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

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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

157 Episoder

episode Viking Navigation: How Norse Mariners Crossed the Atlantic cover

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13. juli 20269 min
episode The Thing at Uppsala: How the Norse Kept Their Gods cover

The Thing at Uppsala: How the Norse Kept Their Gods

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the famous Thing at Uppsala — the great pagan assembly at Gamla Uppsala in Sweden, where every nine years the Norse gathered to sacrifice to the gods. They discuss Adam of Bremen's account of the temple and its gold-gilded statues of Thor, Odin, and Freyr, the ritual sacrifice of nine males of every kind, and the tension between Christian missionaries and the old faith. The episode also examines the political role of the Uppsala Thing as a center of resistance to Christianization, the archaeology of the royal mounds, and the way Snorri Sturluson's Ynglinga saga mythologized the site. A key figure is the late 11th-century king Blót-Sveinn, who briefly restored pagan sacrifice. The conversation ends with the eventual triumph of Christianity and the burning of the temple, though not without leaving a sense of what was lost. #GamlaUppsala #ThingAtUppsala #Blót #AdamOfBremen #NorsePaganism #SnorriSturluson #Ynglinga #BlótSveinn #VikingAge #NorseReligion #PaganSacrifice #Christianization #RoyalMounds #Uppsala #Sweden #History #FexingoHistory #OldNorse Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går5 min
episode How Viking Ships Transformed Northern Warfare cover

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I går8 min
episode The Icelandic Free State: Viking Democracy's Greatest Experiment cover

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11. juli 20265 min
episode How Viking Women Ran the Farm and the Economy cover

How Viking Women Ran the Farm and the Economy

When Viking men sailed off to raid or trade, who kept the farms, the accounts, and the social order running? The sagas and law codes reveal that Norse women wielded surprising authority — managing estates, negotiating marriages, and even demanding divorce. In this episode Lucas and Luna explore the world of Viking women: the keys to the household they carried, the legal rights they held (and lost), and how one Icelandic woman, Unnr the Deep-Minded, led her entire family to settle a new land after her husband's death. They also look at the darker side: the thrall women taken as captives, the concubinage that built alliances, and the limits of female power even in a relatively egalitarian society. Drawing on the sagas, runestones, and law codes like the Gulaþing and Grágás, this episode gives a grounded, human view of the women who made the Viking Age possible. #VikingWomen #UnnrTheDeepMinded #NorseLaw #Gulaþing #Grágás #LaxdælaSaga #EiríksSagaRauða #kvenna #vikingage #womeninhistory #scandinavianhistory #icelandicsagas #norseculture #medievalwomen #thrall #concubinage #history #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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