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Buried treasure
Vikings were buried with all kinds of treasures.
These are known as grave goods. They are usually
the finest or favorite belongings that the dead
man or woman owned or wore. Other grave goods
were specially made, just for the burial. Grave goods
give many glimpses of the Viking way of life: of
how people cooked or sewed; of their furniture,
dress, and jewelry; and of the
tools and weapons they
used every day.
Whole mount is shaped
like an animal’s head
and neck
Two animal heads in profile,
staring snout to snout
Face of an animal,
perhaps a lion
Head of a person or animal
Paw
Tangle
of legs
Eye Long neck
Slender,
S-shaped
animal
Front leg
Back
leg
Cast-bronze handle
Bird
BEAUTIFUL BRIDLE BITS
These five glittering mounts are part of a
horse’s bridle. They date from the late 8th century.
They were found with 17 others in a rich man’s
grave at Broa in Gotland, Sweden. Made of bronze
coated with gold, they are decorated with masses
of intricate animals and birds, some twisting in
slender ribbons, others plump and gripping
everything in sight (p. 37).
Spiral patterns
engraved on
bronze sheets
Fang
Clenched jaws
Surface seet hes wit h
four-legged gripping beasts
The so-called Carolingian
animal-head post
DRINKS BUCKET
Made in northern
England or Scotland,
this bucket was
buried in a woman’s
grave in Birka,
Sweden, around 900.
It is made of birch
wood covered in
sheets of bronze.
The bucket was
probably used for
serving drinks.
Mysterious heads
Among the treasures in the
Oseberg burial ship were five
strange wooden posts. Here are
three of them. Each post is
carved in a different style, but
they are all topped by fantastic
creatures with snarling mouths.
The carvers were incredibly
skilled. The animals’ heads and
necks squirm with a mass of
tiny figures. No one knows what
the posts were for. Worshipers
might have carried them at a
religious procession, perhaps
at the Oseberg funeral. The
fierce animals, like lions, may
have been meant to scare
away evil spirits.