to have been called from the bottom of the
sea by Poseidon and eventually chained to the sea-bed by Zeus.
The island was the birthplace of Apollo and Artemis and sacred to
the former. Secondly, Spegel cites the island of San Borondon, of
which the sixteenth-century Dutchman, van Linschoten, reports
that the Spaniards thought it lay about 100 miles west of the
Canaries; see Linschoten, 1598, 177. They could see the island, but
never find it, and assumed it was either enchanted, or small and
covered with clouds. Thirdly, Chemmis, an island on a lake at the
mouth of the Nile, which Herodotus (Book 2, §156) was told
floated while it was being used as a hiding-place for Apollo. Cf.
also Nansen, 1911, 283–285 and references.

Viking by the fire by thecasperart on DeviantArt
C Hallowing with fire
The motif of hallowing or removing a spell with fire is found
widely in Scandinavia and there is also evidence for its actual
occurrence. Examples are found in Danish, Icelandic and Irish
literature, and have been discussed in detail by Strömbäck (1970,
142–159). He supports the theory that as well as, or as an alternative
to, any legal implications, the ringing of land with fire in some way
placated the land spirits who had bewitched it. To reinforce this he
interprets eluist as a form of eluiskt meaning ‘bewitched’, and
suggests that the account in Guta saga represents merely a more
pointed version of the belief lying behind land-claiming customs,
similar to those mentioned concerning Jo≈rundr goði in Landnámabók
(ÍF I, 350, 351) and Þórólfr in Eyrbyggja saga (ch. 4; ÍF IV, 8) as
well as in Vatnsdœla saga (ch. 10; ÍF VIII, 28) and Hœnsa-Þóris
saga (ch. 9; ÍF III, 25). These are, however, simply parallels and it
is probable that there was a similar oral tradition associated with
Gotland itself. The idea lying behind the fire legend may be that the
island could only be inhabited once it was dry enough to sustain
fire, that is, when the water level was low enough.

D Mythical or mystical ancestors
Having removed the spell from the island, Þieluar disappears from
the scene and is not mentioned as a permanent settler. This puts
him in the role of ‘mystical ancestor’, on a parallel with Tuisto,
referred to by Tacitus (1914, 32), and the Gothic Gaut/Gapt, in
Jordanes (1997, 70), discussed, along with other examples, by
Schütte (1907, 135–136). There are many parallels for such an ancestor and it is not possible to determine whether one of the accounts
extant at the time was the inspiration for the tale incorporated by
the writer of Guta saga, or whether a separate oral tradition existed.

8 Lessons From Viking Warriors (Part 1 of 2) The Vikings were regarded as one of the most savage warriors who would sacrifice their life to raiding and pillaging. In the eyes of the victims, the Vikings were the real monsters. In the meantime, the Vikings honored their raiding actions. But we are not to decide who was right or wrong in those ancient battles, we are to extract the lessons from the Viking raiding battles and generally the Viking culture
E The settlement of the island
There follows the description of a further two generations of mythical
ancestors from whom the inhabitants of Gotland are deemed to
have descended. Hafþi, the son of Þieluar, marries Huitastierna
(‘white star’) and they have three sons who are all given names
starting with ‘G’. Legendary genealogies consisting of sets of
alliterating names are common in the early histories of several
peoples. According to Tacitus (1914, 32), the Germans worshipped
an earth-born god, Tuisto, who had a son Mannus, himself the
father of three sons, the founders of the three races of Ingaevones,
(H)erminones and Istaevones, who were celebrated in songs. These
sons were named Inguo, Ermenus and Istio in sixth-century sources;
cf. Tacitus, 1914, 136. Similarly, the Gothic tribes recognised one
ancestor by the name of Gapt (or Gaut), who had a son named
Hulmul (Humli or Humal), called the father of the Danes, himself
the father of Augis (Agis or Avigis), the father of Amal, the father
of Hisarna, the father of Ostrogotha, the father of Hunuil, the
father of Athal and so on; see Jordanes, 1997, 70; Wolfram, 1988,
31. In medieval Scandinavian literature, several mythical genealogies
are mentioned, including those in Snorri’s Gylfaginning and Ynglinga
saga. In Gylfaginning (Snorri Sturluson, 1982, 11) Snorri writes of
Auðhumla, the giant cow, which licks Búri out of a block of salt.
This Búri marries Bestla and has a son Borr, in turn the father of
Óðinn, Vili and Vé. The earliest extant version of a genealogy of
the Norse people is probably represented by Upphaf allra frásagna
(ÍF XXXV, 39–40), which is thought to be the beginning of a lost
Skjo≈ldunga saga. In it, Fróði, the great-grandson of Óðinn, is described as a bringer of peace and prosperity and a contemporary of
Christ; cf. Faulkes, 1978–1979, 94–95, 107–108. In Ynglinga saga
ch. 10–13 (ÍF XXVI, 23–29) Snorri gives the genealogy of Yngvifreyr’s line and in ch. 17 (ÍF XXVI, 34) that of Rígr father to Danpr,
grandfather to Drótt and great-grandfather to Dyggvi. Again, in
Landnámabók (ÍF I, 40) the three sons of Atli are Hásteinn, Hersteinn
and Hólmsteinn, although these could be historical. Keil (1931,
60–70) suggests that the choice of names in the Icelandic sagas
was also partly influenced by alliteration and other similar factors.
Considering the specific names in Guta saga, the name Hafþi
might possibly be linked with the parish name Havdhem on southern
Gotland as Wessén (SL IV, 302) implies. It is more than likely,
however, that the parish name preceded the writing of that portion
of Guta saga, and that the name Hafþi is secondary to that. It is
necessary to accept the possibility that personal names appearing
in legends could have been invented as a result of the existence of
place-names with an apparent genitive form and/or with a second
element that invited such an assumption. Another example of this
possibility is Lickershamn, discussed below, p. xliv. Olsson (1984,
26) interprets Havdhem as relating either to the Gotlandic haued,
‘head’, or to havde, ‘raised grass bank at haymaking’. Schütte
(1907, 136), however, relates the name Hafþi itself to ‘head’,
suggesting he was the ‘head-man’, with the mystical wife, Huitastierna.
The place-name Havdhem, although it could have suggested the
name Hafþi, is not mentioned in Guta saga. The name Huitastierna,
apart from alliterating with Hafþi, leads Läffler (1908–1909, Part 1,
171–172) to note that it reminds one of the ‘cow-name’, and to
consider that the two might originate in an alternative creation myth,
representing animal deities; cf. above, p. xix, in relation to Inishbofin.

Vitastjerna's dream with the three entwined snakes symbolizing Graip, Gute, and Gunfjaun, with her at the bottom of a picture stone from Smiss in När, Gotland.
F Dreams about snakes
The dream that Huitastierna has on her wedding night, of the three
snakes issuing from her womb or breast, has folklore parallels. The
motif of pregnant women dreaming of events connected with the
birth of their children is very commonplace. There is, for example,
a tale concerning William the Conqueror’s mother who is said to
have dreamed that a great tree grew from her womb. Equally,
dreams concerning snakes are not unusual and the combination of
the two motifs (with the snakes proceeding from some part of a
woman’s anatomy) is also encountered. Henning Feilberg (1886–
1914, IV, 316, s. v. orm) mentions a motif concerning a snake

growing out of a young girl’s back and coiling itself around her
neck. Snakes also figure largely in Celtic myth in various guises:
as protectors, as fertility symbols and in connection with the underworld and death.
The snake motif is common on Gotlandic picture-stones and one
in particular, from Smiss in Gotland, is of interest; see Note to 2/8.
It is therefore possible that a literary or oral motif concerning a
pregnant woman’s dream has been combined with snake iconography to give this version of the tradition. What the true source is
for the dream-sequence it is probably not possible to know: it could
have been a folk-tale applied in a particular case or it could have
been a specific story associated with the island’s settlement, perhaps linked to some native or foreign mythological element. It
could even have been an invented story based on the seeds of an
idea sown by some artefact similar to the disc found in a woman’s
grave at Ihre, Gotland; cf.

Ardre ChapelImage result for ardre Gotland

Ardre Chapekl
G Predictive verse
Huitastierna tells her husband the dream and he interprets it, by
means of a verse. The verse is delivered in two half-strophes, each
of three lines. The first half-strophe is a confirmation of the power
of fate, a reassurance and a statement of belief in the future. The
verse is in all probability older than Guta saga itself, i. e. not the
work of the author of Guta saga, and thus possibly the kernel of an
oral tale. In the second half-strophe, Hafþi gives his offspring
names ‘unborn as they are’: Guti, Graipr and Gunfiaun, and indicates that they will be born in that order, with the first taking the
lead in ruling Gotland. The place-names Gute (in the parish of
Bäl), Gothem, Gothemhammar, Gothemån, as well as Gotland
itself, would be apparently explained by this tale; cf. Note to 2/1.
There are no major place-names that obviously relate to the names
of the two other sons, and indeed it has been maintained by Wessén
(SL IV, 302) amongst others that the name Gunfiaun is unknown
outside Guta saga, although the element Gun- occurs in many
Scandinavian names. Schütte (1907, 194) suggests that it may be
a name plucked out of the air to complete the expected trinity of
names, and that the whole episode expresses a parochial view of
events. The name Graipr occurs, but only rarely, in Old Norse
literature. In the parish of Garde, however, there are remains said
to be of ‘Graipr’s house’ and ‘Graipr’s grave-mound’ (rör). There

