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{{Short description|Danish Viking Age trading settlement}} | |||
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{{distinguish|Hejdeby}} | |||
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{{Infobox UNESCO World Heritage Site | |||
| image = Wikingerhaeuser Haithabu.jpg | |||
| image_upright = | |||
| caption = Reconstructed houses in the area of the old settlement | |||
| location = ], ], ] | |||
| part_of = Archaeological Border Complex of Hedeby and the ] | |||
| criteria = {{UNESCO WHS type|(iii), (iv)}}(iii), (iv) | |||
| ID = 1553 | |||
| coordinates = {{coord|54|29|28|N|9|33|55|E|region:DE-SH_type:landmark|display=inline,title}} | |||
| year = 2018 | |||
| area = | |||
| buffer_zone = | |||
| locmapin = Germany#Germany Schleswig-Holstein | |||
| map_caption = | |||
}} | |||
'''Hedeby''' ({{ |
'''Hedeby''' ({{IPA|da|ˈhe̝ːðəˌpyˀ}}, ]: ''Heiðabýr'', ]: ''Haithabu'') was an important ] ] (8th to the 11th centuries) trading settlement near the southern end of the ], now in the ] district of ], ]. Around 965, chronicler ] visited Hedeby and described it as, "a very large city at the very end of the ]."<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://haithabu.de/de/zur-geschichte|title=Zur Geschichte - Wikinger Museum Haithabu|website=haithabu.de|language=de|access-date=2020-04-08}}</ref> | ||
] with its ] estuary, making a convenient place where goods and Viking ships could be ported overland for an almost uninterrupted seaway between the Baltic and the North Sea and avoiding a dangerous circumnavigation of Jutland. | |||
The settlement developed as a trading centre at the head of a narrow, navigable inlet known as the ], which connects to the ]. The location was favorable because there is a short portage of less than 15 km to the ], which flows into the ] with its ] estuary, making it a convenient place where goods and ships could be pulled on a ] overland for an almost uninterrupted seaway between the Baltic and the North Sea and avoid a dangerous and time-consuming circumnavigation of Jutland, providing Hedeby with a role similar to later ]. Hedeby was the second largest Nordic town during the Viking Age, after ] in present-day southern Sweden.{{Citation needed|date=February 2024}} The city of ] was later founded on the other side of the Schlei. Hedeby was abandoned after its destruction in 1066. | |||
Hedeby was the largest ] city during the ] and used to be the oldest city in Denmark.<ref>The oldest town in modern Denmark is ], first mentioned in 854.</ref> | |||
While it was in the German Schleswig-Holstein duchy, the dukes became also kings of Denmark centuries ago. The kingdom of Denmark lost the co-rulership of the territory on which Hedeby was located to ] and ] in 1864 in the ]. The site was always located in the province of ] in the extreme north of ]. | |||
The name 'Hedeby' means the "town on the ]". Abandoned almost a thousand years ago, Hedeby is now by far the most important archaeological site in Schleswig-Holstein. A museum was opened next to the site in 1985. | |||
Hedeby was rediscovered in the late 19th century and excavations began in 1900. The ] was opened next to the site in 1985. Because of its historical importance during the Viking Age and exceptional preservation, Hedeby and the nearby defensive earthworks of the ] were inscribed on the ] ] in 2018.<ref name = "unesco">{{cite web |url = https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1553 |title = Archaeological Border complex of Hedeby and the Danevirke |website = UNESCO World Heritage Centre |publisher = UNESCO |access-date = 25 September 2022}}</ref> | |||
==Naming== | |||
Both in modern European usage and in Viking times, the names and spellings used for Hedeby were varied and confusing.<ref>Research opinions on the naming issues differ slightly. The version given is based primarily on {{cite book | first = Hildegard | last = Elsner | year = 1989 | title = Wikinger Museum Haithabu: Schaufenster einer frühen Stadt | chapter = | editor = | others = | pages = | location = Neumünster | publisher = Wachholtz | id = | url = | authorlink = }}, p.13</ref> | |||
* ''Hedeby'' is the accepted modern English and Danish spelling. | |||
* ''Heiðabýr'' is derived from old Scandinavian sources and is the oldest known name. | |||
** ''Heithabyr'' is an English spelling of the Old Norse name. | |||
* ''Heidiba'' is a ] form. | |||
* ''Haithabu'' is the modern German spelling used when referring to the historical settlement. It is a revival of the Old Norse name, but whereas this language is usually rendered in its Latin spelling, curiously, in this case a ] of the runic spelling has been preferred. This is reflected in the name of the museum now located at the site. | |||
* ''Haddeby'' is the modern German spelling for the '''' around the site of the original town. | |||
* ''Heddeby'' is also known. | |||
Hedeby is mentioned in ]'s fairy tale "The Marsh King's Daughter". | |||
A second set of names are used in other linguistic traditions. | |||
* ''Sliesthorp'' in the earliest ] and ] texts. | |||
* ''Sliaswich'' in later ] and ] texts. | |||
==Name== | |||
It is possible that two name sets were used interchangeably for the same settlement, depending on which language was being used. However, the fact that two settlements came into existence, situated very close together, creates further difficulties. While the settlement today referred to as Hedeby/Haithabu lies on the south side of the ] inlet, a settlement also grew up (at around the same time) on the north side. That second settlement has had a continuous history of habitation to modern times, and has now grown into the town known as ] (derived from the second set of names for Hedeby) and given its name to the surrounding province. | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
