Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Violence as a Lens to Viking Societies: A Comparison of Norway and Denmark

View through CrossRef
Comparing Viking Age Norway and Denmark, the article examines the primary proposition that as centers of authority become progressively more robust, violence will be proportionately contained. The article introduces a new approach in using indications of violence as a focal point to elicit broader social practices. The disciplines employed in this study – archaeology, osteology, philology, and sociology – are used together in the study of covariance of different indicators across a societal range. The indicators for assessing violence include skeletal trauma and weapon frequency. For assessing the steepness of the social pyramid, we use runestones, indicating variations in social stratification, and monumental constructions as a measure of power to command labor. Among the findings: weapons and interpersonal violence in Norway was much more widespread than in Denmark, and the social pyramid in Denmark was progressively steeper and more complex than in Norway. “Official” executions accounted for the preponderance of violence in Denmark, while rare in Norway. Denmark was evidently a more “civilianized” society than Norway. The comparative research supports the primary proposition. The research, furthermore, suggests that Denmark and Norway were sociologically distinct societies, which accords with recent findings that the respective regions displayed distinct, though still similar, genetic profiles.
Title: Violence as a Lens to Viking Societies: A Comparison of Norway and Denmark
Description:
Comparing Viking Age Norway and Denmark, the article examines the primary proposition that as centers of authority become progressively more robust, violence will be proportionately contained.
The article introduces a new approach in using indications of violence as a focal point to elicit broader social practices.
The disciplines employed in this study – archaeology, osteology, philology, and sociology – are used together in the study of covariance of different indicators across a societal range.
The indicators for assessing violence include skeletal trauma and weapon frequency.
For assessing the steepness of the social pyramid, we use runestones, indicating variations in social stratification, and monumental constructions as a measure of power to command labor.
Among the findings: weapons and interpersonal violence in Norway was much more widespread than in Denmark, and the social pyramid in Denmark was progressively steeper and more complex than in Norway.
“Official” executions accounted for the preponderance of violence in Denmark, while rare in Norway.
Denmark was evidently a more “civilianized” society than Norway.
The comparative research supports the primary proposition.
The research, furthermore, suggests that Denmark and Norway were sociologically distinct societies, which accords with recent findings that the respective regions displayed distinct, though still similar, genetic profiles.

Related Results

Viking Art
Viking Art
Viking Art refers to the visual art produced by those of Scandinavian origin or descent, both at home and abroad, during the Viking Age (c. 800–1100). The term refers not to art in...
Problematic aspects of criminal prosecution for domestic violence
Problematic aspects of criminal prosecution for domestic violence
mestic violence.The article is devoted to the analysis of the features of bringing criminal responsibility for committing domestic violence. It has been proven that the establishme...
(Re)Thinking Young Men's Violence: a Discursive Critique of Dominant Constructions
(Re)Thinking Young Men's Violence: a Discursive Critique of Dominant Constructions
<p>Legitimated and thereby dominant knowledges of youth violence that aim to explain its causes and develop ways of responding are primarily informed by a positivist scientif...
Violence Against Doctors Working in Paediatric Hospitals in Khartoum State, Sudan: Frequency and Risk Factors
Violence Against Doctors Working in Paediatric Hospitals in Khartoum State, Sudan: Frequency and Risk Factors
AbstractBackground:Healthcare workplace violence (WPV) is under-reported, universal and it is not given enough attention in medical education and continuing professional developmen...
Viking Metal
Viking Metal
Hardly any traces survive of the music of the Vikings, but considerable effort has been expended in the modern period in attempting to construct music that can represent the Viking...
Martin Luther in Norway
Martin Luther in Norway
Until 1814, Norway was under Danish rule, and the story of Luther’s reception in Norway is included in the story of Luther’s reception in Denmark (cf. Niels Henrik Gregersen’s arti...
Nordic Laws
Nordic Laws
By the end of the Viking Age, the Nordic region was divided between three kingdoms, all of which still exist in the early twenty-first century, albeit with very different borders, ...
Spousal violence against women and its consequences on pregnancy outcomes and reproductive health of women in India
Spousal violence against women and its consequences on pregnancy outcomes and reproductive health of women in India
Abstract Background Globally, one in three women experienced domestic violence. Alike the scenario observed in India, and a very few studies talk ab...

Back to Top