is also a ruin in the parish of Ardre with the name ‘Gunnfiaun’s
chapel’, which is probably from the fourteenth century and therefore, like the other remains, very possibly secondary to the legend,
if not to Guta saga itself; cf. SL IV, 302–303. As Schütte (1907,
194) also points out, the three alliterating names must in any event
be regarded as a pure fiction, on the pattern of the three sons of
Borr, the three sons of Mannus and other examples. In Guta saga,
the names could be being used merely as an explanation for the
division of the island into thirds. In fact what immediately follows
is a contradiction of the verse just quoted, a not uncommon phenomenon in Old Norse literature when an older verse is incorporated into a prose work by a later author. In the verse, Guti is
presented as the first and most important son, who will own all
Gotland, whereas the prose following cites Graipr as the eldest
son, with Guti taking the central position. The fact that the middle
third of Gotland contains Roma, later the site of gutnalþing, the
assembly for the whole island, could have influenced this version
of events, and show that it might represent a later tradition in which
Guti was associated with the middle third; cf. Notes to 2/19; 2/27;
6/21–22. In this case, as Wessén suggests (SL IV, 302–303), the
only ‘error’ in the prose text of Guta saga is in the naming of
Graipr as the oldest son.
The strophe with which Hafþi interprets his wife’s dream may
well be part of a longer poem and the alliteration in the prose
surrounding the verse (e. g. sum hit Hafþi, sum þaun saman suafu,
droymdi henni draumbr, slungnir saman, skiptu siþan Gutlandi,
lutaþu þair bort af landi) suggests that the material in it appeared
in the lost verse; cf. Notes to 2/12–14, 16–18. Lindquist (1941, 12,
39, 51) has discussed in detail the lists of bishops and lawmen that
appear as supplements to Västgötalagen and argues convincingly,
by only slightly rewording the prose, that they are the remnants of
now lost verses. It is possible that a similar literary source lies
behind at least this early part of Guta saga. If there were two
versions extant, differing slightly in the tradition they represented,
this would explain the apparent contradiction in the text.

Image result for ancient map of Gotland
H The division of the island
One possible explanation for the discrepancy between the verse
and the prose describing the division of the island has been given
above. Läffler (1908–1909, Part 1, 172–177), on the other hand,
argues that the verse carries a separate tradition from that behind
the prose, and that it has been included here in order to follow
Saxo’s example of larding his texts with verse. Authors such as
Strelow (whose chronicle of Gotland, Cronica Guthilandorum,
was designed to show that the island had been settled by, and
always subject to, the Danes, in particular the Jutar) have even
more imaginative ideas, based on surmise from place-names; see
Strelow, 1633, 20–21. Strelow, in fact, names the two younger sons
as Grippa and Gumphinus. There may have been several versions
of an oral genealogy and associated stories of the division of the
island, but the straightforward explanation, given above, is preferable to a more complicated one. The connection between the three
sons of Hafþi and the three administrative districts had certainly
been made by the time the verse source was composed.
The division of the island of Gotland into three is first recorded
in 1213 (DS I, 178, no. 152) in a letter from the Pope to the deans
of the northern and southern thirds (‘prepositis de Northlanda et de
Sutherlanda’) and to the abbot of Gotland (‘abbati de Gothlanda’),
who would have been in spiritual charge of the middle third; see
Yrwing, 1978, 81. A recent study by Hyenstrand (1989) questions
the age of the þriþiung division, however, and argues that the
original division of Gotland was not into thirds. He suggests that
the original division was into 12 hundari and that this was older
than that into þriþiungar, although it is only mentioned in Guta lag
and not elsewhere; cf. GLGS, 46. He notes that the number 12
appears frequently in Guta saga, and suggests that the original
administrative division of the island was into 12 hundari, each
divided into eight, which later gave rise to the division of the
island into sixths, settingar (Gutnish pl. siettungar), and thirds; see
Hyenstrand, 1989, 108, 136 and cf. Note to 2/19. Both hundaris þing
and siettungs þing are referred to in Guta lag.
The motif of the division of an island, in this case Ireland, occurs
in Giraldus Cambrensis (1867, Part 3, 143–147), where successions
of brothers, some with alliterating names, divide up the land between them, before one becomes king of the whole of Ireland.

 

Picture stone from Ardre,  Gotland, photograph taken at the National Historical museum of Sweden

I Emigration as a remedy for over-population
The enforced emigration resulting from the overpopulation of Gotland
may have been a historical reality and possibly the subject of oral
tradition, as is discussed below. On the other hand there are so
xxvi Guta saga
many instances of similar events in the history of various peoples
that the possibility that the author was adapting a literary motif
must also be considered. Weibull thinks that this whole episode is
a formula tale, ‘en lärd transponering på ett nytt folk av en urgammal
utvandringsberättelse’; see Weibull, 1963, 27, 34–35. He considers
it to be derived ultimately from authors such as Herodotus (Book 1,
§94), in which the author writes of the King of Lydia dividing the
people into two groups, determining by lot which group should
emigrate and which stay at home. Weibull argues that, as the tale
appears so frequently in other sources, it cannot be true in the
particular case of Gotland. A similar story, indeed, occurs in Book
8 of Saxo’s Gesta Danorum (written around 1200), with the added
twist that the original suggestion was to kill the old and the very
young and to send away those below arms-bearing age; cf. Saxo
Grammaticus, 1931–1957, I, 237–238. By general agreement this
plan is rejected and there is a ballot, after which it is the stronger
members of the community who must stand in for the weaker
members in exile. They set off from Denmark, stopping in Blekinge
and, coincidentally, anchor off Gotland on their way eastwards.
They are instructed by divine intervention to change their name to
Langobardi and eventually reach Italy, where they impose their
name upon the existing inhabitants. Saxo refers directly to Paulus
Diaconus’s history of the Langobardi (written at the end of the
eighth century), where there is a similar account, including mention
of Nigilanda or Ingolanda (or ‘Golanda’, derived from Golhaida)
as one of the places visited on the way to Italy; cf. Paulus Diaconus,
1878, 54. There is another version of the motif, but this time relating
to the young men of Dacia under Rollo, in Dudo of St Quentin’s
History of the Normans, written about 1014 (Part 2, §1–2, 5).
There are certainly considerable similarities between these stories,
of which the one in Guta saga was most probably the latest in
written form, but this does not necessarily mean that its writer
consciously borrowed from those cited, or from any similar source.
If, on the other hand, the possibility of the episode recording
details of an actual exodus is accepted, the question of when that
exodus occurred has to be considered. One wonders if over-population
might not, in some areas, have been a cause of Viking activity,
although archaeological studies have led scholars to date the exodus
from Gotland, certainly, several centuries earlier than the Viking
Age. The archaeological evidence points to a sharp reduction in
The history of the Gotlanders xxvii
population between circa 475 and 550, as indicated by the paucity
of grave finds and by the number of abandoned settlements; cf.
Nerman, 1963, 19. At the same time, the instances of imported
goods from Gotland increased in the countries around the eastern
Baltic; cf. KL, s. v. Vikingetog, cols 49–51.
If the exodus did occur, the story in Guta saga probably relates
to folk-tales generated from this period. It is possible that some
of the banished Gotlanders or their descendents came back years
later with exotic goods and tales of the East, but of this there is no
remaining direct evidence. From finds in Gotland, it appears that
during the ninth and tenth centuries the coins imported were principally from the Caliphate, and there are very few from Byzantium
itself. Later, coins seem to have come chiefly from western Europe.
If there was any group returning from exile, it does not appear to
have been a large one. Hadorph (1687, viii) considers the emigration
episode to be important in relation to the start of the great Scandinavian
expeditions, but this is not supported by the available evidence.
Nils Tiberg (1946, 44) suggests it would have been natural for
both the author of Guta saga and the composer of the material he
used to have had patterns in mind. Having received an oral tale that
he wanted to record, the author might expand it to some extent on
the basis of similar written material. The opposing argument in
favour of purely literary sources has been discussed, but it seems
probable that behind the tale presented here there is some genuine
oral material that relates specifically to Gotland. One point worth
noting in the story as told by Paulus Diaconus is that he writes, of
the island of Scandinavia (variously Scadinavia and Scadanavia),
that it is covered by the waves that run along its flat shores; see
Paulus Diaconus 1878, 48–49, 52, 54; Goffart, 1988, 385. This, or
some similar tale, is another possible source of inspiration for the
discovery legend. Cf. also Olaus Magnus, 1909–1951, I, Book IV,
ch. 6.

Torsburgen Hill Fort on Flickr. Located near the east coast of Gotland, Torsburgen is the largest fortified hill-fort in Scandinavia, with an area of 112.5 hectares. It’s wall has a diametre of about a kilometer and some remains of it are up to 7 meters high. Built around the 1st century AD and reinforced during the 4th century, Torsburgen fort was in use until c. 1100 AD. A small portion of the wall has been restored after archaeological excavations.

(Torsburgen Hill Fort on Flickr. Located near the east coast of Gotland, Torsburgen is the largest fortified hill-fort in Scandinavia, with an area of 112.5 hectares. It’s wall has a diametre of about a kilometer and some remains of it are up to 7 meters high. Built around the 1st century AD and reinforced during the 4th century, Torsburgen fort was in use until c. 1100 AD. A small portion of the wall has been restored after archaeological excavations.)

