Term for art of Scandinavia and Viking settlements of 8th-11th centuries
Viking art, also known commonly as Norse art, is a term widely accepted for the art of ScandinavianNorsemen and Viking settlements further afield—particularly in the British Isles and Iceland—during the Viking Age of the 8th-11th centuries. Viking art has many design elements in common with Celtic, Germanic, the later Romanesque and Eastern European art, sharing many influences with each of these traditions.[1]
Generally speaking, the current knowledge of Viking art relies heavily upon more durable objects of metal and stone; wood, bone, ivory and textiles are more rarely preserved. The artistic record, therefore, as it has survived to the present day, remains significantly incomplete. Ongoing archaeologicalexcavation and opportunistic finds, of course, may improve this situation in the future, as indeed they have in the recent past.
Viking art is usually divided into a sequence of roughly chronological styles, although outside Scandinavia itself local influences are often strong, and the development of styles can be less clear.
Historical context
The Vikings' regional origins lay in Scandinavia, the northernmost peninsula of continental Europe, while the term 'Viking' likely derived from their own term for coastal raiding—the activity by which many neighboring cultures became acquainted with the inhabitants of the region.
Viking raiders attacked wealthy targets on the north-western coasts of Europe from the late 8th until the mid-11th century CE. Pre-Christian traders and sea raiders, the Vikings first enter recorded history with their attack on the Christian monastic community on Lindisfarne Island in 793.
The Vikings initially employed their longships to invade and attack European coasts, harbors and river settlements on a seasonal basis. Subsequently, Viking activities diversified to include trading voyages to the east, west, and south of their Scandinavian homelands, with repeated and regular voyages following river systems east into Russia and the Black and Caspian Sea regions, and west to the coastlines of the British Isles, Iceland and Greenland. Evidence exists for Vikings reaching Newfoundland well before the later voyages of Christopher Columbus came to the New World.
Trading and merchant activities were accompanied by settlement and colonization in many of these territories.[2]
By material
Wood and organic materials
Wood was undoubtedly the primary material of choice for Viking artists, being relatively easy to carve, inexpensive, and abundant in northern Europe. The importance of wood as an artistic medium is underscored by chance survivals of wood artistry at the very beginning and end of the Viking period, namely, the Oseberg ship-burial carvings of the early 9th century and the carved decoration of the Urnes Stave Church from the 12th century. As summarised by James Graham-Campbell: "These remarkable survivals allow us to form at least an impression of what we are missing from original corpus of Viking art, although wooden fragments and small-scale carvings in other materials (such as antler, amber, and walrus ivory) provide further hints. The same is inevitably true of the textile arts, although weaving and embroidery were clearly well-developed crafts."[3] Woodworking was used on all sorts of items like ships, furniture, and ceremonial objects.
Stone
With the exception of the Gotlandic picture stones prevalent in Sweden early in the Viking period, stone carving was apparently not practiced elsewhere in Scandinavia until the mid-10th century and the creation of the royal monuments at Jelling in Denmark. Subsequently, and likely influenced by the spread of Christianity, the use of carved stone for permanent memorials became more prevalent.
Metal
Beyond the discontinuous artifactual records of wood and stone, the reconstructed history of Viking art to date relies most on the study of decoration of ornamental metalwork from a great variety of sources.[4] Several types of archaeological context have succeeded in preserving metal objects for present study, while the durability of precious metals, in particular, has preserved much artistic expression and endeavor.
Jewelry was worn by both men and women, though of different types. Married women fastened their overdresses near the shoulder with matching pairs of large brooches. Modern scholars often call them "tortoise brooches" because of their domed shape. The shapes and styles of women's paired brooches varied regionally, but many used openwork. Women often strung metal chains or strings of beads between the brooches or suspended ornaments from the bottom of the brooches. Men wore rings on their fingers, arms and necks, and held their cloaks closed with penannular brooches, often with extravagantly long pins. Their weapons were often richly decorated on areas such as sword hilts. A small number of large and lavish pieces or sets in solid gold have been found, probably belonging to royalty or major figures.
Decorated metalwork of an everyday nature is frequently recovered from Viking period graves, on account of the widespread practice of making burials accompanied by grave goods. The deceased was dressed in their best clothing and jewelry, and was interred with weapons, tools, and household goods. Items were forged by casting, inlay, and engraving. Less common, but significant nonetheless, are finds of precious metal objects in the form of treasure hoards, many apparently concealed for safe-keeping by owners later unable to recover their contents, although some may have been deposited as offerings to the gods.
Recently, given the increasing popularity and legality of metal-detecting, an increasing frequency of single, chance finds of metal objects and ornaments (most probably representing accidental losses) is creating a fast expanding corpus of new material for study.
