The History of Gutland, The Viking Age

CLAN CARRUTHERS – GOTLAND HOME OF THE VARAGIANS

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GOTLAND – HOME OF THE

VARANGIANS

 CARRUTHERS ANCESTORS

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*** Let us remember that the lighter color green along with the army green was Gutland/Gotland.  The blue is the estuary of water that was a major tradeway highway of people.  This is one reason they made the long boats.  It ws easier to travel back and forth, from one end of their homeland to another on the long boats. ***

Gotland the home of the Varangians was an independent Merchant Farmers’ Republic, and the hub of the Baltic Sea region, which from time immemorial had its relations mainly east and south.

From the archaeological findings we can establish that trade relations between Gotland and the Roman Empire were intense. The early history is a piece of myth, oral tradition  and fragmentary records. From all this can suddenly emerge a pattern, the outline of a process that may

not be scientifically inviolable, which it never really can be. Yet it is nearer the truth than you could ever reach with ‘scientific accuracy’.

If you take the Guta Saga, written down about 1220,and the Beowulf Epos, written down in the 700s, as serious as Snorri Sturluson’s ‘Nordiska kungasagor’, written down about 1220, has been honored – i.e. as evidence in lack of better sources, there will open up a new, breathtaking perspective regarding Gotlandic, Swedish and Scandinavian history during the Roman time of the emperors and the Migration Period. Yes also that of Europe. 

Already in the Bronze Age and early Iron Age there are signs of Gotlandic trading Emporiums on the east coast of the Baltic Sea and all the way to the river Volga. Trade, especially amber trade, experiences in the Bronze Age a large bloom. The Gotlanders seem to have controlled the amber trade with trading Emporiums in the Kaliningrad-Vistula area.

 

The extensive trade relations convey inuences from outside. From southern cultural centers, Egypt, Crete, Mycenae, spiritual impulses stretched their effects also to the Baltic Sea region and Gotland. A new way of burial appears in the Lake Mälar area in the 500s, as well as the introduction of the Roman calendar.If we accept that the Heruli settle in the Lake Mälararea at this time, as mentioned by Procopius, it explains a lot. Actually this in fact explains the rise of the Vendelera, which in the Lake Mälar area starts first half of the 500s and continues until the beginning of the Middle Ages.

On Gotland it starts about 50 years earlier and is explained by the Gotlanders’ close contacts with Theoderic’s Gothic kingdom. With the discovery that the Beowulf epos is about the Gotlanders in combination with the Heruls immigration to the Lake Mälar area we have been able to shed new light on the Gotlandic history. Indeed the history of the whole Baltic Sea region has come in a whole new light. We now have a link between the Beowulf epos, Guta Saga and the archaeological finds from the 400s and 500s. 

*** Some of these finds is where the first “Grouping” of Carruthers CTS11603 genome was found.  Cinchester was one location that they know a group of Carruthers-Gotlanders came ashore, and then on the east coast of Ireland, and then to the Clyde River in Scotland. ***

Roman gold coins known as solidi have been found on the three Baltic Sea islands: Bornholm, 150,Öland 298, Gotland 270 + 47 on the Gotlandic market place Helgö in Mälaren. The latter have been intended as raw material and are according to the researchers most likely derived from Gotland. It is obvious here to see Helgö and then Birka as Gotlandic trading venues, as implied by the archaeological sources. Gotland’s importance for trade and culture in the

Baltic Sea region during the first millennium can also be illustrated by the coin ands in Gotland.

Kingof the Goths, or GutlandKing of the Goths or Gotland/Gutland

From the 500s until the 1000s the Gotlanders have, according to Swedish researchers, been considered to rarely be mentioned in ancient sources. They are, however, well known in Arabic and Byzantine sources as al-Rus’ and Varangian merchants. 

The word Varangian was used by Arabs, Greeks and Kievan Rus’ for the merchants from the islandin the Baltic Sea region ( the Gotlanders ). It probably came from the old Norse word ‘vár’, which means‘ union through promise’, and was used by a group of men to keep them together in an association, and under oath observe certain obligations to support each other in good faith and to share the resulting  profits.

It was a common word, when trading adventures were undertaken by Gotlandic tradesmen on the Russian rivers. They closed a business contract with each other and pledged to defend each other. Another meaning of the word was for the Gotlanders who acted as mercenary soldiers to the rulers ofKhazaria, Miklagarðr ( Constantinople ) and GarðaríkiKievan Rus’). The Gotlandic Varangian Guard became an elite unit of the Byzantine army formed under emperor Basil II in 988.