J Torsburgen and Fårö
According to the text, the people who were balloted away declined
in the end to depart and installed themselves in Torsburgen, called
Þorsborg in Guta saga. This immense prehistoric fortification, the
largest of Sweden’s hill-forts, utilises one of the few high places on
the island, so that man-made fortification was only required along
half its perimeter. Considerable archeological research has been

done into the dating and use of Torsburgen, and it is certainly
possible that it was used in the way suggested in Guta saga. It is
impressive in scale and could have supported several thousand
people. Engström (1984, abstract on title verso, 123, 124–126; GV,
76) has estimated that about 100–200 men could complete each
two-kilometre length of wall in approximately two months. The
date of construction has been disputed, but as a result of radiocarbon dating and other techniques, Engström has dated the two
phases of the fort to the periods between AD 300 and AD 400, the
end of the Roman Iron Age, and between AD 800 and AD 1100, the
end of the Viking Age. These were periods of vigorous Scandinavian
expansion, combined with social and climatic change, which might
have been the cause of unrest. The position of Torsburgen, near to
the coast and to administrative centres, would lend itself to use in
the defence of the island, as well as in any internal conflicts. The
suggestion (Engström, 1979, 127–128) is that Torsburgen was
constructed as a defensive fort from which the islanders sortied to
fall upon invaders. It is possible that this successful strategy lies
behind the later episode concerning the ‘many kings’ who attacked
Gotland, but the author does not mention Torsburgen specifically
in connection with these attacks. Engström rejects the suggestion
that Torsburgen was a general place of refuge, since it lay too near
the coast from which danger might come, but does not dismiss the
idea that it might have been built by a group of Gotlanders threatened with expulsion. The findings are, in general, consistent with
the emigration story as recorded in Guta saga, which gives the
clear impression that Torsburgen was established well before the
emigrants fled there, and was not built by them. There is also
evidence that at least one of the walls has been augmented after its
initial construction. However defensible their position was, the
emigrants were not permitted to stay at Torsburgen and decamped
to the island of Fårö, where they again failed to set up a permanent
residence; cf.
One might expect an edifice of the size and prominence of
Torsburgen to attract oral traditions, but it has a relatively low-key
role in the story as told in Guta saga. In the sixteenth- and
seventeenth-century chronicles of Gotland the forced emigrants
are led by one Tore, and Torsburgen is said in one tradition to have
been named after him; cf. Strelow, 1633, 32. It seems more likely,
however, that the name relates to a cult place dedicated to Thor and
that later authors have combined the place-name and the emigration story and invented a name for the leader of the emigrants.
There are legends linking Torsburgen to Thor, describing how he
could look out from its highest point over the sea, and of the god
avenging himself on the farmer who dared to try to build on it; cf.
Nihlén, 1975, 82–85.
K Traces of emigrants abroad
When the author describes the temporary settlement on Dagö
(Estonian Hiiumaa), he mentions a fortification, which ‘enn synis’.
It is possible that the author himself visited Dagö, but if not, his
knowledge of the fortification must either have come from an oral
tradition or from a written account. According to information from
the State Historical Museum in Tallinn (private communication),
however, no such construction is now evident. The fortress, although it might still have been extant at the time of writing, and
may have attracted oral tradition, seems not to have survived.
If it is accepted that there was a forced emigration from Gotland
in the fifth century, or at some other time, it is perhaps natural that
it would have been eastwards, and there is no doubt that parts of
Estonia have been settled by Swedish speakers at various times.
The two large islands off the coast of Estonia, Dagö and Ösel
(Estonian Saaremaa), lie north-east of Fårö, in the mouth of the
Gulf of Riga, and this may have been a more likely direction to take
than to the nearer coast of Latvia. One might also speculate upon
the reason that the emigrants could not stay there. Apparently their
numbers must have been so great that the area where they landed
was not able to support them and some, but not all, continued
eastwards. The island of Dagö is not large, smaller in area than
Gotland, and much of the centre is low-lying. It is possible to
imagine that it would not have supported a large influx of people.
The author’s sketch of the onward journey to Greece follows the
route customary for the time; see Note to 4/6.
L The tricking of the king
This passage distinguishes the emigration episode as told in Guta
saga from the more generalised accounts in the written sources
discussed above, pp. xxv–xxvii, and contains such a remarkable
number of alliterative phrases (so fierri foru þair, baddus þair
byggias, ny ok niþar, maira þan ann manaþr, þissun þaira viþratta

and so on) that it seems probable that some lost poetry lies behind
the story. If so, it is likely to have been of the orally-transmitted
variety. One would expect to find parallels to the episode of the
word-play used to trick the Byzantine emperor in ballads or folktales, the purpose of them being to show the superiority of one
group of people over another. The emigrants from Gotland are in
this case seen to outwit the monarch in one of the centres of learning
of the then known world. The fact that the empress is involved in
the dispute and successfully intercedes on behalf of the immigrants
perhaps reflects a Scandinavian social pattern, in which women
were more the equals of men than in other parts of Europe. Examples of influential women may be found in Landnámabók and in
several of the Icelandic sagas, for example Laxdœla saga. No close
parallels to this story have come to light, but there are similar tales
extant of ordinary people tricking monarchs (e. g. the ballad of
King John and the Abbot of Canterbury (Child no. 45 B) where the
disguised shepherd says, in reply to the king’s ‘Tell me truly what
I do think’, ‘You think I’m the Abbot of Canterbury’). There are
also a number of land-claiming tricks, for example ones in which
permission to claim only as much land as could be covered by a
hide is circumvented by cutting the hide into a thin strip and using
that to encircle the land claimed. One version of the story relates
that Birger Magnusson, who had been beaten by the Gotlandic
farmers at Röcklingebacke in 1313, was taken to Visby. There he
asked for as large an amount of land as a calf-skin would cover.
When permission was granted, he had the calf-skin cut into strips
and with these surrounded a considerable area, on which he had an
impressive royal residence built. This is said to be the origin of
Kalvskinnshuset in Visby, but this is probably more likely to have
been built as a symbol of Swedish power by Magnus Ladulås, who
was in a much stronger position than Birger. No king has ever lived
there and there are several more likely explanations for the name;
cf. Pernler, 1982. The motif itself probably goes back to ancient
methods of measuring land, perhaps with a ceremonial aspect; cf.
Söderberg, 1959, 48–49. Another example of the trick is related by
Saxo, in relation to Ívarr, the son of Ragnar loðbrók, and King Ella
of the Danelaw. Ívarr cut a horse-hide or ox-hide into narrow strips
and so was able to claim the land on which London was founded;
cf. Saxo Grammaticus, 1931–1957, I, 263; Ragnars saga loðbrókar,
1954, ch. 16–17.

A further clue to the origin of the particular tale in Guta saga
might lie in its final sentence: the people there still have ‘some of
our language’. To which people does this statement refer? Not the
Greeks, certainly, but perhaps the Goths or Getae, and this provides
another perspective on the emigration story. Weibull (1963, 33),
suggests that the reason for the choice of destination by the author
of Guta saga is that the Getae, who lived on the borders of the Byzantine empire, Grekland in Scandinavian sources, were linked to the
Goths and thus, by implication, to Gotland. It was, in other words,
an attempt at a folk-etymology of the name of Gotland. According
to one of what Gust Johansson (1968, 4) calls the ‘norröna trosartiklarna’, the Swedes of the Viking Age were directly descended
from those peoples who moved into the area as the ice drew back.
Johansson challenges this and favours the idea of the later invasion
by the Goths via Finland. This would appear to turn the whole of
the Gotlandic emigration story on its head, as it is at about the time
of the supposed exodus that Johansson assumes that the Goths,
beaten westwards by the Huns, moved into Sweden. The claim that
some people of eastern Europe ‘still have some of our language’
would then refer to the source of the language in Gotland. It has
been remarked that there are similarities between Gutnish and
Gothic; cf. Bugge, 1907. It is unlikely, however, that the author
himself would have been able to make the comparison, so consideration must be given to what justification the author can have for
the statement. It could be merely an invention to complete the
narrative, or some report might have come back with later travellers
to Constantinople or Jerusalem of a people they had met in the east,
who spoke a language reminiscent of their own, namely Gothic.
This in turn could have led to the invention of the emigration story,
based on the tradition current amongst the Black Sea Goths of their
origins on the island of Scandza, as recorded by Jordanes (1997,
33, 37, 81); cf. Tacitus, 1914, 195; GU, x–xi; Wolfram, 1988, 36
and references. Alternatively, the incident could merely be an
adaptation of a later movement eastwards with a resultant integration
of culture and language. Wessén, however, thinks it more likely
that there already existed an emigration tradition, and that this was
combined with a tradition amongst the Black Sea Goths, relating to
their origins, either by the author of Guta saga or earlier. Until the
end of the eighteenth century, there were the remnants of an East
Gothic community on the Crimean peninsula; see SL IV, 300.

Photograph Fiord King by  KRYSTKOWIAK on 500px

M Heathen beliefs and practices
The heathen beliefs and practices described parallel to a degree
those proscribed in Guta lag (GLGS, 7). The source of the author’s
information could have been tradition, but there are a number of
written accounts which, while they would not have been the specific
ones used by the author, might suggest that his information came
from written material. Belief in sacred groves (hult) is recorded by
Tacitus (1914, 51, 190) and in Adam of Bremen’s description of
the temple at Uppsala (1961, 471–477) amongst others, and is so
well documented that no special source need be sought for this
piece of information. A respect for the howes (haugar) of ancestors
is also a commonplace and the numerous stories in Norse literature
of magical events associated with burial mounds are ample evidence of a cult related to them.