Viking coins fit well into this latter category, but nonetheless form a separate category of Viking period artefact, their design and decoration largely independent of the developing styles characteristic of wider Viking artistic endeavor.
Forms of Art
Beads
Beads were a significant part of Viking society for a multitude of reasons. They were a form of art commonly made out of glass [5]
but also from different types of metals and, more rarely, natural materials such as amber, carnelian, rock crystal, etc. [6]
These were used to create pendants and/or beads for Vikings. Typically, beads were globular and monochrome; however, the rarer beads were kaleidoscopic and had unique patterns. [7]
Beads from the Viking age have been found primarily within Viking burial sites like Birka and also in known Viking settlement locations and trading towns like Hedeby. [8]
Beads during this era were costly items, so if used for individual purposes, they were an indicator of wealth and high social status; [9] The role of beads in burial sites indicated their cultural significance and value within the Viking Society.
Beads were also a huge drive for trade; The Norse used them as portable wealth and leverage for economic determinism. While Scandivania’s beads were an attraction and gave wealth to early Viking establishments, over time and through widespread trade routes from Viking expansion, Eastern beads became more popular. [10] However, beads were still used as a form of currency and a symbol of wealth. Beads were an incentive for trade further establishing Viking settlement and were a huge part of Viking art and culture.
Textiles
While often less preserved reveal a sophisticated tradition of weaving and embroidery, with silk and wool often adorned with elaborate patterns.
Other sources
A non-visual source of information for Viking art lies in skaldic verse, the complex form of oral poetry composed during the Viking Age and passed on until written down centuries later.[11] Several verses speak of painted forms of decoration that have but rarely survived on wood and stone. The 9th-century skald poet Bragi Boddason, for example, cites four apparently unrelated scenes painted on a shield. One of these scenes depicted the god Thor's fishing expedition, which motif is also referenced in a 10th-century poem by Úlfr Uggason describing the paintings in a newly constructed hall in Iceland.
Origins and background
A continuous artistic tradition common to most of north-western Europe and developing from the 4th century CE formed the foundations on which Viking Age art and decoration were built: from that period onwards, the output of Scandinavian artists was broadly focused on varieties of convoluted animal ornamentation used to decorate a wide variety of objects.
The art historian Bernhard Salin was the first to systematise Germanic animal ornament, dividing it into three styles (I, II, and III).[12] The latter two were subsequently subdivided by Arwidsson[13] into three further styles: Style C, flourishing during the 7th century and into the 8th century, before being largely replaced (especially in southern Scandinavia) by Style D. Styles C and D provided the inspiration for the initial expression of animal ornament within the Viking Age, Style E, commonly known as the Oseberg / Broa Style. Both Styles D and E developed within a broad Scandinavian context which, although in keeping with north-western European animal ornamentation generally, exhibited little influence from beyond Scandinavia .
Scholarship
Although preliminary formulations were made in the late 19th century, the history of Viking art first achieved maturity in the early 20th century with the detailed publication of the ornate wood carvings discovered in 1904 as part of the Oserberg ship-burial by the Norwegian archaeologist Haakon Shetelig.
Importantly, it was the English archaeologist David M. Wilson, working with his Danish colleague Ole Klindt-Jensen to produce the 1966 survey work Viking Art, who created foundations for the systematic characterization of the field still employed today, together with a developed chronological framework.
David Wilson continued to produce mostly English-language studies on Viking art in subsequent years, joined over recent decades by the Norwegian art-historian Signe Horn Fuglesang with her own series of important publications. Together these scholars have combined authority with accessibility to promote the increasing understanding of Viking art as a cultural expression.
Styles
The art of the Viking Age is organized into a loose sequence of stylistic phases which, despite the significant overlap in style and chronology, may be defined and distinguished on account both of formal design elements and of recurring compositions and motifs:
Oseberg Style
Borre Style
Jellinge Style
Mammen Style
Ringerike Style
Urnes Style
Unsurprisingly, these stylistic phases appear in their purest form in Scandinavia itself; elsewhere in the Viking world, notable admixtures from external cultures and influences frequently appear. In the British Isles, for example, art historians identify distinct, 'Insular' versions of Scandinavian motifs, often directly alongside 'pure' Viking decoration.
Oseberg Style
The Oseberg Style characterises the initial phase in what has been considered Viking art.[14] The Oseberg Style takes its name from the Oseberg Ship grave, a well-preserved and highly decorated longship discovered in a large burial mound at the Oseberg farm near Tønsberg in Vestfold, Norway, which also contained a number of other richly decorated wooden objects.[15]
Currently located at the Viking Ship Museum, Bygdøy, and over 70 feet long, the Oseberg Ship held the remains of two women and many precious objects that were probably removed by robbers early before it was found. The Oseberg ship itself is decorated with a more traditional style of animal interlace that does not feature the gripping beast motif. However, five carved wooden animal-head posts were found in the ship, and the one known as the Carolingian animal-head post is decorated with gripping beasts, as are other grave goods from the ship.[16] The Carolingian head represents a snarling beast, possibly a wolf, with surface ornamentation in the form of interwoven animals that twist and turn as they are gripping and snapping.