 At that time was also the official Christianization of the Kievan Rus’ by Vladimir I of Kiev. There were no Vikings in the Baltic Sea region. The word Viking is not known there. The Vikings were warriors from Denmark, the west of Sweden and Norway, and the Viking Age starts with the attackon Lindisfarne in 793. There is a clear line in the river Elbe between Vikings and Varangians .

East of the river Elbe there is no mention of Vikings, only Varangians. In the Baltic Sea region the Gotlanders, after the signing of the trade and peace treaty in the 550s,controlled the trade under Svea protection on the areas controlled by the Svear. End 700s when silver from the Islamic Caliphate started to flow, the Gotlanders entered the Russian rivers all the way to river Volga and the Kaspian Sea. The Gotlandic Merchant Farmers were on the Russian rivers called Varangians and al-Rus’ ( expeditions of rowing ships ). It is documented in Byzantine sources that from late 800s and forward there were larger Gotlandic contingents stationed in Miklagarðr. As mentioned above, it is only in the early 500s that sources start to talk about some powerful people in the Lake Mälar area, except for Tacitus Sitones who he considers degenerated as they were ruled by a woman.

1st. Prokopios tells us about the Heruli or Earls who settle next to the Gauti.

2nd. Snorri tells us about the Asia men who introduce a new religion and settle in Sigtuna.

The excavations at Old Sigtuna reveal major changes in the early 500s with large increase in people and horses.

3rd. The Beowulf epos talks about the conditions in the Baltic

Sea region and the antagonism betweenthe immigrant Svear and the Gotlanders.

The real name of the island in the Baltic Sea is Gutland or the island of the Gutar. In the trade treaties from the 1100s it is called ‘Gutniska kusten( Gotlandish coast), and the people are called Gutar. The Couronians called the Gotlanders for Gudi. Jordanes talks about Gothi scandza as the linguists have translated with the ‘Gotlandic coast’, or the coast where the Gotlandic trading colonies were located on the southern shores of the Baltic Sea.

The word Scandza means just the coast, later ‘Gutniska kusten’, which is the island Gotland. The word Gotland is a Latin form that alludes to the Roman name for the Goths, who called them-selves Guthiuda and Gutans.

 The Gotlanders were thus independent until the end of the 1300s and then self-governing

 first under pirates ( including removed foreign kings ).From 1530 until 1645 Gotland was a tributary state under the Danish king. All that time the Gotlandic Merchant Farmers’ Republic functions de jure

The Gotlanders choose things judges and the large Gotlandic ‘national seal’ with the ewe is used until they later in the 1500s do not want to acknowledge a too uncomfortable Danish decision. Instead they explain that the seal has been lost. On paper the Gotlandic Merchant Farmers’ Re-public exists until the beginning of the 1600s but is gradually abolished. 

 The Gotlandic Merchant Farmers’ counted their birth position and their social class socially higher than burghers and peasants of other nations. The difference can obviously be explained, that they were aware, that they had a higher form of freedom, namely to be free from land lords and liability to taxation. The Gotlandic society before the 1600s was considered to be an ‘ethnie’, a group with a perceived common origin, language and history.  The governor of Tobolsk, Siberia’s capital, Count Matjev Gagarin ( 1711-1719 ) was considered to be of Varangian origin and higher than  Tsar Peter who was just a Romanov.

The Gotlanders had early close contact with the Byzantine Ortodox Church and a trade agreement was signed with the Emperor in Miklagarðr ( Constantinople ) dated in the year 911. The document was signed by the Emperor Leo VIand Karl, Ingjald, Farulf, Vermund, Hrollaf, Gun-nar, Harold, Kami, Frithleif, Hroarr, Angantyr, Throand, Leithulf, Fast, and Steinvith. The treaty regulates the status of the colony of the Gotlandic Varangian merchants in Constantinople.

The text testifies that they settled in the quarter of Saint Mamas. No one was able to force their will on the Gotlanders, not even the Catholic Church.  The Gotlanders are one of the few peoples who themselves determined the conditions for the con-nection to the Pope and the Catholic Church.

