8a. F2012 Vikings - Some notes
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Transcript of 8a. F2012 Vikings - Some notes

Alfred and the Viking Threat

Rational bandits: Plunder, public goods, and the Vikings
The economics of banditry• Roving bandit receives large, individual
benefits from plunder at the expense of society as a whole– Unrestricted plundering leads to competition– Plunder used for local infrastructure

Rational bandits: Plunder, public goods, and the Vikings
The economics of banditry• Roving bandit becomes stationary bandit
– Receives local taxation– Accepted because protects area from other bandits
• Provides security and legal institutions– Economic growth

Viking Ship

Viking Conquests – Northern Europe

Orkney• Christian contact reported c. 600; Irish contact
709; Broch settlements used by Picts• Domestic rubbish includes cow, sheep, pig and red
deer• Sagas report Norwegian settlement c. 870• Viking era layers indicate some coexistence?

Genetics
Admixed population
Scandinavian British/Irish
Y-chromosome
mtDNA Y-chromosome
mtDNA
Shetland 0.445 0.43 ,555 .57
Orkney 0.31 0.305 .69 .695
Scottish NW coast
.15 .145 .85 .855
Western Isles and Skye
.225 .11 0.775 0.89
Iceland .75 .34 0.25 0.66

A Bone of Contention
Orkney
Ashby, Steven P “Combs, Contact and Chronology: Reconsidering Hair Combs in Early-Historic and Viking-Age Atlantic Scotland” Medieval Archaeology, 53, 2009

Pictish Combs

Insu
lar A
rt in
Nor
weg
ian
Gra
ves

Gausel hanging bowl

Brooch, Vinjum in AurlandKillarney Brooch

Hopperstad bucket

Codex Amiatinus, Wearmouth-JarrowCuthbert Gospel, Lindisfarne

Balance and Weights, Hopperstad, Norway

Fellow travelers
Norway mice as indicators of where Norwegian Viking ships land

Martyrdom of St. EdmundPickering, Yorkshire

Alfred faces the Great Army