Detail of the Carolingian animal-head post from the Oseberg ship burial, showing the gripping beast motif.
Detail from the Oseberg ship
Oseberg bow detail
Broa style
The Broa style, named after a bridle-mount found at Broa, Halla parish, Gotland, is sometimes included with the Oseberg style, and sometimes held as its own.
Photograph of the Broa bridle taken by Ola Myrin for the Swedish Historiska museet exhibit "The Viking World".
Front of the bridle.
Right side relative to the horse.
Left side relative to the horse.
Detail of left side.
Detail of mounts hanging from the bit.
Borre Style
The Borre Style embraces a range of geometric interlace / knot patterns and zoomorphic (single animal) motifs, first recognised in a group of gilt-bronze harness mounts recovered from a ship grave in Borre mound cemetery near the village of Borre, Vestfold, Norway, and from which the name of the style derives. Borre Style prevailed in Scandinavia from the late 9th through to the late 10th century, a timeframe supported by dendrochronological data supplied from sites with characteristically Borre Style artifacts[17] Found in Brooches
The 'gripping-beast' with a ribbon-shaped body continues as a characteristic of this and earlier styles. As with geometric patterning in this phase, the visual thrust of the Borre Style results from the filling of available space: ribbon animal plaits are tightly interlaced and animal bodies are arranged to create tight, closed compositions. As a result, any background is markedly absent – a characteristic of the Borre Style that contrasts strongly with the more open and fluid compositions that prevailed in the overlapping Jellinge Style.
A more particular diagnostic feature of Borre Style lies in a symmetrical, double-contoured 'ring-chain' (or 'ring-braid'), whose composition consists of interlaced circles separated by transverse bars and a lozenge overlay. The Borre ring-chain occasionally terminates with an animal head in high relief, as seen on strap fittings from Borre and Gokstad.
The ridges of designs in metalwork are often nicked to imitate the filigree wire employed in the finest pieces of craftsmanship.[18]
The Mammen Style takes its name from its type object, an axe recovered from a wealthy male burial marked a mound (Bjerringhø) at Mammen, in Jutland, Denmark (on the basis of dendrochronology, the wood used in construction of the grave chamber was felled in winter 970–971). Richly decorated on both sides with inlaid silver designs, the iron axe was probably a ceremonial parade weapon that was the property of a man of princely status, his burial clothes bearing elaborate embroidery and trimmed with silk and fur.
On one face, the Mammen axe features a large bird with pelleted body, crest, circular eye, and upright head and beak with lappet. A large shell-spiral marks the bird's hip, from which point its thinly elongated wings emerge: the right wing interlaces with the bird's neck, while the left wing interlaces with its body and tail. The outer wing edge displays a semi-circular nick typical of Mammen Style design. The tail is rendered as a triple tendril, the particular treatment of which on the Mammen axe – with open, hook-like ends – forming a characteristic of the Mammen Style as a whole. Complicating the design is the bird's head-lappet, interlacing twice with neck and right wing, whilst also sprouting tendrils along the blade edge. At the top, near the haft, the Mammen axe features an interlaced knot on one side, a triangular human mask (with large nose, moustache and spiral beard) on the other; the latter would prove a favoured Mammen Style motif carried over from earlier styles.
On the other side, the Mammen axe bears a spreading foliate (leaf) design, emanating from spirals at the base with thin, 'pelleted' tendrils spreading and intertwining across the axe head towards the haft.
Ringerike Style
The Ringerike Style receives its name from the Ringerike district north of Oslo, Norway, where the local reddish sandstone was widely employed for carving stones with designs of the style.[23]
The type object most commonly used to define Ringerike Style is a 2.15-metre (7 ft 1 in) high carved stone from Vang in Oppland. Apart from a runic memorial inscription on its right edge, the main field of the Vang Stone is filled with a balanced tendril ornament springing from two shell spirals at the base: the main stems cross twice to terminate in lobed tendrils. At the crossing, further tendrils spring from loops and pear-shaped motifs appear from the tendril centres on the upper loop. Although axial in conception, a basic asymmetry arises in the deposition of the tendrils. Surmounting the tendril pattern appears a large striding animal in double-contoured rendering with spiral hips and a lip lappet. Comparing the Vang Stone animal design with the related animal from the Mammen axe-head, the latter lacks the axiality seen in the Vang Stone and its tendrils are far less disciplined: the Mammen scroll is wavy, while the Vang scroll appears taut and evenly curved, these features marking a key difference between Mammen and Ringerike ornament. The inter-relationship between the two styles is obvious, however, when comparing the Vang Stone animal with that found on the Jelling Stone.