One of the most dramatic of the Gotlandic picture-stones (Hammars
I, preserved in the Bunge museum near Fårösund in the north of
Gotland, but originally from Hammars in Lärbro parish in northeast Gotland) shows what appear to be preparations for a human
sacrifice, with a figure lying across what seems to be an altar.
Gustaf Trotzig (GV, 370–371) writes of the figure, who is apparently being threatened by a spear, that he is particularly badly
placed (‘ligger illa till’). It might be significant that the potential
victim is considerably smaller than the other figures depicted; see
Lindqvist, 1941–1942, I, fig. 81; II, 86–87. Beyond him an armed
man seems about to be hanged, once the branch to which he is tied
is released, although Trotzig asks why, in that case, he is armed.
Adam of Bremen gives an account of human as well as animal
sacrifice at Uppsala, so one could accept that this picture-stone
carries evidence of heathen practice as well as belief. On a stone
from Bote, in Garde parish in central Gotland, there is a procession
of men who appear to have ropes around their necks and could be
about to be sacrificed. This particular scene is, however, open to
other interpretations. According to Guta saga human sacrifices
were offered for the whole of the island, whereas the thirds had
lesser sacrifices with animals, and there were also sacrifices on a
smaller scale more locally, possibly centred round the home of an
influential farmer, which later became the centre of a parish; cf.
Schück, 1945, 182. This structured organisation could well be a
later imposition of order upon what was a much more haphazard

arrangement, but there is no evidence for this either way. Steffen
(1945, 232–239) argues that the treding was a medieval division
and not a prehistoric one, with the original division of the island
being into two, but Schück (1945, 179–180) disagrees. Hyenstrand’s
study of the subject is referred to above, p. xxv.
Ibn Fadlan describes in detail the sacrifice of a servant girl at the
cremation of her Rus master, and the Russian Primary Chronicle
has a reference specifically to the sacrifice of their sons and daughters
by the people of Kiev, to idols set up by Vladimir, Jaroslav’s father;
see Birkeland, 1954, 17–24; RPC, 93–94. The victims of human
sacrifice were often slaves, criminals or prisoners of war, and the
means of death was frequently hanging as described by Ibn Rustah
and Adam of Bremen; see Birkeland, 1954, 16–17; Adam of Bremen,
1961, 471–473. The king, who represented a god, was sometimes
sacrificed in time of particular hardship, for example if the harvest
failed, and Håkon jarl offered his son Erling during the Battle of
Hjørungavåg in 986.
The subject of the extent and significance of human sacrifice is
discussed by, amongst others, Mogk and Ström. Mogk (1909, 643)
summarises his opinion as that the Germanic sacrifice was not an
act of punishment and that a cult act was involved, whereas Ström
(1942, 277–278) does not regard the death penalty as sacred, but
thinks that superstitions related to the act of killing led to rituals,
which gave a quasi-religious appearance to the deaths, making
them appear to have been self-inflicted. This does not, however,
explain the sacrifice of the king by the Swedes in time of need; cf.
Gordon, 1962, 256–257. Whichever is the case, the author of Guta
saga must have been aware of heathen traditions, since laws forbidding them were incorporated into Guta lag.

Playing on the limestone rocks at Hoburgen, Gotland, Sweden. Photo: Ken Kochey
N Gotland’s treaty with Sweden
The successful negotiations by Avair Strabain with the king of
Sweden and the resulting treaty do not appear in any other known
source, but in King Alfred’s ninth-century translation of Orosius’
History of the World there is a description by a traveller named
Wulfstan of a voyage across the Baltic from Hedeby to Truso.
Wulfstan records that Gotland belongs (hyrað) to Sweden; see
Orosius, 16, line 28. This must be treated with caution, since he
also states that Blekinge did (Orosius, 16, line 27), and certainly by
the eleventh century the latter belonged to Denmark. On the other

hand, Rydberg (STFM I, 40) uses Snorri’s narrative in Heimskringla
to argue that Gotland was independent of Sweden at the time of
Olaf Skötkonung and Olaf Tryggvason, that is in the tenth century.
Gotland was said by Snorri in Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar (ÍF XXVI,
254–255) to have been the subject of a Norwegian attack (unlikely
if Gotland belonged to Sweden, as the two kings were allies) and
Rydberg’s argument, based on this account and another in the same
saga (ÍF XXVI, 337), places the treaty after the time of Olaf
Tryggvason. From the dating of a runic inscription on the Torsätra
stone in Uppland (U 614), it appears that some sort of tribute was
being paid to Sweden in the second half of the eleventh century.
The inscription records that Skuli and Folki had the stone raised in
memory of their brother Husbiorn, who fell sick abroad (usiok uti
‘vas siukR uti’) when they were taking tribute in Gotland. It is dated
to the 1060s or 1070s on account of its attribution to the runemaster Vitsäte, who appears to have been active about this time; see
Jansson, 1987, 88. Codex Laur. Ashburnham, the so-called Florensdokument, dated to circa 1120, mentions Guthlandia as one of the
‘insulae’ (literally ‘islands’, though the list includes non-insular
districts) of Sweden, but as it contains a number of very obvious
errors, its testimony on this point must be questionable; cf. Delisle,
1886, 75; DS, Appendix 1, 3, no. 4; Tunberg, 1913, 28; GV, 449–451.1
Whenever the treaty was negotiated, it seems possible that the
author of Guta saga had access to some written information about
the arrangements as they stood in his time and that there was then
some annual tax being paid to the Swedish crown. In 1285, King
Magnus Birgersson Ladulås issued an edict that each year the
Gotlanders should pay a levy tax in addition to the tribute, whether
or not a muster of ships were commanded. This seems not to have
been the case as described in Guta saga, where a levy tax is only
1 Various alternative theories have been advanced about the dating of the
incorporation of Gotland into Sweden. Nerman (1923, 67; 1932, 163–167;
1963, 25) argues from archaeological evidence of periods of disturbance
on Gotland and from finds at Grobin, Latvia, where Swedish and Gotlandic
artefacts from similar periods were found side by side, for an early dating,
around 550. Wessén, however, rejects this in favour of a date not long
before St Olaf’s visit in 1029; cf. SL IV, 306. Lindqvist (1932, 78) suggests
that the ninth century is a more likely period for the incorporation to have
occurred, since this was a time of Swedish expansion, and would have
offered advantages to Gotland of trade with the East.

demanded if the Gotlanders for some reason fail to provide the
ships for the levy, so the annual tax would have been separate.
These taxes would have been in silver, a material not available in
the migration period; see Nerman, 1932, 167. If, as has been
suggested by Sjöholm (1976, 108), Guta saga was written as a
legendary history with the purpose of arguing the case for Gotland’s
autonomy, it would be necessary to demonstrate that the agreement
had been first entered into freely and not under duress, as a symbiotic relationship that did not involve Gotland relinquishing its
sovereignty. Written sources for an early agreement seem unlikely
and the possibility of oral sources is further discussed below. The
treaty terms themselves probably relate more closely to those of
the author’s day than to those of 200 years or more previously and
the change from the preterite to the present tense in the text might
support this argument.
If the interpretation put by Wessén on the expression fielkunnugr
is to be accepted, and Avair Strabain was skilled in ‘magical’ arts,
this would, according to Wessén, place the treaty in the heathen
period; see SL IV, 306 and Note to 6/9–11. Any details about it
must therefore have come from oral rather than written tradition,
possibly a narrative verse. There is no hint as to where the author
found his story, and no other record of an Avair, but it is possible,
one might suggest, that he had heard poetry concerning a muchrespected heathen who might have acted as intermediary in such a
negotiation. Schütte (1907, 83) compares Avair Strabain in Guta
saga to a character in a tale told about Charlemagne who succeeded in getting a law agreed upon where others had failed. He
suggests that this could have been a model for the episode in Guta
saga. The man in this story later disappears without trace, as
mysteriously as he appeared, but the information about Avair seems
to be more circumstantial. He is given a home parish, a wife and
a son, and extracts a promise of compensation should his mission
miscarry. As Wessén remarks, the alliterative phrase faigastan ok
fallastan (‘doomed and ill-fated’) suggests an oral tale behind the
speech Avair delivers, if not behind the whole story; see SL IV,
306. The use of such phrases is not, of course, confined to poetry
and there would be no reason for particularly assuming that a lost
verse lay behind this episode, were it not for the proliferation of
alliterative phrases throughout the passage, for example: siþan
sentu gutar sendimen, fikk friþ gart, gierþi fyrsti friþ. The use of

parallelism is a further indication of possible poetic origin for this
part of the narrative. Similarly, the details of the actual treaty
contain evidence of an oral source. Phrases such as frir ok frelsir,
hegnan ok hielp and steþi til sykia may well have had their origin
in verse, although they may have been in written form when used
by the author of Guta saga, possibly as a set of legal formulae.
It is dangerous to rely on place-names to support oral traditions
and there seems little doubt that names such as Ava, Avagrunn and
Avanäs lack any connection with Avair, particularly as they are all
on Fårö, and as the names are repeated on the Swedish mainland.
A village named Awirstadha in the parish of Askeby, Östergötland,
was mentioned in a manuscript from 1376 (designated 9/10 in
Linköpings stifts- och landsbibliotek, but probably destroyed in a
recent fire); see Sveriges medeltida personnamn, 1974– , s. v. Aver.
Hilfeling (1994–1995, I, 184) records the existence of a Strabeins
grav in Alva parish and provides a sketch of it, but the designation
of this kämpargrav to Avair is, as he says, not historical. Even if it
is accepted that Avair was a historical figure, which is by no means
certain, firm evidence is still lacking for the dating of the treaty.
One also wonders if, in the figure of Ívarr beinlauss of West Norse
tradition, there is any sort of parallel to Avair Strabain.