The Old Norse name ''Heiða-býr'' simply translates to "heath-settlement" (''heiðr'' "]" and ''býr'' = "yard; settlement, village, town"). The name is recorded in numerous spelling variants.<ref>{{cite book | first = Hildegard | last = Elsner | year = 1989 | title = Wikinger Museum Haithabu: Schaufenster einer frühen Stadt | location = Neumünster | publisher = Wachholtz }}, p. 13</ref> | |||
* ''Heiðabýr'' is the reconstructed name in standard ], also anglicized as ''Heithabyr''. | |||
* The ], a 10th-century Danish ] with an inscription mentioning ᚼᛅᛁᚦᛅ᛭ᛒᚢ (''haiþa bu''), found in 1796.<ref name="DR1"> - ] entry for DR 1.</ref> | |||
* Old English ''æt Hæðum'', from ]'s and ]'s accounts of their travels to ] in the Old English ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Old English Orosius |url=https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/old-english-orosius |website=The British Library |access-date=27 October 2018 |language=en |at=Digitised image 18 — f. 9v |archive-date=3 August 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200803042628/https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/old-english-orosius |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Orosius |first1=Paulus |last2=Alfred |first2=King of England |last3=Bosworth |first3=Joseph |last4=Hampson |first4=Robert Thomas |title=King Alfred's Anglo-Saxon version of the Compendious history of the world by Orosius |date=1859 |publisher=Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/kingalfredsangl00boswgoog/page/n284}}</ref> | |||
* ''Hedeby'', the modern Danish spelling, also most commonly used in English. | |||
* '']'' is the ] form, also the name of the administrative district formed in 1949 and named for the site; in 1985, the district introduced a coat of arms featuring a bell with a ] inscription reading ᚼᛁᚦᛅ᛬ᛒᚢ (''hiþa:bu'').<ref></ref> | |||
* ''Haithabu'' is the modern German spelling used when referring to the historical settlement; this spelling represents the transliteration of the name as found in the ] inscription; it was introduced among other variants in antiquarian literature in the 19th century and has since become the standard German name of the settlement.<ref>"''Haddeby'', vormals Heidabu, Haithabu, Heidebo, Hethäbye" | |||
Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus, ''Schweden, Norwegen u. Dänemark die 3 skandinavischen Reiche'' Hasselberg (1858), .</ref> | |||
Sources from the 9th and 10th century AD also attest to the names ''Sliesthorp'' and ''Sliaswich'' (cf. '']'' vs. '']''), and the town of ] still exists 3 km north of Hedeby.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=von Steinsdorff |first1=Katja |last2=Grupe |first2=Gisela |title=Reconstruction of an Aquatic Food Web: Viking Haithabu vs. Medieval Schleswig |journal=Anthropologischer Anzeiger |date=2006 |volume=64 |issue=3 |page=285 |jstor=29542750 }}</ref> However, ] claimed in his Latin translation of the ] that the Saxons used ''Slesuuic'' and the Danes ''Haithaby'' to refer to the same town.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Hardy |editor1-first=Thomas Duffus |editor2-last=Petrie |editor2-first=Henry |title=Monumenta Historica Britannica, Or Materials for the History of Britain from the Earliest Period |date=1848 |publisher=Eyret |page=502 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N1v31IRyUdsC&pg=RA1-PA502 |language=la}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Giles |editor1-first=John Allen |title=Old English chronicles: including Ethelwerd's chronicle, Asser's Life of Alfred, Geoffrey of Monmouth's British history, Gildas, Nennius, together with the spurious Chronicle of Richard of Cirencester |date=1906 |publisher=London: G. Bell |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/oldenglishchroni00gileuoft}}</ref> | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
] | |||
===Origins=== | ===Origins=== | ||
Hedeby is first mentioned in the Frankish chronicles of ] (804), who was in the service of ], as a place Charlemagne stayed in the summer of 804, at the end of the ]. In 808 the Danish king ] (Lat. Godofredus) destroyed a competing ] trade centre named ], and it is recorded in the Frankish chronicles that he resettled the merchants from there to Hedeby. This may have provided the initial impetus for the town to further develop.<ref name="kalmring">{{ cite book |last=Kalmring |first=Sven | date=2010 |title=Der Hafen von Haithabu |trans-title=The Harbour of Haithabu |url=https://macau.uni-kiel.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/macau_derivate_00004519/Der_Hafen_von_Haithabu.pdf |language=German |location=Neumünster |publisher=Wachholtz Verlag |isbn=9783529014147 |pages=42–43 }}</ref> | |||
Hedeby is first mentioned in the Frankish chronicles of ] (804) who was in the service of ], | |||
but was probably founded around 770. In 808 the Danish king ] (Lat. Godofredus) destroyed a competing ] trade centre named ] and it is recorded in the Frankish chronicles that he moved the merchants from there to Hedeby. This may have given the town of Hedeby its initial impetus to develop. The same sources record that Godfred strengthened the ] earthen wall which stretched across the south of the Jutland peninsula. The ] joined the defensive walls of Hedeby to form an east-west barrier across the peninsula, from the marshes in the West to the Schlei inlet leading into the Baltic in the East. | |||
The same sources record that Godfred strengthened the ], an earthen wall that stretched across the south of the Jutland peninsula. The Danevirke joined the defensive walls of Hedeby to form an east–west barrier across the peninsula, from the marshes in the west to the Schlei inlet leading into the Baltic in the east. | |||
