PEASANT WARRIOR
This peasant was not rich, and
dressed simply. But he was a
freeman, and owned his own farm,
which his wife would look after
when he went to war. The 10th-
century poem Rigst hula describes
a peasant couple: he makes
furniture and his wife
weaves. They have a son
named Karl, meaning
farmer or freeman.
Karl’s wife wears fine
goatskin and carries
keys, a symbol of
her status (p. 33).
VȪȬȪȯȨȴȰȤȪȦȵȺȩȢȥȵȩȳȦȦȤȭȢȴȴȦȴ—slaves,
freemen, and nobles. Most of the hard labor
was done by slaves, or t hralls. Many were
foreigners captured in war. Wealthy people
sometimes had their slaves killed and
buried with them. Slaves could be freed.
Freemen included farmers, traders,
craftsmen, warriors, and big landowners.
At the beginning of the Viking Age,
there were many local chieftains
(nobles) who ruled over small areas.
They were subject to the rule of the
Thing, the local assembly where all freemen could
voice their opinions and complain about others.
But chieftains and kings gradually increased
their wealth and power by raiding and
conquering foreign lands. By the end
of the Viking Age, around 1050,
Norway, Denmark, and Sweden
were each ruled by a single,
powerful king, and the role of
the Things had declined.
28
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The well-off Viking
warrior or chieftain
took pride in
his appearance.
This Viking carved
from elk antler has
neatly trimmed
hair and beard.
Simple
leat her belt
Wooden ax handle
Plain iron ax head Wooden shield
wit h iron boss
Plain woolen
pants
Leat her shoes
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Rich or poor, leather shoes were of a
simple design. Fancy pairs had colored
uppers, ornamental seams, or even
inscriptions. The most common
leather for shoes was goatskin.
Toggle (fastener)
made of ant ler
Goatskin
),*+7,1*,7287
This is the Duel at Skiringsal,
painted by the Norwegian artist
Johannes Flintoe in the 1830s.
Disputes were often settled by
a duel, which could end in death.
These gruesome fights were
forbidden by law in Iceland
and Norway in around 1000.
Arguments could also be sorted out
by the Thing (the local assembly),
or by tests called ordeals. In ordeals,
men would try to prove their
innocence by picking stones from
a cauldron of boiling water or
carrying a hot iron for nine paces.
The Vikings believed that the gods
would protect the innocent.