(HST DIG25846)]]
With regard to metalwork, Ringerike Style is best seen in two copper-gilt weather-vanes, from Källunge, Gotland and from Söderala, Hälsingland (the Söderala vane), both in Sweden. The former displays one face two axially-constructed loops in the form of snakes, which in turn sprout symmetrically-placed tendrils. The snake heads, as well as the animal and snake on the reverse, find more florid treatment than on the Vang Stone: all have lip lappets, the snakes bear pigtails, while all animals have a pear-shaped eye with the point directed towards the snout – a diagnostic feature of Ringerike Style.
The Ringerike Style evolved out of the earlier Mammen Style. It received its name from a group of runestones with animal and plant motifs in the Ringerike district north of Oslo. The most common motifs are lions, birds, band-shaped animals and spirals.[24] Some elements appear for the first time in Scandinavian art, such as different types of crosses, palmettes and pretzel-shaped nooses that tie together two motifs.[22] Most of the motifs have counterparts in Anglo-Saxon, Insular and Ottonian art.[24]
The style is characterized by slim and stylised animals that are interwoven into tight patterns.[25] The animals heads are seen in profile, they have slender almond-shaped eyes and there are upwardly curled appendages on the noses and the necks.[25]
The mid-Urnes Style has received a relatively firm dating based on its appearance on coins issued by Harald Hardrada (1047–1066) and by Olav Kyrre (1080–1090). Two wood carvings from Oslo have been dated to c. 1050–1100 and the Hørning plank is dated by dendrochronology to c. 1060–1070.[27] There is, however, evidence suggesting that the mid-Urnes style was developed before 1050 in the manner it is represented by the runemastersFot and Balli.[27]
Late Urnes Style
The mid-Urnes Style would stay popular side by side with the late Urnes style of the runemasterÖpir.[27] He is famous for a style in which the animals are extremely thin and make circular patterns in open compositions.[27] This style was not unique to Öpir and Sweden, but it also appears on a plank from Bølstad and on a chair from Trondheim, Norway.[27]
The Jarlabanke Runestones show traits both from this late style and from the mid-Urnes style of Fot and Balli, and it was the Fot-Balli type that would mix with the Romanesque style in the 12th century.[27]
Urnes-Romanesque Style
The Urnes-Romanesque Style does not appear on runestones which suggests that the tradition of making runestones had died out when the mixed style made its appearance since it is well represented in Gotland and on the Swedish mainland.[28] The Urnes-Romanesque Style can be dated independently of style thanks to representations from Oslo in the period 1100–1175, dendrochronological dating of the Lisbjerg frontal in Denmark to 1135, as well as Irish reliquaries that are dated to the second half of the 12th century.[28]
^*Maurizio Tani, Le origini mediterranee ed eurasiatiche dell’arte vichinga. Casi esemplari dall’Islanda, in Studi Nordici (Roma), XIII, 2006, pp. 81–95
^Kleiner, Gardner's Art Through The Ages: The Western Perspective, Volume I, 288.
^Mannion, Mags. “Beads and Society.” In Glass Beads from Early Medieval Ireland: Classification, Dating, Social Performance, 90–97. Archaeopress, 2015. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvr43k7k.11.
^Faḍlān, Aḥmad ibn, James E. Montgomery, and Tim Severin. “Mission to the Volga.” In Mission to the Volga, edited by Shawkat M. Toorawa, 28:3–40. NYU Press, 2017. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt1gk093h.7.
^Sinbaek, Soren (2012). Enter the Gripping Beast. British Archaeological Reports International Series.
^Dated Borre sites include Borre (c. 900), Gokstad (900–905), Tune (905–910), Fyrkat (980) and Trelleborg (980/1), as well as several coin-dated hoards; cf. Bonde and Christensen 1993.
^Roesdahl, Else (1993). "Pagan Beliefs, Christian Impact and Archaeology—a Danish View". In Faulkes, Anthony; Perkins, Richard (eds.). Viking Revaluations: Viking Society Centenary Symposium, 14–15 May 1992. Viking Society for Northern Research, University College London. p. 132. CiteSeerX10.1.1.683.8845.