The town itself was surrounded on its three landward sides (north, west, and south) by earthworks. At the end of the 9th century the northern and southern parts of the town were abandoned for the central section. Later a 9-metre (29-ft) high semi-circular wall was erected to guard the western approaches to the town. On the eastern side, the town was bordered by the innermost part of the ] inlet and the bay of ]. | |||
The town itself was surrounded on its three landward sides (north, west, and south) by earthworks. At the end of the 9th century the northern and southern parts of the town were abandoned for the central section. Later a 9-metre (29-ft) high semi-circular wall was erected to guard the western approaches to the town. On the eastern side, the town was bordered by the innermost part of the Schlei inlet and the bay of ]. | |||
===Timeline=== | |||
===Timeline=== | |||
{| class="toccolours" align="centre" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" style="margin:0 0 1em 1em; font-size: 95%;" | {| class="toccolours" align="centre" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" style="margin:0 0 1em 1em; font-size: 95%;" | ||
|colspan=1 style="padding:0.3em;border-collapse:collapse;background-color:#ccccff" align=center| |
|colspan=1 style="padding:0.3em;border-collapse:collapse;background-color:#ccccff" align=center|based on Elsner<ref>{{cite book | first = Hildegard | last = Elsner | year = 1989 | title = Wikinger Museum Haithabu: Schaufenster einer frühen Stadt | location = Neumünster | publisher = Wachholtz }}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
|valign=top|'''793''' | |valign=top|'''793''' | ||
Line 48: | Line 66: | ||
|Destruction of ] and migration of tradespeople to Hedeby | |Destruction of ] and migration of tradespeople to Hedeby | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''c.850''' | |'''c. 850''' | ||
|Construction of a church at Hedeby | |Construction of a church at Hedeby | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''886''' | |'''886''' | ||
|The ] is established in ], following Viking |
|The ] is established in ], following Viking invasion | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''911''' | |'''911''' | ||
Line 69: | Line 87: | ||
|Hedeby returns to Danish control | |Hedeby returns to Danish control | ||
|- | |- | ||
|'''c.1000''' | |'''c. 1000''' | ||
|The Viking ] explores ], probably in Newfoundland | |The Viking ] explores ], probably in Newfoundland | ||
|- | |- | ||
|''' |
|'''1016–1042''' | ||
|Danish kings rule in England | |Danish kings rule in England | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 86: | Line 104: | ||
===Rise=== | ===Rise=== | ||
Hedeby became a principal marketplace because of its geographical location on the major trade routes between the ] and ] (north-south), and between the ] and the ] (east-west). Between 800 and 1000 the growing economic power of the ] led to its dramatic expansion as a major trading centre. | Hedeby became a principal marketplace because of its geographical location on the major trade routes between the ] and ] (north-south), and between the ] and the ] (east-west). Between 800 and 1000 the growing economic power of the ] led to its dramatic expansion as a major trading centre. Along with ] and ], Hedeby's prominence as a major international trading hub served as a foundation of the ] that would emerge by the 12th century.<ref>{{cite thesis |last=Smith |first=Jillian R. |date=May 2010 |title=Hanseatic Cogs and Baltic Trade: Interrelations Between Trade, Technology and Ecology |chapter=2 |publisher=University of Nebraska at Lincoln |chapter-url=http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/anthrotheses/4 |access-date=1 July 2019}}</ref> | ||
The following indicate the importance achieved by the town: | |||
Hedeby played an important role in the international Viking slave trade between Europe and the Muslim world. People taken captive during the Viking raids in Western Europe, such as Ireland, could be sold to ] via the ]<ref name="aroundtheworldineightyyears.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.aroundtheworldineightyyears.com/viking-dublin/|title=The Slave Market of Dublin|date=23 April 2013}}</ref> or transported to Hedeby or ] in Scandinavia and from there via the ] to Russia, where slaves and furs were sold to Muslim merchants in exchange for Arab silver '']'' and silk, which have been found in ], ] and ];<ref>The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024. (1995). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 91</ref> initially this trade route between Europe and the Abbasid Caliphate passed ],<ref>The World of the Khazars: New Perspectives. Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium. (2007). Nederländerna: Brill. p. 232</ref> but from the early 10th-century onward it went ] and from there by caravan to ], to the ] in Central Asia and finally via Iran to ].<ref>The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024. (1995). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 504</ref> | |||
* The town was described by visitors from England (] - 9th C.) and the Mediterranean (] - 10th C.). | |||
The following indicates the importance achieved by the town: | |||
* The town was described by visitors from England (] - 9th century) and the Mediterranean (] - 10th century). | |||
* Hedeby became the seat of a bishop (948) and belonged to the Archbishopric of ] and ]. | * Hedeby became the seat of a bishop (948) and belonged to the Archbishopric of ] and ]. | ||
* The town minted its own coins (from 825 |
* The town minted its own coins (from 825). | ||
* ] (11th |
