The Viking World (Routledge Worlds)

(Ben Green) #1

This development is mirrored in changes in weighing equipment. The earliest
Viking Age weights were rather imprecise and many local standards seem to have
existed. Their shape and material, cylindrical lead weights dominating, made them easy
to tamper with, which did not promote trust between trading partners. Around 860 / 70
a new type and standard of much more reliable bronze weights were introduced in
southern and eastern Scandinavia. One would expect that the increased trustworthiness
of weights facilitated trade and contributed to the strong growth in exchange where
silver was used as a means of payment (Steuer 1997 ; Gustin 2004 ).
The need for a trusted means of payment was one of the reasons for the shift to
coinage in the final decades of the Viking Age. The trust in the king as a ruler and
peacekeeper was extended into the economic sphere and made operational there. One
may say that the development in the means of exchange from local weight systems to
royal coinage mirrors the fundamental changes that took place in the Scandinavian
societies during the Viking Age. The towns were important arenas for the economic,
social and political driving forces in this development.


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–– Dagfinn Skre––
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