DK Eyewitness Books - Viking

(C. Jardin) #1

HEAVENLY BED POST
A mass of everyday
objects was buried in
the Gokstad ship.
These included the
dead man’s clothes, a
cauldron, six wooden
cups, a bucket, six
beds, three boats, a
sled, tent frames,
plus the skeletons of
12 horses, six dogs,
and a peacock. One
of the beds had two
posts carved with
animal heads. The
dead man wanted
to take all his
belongings with him
to Valhalla, the
Viking heaven (p. 53).


Copper alloy
coated wit h gold

Carved tongue

Figure of a great beast,
like t he animal on t he
Jelling Stone (pp. 60–61)

Oak Lookout

Stern-post

Dragon head

Strakes
shown on
t he hull

Proud lion, which would always
point away from t he wind

Vane was probably
mounted on t he ship’s
prow along t his edge

BLOWING IN THE WIND
Weather vanes are used to tell the direction of
the wind. This one is from Söderala Church in
Sweden. It may once have swung from the
prow or mast of a Viking ship. When King
Svein Forkbeard’s ships left Denmark to
conquer England in 1013, a French monk said
they glittered with “lions molded in gold” and
“birds on the tops of the masts.”

CHANGING COURSE
The steersman held the tiller, a
wooden bar that slotted into the top of
the steering oar (p. 11). The Gokstad
tiller is decorated with a carved
animal head.
Tiller

Leat her strap holds t he
steering oar in place

BOAT BROOCH
A Danish Viking woman wore this brooch in the
9th century. It is shaped like a ship, with strakes
and shields along the side, dragon heads at the
prow and stern, and even a lookout up the mast!

Shield

Strakes are held
toget her by iron
nails (p. 25)

Keel stops t he
ship from sliding
sideways in t he wind

GOKSTAD SHIP, STERN VIEW
The Viking ship was steered by a large oar
with a long, flat blade. The Gokstad steering oar
is 10 ft 9 in (3.3 m) long. The steering oar was always
attached to the right side of the ship near the stern. In
English, a ship’s right side is still called starboard, after
the old Norse word styra (to steer). The Gokstad ship
is symmetrical—the prow is identical to the stern, except
that it has no steering oar. Steering oar
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