It is important that we are aware that the Gotlanders had experience of many Christian and non-Christian doctrines of faith. Åke Ohlmarks, among others, believes that there is evidence of Arian-Christian graves on Gotland as early as the 500s. The Bishop in Linköping, who the Gotlanders con-cluded contracts with, “because he was closest to them”, seems not to have been able to interfere in the decision making in the Gotlandic Church. He was only contracted to perform dedication ceremonies and tours of inspection as required. He did not even have a say in the selection of priests, although he protested to Rome.  Even the compensation, that the bishop received, was decided by the Gotlanders.  As earlier mentioned the Gotlandic Merchant Farmers’ counted their birth position and their social class socially higher than burghers and peasants of other nations.

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Tore Gannholm

Reviewed by Tammy Wise CHS

CLAN SEANACHAIDHI

CLAN CARRUTHERS INT SOCIETY CCIS HISTORIAN AND GENEALOGIST

Information about Tore Gannholm, whose work has been valued by all researchers at Clan Carruthers CCIS

I have researched the Gotlandic history since 1990 when I came with my first book “Gutarnas historia”.At that time it said in Swedish history books: “Gotland is seldom mentioned in the written sources why it was considered that Gotland had no real history, as there lived only peasants.We still suffer badly from earlier generations ’‘Swedish – centered’ historical research. History was always written by the victors. The ‘history’ of the defeated and that of conquered territories is usually being ignored or even misinterpreted. This is true, not only for Gotland but for all those landscapes which were conquered in the 1600s and also, mutatis mutandis, for those parts of the old Sweden which were lost. Who now knows anything about the Middle Ages of Karelia or of Ingermanland or, for that matter, of Finland? When Gotland was annexed by Sweden in 1679 it was the winners history that became ruling. Gotlandic history became irrelevant. To understand the history of Gotland, one must fully realize that Gotland was an independent Merchant Farmers’ Republic, and the hub of the Baltic Sea region, which from time immemorial had its relations mainly east and south. The Gotlandic history is misleading and difficult to understand if it is bundled with the Swedish history, which so far has been done. They both have their separate history. There are some deadlocks in Swedish history which have blocked the view for a broader perspective. I here think of the Roman sources about the Baltic Sea region. In the 1600s when Sweden was a super-power they had to give it a story that matched its position in the world and when they in the Roman sources found peoples and places that started with an ‘S’ they immediately concluded that it must be ‘Svear’ and the ‘Scandinavian peninsula’. The Roman name for the Scandinavian peninsula was, however, still in the 500s THULE. This historical picture was created by Johannes Magnus, and continued by Olof Rudbeck in ‘Atlantica’. Still today many writers without thought are copying these old delusions that the Roman writers would have written about some mighty Svear at the beginning of our era.It is not possible to study Gotlandic history or Gotlandic world-uniqe churches in any Swedish university as there are no such subjects. However on internet I have over the years been able to discuss history with scholars in various countries. As regards the world-unique Gotlandic Medieval churches Professor Emeritus Jan Svanberg has been my mentor since early 1990s and I have followed him on various excursions to churches in Gotland, in Sweden, in Russia and in southern Europe. I have also arranged excursions with Jan as guide to Gotlandic churches. After the book-release of “Gotland the Pearl of the Baltic Sea” in august 2013 I started with the project of the Gotlandic churches with Jan Svanberg as my mentor. I realized something was wrong with the dating and could soon prove that they were up to 200 years older that available research showed. I worked 8 hours a day seven days a week for two years. I used three computers to access my research material that  I had scanned and is available in pdf on my server. I had book release on ”The Gotlandic Merchant Republic and its Medieval Churches”.

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OUR ANCESTORS, Uncategorized, Varangians

THE SEA KINGS – CLAN CARRUTHERS CCIS

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THE SEA KINGS

The Sea-Kings and their Daring Feats

From the word vik, or bay, comes the word viking, long used to designate the sea-rovers of the Northland, the bold Norse wanderers who for centuries made their way to the rich lands of the south on plundering raids. Beginning by darting out suddenly from hiding places in bays or river mouths to attack passing craft, they in the end became daring scourers of the seas and won for themselves kingdoms and dominions in the settled realms of the south.

Nothing was known of them in the early days. The people of southern Europe in the first Christian centuries hardly knew of the existence of the race of fair-skinned and light-haired barbarians who dwelt in the great peninsula of the north. It was not until near the year 800 B.C. that these bold brigands learned that riches awaited those who dared seize it on the shores of France, England, and more southern lands. Then they came in fleets and spread terror wherever they appeared. For several centuries the realms of civilization trembled before their very name.