* ] (11th century) reports that ships were sent from this ''portus maritimus'' to Slavic lands, to ], ] (''Semlant'') and even ]. | ||
A Swedish dynasty founded by ] is said to have ruled Hedeby during the last decades of the 9th century and the first part of the 10th century. This was told to ] by the Danish king ], and it is supported by three ]s found in Denmark. Two of them were raised by the mother of Olof's grandson ]. The third runestone is from Hedeby, the '']'' ({{ |
A Swedish dynasty founded by ] is said to have ruled Hedeby during the last decades of the 9th century and the first part of the 10th century. This was told to ] by the Danish king ], and it is supported by three ]s found in Denmark. Two of them were raised by the mother of Olof's grandson ]. The third runestone, discovered in 1796, is from Hedeby, the '']'' ({{langx|sv|Erikstenen}}). It is inscribed with ]. It is, however, possible that Danes also occasionally wrote with this version of the ]. | ||
===Lifestyle=== | ===Lifestyle=== | ||
Life was short and crowded in Hedeby. The small houses were clustered tightly together in a grid, with the |
Life was short and crowded in Hedeby. The small houses were clustered tightly together in a grid, with the east–west streets leading down to jetties in the harbour. People rarely lived beyond 30 or 40, and archaeological research shows that their later years were often painful due to crippling diseases such as tuberculosis.<ref name="denmark_org">{{cite web|author=Consulate General of Denmark in New York |title=Factsheet |url=http://www.denmark.org/about_denmark/factsheets_articles/factsheets_vikings.html |access-date=January 14, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060113013845/http://www.denmark.org/about_denmark/factsheets_articles/factsheets_vikings.html |archive-date=January 13, 2006 |url-status=dead }}</ref> | ||
While Hedeby primarily served as a trade emporium, archaeological evidence demonstrates that it had produced many goods locally. Discovery and analysis of excavated artifacts reveal that tools such as spindle whorls, spindle rods, loom weights, and bone needles were standardized products. The distribution of these various tools demonstrates that there was a wide range of textiles produced at Hedeby, ranging from coarse fabric for sailcloth and outer-garments, to fine worsted wool fabric for higher quality clothes.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Corsi |first=Maria R. D. |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv13vdj3q |title=Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town |date=2020 |publisher=Amsterdam University Press}}</ref> More than 340,000 pieces related to comb making, tools for working leather, remains of ironworking and goldsmithing, and mercury from fire gilding were also found. <ref>{{Cite book |last=Corsi |first=Maria R. D. |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv13vdj3q |title=Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town |date=2020 |publisher=Amsterdam University Press}}</ref> There was also evidence found for the presence of a glass furnace active in the site from the period of 850 to 900. A total of 7,700 decorative beads have been unearthed in Hedeby, although it is likely that a small percentage of those were produced in situ.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Delvaux |first=Matthew C. |date=2018 |title=Colors of the Viking Age: A Cluster Analysis of Glass Beads from Hedeby |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26678008 |journal=Journal of Glass Studies |volume=60 |pages=41–68 |issn=0075-4250}}</ref> The presence of these artifacts at the site indicate that Hedeby had a robust local economy that produced a wide variety of goods, likely for domestic use and for trade at the sites markets.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Corsi |first=Maria R. D. |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv13vdj3q |title=Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town |date=2020 |publisher=Amsterdam University Press}}</ref> | |||
The Jewish Arab traveller Ibrahim ] (late 10th C.) provides one of the most colourful and often quoted descriptions of life in Hedeby. Al-Tartushi was from ] in ], which had a significantly more wealthy and comfortable lifestyle than Hedeby. While Hedeby may have been significant by Scandinavian standards, Al-Tartushi is unimpressed: | |||
:''"Slesvig (Hedeby) is a very large town at the extreme end of the world ocean.... The inhabitants worship Sirius, except for a minority of Christians who have a church of their own there.... He who slaughters a sacrificial animal puts up poles at the door to his courtyard and impales the animal on them, be it a piece of cattle, a ram, billygoat or a pig so that his neighbors will be aware that he is making a sacrifice in honor of his god. The town is poor in goods and riches. People eat mainly fish which exist in abundance. Babies are thrown into the sea for reasons of economy. The right to divorce belongs to the women.... Artificial eye make-up is another peculiarity; when they wear it their beauty never disappears, indeed it is enhanced in both men and women. Further: Never did I hear singing fouler than that of these people, it is a rumbling emanating from their throats, similar to that of a dog but even more bestial."''<ref>{{cite web |author=Consulate General of Denmark in New York | title=Factsheet | work= | url=http://www.denmark.org/about_denmark/factsheets_articles/factsheets_vikings.html | accessmonthday=January 14 | accessyear=2006}}</ref> | |||