^ abFuglesang, S.H. Swedish runestones of the eleventh century: ornament and dating, Runeninschriften als Quellen interdisziplinärer Forschung (K.Düwel ed.). Göttingen 1998, pp. 197–218. p. 206
^ abcdefFuglesang, S.H. Swedish runestones of the eleventh century: ornament and dating, Runeninschriften als Quellen interdisziplinärer Forschung (K.Düwel ed.). Göttingen 1998, pp. 197–218. p. 207
^ abFuglesang, S.H. Swedish runestones of the eleventh century: ornament and dating, Runeninschriften als Quellen interdisziplinärer Forschung (K.Düwel ed.). Göttingen 1998, pp. 197–218. p. 208
References
Background
Brink, S. with Price, N. (eds) (2008). The Viking World, [Routledge Worlds], Routledge: London and New York, 2008. ISBN9780415692625
Graham-Campbell, J. (2001), The Viking World, London, 2001. ISBN9780711234680
General Surveys
Anker, P. (1970). The Art of Scandinavia, Volume I, London and New York, 1970.
Fuglesang, S.H. (1996). "Viking Art", in Turner, J. (ed.), The Grove Dictionary of Art, Volume 32, London and New York, 1996, pp. 514–27, 531–32.
Graham-Campbell, J. (1980). Viking Artefacts: A Select Catalogue, British Museum Publications: London, 1980. ISBN9780714113548
Graham-Campbell, James (2013). Viking Art, Thames & Hudson, 2013. ISBN9780500204191
Fred S. Kleiner, Gardner's Art Through The Ages: The Western Perspective, Volume I. (Boston, Mass.: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2009) [1]
Roesdahl, E. and Wilson, D.M. (eds) (1992). From Viking to Crusader: Scandinavia and Europe 800–1200, Copenhagen and New York, 1992. [exhibition catalogue]. ISBN9780847816255
Williams, G., Pentz, P. and Wemhoff, M. (eds), Vikings: Life and Legend, British Museum Press: London, 2014. [exhibition catalogue]. ISBN9780714123363
Wilson, D.M. & Klindt-Jensen, O. (1980). Viking Art, second edition, George Allen and Unwin, 1980. ISBN9780047090189
Specialist Studies
Arwidsson, G. (1942a). Valsgärdestudien I. Vendelstile: Email und Glas im 7.-8. Jahrhundert, [Acta Musei antiquitatum septentrionalium Regiae Universitatis Upsaliensis 2], Uppsala: Almqvist, 1942.
Arwidsson, G. (1942b). Die Gräberfunde von Valsgärde I, Valsgärde 6, [Acta Musei antiquitatum septentrionalium Regiae Universitatis Upsaliensis 1], Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell, 1942.
Bailey, R.N. (1980). Viking Age Sculpture in Northern England, Collins Archaeology: London, 1980. ISBN9780002162289
Bonde, N. and Christensen, A.E. (1993). "Dendrochronological dating of the Viking Age ship burials at Oseberg, Gokstad and Tune, Norway", Antiquity 67 (1993), pp. 575–83.
Capelle, T. (1968). Der Metallschmuck von Haithabu: Studien zur wikingischen Metallkunst, [Die Ausgrabungen in Haithabu 5], Neumunster: K. Wachholtz, 1968.
James Curle, "A Find of Viking Relics in the Hebrides," The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 162 (1916): 241–43. https://www.jstor.org/stable/860122
Fuglesang, S.H. (1980). Some Aspects of the Ringerike Style: A Phase of 11th Century Scandinavian Art, [Mediaeval Scandinavia Supplements], University Press of Southern Denmark: Odense, 1980. ISBN9788774921837
Fuglesang, S.H. (1981). "Stylistic Groups in Late Viking and Early Romanesque Art", Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia, [Series altera in 8°] I, 1981, pp. 79–125.
Fuglesang, S.H. (1982). "Early Viking Art", Acta ad Archaeologiam et Artium Historiam Pertinentia [Series altera in 8°] II, 1982, pp. 125–73.
Fuglesang, S.H. (1991). "The Axe-Head from Mammen and the Mammen Style", in Iversen (1991), pp. 83–108.
Fuglesang, S.H. (1998). "Swedish Runestones of the Eleventh Century: Ornament and Dating", in Düwel, K. and Nowak, S. (eds), Runeninschriften als Quellen interdisziplinärer Forschung: Abhandlungen des vierten internationalen Symposiums über Runen und Runeninschriften in Gottingen vom 4.-9. August 1995, Göttingen: Walter de Gruyter, 1998, pp. 197–218.
Fuglesang, S.H. (2001). "Animal Ornament: the Late Viking Period", in Müller-Wille and Larsson (eds) (2001), pp. 157–94.
Fuglesang, S.H. (2013). "Copying and Creativity in Early Viking Ornament", in Reynolds and Webster (eds) (2013), pp. 825–41.