 

 

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Uncategorized, Varangians

Birka is the City of the Gotlanders

Birka was established as a Gotlandic (Varangian) trading Emporium at the northern point of the Rus-Varangian trading route to Bagdad

 

After Bagdad was founded in 762 and the capital of the Islamic Caliphate was
moved from Damascus to Bagdad the Gotlandic merchants traded with the
Islamic Caliphate which they called Særkland and the Khazar Khaganate with
their capital Atil on the Volga.
From end 700s silver from the Islamic Caliphate started to flow. The Gotlanders who knew the Russian rivers since earlier went all the way to the river
Volga and the Kaspian Sea. They were on the Russian rivers called Varangians and al-Rus’ (expeditions of rowing ships).

 

The Gotlanders founded, end 700s and
first half of the 800s, between the Baltic Sea and the Volga bases which today
are called the Rus’ Khaganate. This was a state, or a cluster of city-states all
through Russia to the Volga. The Spilling’s Treasure can be dated to the Rus’
Khaganate.
The first documented contact with a delegation of Gotlandic merchants (Rhos)
to visit Miklagarðr (Constantinople) is in 838. There are three separate written
sources that mention it and a coin with the emperor Theophilos was found in
the large silver hoard at Spillings. Miklagarðr means the large farm in contrast
to the small farms they had at home in Gotland.
About 860 most of these bases in the Rus’ Khaganate were destroyed and
sources tell that the Varangians were driven away. At the same time a Gotlandic
fleet with 200 ships besieged Constantinople for about 14 months in 860-861
with the outcome of longlasting agreemets between the Gotlanders and the
Byzantine Emperor.
On June 18, 860, at sunset, a fleet of about 200 Rhos vessels sailed into the
Bosporus and started pillaging the suburbs of Constantinople, Miklagarðr.
The attackers were setting homes on fire, drowning and stabbing the residents.
The attack took the Greeks by surprise, ‘like a thunderbolt from heaven’. The
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople Photius (858-867 and 877-886) says that
it came suddenly and unexpectedly, ‘like a swarm of wasps’. Unable to do anything to repel the invaders, Patriarch Photius urged his flock to implore
the Theotokos to save the city. Emperor Michael III and the Imperial Army,
including the troops normally stationed closest to the capital, and the dreaded
fleet which discouraged with the deadly Greek Fire, fought against the Arabs in
Asia Minor. The exceptional time of the attack when the Rhos, Gotlandic Varangians, caught Constantinople unprepared suggests that the Rhos had information about the city’s weaknesses. It shows that the Rhos trade and communication with Miklagarðr continued into the 840s and 850s. We don’t know how
many Gotlanders took service in the Imperial Guard in 838 and if they were
involved from inside. Still, the attack by the Rhos in 860 came as a surprise. The
Rhos–Byzantine War of 860-861 was the only major military expedition from
the Rus’ Khaganate recorded in Byzantine and Western European sources.
Accounts vary regarding the events that took place around Constantinople.

There are discrepancies between contemporary and later sources, and the exact outcome is unknown. This event gave rise to a later Orthodox Christian
tradition, which ascribed the deliverance of Constantinople to a miraculous
intervention by the Theotokos, mother of God. The Rhos campaign of 860-
861 lasted ten months at least and ended some time in 861.
Evidently the hymn Acathistus was composed and first performed in moration of the solemn procession which has been described with many details and which, according to later local tradition led to the final cease of the
siege by the Rhos.
Since the yearly performance of the Acathistus was fixed for March 22, we may
consider this date as the day when the solemn procession with the sacred vestment of the Holy Virgin took place. In other words, at the close of March 861
the Rhos were already withdrawing from under the walls of Constantinople.
Their invasion left so deep an impression on the minds of the people that the
Acathistus has remained permanently fixed in the ritual of the Greek-Orhodox Church. Without doubt some of the most impressive moments during
the invasion of 860-861 were those of the solemn processions headed by the
Patriarch Photius, when the precious garment of the Virgin Mary, preserved in
the Chruch of the Virgin at Blanchernae, was borne round the walls of the city.
It was not the first time that this venerated relic was used during a critical experience for the capital. The best known occasion was during the siege of the
city by Avars, Scythians and Persians in 626 when, according to a legendary
tradition, the relic had saved the capital. Doubtless such religious performances
deeply impressed the superstitious populace and furnished them real consolation and comfort.
It is a very interesting question whether the Gotlandic Rhos invasion of 860-
861 ended in a definite agreement with the Byzanatine government or not.
Theophanes’ Continuator writes that shortly after the Rhos withdrawal a Rhos
embassy came to Constantinople beseeching to be converted to Christianity,
and that this conversion indeed took place. We can probably conclude that negotiations initiated by the Rhos took place at once after the campaign of
860-861 and ended in a friendly agreement.
Photius writings provide the earliest example of use of the name Rhos by the

Byzantines. He also mentions the foresaid contact in 838 between the Byzantine Empire and the Rhos.
Previously, the inhabitants of the countries north of the Black Sea had been
called ‘archaic’or ‘Tauroscyths’. The learned patriarch reports that the Rhos
has no supreme ruler and live in some remote northern country. Photius called
them ‘unknown people’, although some historians prefer to translate the phrase with ‘obscure people’.
In the year 911 a document was signed between the Byzantine Emperor Leo VI
and the Gotlandic Varangians: Karl, Ingjald, Farulf, Vermund, Hrollaf, Gunnar, Harold, Kami, Frithleif, Hroarr, Angantyr, Throand, Leithulf, Fast, and Steinvith.
One of the aims of the treaty was to maintain and proclaim the amity which
for many years had joined Christians, i.e, Greeks, and Rhos, Gotlanders. This
statement very well explains the peaceful relations between the two countries
that began in 861 or shortly thereafter. It is known that in the treaty of 911
there is a special clause which allows the Gotlandic Rhos who desire honoring
the Emperor to come at any time and to remain in his service. They shall be
permitted in this respect to act according to their desire. We must not forget
that Leo VI was the grandson of the Gotlandic Varangian Ingr and was well
aware of Gotlandic conditions.
Leo’s son Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos writes that the Krivichs and
other tribes transported hollowed-out sailboats, or monoxyla, which could accommodate thirty to forty people, to places along the rivers. These sailboats
were then transported along the Dnieper to Kiev. There they were sold to the
Varangians who re-equipped them and loaded them with merchandise.
The most authoritative source on the first Christianization of the Rhos is an
encyclical letter from the Patriarch Photius, datable to early 867. Referencing to
the Rhos-Byzantine War of 860-861, Photius informs the Oriental patriarchs
and bishops that, after the Bulgars turned to Christ in 864, the Rhos followed
suit so zealously that he found it prudent to send a bishop to their land.
The first church was according to Guta Saga in Kulstäde. It was burned down,
but in 897 the church in Visby, probably where the present St. Clemens stands,
was allowed to remain. We today know of 55 wooden churches, probably allfrom the 900s.

Red wooden church, Sweden, Europe

From the beginning of the 1000s the wooden churches were
replaced with Romanesque stone churches in Macedonian Renaissance art.
Macedonian Renaissance art (867-1056) was a period in Byzantine art which began in the period following the death of Emperor Theophilus in 842 and the
lifting of the ban on icons, iconoclasm. The Gotlanders were deeply involved
in Miklagar∂r during that time and the early Gotlandic churches are highly influenced by Armenian church buildings and the Byzantine art.
In 886 the grandson to the Gotlandic Varangian Ingr became Emperor under
the name Leo VI the Wise. The Gotlandic church was like the Armenian and
Georgian churches independant, directly under Gutna Althingi, and did never
submit to any bishop or the Catholic Pope. During the first 300 years the Gotlandic Church was Byzantine with Byzantine ritual and paintings. From 1164,
when the Catholic bishop in Linköping was hired to inaugurate churches, even
Catholic rituals came creeping in.
Later the Gotlanders settled in Garðaríki (Kievan-Rus’) and Holmgarðr (Novgorod) where Gotlandic Varangians became the first rulers. Gradually they opened Emporiums, ‘Gutagårdar’. Several such ‘Gutagårdar’ are known. They sold
furs, weapons and slaves and were paid in hard cash. Gotland has today the
worlds largest collection of coins from the Islamic Caliphate, most of them
minted in Bagdad.
We know from Arabic writers in the 800s that al-Rus’ were merchants from the
island in the Baltic Sea region, who came rowing on the Russian rivers. From
there comes later the name Russia. The etymology of the name al-Rus’/Rhos
needs clarification. Many scholars have wrongly maintained that the word alRus’ must be identical with the Finnish word Ruotsi and Estonian Rootsi. Sven Ekbo (1981) convincingly connects the word to Old Norse ro∂r meaning ‘expedition of rowing ships’. Accordingly there were on the Russian rivers in the
late 700s and 800s rowing Gotlandic merchants, Varangians, who the Arabic
writers called al-Rus’.
In the Baltic Sea and on the Russian rivers there were no Vikings. The Gotlandic merchants were called Varangians. Please note that there is no sign of
Scandinavians on the Russian rivers or in Kiev until Olof Skötkonung married
off his daughter Ingegerd to Jaroslav in Kiev in 1019. The large amount of