Analysis of some of Hedeby’s burial sites provide evidence for the existence of an aristocracy. Graves that are lavishly furnished with jewelry, commodities, weapons and armor set apart from more humble inhumation sites indicate an established degree of stratification among Hedeby’s society.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lorenzen |first=Daniel Henvig |date=2018-01-01 |title=The Vikings of Haithabu (8th -10th Century AD): Burials and Identity (Master's thesis 2018) |url=https://www.academia.edu/36892711/The_Vikings_of_Haithabu_8th_10th_Century_AD_Burials_and_Identity_Masters_thesis_2018_}}</ref> | |||
The trade and production of beads was tied to a robust fashion within Hedeby. Beads made of varying materials such as carnelian, rock crystal, amber, jet, silver, brass, bronze, and mosaic glass have been found in the harbor excavation sites, burials, and throughout the settlement. Dating of these finds reveals that there was a change in style roughly every 10-35 years within the settlement.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Delvaux |first=Matthew C. |date=2018 |title=Colors of the Viking Age: A Cluster Analysis of Glass Beads from Hedeby |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/26678008 |journal=Journal of Glass Studies |volume=60 |pages=41–68 |issn=0075-4250}}</ref> | |||
], a late 10th-century traveller from ], provides one of the most colourful and often quoted descriptions of life in Hedeby. Al-Tartushi was from ] in ], which had a significantly more wealthy and comfortable lifestyle than Hedeby. While Hedeby may have been significant by Scandinavian standards, Al-Tartushi was unimpressed: | |||
:''"Slesvig (Hedeby) is a very large town at the extreme end of the world ocean... The inhabitants worship ], except for a minority of Christians who have a church of their own there.... He who slaughters a sacrificial animal puts up poles at the door to his courtyard and impales the animal on them, be it a piece of cattle, a ram, billy goat or a pig so that his neighbours will be aware that he is making a sacrifice in honour of his god. The town is poor in goods and riches. People eat mainly fish which exist in abundance. Babies are thrown into the sea for reasons of economy. The right to divorce belongs to the women.... Artificial eye make-up is another peculiarity; when they wear it their beauty never disappears, indeed it is enhanced in both men and women. Further: Never did I hear singing fouler than that of these people, it is a rumbling emanating from their throats, similar to that of a dog but even more bestial."''<ref name="denmark_org" /> | |||
===Destruction=== | ===Destruction=== | ||
The town was sacked in 1050 by King ] of Norway during |
The town was sacked in 1050 by King ] of Norway during a conflict with King ]. He set the town on fire by sending several burning ships into the harbour, the charred remains of which were found at the bottom of the Schlei during recent excavations. A Norwegian '']'', quoted by ], describes the sack as follows: | ||
:''Burnt in anger from end to end was Hedeby |
:''Burnt in anger from end to end was Hedeby'' | ||
:''High rose the flames from the houses when, before dawn, I stood upon the stronghold's arm'' | :''High rose the flames from the houses when, before dawn, I stood upon the stronghold's arm''<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://heimskringla.no/Sagan_af_Haraldi_har%C3%B0r%C3%A1%C3%B0a | title=Sagan af Haraldi harðráða – heimskringla.no}}</ref> | ||
In 1066 the town was ] and burned by ].<ref>{{cite news|author1=Nancy Marie Brown|title=The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman|date=6 October 2008|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aUE9ZFNeCBsC&pg=PT110 |access-date=6 March 2016|pages=95|isbn=9780547539393}}</ref> Following the destruction, Hedeby was slowly abandoned. People moved across the ] ], which separates the two peninsulas of ] and ], to the growing town of ]. Hedeby’s royal tolls and levies were transferred to the town by the monarchy.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Corsi |first=Maria R. D. |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv13vdj3q |title=Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town |date=2020 |publisher=Amsterdam University Press}}</ref> | |||
After the sack of Hedeby by Harold, ] plundered and again destroyed the town in 1066. The inhabitants then abandoned Hedeby and moved across the ] inlet to the town of ]. | |||
==Archaeology== | ==Archaeology== | ||
===20th century excavations=== | |||
=== 20th-century archaeology === | |||
] | |||
] | |||
After the settlement was abandoned, rising waters contributed to the complete disappearance of all visible structures on the site. It was even forgotten where the settlement had been. This proved to be fortunate for later archaeological work at the site. | After the settlement was abandoned, rising waters contributed to the complete disappearance of all visible structures on the site. It was even forgotten where the settlement had been. This proved to be fortunate for later archaeological work at the site. | ||
