How the Vikings Changed Europe Forever — Fexingo History

Viking Runestones: The First Written Records of Northern Europe

9 min · 21. juni 2026
episode Viking Runestones: The First Written Records of Northern Europe cover

Beskrivelse

Before the sagas were written down, Vikings carved runestones across Scandinavia—thousands of them, raised between the 8th and 12th centuries. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore what these monuments actually say: warriors who died in battle, merchants who traded in the East, women who commissioned stones, and the gradual shift from Old Norse to Christian symbols. They focus on the Jelling stones of Harald Bluetooth, the Kjula Runestone in Sweden, the Rök Runestone with its riddles, and the lesser-known Gotlandic picture stones. They discuss how runestones serve as eyewitness accounts of Viking Age life, death, and conversion, and why they remain our most authentic primary sources from the period. This episode covers U 344 from Orkesta, the Ingvar Runestones that commemorate a failed expedition to the Caspian Sea, and the famous Gripsholm Runestone. Lucas explains the runic alphabet—the Younger Futhark—and how it differed from the Elder Futhark. They also touch on the controversy over whether runestones were purely memorial or had magical functions. A rich, detailed look at how the Vikings wrote their own history in stone. #VikingRunestones #YoungerFuthark #HaraldBluetooth #JellingStones #RökRunestone #GripsholmRunestone #KjulaRunestone #IngvarRunestones #GotlandPictureStones #U344 #Orkesta #VikingAge #Scandinavia #RunicInscriptions #PrimarySources #NorseHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

152 episoder

episode The Varangian Guard Before 1066: Vikings in Byzantium cover

The Varangian Guard Before 1066: Vikings in Byzantium

Long before Harald Hardrada, Vikings served as elite mercenaries in the Byzantine Empire. This episode traces the origins of the Varangian Guard from Basil II's request for 6,000 Rus warriors to crush a rebellion in 988, through the Norse runestones left behind in Greece, and the everyday life of these Scandinavian soldiers in Constantinople. Lucas and Luna explore the archaeological evidence from the Piraeus Lion inscription, the diplomatic letters between emperors and Norse kings, and the cultural exchange that brought Byzantine silks and icons back to Scandinavia. They also discuss the mysterious Väringjar who guarded the emperor, their battle tactics with the deadly Dane axe, and how the Varangian tradition shaped Norse views of the Mediterranean. #VarangianGuard #ByzantineEmpire #BasilII #Miklagarðr #Rus #PiraeusLion #DaneAxe #VikingMercenaries #Constantinople #NorseRunestones #GreeceRunestone #Väringjar #ByzantineArmy #Chrysotriklinos #HaraldHardrada #NordicHistory #MedievalHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode The Thing: How Viking Democracy Built the North cover

The Thing: How Viking Democracy Built the North

Long before parliaments, Norse settlers gathered at assembly sites called things (þing) to settle disputes, pass laws, and make collective decisions. This episode follows the thing from its origins in Norway and Denmark to its spread across Iceland, Greenland, and even the Danelaw in England. We explore the site of Þingvellir in Iceland, where the Alþingi was established around 930 CE — arguably the world's oldest surviving parliament. We also look at how things worked on a practical level: how laws were recited by a lawspeaker (lögsögumaðr), how disputes were adjudicated, and how outlawry was enforced. The thing was not just a political institution — it was a social and religious gathering, a market, and a place where alliances were forged. We also touch on the Gulaþing in Norway and the thing's role in the Christianization process. By the end, you'll see how the Norse tradition of assembly shaped later democratic ideals in Scandinavia and beyond. #Thing #Althingi #Þingvellir #NorseDemocracy #VikingLaw #Lawspeaker #Gulaþing #Iceland #NorseAssembly #VikingGovernment #MedievalParliament #ScandinavianHistory #VikingAge #NorthernEurope #FexingoHistory #HistoryPodcast #NorseCulture #IcelandicHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode The Greenland Tariffs: How Walrus Tusk Changed Viking Economy cover

The Greenland Tariffs: How Walrus Tusk Changed Viking Economy

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the hidden economic engine of Norse Greenland: not farming, but walrus ivory. They trace how the remote settlers of the Eastern and Western Settlements built a monopoly on the luxury tusks that European artisans craved for carving religious objects and jewelry. Lucas explains how the Greenlanders bartered walrus hides, live polar bears, and narwhal tusks (which passed as unicorn horns) for iron, timber, and grain from Norway. The hosts discuss the rise of the Norwegian crown monopoly under King Haakon IV, which forced Greenlanders to trade only through royal merchants and squeezed the colony's economy. They also touch on the ecological cost: overhunting walrus herds around Disko Bay. The episode offers a fresh angle on why Greenland's Norse colony ultimately failed—not just climate change, but a fragile single-resource economy strangled by distant trade policies. Listeners will hear terms like Norðrsetur, afgift, hvalr, and the name of the last known Greenlandic ship, the Knarr, that made the perilous crossing. #Greenland #Norse #WalrusIvory #MedievalEconomy #GreenlandNorse #EasternSettlement #WesternSettlement #DiskoBay #Norðrsetur #HaakonIV #NorwegianCrownMonopoly #MedievalTrade #VikingEconomy #WalrusTusk #Narwhal #Knarr #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9. juli 20265 min
episode Erik the Red's Greenland: How Norse Farmers Survived the Ice cover

Erik the Red's Greenland: How Norse Farmers Survived the Ice

Before the Vikings reached North America, they spent a generation learning to survive on the edge of the world. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Greenland settlement founded by Erik the Red in 985 CE — a bold experiment in farming, livestock, and social organization in one of the harshest climates on earth. They unpack how the Norse adapted their sheep and cattle economy to the subarctic, the role of walrus ivory in trade with Europe, and the mysterious disappearance of the Eastern Settlement in the 15th century. Along the way they discuss the Greenlandic Thing, the tithe to the Bishop of Gardar, and the little ice age that may have doomed the colony. This is a story of resilience, trade, and the limits of adaptation — and it sets the stage for the Vinland voyages that followed. #ErikTheRed #Greenland #NorseSettlement #VikingAge #WalrusIvory #Gardar #Brattahlid #EasternSettlement #WesternSettlement #Thing #LittleIceAge #NorseEconomy #SubarcticFarming #ClimateHistory #Vinland #MedievalGreenland #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

9. juli 20267 min
episode How Viking Slavery Shaped Northern Europe's Economy cover

How Viking Slavery Shaped Northern Europe's Economy

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the often-overlooked institution of slavery in the Viking world. They discuss the Old Norse term þræll (thrall), how raiders captured people from Ireland, Scotland, and the Slavic east, and the massive slave markets at Hedeby, Birka, and Dublin. The conversation covers the legal status of thralls, their roles on farms and in households, and the path to freedom through self-purchase or manumission. Lucas explains how the slave trade fueled the Viking economy, with silver dirhams from the Abbasid Caliphate flowing north in exchange for captives known as saqaliba. They also touch on the Guta Lag and other law codes that regulated slavery, and the gradual decline of the institution as Christianity spread and economic conditions shifted. This episode offers a nuanced look at a harsh reality that enabled much of the Viking Age's expansion and exchange. #VikingSlavery #Thralls #Hedeby #Birka #Dublin #Saqaliba #Dirhams #Manumission #GutaLag #NorseLaw #VikingTrade #SlaveTrade #VikingEconomy #SocialHistory #MedievalSlavery #NorseSociety #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

8. juli 20267 min