“From the fury of the Northmen, Good Lord deliver us!” prayed the priests, and the people joined fervently in the prayer.

Long before this period the sea was the favorite hunting ground of the daring sons of the north, but the small chiefs of that period preyed upon each other, harrying their neighbors and letting distant lands alone. But as the power of the chiefs, and their ability to protect themselves increased, this mode of gaining wealth and fame lost its ease and attraction and the rovers began to rove farther afield.

Sveidi 'Sveiði' “The Sea King” HEYTIRSSON – The Lives of my Ancestors

Sea-kings they called themselves. On land the ruler of a province might be called either earl or king, but the earl who went abroad with his followers on warlike excursions was content with no less name than king, and the chiefs who set out on plundering cruises became from the first known as sea-kings. Pirates and freebooters we would call them to-day, but they were held in high distinction in their native land, and some of the most cruel of them, on their return home, became men of influence, with all the morality and sense of honor known in those early days. Their lives of ravage and outrage won them esteem at home and the daring and successful sea-king ranked in fame with the noblest of the home-staying chiefs. We have seen how King Erik began his career as a viking and ended it in the same pursuit; how Rollo, a king’s son, adopted the same profession; and from this it may be seen that the term was one of honor instead of disgrace.

From all the lands of the north they came, these dreaded sons of the sea, from Norway, Sweden, and Denmark alike, fierce heathens they who cared nought for church or priest, but liked best to rob chapels and monasteries, for there the greatest stores of gold and silver could be found. When the churches were plundered they often left them in flames, as they also did the strong cities they captured and sacked. The small, light boats with which they dared the sea in its wrath were able to go far up the rivers, and wherever these fierce and bloodthirsty rovers appeared wild panic spread far around. So fond were they of sword-thrust and battle that one viking crew would often challenge another for the pure delight of fighting. A torment and scourge they were wherever they appeared.

Ivar Halfdansson + Thyra Eysteinsdoittir

The first we hear in history of the sea-kings is in the year 787, when a small party of them landed on the English coast. In 794 came another flock of these vultures of the sea, who robbed a church and a monastery, plundering and killing, and being killed in their turn when a storm wrecked their ships and threw them on shore. As a good monk writes of them: “The heathen came from the northern countries to Britain like stinging wasps, roamed about like savage wolves, robbing, biting, killing not only horses, sheep, and cattle, but also priests, acolytes, monks, and nuns.”

The Norsemen had found a gold mine in the south and from this time on they worked it with fierce hands. Few dared face them, and even in the days of the great Charlemagne they ravaged the coast lands of France. Once, when the great emperor was in one of his cities on the Mediterranean coast, a fleet of the swift viking ships, known by their square sails, entered the harbor. Soon word was brought that they had landed and were plundering. Who they were the people knew not, some saying that they were Jews, others Africans, and others that they were British merchants.

“No merchants they,” said the emperor. “Those ships do not bring us goods, but fierce foes, bloody fighters from the north.”

The warriors around him at once seized their weapons and hurried to the shore, but the vikings had learned that the great emperor was in the city and, not daring to face him, had sought their ships and spread their sails again. Tears came to the eyes of Charlemagne as he watched them in their outward flight. He said to those around him:

“It is not for fear that these brigands can do me any harm that I weep, but for their daring to show themselves on this coast while I am alive. Their coming makes me foresee and fear the harm they may do to my descendants.”

This story may be one of those legends which the monks were fond of telling, but it serves to show how the dread Norsemen were feared. France was one of their chief fields of ravage and slaughter. First coming in single ships, to rob and flee, they soon began to come in fleets and grew daring enough to attack and sack cities. Hastings, one of the most renowned of them all, did not hesitate to attack the greatest cities of the south.

In 841 this bold freebooter sailed up the Loire with a large fleet, took and burned the city of Amboise, and laid siege to Tours. But here the inhabitants, aided, it is said, by the bones of their patron saint, drove him off. Four years later he made an attack on Paris, and as fortune followed his flag he grew so daring that he sought to capture the city of Rome and force the Pope to crown him emperor.