The exact location of the site was rediscovered by ] in 1897. Archaeological work began at the site in 1900 after the rediscovery of the settlement with small-scale excavations by ]. Excavations were conducted for the next 15 years, and additionally in 1921. These early efforts would result in over 350 small trenches being dug, and the discovery of a burial site within the rampart dating from earlier in the site's history, they were led by Wilhelm Splieth and Friedrich Norr.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF {{!}} PDF |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/374424441/Hedeby-in-Wulfstans-days-pdf |access-date=2024-12-12 |website=Scribd |language=en}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Further excavations were carried out between 1930 and 1939 by Nazi Germany’s ], the pseudoscientific organization within the SS under ].<ref>{{Cite journal |date=2015-10-13 |title=Graben für Germanien, Graben für Germanien. Archäologie unterm Hakenkreuz. Hrsg. v. Focke-Museum unt. Mitarb. v. <i>Sandra Geringer</i>, <i>Frauke von der Haar</i>, <i>Uta Halle</i> u. a. Stuttgart, Theiss 2013 |url=https://doi.org/10.1515/hzhz-2015-0450 |journal=Historische Zeitschrift |volume=301 |issue=2 |pages=566–567 |doi=10.1515/hzhz-2015-0450 |issn=2196-680X}}</ref> The results of Jankuhn’s discoveries were never published in detail. What has been published shows that this period saw the digging of several trial trenches, discovering a group of ten chamber burials, a cremation burial site, and two inhumation graves.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF {{!}} PDF |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/374424441/Hedeby-in-Wulfstans-days-pdf |access-date=2024-12-12 |website=Scribd |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Archaeological work began at the site in 1900 after the rediscovery of the settlement. Excavations were conducted for the next 15 years. Further excavations were carried out between 1930 and 1939. Archaeological work on the site was productive due to two main factors: that the site had never been built on since its destruction some 840 years earlier, and that the permanently waterlogged ground had preserved wood and other perishable materials. After the Second World War, in 1959 archaeological work was started again and has continued intermittently ever since. The embankments surrounding the settlement were excavated and a partial dredging of the harbour was carried out. The wreck of a ] was discovered in the harbour during these latter excavations. Despite all this work, today only 5% of the settlement (and only 1% of the harbour) has actually been investigated. | |||
Excavation in 1956 found more inhumation and cremation burials south of the rampart, which prompted many large-scale excavations. Klaus Raddatz, ], and Konrad Weidemann investigated much of the cemetery site at that time, but their findings have not been published in detail.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF {{!}} PDF |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/374424441/Hedeby-in-Wulfstans-days-pdf |access-date=2024-12-12 |website=Scribd |language=en}}</ref> | |||
In 1963, Torsten Capelle and Kurt Schietzel conducted further work on the site, they were the source of the youngest find at the site, with an excavated well dated to 1020 A.D. by dendrochronology.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF {{!}} PDF |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/374424441/Hedeby-in-Wulfstans-days-pdf |access-date=2024-12-12 |website=Scribd |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Archaeological work on the site was productive for two main reasons: that the site had never been built on since its destruction some 840 years earlier, and that the permanently waterlogged ground had preserved wood and other perishable materials. The embankments surrounding the settlement were excavated, and the harbour was partially dredged, during which the wreck of multiple ] were discovered, including the ]. Despite all this work, only 5% of the settlement (and only 1% of the harbour) has as yet been investigated. | |||
The most important finds resulting from the excavations are now on display in the adjoining ]. | The most important finds resulting from the excavations are now on display in the adjoining ]. | ||
===21st-century archaeology=== | |||
] | |||
] | |||
Work has continued on the site since the earlier projects. | |||
In 2002 a large scale geophysical project was started by teams from Marburg, Munich and Vienna. Over the course of three weeks, a total of ca 29 ha in and around the semi-circular rampart were analysed using ], ] and ground-penetrating radar.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF {{!}} PDF |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/374424441/Hedeby-in-Wulfstans-days-pdf |access-date=2024-12-12 |website=Scribd |language=en}}</ref> | |||
Further work continued in 2003 when the ''Archäolgisches Landesmuseum'' began a metal detector survey with the help of the ''Bornholmske Amatørarkaologer'' and a group from Schleswig-Holstein. Throughout their work, 11,500 metal finds were collected and catalogued with a D-GPS system.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF {{!}} PDF |url=https://www.scribd.com/document/374424441/Hedeby-in-Wulfstans-days-pdf |access-date=2024-12-12 |website=Scribd |language=en}}</ref> | |||
In 2005 an ambitious archaeological reconstruction program was initiated on the original site. Based on the results of archaeological analyses, exact copies of some of the original Viking houses have been built. | |||
===21st century reconstructions=== | |||
In 2005 an ambitious archaeological reconstruction programme was initiated on the original site. Based on the results of archaeological analyses, exact copies of some of the original Viking houses have been built. | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* Towns: ], ], ], ], ] | |||
* ] | |||
* People: ], ], ], ], ], ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ], ] | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{ |
{{Reflist}} | ||
==Bibliography and media== | ==Bibliography and media== | ||
* A number of short archaeological films relating to Hedeby and produced by researchers during the 1980s are available on DVD from the '''' | |||
{{commonscat|Haithabu}} | |||
* Most publications on Hedeby are in German. See '']'' | |||