Hedeager, L. (2003). "Beyond Mortality: Scandinavian Animal Styles AD 400–1200", in Downes, J. and Ritchie, A. (eds), Sea Change: Orkney and Northern Europe in the Later Iron Age AD 300–800, Balgavies, 2003, pp. 127–36. ISBN9781874012382
Iversen, M. (ed.) (1991). Mammen: Grav, Kunst og Samfund i Vikingetid, [Jysk Arkæologisk Selskabs Skrifter XXVIII], Højbjerg, 1991. ISBN8772885718
Kershaw, J. (2008). "The Distribution of the 'Winchester' Style in Late Saxon England: Metalwork Finds from the Danelaw", Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 15 (2008), pp. 254–69. Academic.edu(registration required)
Krafft, S. (1956). Pictorial Weavings from the Viking Age, Oslo: Dreyer, 1956.
Lang, J.T. (1984). "The hogback: a Viking colonial monument", Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 3 (1984), pp. 85–176.
Lang, J.T. (1988). Viking Age Decorated Wood: A Study of its Ornament and Style, Dublin: Royal Irish Academy, 1988. ISBN9780901714695
Moss, Rachel. Medieval c. 400—c. 1600: Art and Architecture of Ireland. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014. ISBN978-0-3001-7919-4
Müller-Wille, M. and Larsson, L.O. (eds) (2001). Tiere – Menschen – Götter: Wikingerzeitliche Kunststile und ihre Neuzeitliche Rezeption, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht: Gottingen, 2001. ISBN9783525863091
Myhre, B. (1992). "The Royal Cemetery at Borre, Vestfold: A Norwegian Centre in a European Periphery", in Carter, M. (ed.), The Age of Sutton Hoo. The Seventh Century in North-West Europe, Woodbridge: Boydell, 1992.
Owen, O. (2001). "The strange beast that is the English Urnes Style", in Graham-Campbell, J. et al. (eds), Vikings and the Danelaw – Selected Papers from the Proceedings of the Thirteenth Viking Congress, Oxford: Oxbow, 2001, pp. 203–22.
Paterson, C. (2002). "From Pendants to Brooches – The Exchange of Borre and Jelling Style Motifs across the North Sea", Hikuin 29 (2002), pp. 267–76.
Reynolds, A. and Webster, L. (eds) (2013), Early Medieval Art and Archaeology in the Northern World—Studies in Honour of James Graham-Campbell, Brill: Leiden and Boston, 2013. ISBN9789004235038
Richards, J.D. and Naylor, J. (2010). "The metal detector and the Viking Age in England", in Sheehan, J. and Corráin, D. Ó. (eds), The Viking Age. Ireland and the West. Proceedings of the Fifteenth Viking Congress, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2010, pp. 338–52.
Roesdahl, E. (1994). "Dendrochronology and Viking Studies in Denmark, with a Note on the Beginning of the Viking Age", in Abrosiani, B. and Clarke, H. (eds), Developments around the Baltic and the North Sea in the Viking Age, Stockholm: Birka Project for Riksantikvarieämbetet and Statens Historiska Museer, 1994, pp. 106–16.
Roesdahl, E. (2010a). "Viking Art in European Churches (Cammin – Bamberg – Prague – León)", in Sheehan and Ó Corráin (eds) (2010), pp. 149–64.
Roesdahl, E. (2010b). "From Scandinavia to Spain: a Viking Age Reliquary in León and its Significance", in Sheehan, J. and Corráin, D. Ó. (eds), The Viking Age. Ireland and the West. Proceedings of the Fifteenth Viking Congress, Dublin: Four Courts Press, 2010, pp. 353–60.
Salin, Bernhard (1904). Die altgermanische Thieronamentik, Stockholm: Wahlström & Widstrand, 1904.
Sheehan, J. and Ó Corráin, D. (eds) (2010). The Viking Age: Ireland and the West. Proceedings of the XVth Viking Congress, Cork, 2005., Dublin and Portland: Four Courts Press, 2010. ISBN9781846821011
Shetelig, H. (1920). Osebergfundet, Volume III, Kristiania, 1920.
Wilson, D.M. (2001). "The Earliest Animal Styles of the Viking Age", in Müller-Wille and Larsson (eds) (2001), pp. 131–56.
Wilson, D.M. (2008a). "The Development of Viking Art", in Brink with Price (2008), pp. 323–38.
Wilson, D.M. (2008b). The Vikings in the Isle of Man, Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 2008. ISBN9788779343702
Sorabella, Jean, "The Vikings (780–1100)", in Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History, New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. Updated October 2002.