For an account of this remarkable adventure of the bold Hastings see the article, “The Raids of the Sea-Rovers,”  https://clancarruthers.home.blog/2022/01/12/the-raids-of-the-sea-kings-clan-carruthers-ccis/

In that account are also given the chief exploits of the vikings in France and Germany. We shall therefore confine ourselves in the remainder of this article to their operations in other lands, and especially in Ireland.

This country was a common field for the depredations of the Norse rovers. For some reason not very clear to us the early vikings did not trouble England greatly, but for many years they spread terror through the sister isle, and in the year 838 Thorgisl, one of their boldest leaders, came with a fleet of one hundred and twenty ships, with which he attacked and captured the city of Dublin, and afterwards, as an old author tells us, he conquered all Ireland, securing his conquest with stone forts surrounded with deep moats.

Sveide Sveidasson - Historical records and family trees - MyHeritage

But the Irish at length got rid of their conqueror by a stratagem. It was through love that the sea-king was lost. Bewitched with the charms of the fair daughter of Maelsechnail, one of the petty kings of the land, he bade this chieftain to send her to him, with fifteen young maidens in her train. He agreed to meet her on an island in Loch Erne with as many Norsemen of high degree.

Maelsechnail obeyed, but his maidens were beardless young men, dressed like women but armed with sharp daggers. Thorgisl and his men, taken by surprise, were attacked and slain. The Irish chief had once before asked Thorgisl how he should rid himself of some troublesome birds that had invaded the island. “Destroy their nests,” said the Norseman. It was wise advice, and Maelsechnail put it in effect against the nests of the conquerors, destroying their stone strongholds, and killing or driving them away, with the aid of his fellow chieftains.

Thus for a time Ireland was freed. It was conquered again by Olaf the White, who in 852 defeated some Danes who had taken Dublin, and then, like Thorgisl, began to build castles and tax the people. Two other viking leaders won kingdoms in Ireland, but Olaf was the most powerful of them all, and the kingdom founded by him lasted for three hundred and fifty years. From Dublin Olaf sailed to Scotland and England, the booty he won filling two hundred ships.

The sea-rovers did not confine their voyages to settled lands. Bold ocean wanderers, fearless of man on shore and tempest on the waves, they visited all the islands of the north and dared the perils of the unknown sea. They rounded the North Cape and made their way into the White Sea as early as 750. The Faroe, the Orkney and the Shetland Islands were often visited by them after 825, and in 874 they discovered Iceland, which had been reached and settled by Irishmen or Scots about 800. The Norsemen found here only some Irish hermits and monks, and these, disturbed in their peaceful retreat by the turbulent newcomers, made their way back to Ireland and left the Norsemen lords of the land. From Iceland the rovers reached Greenland, which was settled in 986, and about the year 1000 they discovered North America, at a place they named Vinland.

Such is, briefly told, the story of the early Norse wanderers. They had a later tale, of which we have told part in their conquest of Ireland. Though at first they came with a few ships, and were content to attack a town or a monastery, they soon grew more daring and their forces larger. A number of them would now fortify themselves on some coast elevation and make it a centre for plundering raids into the surrounding country. At a later date many of them ceased to pose as pirates and took the rôle of invaders and conquerors, storming and taking cities and founding governments in the invaded land.

The Sea King | Art UK

( The Carrruthers have many ancestors who were Sea Kings, as far back as 200 AD.  In our line we only know of the King or Chief , of a large group of big men who wore a lot of chain male.  They were identified as big, tall, huge men with no roof.   We had ancestors later on who were  called Varigians.)

Such was the work of Thorgisl and Olaf in Ireland and of Rollo in Normandy. England was a frequent field of invasion after 833, which continued until 851, when King Ethelwulf defeated them with great slaughter. Fifteen years later they came again, these new invaders being almost all Danes. During all his reign Alfred the Great fought with them, but in spite of his efforts they gained a footing in the island, becoming its masters in the north and east. A century later, in 1016, Canute, the king of Denmark, completed the conquest and became king of all England.

This is not the whole story of the sea-kings, whose daring voyages and raids made up much of the history of those centuries. One of the most important events in viking history took place in 862, when three brother chiefs, probably from Sweden, who had won fame in the Baltic Sea, were invited by the Russian tribes south of Lake Ladoga to come and rule over them. They did so, making Novgorod their capital. From this grew the empire of Russia, which was ruled over by the descendants of Rurik, the principal of these chiefs, until 1598.