* {{cite book | first = Ole | last = Crumlin-Pedersen | year = 1997 | title = Viking-Age Ships and Shipbuilding in Hedeby/ Haithabu and Schleswig. Ships and Boats of the North 2. | location= Schleswig and Roskilde | publisher=Archaeologisches Landesmuseum der Christian-Albrechts-Universitat, Wikinger Museum Haithabu, The National Museum of Denmark, and The Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde }} | |||
* A number of short archaeological films relating to Hedeby and produced by researchers during the 1980s are available on DVD from the '''' | |||
* The known publications on Hedeby are mainly in the German language. See '''' | |||
* {{cite book | first = Ole | last = Crumlin-Pedersen | year = 1997 | title = Viking-Age Ships and Shipbuilding in Hedeby/ Haithabu and Schleswig. Ships and Boats of the North 2. | chapter = | editor = | others = | pages = | location= Schleswig and Roskilde | publisher=Archaologisches Landesmuseum der Christian-Albrechts-Universitat, Wikinger Museum Haithabu, The National Museum of Denmark, and The Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde | id = | url = | authorlink = }} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{commons category|Haithabu}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180130191742/http://www.euro-t-guide.com/See_Coun/Germany/D_NW/D_See_Viking_Museum_Haithabu_1-1.htm |date=2018-01-30 }} | |||
* | |||
{{World Heritage Sites in Germany}} | |||
{{Baltic emporia}} | {{Baltic emporia}} | ||
{{Authority control}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:41, 18 December 2024
Danish Viking Age trading settlement Not to be confused with Hejdeby.UNESCO World Heritage Site | |
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Reconstructed houses in the area of the old settlement | |
Location | Busdorf, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany |
Part of | Archaeological Border Complex of Hedeby and the Danevirke |
Criteria | Cultural: (iii), (iv) |
Reference | 1553 |
Inscription | 2018 (42nd Session) |
Coordinates | 54°29′28″N 9°33′55″E / 54.49111°N 9.56528°E / 54.49111; 9.56528 |
Location of Hedeby in GermanyShow map of GermanyHedeby (Schleswig-Holstein)Show map of Schleswig-Holstein |
Hedeby (Danish pronunciation: [ˈhe̝ːðəˌpyˀ], Old Norse: Heiðabýr, German: Haithabu) was an important Danish Viking Age (8th to the 11th centuries) trading settlement near the southern end of the Jutland Peninsula, now in the Schleswig-Flensburg district of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany. Around 965, chronicler Abraham ben Jacob visited Hedeby and described it as, "a very large city at the very end of the world's ocean."
The settlement developed as a trading centre at the head of a narrow, navigable inlet known as the Schlei, which connects to the Baltic Sea. The location was favorable because there is a short portage of less than 15 km to the Treene River, which flows into the Eider with its North Sea estuary, making it a convenient place where goods and ships could be pulled on a corduroy road overland for an almost uninterrupted seaway between the Baltic and the North Sea and avoid a dangerous and time-consuming circumnavigation of Jutland, providing Hedeby with a role similar to later Lübeck. Hedeby was the second largest Nordic town during the Viking Age, after Uppåkra in present-day southern Sweden. The city of Schleswig was later founded on the other side of the Schlei. Hedeby was abandoned after its destruction in 1066.
Hedeby was rediscovered in the late 19th century and excavations began in 1900. The Hedeby Viking Museum was opened next to the site in 1985. Because of its historical importance during the Viking Age and exceptional preservation, Hedeby and the nearby defensive earthworks of the Danevirke were inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage List in 2018.
Hedeby is mentioned in Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tale "The Marsh King's Daughter".
Name
The Old Norse name Heiða-býr simply translates to "heath-settlement" (heiðr "heath" and býr = "yard; settlement, village, town"). The name is recorded in numerous spelling variants.
- Heiðabýr is the reconstructed name in standard Old Norse, also anglicized as Heithabyr.
- The Stone of Eric, a 10th-century Danish runestone with an inscription mentioning ᚼᛅᛁᚦᛅ᛭ᛒᚢ (haiþa bu), found in 1796.
- Old English æt Hæðum, from Ohtere's and Wulfstan's accounts of their travels to Alfred the Great in the Old English Orosius.
- Hedeby, the modern Danish spelling, also most commonly used in English.
- Haddeby is the Low German form, also the name of the administrative district formed in 1949 and named for the site; in 1985, the district introduced a coat of arms featuring a bell with a runic inscription reading ᚼᛁᚦᛅ᛬ᛒᚢ (hiþa:bu).
- Haithabu is the modern German spelling used when referring to the historical settlement; this spelling represents the transliteration of the name as found in the Stone of Eric inscription; it was introduced among other variants in antiquarian literature in the 19th century and has since become the standard German name of the settlement.
Sources from the 9th and 10th century AD also attest to the names Sliesthorp and Sliaswich (cf. -thorp vs. -wich), and the town of Schleswig still exists 3 km north of Hedeby. However, Æthelweard claimed in his Latin translation of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle that the Saxons used Slesuuic and the Danes Haithaby to refer to the same town.
History
Origins
Hedeby is first mentioned in the Frankish chronicles of Einhard (804), who was in the service of Charlemagne, as a place Charlemagne stayed in the summer of 804, at the end of the Saxon Wars. In 808 the Danish king Godfred (Lat. Godofredus) destroyed a competing Slav trade centre named Reric, and it is recorded in the Frankish chronicles that he resettled the merchants from there to Hedeby. This may have provided the initial impetus for the town to further develop.