Begonia insularis TaksonomiDivisiTracheophytaSubdivisiSpermatophytesKladAngiospermaeKladmesangiospermsKladeudicotsKladcore eudicotsKladSuperrosidaeKladrosidsKladfabidsOrdoCucurbitalesFamiliBegoniaceaeGenusBegoniaSpesiesBegonia insularis Brade, 1957 lbs Begonia insularis adalah spesies tumbuhan yang tergolong ke dalam famili Begoniaceae. Spesies ini juga merupakan bagian dari ordo Cucurbitales. Nama ilmiah spesies ini pertama kali diterbitkan oleh Alexander Curt Brade pada 1957. Referensi Pran...
نافين أندروز معلومات شخصية اسم الولادة نافين وليام سيدني أندروز الميلاد 17 يناير 1969 (العمر 55 سنة)لندن، إنجلترا مواطنة المملكة المتحدة الطول 1.73 سم العشير باربرا هيرشي (1998–2005) الحياة العملية الأدوار المهمة سعيد جراح في لوست المدرسة الأم مدرسة جيلدهولمدرسة إيمانويل ...
Successful presidential campaign of Lyndon B. Johnson Lyndon B. Johnson for President 1964Campaign1964 Democratic primaries1964 U.S. presidential electionCandidateLyndon B. Johnson36th President of the United States(1963–1969)Hubert HumphreyU.S. Senator from Minnesota(1949–1964)AffiliationDemocratic PartyStatusOfficial nominee: August 27, 1964Won election: November 3, 1964Inaugurated: January 20, 1965Key peopleOliver Quayle (pollster)SloganAll the way with LBJ[1 ...
انتشار حملة الشحنات عبر وصلة بي إن، وتجمّع الشحنات على طرفي الوصلة وظهور جهد العبور، بالإضافة حركة حوامل الشحنات الأكثرية والأقلية نتيجة التوصيل في نوعي شبه الموصلات في فيزياء أشباه الموصلات منطقة انخفاض أو منطقة الافتقار أو منطقة العبور (بالإنجليزية: Depletion region) هي منطق�...
Former headquarters of Tyne Tees Television The Television CentreThe Studio building in 1999The Television CentreLocation within Tyne and WearAlternative namesCity RoadGeneral informationTypeTelevision studiosLocationOn City Road in the centre of Newcastle. Access from to offices and Studios 1-4 were separate to Studio 5.AddressCity Road, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 2ALCoordinates54°58′20″N 1°35′53″W / 54.972212°N 1.59799°W / 54.972212; -1.59799Inaugurated1959...
Conjoined islands in New York City Ward's Island redirects here. Not to be confused with Bumpkin Island or Toronto Islands. Randalls Island redirects here. For other uses, see Randalls Island (disambiguation). Randalls and Wards IslandsLooking southwest; Randalls Island is in the foreground and Wards Island is behind it. Roosevelt Island and Manhattan can be seen in the background.Randalls and Wards IslandsLocation of Randalls and Wards IslandsShow map of New York CityRandalls and Wards Islan...
Protected area in Lanaudière, Quebec, Canada Kiamika Reservoir Regional ParkLocationCanada, Quebec, Laurentides, Antoine-Labelle Regional County MunicipalityNearest townLac-DouaireCoordinates46°40′22″N 75°05′24″W / 46.67278°N 75.09°W / 46.67278; -75.09Area184 square kilometres (71 sq mi)reservoirkiamika.org The Kiamika Reservoir Regional Park (in French: Parc régional du Réservoir-Kamika) is a regional park located in the unorganized terri...
Nama Inggris: Buona Vista China: 波娜维斯达 (Pinyin: Bōnàwéisīdá) Melayu: Buona Vista Tamil: பியோநா விஸ்டா Buona Vista adalah sebuah tempat dan subdivisi negara kota Singapura, dan sering dirujuk sebagai kota. Sebagai subdivisi utama, dilayani oleh Buona Vista MRT Station di jalur Timur-Barat, Jalur Lingkaran dan Jalur Utara-Barat berkode EW21 / CC22 / NW19 oleh sistem MRT. Buona Vista juga memiliki terminal bus. Geografi Buona Vista dekat dengan estate Dove...
Football tournament season 2019–20 Cupa RomânieiCupa României 2019–20Tournament detailsCountryRomaniaTeams145Defending championsViitorul ConstanțaFinal positionsChampionsFCSBRunner-upSepsi OSK← 2018–192020–21 → The 2019–20 Cupa României was the 82nd season of the annual Romanian primary football knockout tournament. The winner will qualify for the first qualifying round of the 2020–21 UEFA Europa League. Times up to 26 October 2019 and from 29 March 2020 ...
رفاعي طه معلومات شخصية الميلاد 24 يونيو 1954 أرمنت الوفاة 5 أبريل 2016 (61 سنة) إدلب سبب الوفاة ضربة جوية قتله القوات الجوية الأمريكية مواطنة جمهورية مصر (1954–1958) الجمهورية العربية المتحدة (1958–1971) مصر (1971–2016) الحياة العملية المدرسة الأم جامعة أسيوط تعلم...