Scandinavians in Kiev come in the 1040s with Ingvar and his warriors.
Gotland is said to have been an unusually homogeneous society as the population structure is concerned. There has never been any feodal nobles on
Gotland. There were of course social inequalities. The Merchant Farmers, who
ran the trade and among other places visited outlying venues such as Aldeigjuborg, Atil, Bagdad, Bulgar, Holmga∂r, Kiev and Miklagarðr in the east and
Bardowick, Schleswig, Bergen, London and Spain in the west, formed a wealthy upper class, who surely had power in their hands, even in political terms. It
has been assumed that for instance judges were recruited mainly from these
lineages. An intermediate position holds ‘rural residents’, that the Guta Lagh
mentions. These were probably tenants. At the bottom of the scale of ranks we

find the serfs, who performed the heavy work, and who were for sale, mainly
in the eastern trading venues. Not least in this area came Christianity and the
Church to be significant, particularly in humanizing direction.
The Trade Treaty between the Gotlanders and the newly in the Lake Mälar
area immigrant Heruli (Svear), probably from second half of the 500s, means
that the Gotlanders could freely trade on the new kingdom in the Lake Mälar
area and its conquered lands east of the Baltic Sea. Instead of paying customs
duty every time they passed the border they paid a fixed amount every year and
could then trade freely in all areas controlled by the Svear. There were large
Gotlandic trading Emporiums, i. a. in Grobina (Latvia) ca 650- 850 CE, with
over 1000 Gotlandic graves, an area at that time was conquered by the Svear.
On Helgö was on the northeastern part of the island an ancient trade and
workshop site. The area consists of seven house groups, five burial fields and
an ancient castle from between 200 to 500. There are also clear traces of precocious cult on the island and an early temple building. The old trading place
at Helgö began to grow around 200, and is therefore about 500 years older
than Birka on Björkö. Already in the 400s there were skilled craftsmen in place with strong links to Gotland. Among other things, there are rich traces of
goldsmiths and other workshops. Helgö’s greatness period is considered to be
400-800 AD. The advanced bronze foundry and craft cease in the 600s and
Helgö assumes a more ordinary farm character. About 750 the Gotlanders
move their trade to Birka that dominates trade in the Lake Mälar area until the
late 900s, when Sigtuna probably takes over the trade. Evidence of long-term
trade in the form of a small Buddha from Swat Valley in India, an early Christian Coptic baptismal cup from Egypt, both dating back to the 500s, as well
as an Irish Crosier from the 800s and coins from Ravenna, Rome, Bysans and
Arabia shows the importance of the site. The island’s merchants may have had
the royal families from Vendel and Uppsala as customers for their luxury items,
such as jewelery, glass and spices.
The immigration of the Herul Royal family (Svear) to the Lake Mälar area in
the early 500s, when they bring a new ruling dynasty and a new religion to the
area, what we today know as the Ynglinga dynasty and the Æsir religion, is
mentioned in several sources. Their entrance on the stage changes the situation
in the Baltic Sea region. The wars between the Skilfings (Svear) and the Gotlanders are mentioned in the Beowulf epos and the Guta Saga. No traces of Æsir
religion is discernible on Gotland. The eight-legged horse that can be seen on
three Gotlandic picture stones is a Shaman horse that the Gotlanders came in
contact with in Khazaria. An eight-legged horse is not known in Scandinavia,
only on three picture stones from the 700-800s in Gotland. It is only mentioned by Snorre Sturlason in his Edda from the 1200s.
Ibn Rustah travelled to Novgorod with the al-Rus’, and compiled books relating to his own travels, as well as second-hand knowledge of the Khazars,
Magyars, Slavs, Bulgars, and other peoples. His impression of the al-Rus’ is
very favourable: ‘They carry clean clothes and the men adorn themselves with bracelets of gold. They treat their slaves well and they also carry exquisite
clothes, because they put great effort in trade. They have many towns. They
have a most friendly attitude towards foreigners and strangers who seek refuge.’
The establishment of the Varangian trading place Birka in the Lake Mälar area
and Sliesthorp in Denmark show a common special Gotlandic type, which in
ancient times developed in the Baltic Sea region. What we are talking about
here is the Gotlandic or Varangian commercial Emporiums across the Baltic
Sea e.g. Grobina and Paviken which are direct models. In a semicircle around
the old town area lie the three cemeteries and, like Birka, it has also had a
stronghold as support point.
Sliesthorp was a transit harbour and therefore terminus for the Frisian trade.
Frisian koggs did not reach Sliesthorp. They stayed in Hollingstedt. The goods
were then transported on trolleys between Hollingstedt and Sliestorp or vice
versa. From there Gotlandic merchants, the Varangians, took over the goods.

There are many links between Gotland and Birka. Birka is very centrally located
for trading in the Lake Mälar area and on the sea line from Gotland, which at
that time was open straight up to from Södertälje. The archaeologist Gustaf
Trotzig has in 1991 published a booklet on ‘Viking burial vessels of copper
and copper alloys from Birka and Gotland’. This type of grave finds are found

in the Baltic Sea region, Birka and on Gotland. Finds of such containers in
East Prussia occurs in combination with ceramics of the same type as found
on southern Gotland. If you go into individual find areas on Gotland you get
a picture on the graves location that is similar to the one in Birka. The graves
with metal containers are grouped in the same way. This is i.e. shown in the
cemetery at Barshaldar in Grötlingbo.
This type of graves in Birka are considered to accommodate foreign merchants,
while graves on Gotland would have Gotlanders. Of course, the Gotlanders
who died in Birka were also buried there. Another relation to Gotland is Adam
of Bremen’s words. He says in his history: “Birka is the city of the Gotlanders”

Elegant, pattern woven silk with Bahram Gur hunting scenes - a design that was hugely popular when the Vikings set out on trading and raiding expeditions where it was brought back to Scandinavia. #viking #silk #fabric #oseberg #grimfrost

Birka’s location in the Lake Mälar area made the city suitable as the pivot for
an internal trade in the winter markets on the Lake Mälar ice when the furs are
the best, and summer markets, where the ships could meet in the city’s harbour.
The presence of imported objects from the Orient and Western Europe in the
tombs are many. Uppland burial grounds could indicate that Birka to a large extent sold their imported goods, especially silk fabrics on the domestic market.
One must be cautious with the conclusions. There were other ways for the
trading ships, such as waterways through Roden (Roslagen) from the coast to the
interior of Uppland. It is howeveris quite clear that Birka traded with the rural
people. Bones of eider and other waterfowl in Birka’s garbage heaps show that
the residents in the archipelago provided merchants in Birka with food, and
reindeer testify trade to the north. The information in Ansgar’s biography, that
Birka had its own Thing, indicates that the city occupied a special position in
relation to the surrounding countryside and had remote commerce. Transit
trade between east, west and north was Birkas lifeblood. When it could not be
maintained any longer, the city disappeared or lost in any case its role shortly
after the middle of the 900s.

Viking kaftan Birka model.
Silk textiles from the Viking age are a small but exclusive group of archeological finds in Scandinavia. The silk fragments are produced in many different
qualities. The majority of silks have been interpreted as either Central Asian or
as made in the Byzantine production area, that is in Constantinople, or in associated areas in the eastern Mediterranean region. A few fragments from Birka
have been interpreted as Chinese silk. Great emphasis must be placed on the
Gotlandic merchants’, the Varangians or Rus as they are called in Arabic sources, strong ties to the Byzantine Empire in the 800s and 900s and thereby the
trade on the westernmost of the Russian waterways. Archaeological sources
give no reason to believe that the distribution of silk to the Baltic Sea areas is a
result of trading along one single route. The two major eastern trading routes
along the Russian rivers Dnjepr and the Volga-Oka region are likely routes for
the arrival of silk to both Oseberg and to Birka.
In Scandinavia so far 23 archaeological sites with finds of silks dating to the
800s and 900s have been registered, in most cases from graves. This includes
both silk fabrics and silk thread and lan-cores used in embroideries. In addition there are several graves with finds of fibres assumed to be silk but not yet identified. Many of the sites revealed only one or a few fragments of silk. The
largest concentration of graves is in Birka in the Lake Mälar area where 49 graves, according to Agnes Geijer, contained silk.
Based on these finds in the graves a project at Enköping museum has reconstructed silk fabrics with Islamic patterns.
The majority of graves containing silk from Birka are dated to the 900s. Of 49
graves, 37 are dated to this period while 12 date to the 800s. The fabric type
by Geijer called S4 dominates in both centuries and is the most common type
represented in all graves. This is a type of samite with z-spun main warps and
weft with no traces of spinning. Unlike the Oseberg silk fragments it has a
double main warp. The S4 group contains several different degrees of coarseness in the weave. Geijer noticed that some fragments seemed mono coloured
while others bore traces of pattern. This could very well be caused by differences in preserving condition, as seen in the Oseberg silks. Geijer explains the
arrival of the most common type called S4 with strong connections with the
Byzantine Empire. A coarser and more uneven woven quality of similar samite
was separated by Geijer in a singular group called S5 with patterns showing
similarities with some of the Oseberg fragments regarded as Central Asian
products.

5th c Iranian silk, prob samite; the Norse cut silk samite fabric into thin strips & appliqued it as trim onto clothing

In one of the Birka graves, a very special find appeared. This is a fabric of
two-coloured silk damask, with a pattern of stars and dots. The threads of raw
silk bear no traces of spinning in either warp or weft. This silk, the only one
of its kind so far found in Scandinavia, is probably produced in China. Two
different qualities of raw silk tabby were found in four of the graves in Birka.
The fabrics bear no traces of spinning in warp or weft.