Other vikings made their way southward through Russia and, sailing down the Dnieper, put Constantinople in peril. Only a storm which scattered their fleet saved the great city from capture. Three times later they appeared before Constantinople, twice (in 904 and 945) being bought off by the emperors with large sums of money. Later on the emperors had a picked body-guard of Varangians, as they called the Northmen, and kept these till the fall of the city in 1453. It was deemed a great honor in the north to serve in this choice cohort at Myklegaard (Great City), and those who returned from there doubtless carried many of the elements of civilization to the Scandinavian shores.

To some of these Varangians was due the conquest of Sicily by the Northmen. They were in the army sent from Constantinople to conquer that island, and seeing how goodly a land it was they aided in its final conquest, which was made by Robert Guiscard, a noble of Normandy, whose son Roger took the title of “King of Sicily and Italy.” Thus it was that the viking voyages led within a few centuries to the founding of kingdoms under Norse rulers in England, Ireland, Sicily, Russia, and Normandy in France.

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The Viking Age, Uncategorized

CLAN CARRUTHERS – THE VIKINGS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE U.K.

THE VIKINGS AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE U.K.

 

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Vikings were feared and respected. Some viewed and portrayed them as godless pagans, barbarian invaders. Others looked up to them, regarding them as brave, fearless legendary warriors.

Viking Ship found carved in stone on Gotland (Swedish island)

Vikings formed part of a complex and sophisticated Scandinavian culture. They originated from what are now Norway, Sweden and Denmark, though there are mentions in historical records of Finnish, Estonian Varaginian and Saami Vikings as well.

As well as raiders they were traders, reaching as far east as the rivers of Russia and the Caspian Sea, far across the Atlantic where they would land on the coastline of North America ten centuries before Columbus; poets, composing verse and prose sagas of great power, and artists, creating works of astonishing beauty. While the Vikings had the runic alphabet, they didn’t have written history, it was transmitted orally. These seafaring warriors known collectively as Vikings or Norsemen (“Northmen”) began by raiding coastal sites, especially undefended monasteries, in the British Isles in 793 CE.

Terror descended on the coast of Northumbria (U.K), as armed raiders attacked the defenceless monastery of St Cuthbert on Lindisfarne. The terrified monks watched helplessly as these invaders made off with a haul of treasure and a clutch of captives, mainly monks most likely. It was the first recorded raid by the Vikings, who would prey on coastal communities in north-western Europe as well as parts of modern-day Russia, Iceland, Greenland and Newfoundland for more than two centuries. The attack and plunder of Lindisfarne echoed throughout the next 300 years of European history, what historians refer to as The Viking Age, had begun.

Lindisfarne Raid: Viking Ships arriving in Britain as depicted in an English illuminated manuscrpit, c. 1130.

The exact reasons for Vikings to leave their homeland remain unclear, but we do know that at first they were looking for riches and not land which out rules the theory that they were overpopulated. It is a historic fact that Europe was growing richer, fuelling the growth of trading centres such as Dorestad and Quentovic on the Continent and Hamwic (now Southampton), London, Ipswich and York in England. Scandinavian furs were highly prized in the new trading markets. Their knowledge on new sailing technology and inner conflicts between European kingdoms would be used to expand their fortune-seeking activities into the North Sea and beyond. Special ship construction techniques made the long ships and larger dragon ships versatile enough to sail great distances, carry up to 200 men, withstand rough seas while still being light enough to drag over land or carry through portages. They traded all the goods of the north – furs, amber, iron and timber – for all the goods of the south – silver, gold, silks and spices. And all along the trade routes, the Vikings traded in slaves. It is worth noting that women in Viking society had more power than most other European women of the time. They could divorce their husbands, own some property and sell their own handicrafts. Some women became wealthy landowners too.

So Vikings took to raiding towns, churches and monasteries in Christian faith countries, e.g. Francia; many of the attacks took place on the coasts as they were easiest to reach. With their swift and easily landed ships, they quickly swarm over the communities, killing and looting, and just as fast returned to their ships and left. They were gone before any defence or counter-attack could be made. Strangely enough, for most of the men who went plundering, it was only part time. They often returned in time for harvest in the fall. However, raiding was very profitable and many farmers did become full time pirates and raiders.