Ekonomi Ekonomi menurut kawasan Afrika · Amerika Amerika Selatan · Asia Eropa · Oseania Kategori umum Ekonomi mikro · Ekonomi makro Sejarah pemikiran ekonomi Metodologi · Pendekatan heterodoks Bidang dan subbidang Perilaku · Budaya · Evolusi Pertumbuhan · Pengembangan · Sejarah Internasional · Sistem ekonomi Keuangan dan Ekonomi keuangan Masyarakat dan Ekonomi ke...
Islamic phrase For other uses, see Bismillah and In the name of Allah (disambiguation). The basmala on the oldest surviving Quran. Bismala calligraphy A calligraphic rendition of the Bismillah Mughal-era calligraphy The Basmala (Arabic: بَسْمَلَة, basmalah; also known by its opening words Bi-smi llāh; بِسْمِ ٱللَّٰهِ, In the name of God),[1] or Tasmiyyah (Arabic: تَسْمِيَّة), is the titular name of the Islamic phrase In the name of God, the Most Graci...
Филиал Московского государственного университета имени М. В. Ломоносова в городе Ташкенте(филиал МГУ в Ташкенте) Международное название Tashkent Branch of Moscow State University Год основания 24 февраля 2006 года Руководитель филиала Часовских А.А. Студенты 434(397 — бакалавриат, 37 — магистрат...
OresteiaStairwell Theater mementaskan adaptasi Oresteia di Brooklyn, NY, 2019PenulisAeschylusBahasa asliYunaniGenreTragedi Oresteia (bahasa Yunani Kuno: Ὀρέστεια) adalah drama trilogi tragedi Yunani yang ditulis oleh Aeschylus pada abad ke-5 SM mengenai pembunuhan Agamemnon oleh Clytemnestra, pembunuhan Clytemnestra oleh Orestes, pengadilan Orestes, akhir dari kutukan pada Dinasti Atreus dan pasifikasi Erinyes. Trilogi ini terdiri dari Agamemnon (Ἀγαμέμνων), The Libatio...
Prime Minister of Malaysia from 2020 to 2021 Muhyiddin redirects here. For other people with this name, see Mohy al-Din. In this Malay name, there is no surname or family name. The name Yassin is a patronymic, and the person should be referred to by their given name, Muhyiddin. The word bin or binti/binte means 'son of' or 'daughter of', respectively.Yang Berhormat Tan Sri Dato' HajiMuhyiddin YassinPSM SPMJ SHMS SPSA SPMP SUNS DUNM SPDK DP PNBS SMJ ...
Questa voce o sezione sull'argomento arte è ritenuta da controllare. Motivo: la voce fa iniziare l'arte moderna nella seconda metà del XIX secolo, ma tale periodo di inizio non è affatto pacifico. Lo stesso template di fine pagina dà una delimitazione temporale ben più ampia. Vedi anche quanto è stato scritto nella discussione relativa a questa voce Partecipa alla discussione e/o correggi la voce. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Valzer di donne al Moulin Rouge, d...
William DigbyFonctionsMembre du Parlement d'AngleterreMembre du Parlement anglais de 1695-98Warwick (d)Membre du Parlement anglais de 1690-1695Warwick (d)Membre du Parlement anglais de 1689-1690Warwick (d)BiographieNaissance 20 février 1661Décès 27 novembre 1752 (à 91 ans)Formation Magdalen CollegeActivité Homme politiquePère Kildare Digby (2e baron Digby)Mère Mary Gardiner (d)Fratrie Simon Digby (4e baron Digby)Conjoint Jane Noel (d) (à partir de 1686)Enfants Edward DigbyMary D...
Head of state and head of government of Venezuela For a list of presidents, see List of presidents of Venezuela. This article appears to be slanted towards recent events. Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non-recent events. (January 2023) President of the Bolivarian Republic of VenezuelaPresidente de la República Bolivariana de VenezuelaPresidential Standard of VenezuelaPresidential sealIncumbentNicolás Madurosince 5 March 2013S...
Bài viết này cần thêm chú thích nguồn gốc để kiểm chứng thông tin. Mời bạn giúp hoàn thiện bài viết này bằng cách bổ sung chú thích tới các nguồn đáng tin cậy. Các nội dung không có nguồn có thể bị nghi ngờ và xóa bỏ.Kinh tế học trọng cung nhấn mạnh các biện pháp nâng cao năng lực sản xuất, đẩy đường tổng cung AS dịch chuyển sang phải, nâng cao tốc độ tăng trưởng tiềm năng, t�...