Khazaria, Volga Bulgaria and the Silk Trade
The Khazars, a semi-nomadic Turkish people closely related to the Bulgarians,
established one of the largest polities of medieval Eurasia, with Atil as the capital. Their territory covered much of modern-day European Russia, western
Kazakhstan, eastern Ukraine, Azerbaijan, large portions of the northern Caucasus (Circassia, Dagestan), parts of Georgia, the Crimea, and northeastern Turkey.
They played a role in the balance of powers and destiny of the world civilization. After Kubrat’s Great Bulgaria was destroyed by the Khazars in the 600s,
some of the Bulgars fled to the west and founded a new Bulgar state (presentday
Bulgaria) near the Danubian Plain, under the command of Khan Asparukh. The
rest of the Bulgars fled to the north of the Volga River region and founded at
the big bend in the Volga in Russia’s heart, where the river Kama flows into the
Volga, the Volga Bulgaria kingdom with its capital Bolghar. Volga Bulgaria’s
heyday occurred in the 900s. At that time they adopted Muhammad’s teachings.
The area south of the kingdom of the Volga Bulgars, between the Caspian
and Black Seas, accordingly belonged to the Khazars. Khazaria had an ongoing
entente with Byzantium. The Khazars aided the Byzantine emperor Heraclius
(reigned 610–641) by sending an army of 40,000 soldiers in his campaign against
the Persians in the Byzantine–Sassanid War of 602–628. They also served their
partner in wars against the Abbasid Caliphate.
Sarkel, a Turkish word meaning White Fortress, was built in the 830s by a joint
team of Greek and Khazar architects to protect the north-western border of
the Khazar state. The chief engineer during the construction of Sarkel was Petronas Kamateros who later became the governor of Cherson. Khazaria was
the first feudal state to be established in Eastern Europe. According to ibn
Khordadhbeh the Khazarian Jewish merchants (Radhanites) were responsible for
the commerce between southwestern Asia and northern Europe, as well as
the connection to the Silk Road. The name ‘Khazar’ is found in numerous
languages and seems to be tied to a Turkish verb form meaning ‘wandering’
(modern Turkish: Gezer). Pax Khazarica is a term used by historians to refer to the
period during which Khazaria dominated the Pontic steppe and the Caucasus
Mountains.
The Gotlandic Varangians made regular commercial trips to the Khazar capital
Atil at the lower Volga and the city of Bolghar in the country of the Volga
Bulgars in the region of Kamas’ inflow in the Volga river.

After fighting the Arabs to a standstill in the North Caucasus, Khazars became increasingly interested in replacing their Tengriism with a state religion
that would give them equal religious standing with their Abrahamic neighbors.
During the 800s, the Khazar royalty and much of the aristocracy converted to
a form of Judaism. Yitzhak ha-Sangari is the name of the rabbi who converted the Khazars to Judaism according to Jewish sources. Khazaria became the
world’s largest Jewish kingdom. It is estimated today that 80% of those in the
world who confess to the Jewish religion are descended from there. They are
also called the ‘13th tribe’. In Khazaria the main languages were Turkish, various

Image result for The unique coin from the Spillings Hoard with the inscription ‘Moses is the prophet of God’ dated to 837-838. Photo: Kenneth Jonsson

Slavic languages and Gothic. If you mix these languages you get Jiddish.
Khazars were judged according to Tōra (orders of the Khagan; coming from the root
Tōr meaning customs; unwritten law of people in Old Turkic) (Modern Turkish: Töre), while the
other tribes were judged according to their own laws.
Being a surprisingly tolerant and pluralistic society, even its army incorporated
Jews, Christians, Muslims and Pagans at a time when religious warfare was the
order of the day around the Mediterranean and in Western Europe. By welcoming educated and worldly Jews from both Christian Europe and the Islamic
Middle East, Khazaria rapidly absorbed many of the arts and technologies of
civilization.

As a direct result of this cultural infusion, they became one of the very few
Asian steppe tribal societies that successfully made the transition from nomad
to urbanite. Settling in their newly created towns and cities between the Caspian
Sea and the Crimean Peninsula on the Black Sea, they became literate and multi-lingual agriculturalists, manufacturers and international traders.
The Islamic Bulgars in the Volga river bend and Khazaria were the two main
cross points for the trade routes to Europe. The main imported goods traded
in these markets were furs, slaves and weapons.
According to ibn Rustah and ibn Haukal, al-Rus’ delivered the first two mentioned in Khazaria and Volga Bulgaria. Ibn Rustah and Gurdesi explain that
the Varangians refused to accept anything else but jingling silver coins for their
goods.
In return they brought silk and other exotic products that they sold in Birka,
and these goods were handled by the Varangians (Rus) and came to the Baltic
Sea region through the Russian waterways.
Between 965 and 969, Khazar sovereignty was broken by the Kievan Rus’. Sviatoslav I of Kiev defeated them in 965 by conquering the Khazar fortress of
Sarkel. Two years later, Sviatoslav conquered Atil.
Archaeological finds of coins show a flow of Islamic dirhams mainly into Gotland dated to around c. 800 to the last quarter of the 900s. Gotland has the largest collection in the world of coins from the Islamic Caliphate, most of
them minted in Bagdad, and some from places well-known for silk production
like Samarkand and Tashkent.
The river systems of Volkhov-Lovat, Dniepr, Volga and Don formed a central
nerve in communication and trade. From the Rus (Varangian) northern strongholds you could go either to the south, sailing along Dnjepr to the Black sea
and finally reach Constantinople, or you could go further east, and along the
river Volga to the trading hub of Bulghar connecting the northern trade with
the northern silk roads in Central Asia and from there to China.
The Varangians took Kiev from the Khazarians in 882 and appointed one of
their own, Oleg, as ruler. Archaeological excavations show that a line of strongholds was established in the Kiev area along the Dnjepr in the last two decades
of the 800s. Tax collection was probably a motivation for establishing these
strongholds.
What about the eastern route along the river Volga? This route connected the
northern trade with the northern silk roads and the silk producing hubs in
Central Asia. The earliest archaeological traces of a Varangian (Rus) presence
in the Volga area dates to the early 800s, located south west of Rostov Velikij.
Later, at about the same time as the establishment of Varangian (Rus) strongholds on the shores of Dnjepr, settlements with distinct Gotlandic cultural
components were established not far from Volga nearby contemporary Yaroslavl. Even though they are not directly on the shores of the river, they show
a Gotlandic connection with the areas north of the trading hub of Bhulgar
situated about 30 km downstream from Volga’s confluence with the Kama
River near today’s Kazar.
It was in the town of Bulghar that Ibn Fadlan made his famous observation of a Varangian funeral in the 900s. Bulghar functioned as an eastern meeting point
between north and east, a melting pot of different cultures and languages. On
his journey to Bulghar, Ibn Fadlan travelled across the desert from Baghdad to
Bukhara, one of the main production centres for Persian silk in the 800s and
900s. Ibn Fadlan seems to have had a certain understanding of differences and
variations in luxury textiles. He brought with him a lot of different textiles to
be used as presents and tax payment on his journey. When describing the different textiles and clothing items, he uses the name of the place of production.

An example is his description of the presents he gave to an army commander
he met on his journey, who among other things was given cloth from Merv.
Not only expensive fabrics from Central Asia seem to have been transported
along this road. According to Ibn Fadlan, the Varangian chief buried in Bulghar was equipped with costly fabrics of Byzantine origin on his last journey at
the beginning of the 900s.
The complex trading relationship between areas of production in this period further complicates the interpretation of trading routes. In spite of strong
political rivalry and competition in trade and silk production, both preserved
silk fabrics and written sources show a strong interaction relating to pattern exchange and technology as well as trading and gift exchange between Byzantine
and Persian areas.
It is interesting to note that a trade regulation in Constantinople forbid merchants from Bhulgar to buy Persian silk of higher value when they were visiting
the town. According to the Book of Epharc silk fabrics and clothing from Baghdad were among goods brought by Syrian merchants to Constantinople in the
early 900s. In addition, Islamic fashion in the form of garments “tailored in the
Saracen style” was according to De Ceremoniis made in the Byzantine capital.
There is also reason to believe that many of the town markets were regarded
as multicultural meeting places. In several Arabic sources, towns like Baghdad
and Tashkent are described as cosmopolitan hubs of trade. A writer of the late
800s describes the thriving trade in Baghdad like this: “There are not a people
from any country but has a quarter in it, a place for the exchange of their produce, and a special district of their own. That what is not to be found in any
other town of the world is brought together here”.
Silk trade between the Caliphate and the Byzantine Empire also led to diffusion and imitation of fashion. Arab sources written in the 700s and 800s indicate a
clear consciousness of Byzantine fashion among the people of Baghdad. This
indicates that not only physical products but also ideas and fashion to some
extent were exchanged between the rivals. This makes it extremely diffcult to
know the specific trade routes the different types of silks came through.