Vikings presence in Britain

Gradually, Viking raiders began to stay, first in winter camps, then settling in land they had seized, mainly in the east and north of England. Outside Anglo-Saxon England, to the north of Britain, the Vikings took over and settled in Iceland, the Faroes and Orkney (an archipelago in the Northern Isles of Scotland), becoming farmers and fishermen, and sometimes going on summer trading or raiding voyages. Orkney became powerful, and from there the Earls of Orkney ruled most of Scotland. To this day, especially on the north-east coast, many Scots still bear Viking names.

To the west of Britain, the Isle of Man became a Viking kingdom. The island still has its Tynwald, or ting-vollr (assembly field), a reminder of Viking rule. In Ireland, the Vikings raided around the coasts and up the rivers. They founded the cities of Dublin, Cork and Limerick as Viking strongholds. Meanwhile, back in England, the Vikings took over Northumbria, East Anglia and parts of Mercia. In 866 they captured modern York (Viking name: Jorvik) and made it their capital. They continued to press south and west. The kings of Mercia and Wessex resisted as best they could, but with little success until the time of Alfred of Wessex, the only king of England to be called ‘the Great’.

Portrait of King Alfred the Great (849-899 AD).

King Alfred ruled from 871-899 AD and after many trials and tribulations he defeated the Vikings at the Battle of Edington in 878. After the battle, the Viking leader Guthrum converted to Christianity. In 886 Alfred took London from the Vikings and fortified it. The same year he signed a treaty with Guthrum. The treaty partitioned England between Vikings and English. The Viking territory became known as the Danelaw. It comprised the north-west, the north-east and east of England. Here, people would be subject to Danish laws. Alfred became king of the rest. Alfred’s grandson, Athelstan, became the first true King of England. He led an English victory over the Vikings at the Battle of Brunaburh in 937, and his kingdom for the first time included the Danelaw. In 954, Eirik Bloodaxe, the last Viking king of York, was killed and his kingdom was taken over by English earls.

England, 878 AD.

Moreover, in 991, during the reign of Aethelred ‘the Unready’ (‘ill-advised’), Olaf Tryggvason’s Viking raiding party defeated the Anglo-Saxon defenders (recorded in the poem The Battle of Maldon), with Aethelred responding by paying ‘Danegeld’ in an attempt to buy off the Vikings. So the Vikings were not permanently defeated – England was to have four Viking kings between 1013 and 1042. The greatest of these was King Cnut, who was king of Denmark as well as of England. As a Christian, he did not force the English to obey Danish law; instead he recognised Anglo-Saxon law and customs. He worked to create a north Atlantic empire that united Scandinavia and Britain. Unfortunately, he died at the age of 39, and his sons had short, troubled reigns.

The final Viking invasion of England came in 1066, when Harald Hardrada sailed up the River Humber and marched to Stamford Bridge with his men. His battle banner was called Land-waster. The English king, Harold Godwinson, marched north with his army and defeated Hardrada in a long and bloody battle. The English had repelled the last invasion from Scandinavia. Nonetheless, immediately after the battle, King Harold heard that William of Normandy had landed in Kent with yet another invading army. With no time to rest, Harold’s army marched swiftly back south to meet this new threat. The exhausted English army fought the Normans at the Battle of Hastings on 14th October, 1066. At the end of a long day’s fighting the Normans had won, King Harold was dead, and William was the new king of England. The irony is that William was of Viking descent: his great-great-great-grandfather Rollo was a Viking who in 911 had invaded Normandy. ** Carruthers have a genealogy link to King Robert I also know as King Rollo ).   His people had become French over time, but in one sense this final successful invasion of England was another Viking one.

Interesting facts:

  • Viking Age Scandinavia’s runic alphabet, the Futhark, is named after its first six symbols (futhar, and k). During the Viking Age (800-1050 CE), runestones were often painted and the carved lettering filled in with bright colors. Runestones were raised along waterways and property boundaries, by road intersections, and on hilltops so people could find and read them.
  • English and Frankish Christian priests and monks had begun missionary tours to the Viking lands from the 700s to 800s but it wasn’t until King Harald Bluetooth was baptized in 965 that Christianity took a firmer hold in Denmark.
  • Viking warriors usually went into battle bareheaded. The whole horned-helm idea came about in Victorian times when Vikings were romanticized.
  • In English speaking countries, names for days of the week come mainly from Norse gods – Tuesday from Tiw or Týr, Wednesday from Woden (Odin), Thursday from Thor and so on. Many of their other words have also become part of English, for example egg, steak, law, die, bread, down, fog, muck, lump and scrawny.

 

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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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