Conclusion
Silk finds in Birka and surroundings show that luxury goods from both Central Asia and Byzans were traded by the Varangians in the 800s and 900s. The
archaeological and written sources show that the most plausible trading routes
for these silks went along the Russian rivers.
Great emphasis has been placed on the Varangians’ strong ties to the Byzantine
power. Nevertheless, both the excavations along the Volga and Gotlandic coin
finds minted in Central Asia also show a connection to the Central Asian production areas for silk through the Volga-Oka region. It is likely that both these
routes were used for trading silk by the Varangians. Silk trade and exchange
of fashion ideas between the main areas of production makes it even more
plausible that more than one trading route was used. Silk trade was probably
part of a complex and multidimensional system in which merchandise and gifts
changed hands.
As we know the Gotlanders were deeply involved in Miklagar∂r and the Macedonian Renaissance art from the end of Iconclasm. It is documented in Byzantine sources that from second half of the 800s and forward there were larger
Gotlandic contingents stationed in Miklagarðr.
The Gotlanders were related to the Byzantine Imperial Court from 867 when
the Gotlandic Varangian Ingr’s daughter Indrina became Empress Eudokia
Ingerina and in 886 when her son became Emperor Leo VI the Wise. The
Gotlandic Varangians were allocated their own living quarters to stay in St
Mamas outside the Theodosian wall.
On the trade route between the Baltic Sea and Constantinople Kiev was a
Slavic settlement. It was a tributary of the Khazars, until seized by the ians in 882. Under Varangian rule, Kiev became a capital of Kievan Rus’.
To understand the history of the Gotlandic Merchant Republic and its Medieval Churches, one must fully realize that Gotland was an independent Merchant
Republic, and the hub of the Baltic Sea region, which from time immemorial
had its relations mainly east and south and controlled trade on the Russian
rivers from time to time. There were no Vikings in the Baltic Sea or on the
Russian rivers and no Scandinavians in Russia before 1019.
Gotland has very little in common with Swedish history.   Tore Gannholm

 

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Uncategorized

Viking Voyages to Vinland

Viking Voyages to Vinland

 

 

Did you know that the Scandinavian Vikings visited Newfoundland and Labrador Canada approximately five centuries before John Cabot or Christopher Columbus sailed to North America? Vinland or Wine-land was discovered by Leif Erickson, covered the area from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the northeastern New Brunswick known for its grapevines, then all the way up to Newfoundland.

Photo below: Reenactment of Viking ships at L’Anse aux Meadows

330px-Viking_landing

Vikings were known for their raiding and trading in unknown lands such as L’Anse aux Meadows located at the Northern tip of Newfoundland. In 1960 archaeological artifacts were found there. This site’s discovery and dig was lead by Archaeologist Anne Stine Ingstad with her husband Helge Ingstad. Vineland or Wine-land was written about in the Icelandic Sagas. This site was named an Archaeological and Historical site by the Government of Canada in 1968. Over time, the Vikings left the area due to the extreme cold and lack of food during the winter months, they returned home.

Photo: Archaeologist, Anne Ingstad at L’Anse aux Meadows, 1963.

255px-Anne_Stine_Moe_Ingstad_(1918-1997)_(5494474208)

Photo below: L’Anse aux Meadows site at the North tip of Newfoundland.

375px-Authentic_Viking_recreation

L’Anse aux Meadows may be the camp Straumfjörd  meaning stream-fjord described by the famous Viking, Erik The Red in The Saga of Erik The Red.
This site dates back six thousand years earlier before the Vikings, where The DorsetPaleo-Eskimo peoples lived from 500 BCE to 1500 CE.
Source & Reference:
  • Hreinsson, Vidar (1997) The Complete Sagas of Icelanders (Leifur Eiriksson Publishing, Reykjavik, Iceland) ISBN 978-9979-9293-0-7
  • Wahlgren, Erik (2000). The Vikings and America. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-28199-4.
  •  Wallace, Birgitta (2003). “The Norse in Newfoundland: L’Anse aux Meadows and Vinland”. The New Early Modern Newfoundland. 
  • All photos in Public Domain

Preserving Our Past, Recording Our Present, Informing Our Future

Ancient and Honorable Carruthers Clan Int Society LLC

carruthersclan1@gmail.com

 

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Gutland / Gotland, Uncategorized

Gotland and The Black Sea Area

Gotland and its relations to the Black Sea area

 

Artist's Conception of Varangian Guardsman

The Guta Saga like the Goths’ tribal saga speak of a southern migration from Gotland to the Black Sea area and the Byzantine Empire. We know from Byzantine sources that the Goths settled in the Bosporian Kingdom and took possession of its feet with which they for some time ravaged in the Mediterranean. As we have seen above, we have already in late Bronze Age Gotlandic trading Emporiums on the Baltic Sea coast where the river roads lead down to the Black Sea. Even at the time when the Guta Saga was recorded, in the early1200s, it is not startling when the author of the Guta Saga notes that in Greece (Crimea belonged to Greece with Miklagarðr, as its capital), there lived a group
that “settled and live there and even today they have in their speech track of our language”.

One can therefore assume that the contemporaries with the Guta Saga, when they traveled to the Black Sea area, without too much diffculty understood the language of the Crimean Goths. It may not have been much more difference between their own language and that of the Crimean Gothic than between current Danish and Swedish. Especially silver findings prove that the Gotlanders during the Viking Age were frequent travelers to the area concerned.

Although the coins are minted further east in the Caliphate, they will in many
cases come just from this area, as they were used as means of payment there.
Other evidence that the Gotlanders travelled in the areas closest to the Crimea is the rune stones on Gotland. It can be mentioned the stone from Pilgårds in Boge, from the 900s, which tells about the Gotlander Ravn together with some brothers who came to Aeiphor, a ford in the Dnieper, not far from the Crimea.

One of the attractions with the Byzantine Empire can be attributed to the
proximity of ancient Troy. A trip to the Byzantine Empire was not only a
trading trip, but could also be a pilgrimage to the region for the mythological
home of the Æsir even if the exact location was not known.
Saxo Grammaticus (1150-1220) describes how a gold image of Odin was sent to Byzantium from the northern kings as an act of homage. This may have been regarded as a visit by the God in his former homeland as is told in an episode in Snorri’s Ynglinga Saga. There it tells how King Sveigdir travels to the Turk country in search for Odin and the home of the gods.

According to Snorri Sturluson he was a descendant of Yngve, the king of the Turks. Several other traditions show how well established the belief was that the Norse gods originally came from Troy.

Holm fishing village, Holmhällar in VamlingboHolm fishing village, Holmhällar in Vamlingbo

The ‘Snäck’ harbor Snäckhusvik in Vamlingbo. There may have been an activity similar to that in Paviken.
Painting by Erik Olsson
When the people in the Baltic Sea region went on crusades to the Holy Land
they followed the same road, and the journey went over Gotland, as it says in
Guta Saga: “Before Gutland in seriousness appointed a bishop, bishops came
to Gutland, who were pilgrims on their way to the holy Jerusalem, or went
home from there. At that time the road went east across Russia and Greece to
Jerusalem.”
Already Saxo in his chronicle tells how king Erik Ejegod from Denmark on his
pilgrimage to Jerusalem with his queen and a splendid retinue of knights and
attendants about the year 1103 pass Visby and inaugorates the St Olaf church.
The most detailed records of Byzantine court activity, diplomacy and administration are the compilations by Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos (945-59):
‘Book of Ceremonies; a treatise on Governing the Empire’, dedicated to his
son; and another ‘On the Themes’. These refect a practical need to prepare
Romanos II for his imperial role, and it draws on a long tradition of books of
guidance. The two treatises deal respectively with territories and rulers beyond
the empire, and the regions under imperial control, the themes. Both include
much geographical information about the different terrains, mountains, rivers
and the characteristics of their inhabitants.
In the section on Byzantium’s northern neighbors, Constantine gives a detailed
account of the way the people from Novgorod, Smolensk and other cities, who
gather in Kiev and sail down the river Dnieper to the Crimea, and thence across
the Black Sea to Miklagarðr.

Rush on Dnieper near Aleshki, 1857 - Ivan Aivazovsky

Denieper River

He describes the seven rapids or cataracts on the lower Dnieper and how they may be negotiated. At the frst, which is called Essoupi, which means ‘Do not sleep!’, the water crashes against rocks in the middle ‘with a mighty and terrifc
din’. To provide a sense of scale, he reports that this cataract is as narrow as
the polo ground in Miklagarðr. Here the Rus’ disembark the men and guide the
boats around the rocks in the middle of the river on foot, also punting them
with poles.
At the fourth barrage, the big one called in Rus’ Aeiphor and in Slavonic, Neasit, because the pelicans nest in the stones of the barrage … all put into
land. They conduct the slaves in their chains by land, six miles, until they are
through the barrage. Then partly dragging their boats, partly carrying them on
their shoulders, they convey them to the far side of the barrage.
They continue to the seventh barrage and on to Krarion, where there is a ford
as wide as the Hippodrome and as high as an arrow can reach if shot from the
bottom to the top. This is where the Pechenegs come down and attack the alRus’.
How did Constantine have such a detailed knowledge about the Varangians or
al- Rus’ (Gotlanders) when they travel to Miklagarðr (Byzantium)?
His father Leo VI was the grandson to the Gotlandic Varangian Ingr.
Kiev was a Slavic settlement on the trade route between the Baltic Sea and Constantinople, and was a tributary of the Khazars, until seized by the VaranThe free trade on the Gotlandic coast. In the time of the Sagas when the Gotlanders were a free people, the Gotlandic
Merchant Farmers sailed and traded with whomever they wished. At that time the Gotlanders decided that the
island’s trade would be free for all mariners. It was the free trade that made us rich!

Tore Gannholm

 

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