The same sources record that Godfred strengthened the Danevirke, an earthen wall that stretched across the south of the Jutland peninsula. The Danevirke joined the defensive walls of Hedeby to form an east–west barrier across the peninsula, from the marshes in the west to the Schlei inlet leading into the Baltic in the east.
The town itself was surrounded on its three landward sides (north, west, and south) by earthworks. At the end of the 9th century the northern and southern parts of the town were abandoned for the central section. Later a 9-metre (29-ft) high semi-circular wall was erected to guard the western approaches to the town. On the eastern side, the town was bordered by the innermost part of the Schlei inlet and the bay of Haddebyer Noor.
Timeline
based on Elsner | |
793 | Viking raid on Lindisfarne - traditional date for the beginning of the Viking Age. |
804 | First mention of Hedeby |
808 | Destruction of Reric and migration of tradespeople to Hedeby |
c. 850 | Construction of a church at Hedeby |
886 | The Danelaw is established in England, following Viking invasion |
911 | The Vikings settle in Normandy |
948 | Hedeby becomes a bishopric |
965 | Visit of Al-Tartushi to Hedeby |
974 | Hedeby falls to the Holy Roman Empire |
983 | Hedeby returns to Danish control |
c. 1000 | The Viking Leif Erikson explores Vinland, probably in Newfoundland |
1016–1042 | Danish kings rule in England |
1050 | The Norwegian King Harald Hardrada destroys Hedeby |
1066 | Final destruction of Hedeby by a Slavic army. |
1066 | Traditional end of the Viking Age |
Rise
Hedeby became a principal marketplace because of its geographical location on the major trade routes between the Frankish Empire and Scandinavia (north-south), and between the Baltic and the North Sea (east-west). Between 800 and 1000 the growing economic power of the Vikings led to its dramatic expansion as a major trading centre. Along with Birka and Schleswig, Hedeby's prominence as a major international trading hub served as a foundation of the Hanseatic League that would emerge by the 12th century.
Hedeby played an important role in the international Viking slave trade between Europe and the Muslim world. People taken captive during the Viking raids in Western Europe, such as Ireland, could be sold to Moorish Spain via the Dublin slave trade or transported to Hedeby or Brännö in Scandinavia and from there via the Volga trade route to Russia, where slaves and furs were sold to Muslim merchants in exchange for Arab silver dirham and silk, which have been found in Birka, Wollin and Dublin; initially this trade route between Europe and the Abbasid Caliphate passed via the Khazar Kaghanate, but from the early 10th-century onward it went via Volga Bulgaria and from there by caravan to Khwarazm, to the Samanid slave market in Central Asia and finally via Iran to the Abbasid Caliphate.
The following indicates the importance achieved by the town:
- The town was described by visitors from England (Wulfstan - 9th century) and the Mediterranean (Al-Tartushi - 10th century).
- Hedeby became the seat of a bishop (948) and belonged to the Archbishopric of Hamburg and Bremen.
- The town minted its own coins (from 825).
- Adam of Bremen (11th century) reports that ships were sent from this portus maritimus to Slavic lands, to Sweden, Samland (Semlant) and even Greece.
A Swedish dynasty founded by Olof the Brash is said to have ruled Hedeby during the last decades of the 9th century and the first part of the 10th century. This was told to Adam of Bremen by the Danish king Sweyn Estridsson, and it is supported by three runestones found in Denmark. Two of them were raised by the mother of Olof's grandson Sigtrygg Gnupasson. The third runestone, discovered in 1796, is from Hedeby, the Stone of Eric (Swedish: Erikstenen). It is inscribed with Norwegian-Swedish runes. It is, however, possible that Danes also occasionally wrote with this version of the younger futhark.
Lifestyle
Life was short and crowded in Hedeby. The small houses were clustered tightly together in a grid, with the east–west streets leading down to jetties in the harbour. People rarely lived beyond 30 or 40, and archaeological research shows that their later years were often painful due to crippling diseases such as tuberculosis.
While Hedeby primarily served as a trade emporium, archaeological evidence demonstrates that it had produced many goods locally. Discovery and analysis of excavated artifacts reveal that tools such as spindle whorls, spindle rods, loom weights, and bone needles were standardized products. The distribution of these various tools demonstrates that there was a wide range of textiles produced at Hedeby, ranging from coarse fabric for sailcloth and outer-garments, to fine worsted wool fabric for higher quality clothes. More than 340,000 pieces related to comb making, tools for working leather, remains of ironworking and goldsmithing, and mercury from fire gilding were also found. There was also evidence found for the presence of a glass furnace active in the site from the period of 850 to 900. A total of 7,700 decorative beads have been unearthed in Hedeby, although it is likely that a small percentage of those were produced in situ. The presence of these artifacts at the site indicate that Hedeby had a robust local economy that produced a wide variety of goods, likely for domestic use and for trade at the sites markets.
Analysis of some of Hedeby’s burial sites provide evidence for the existence of an aristocracy. Graves that are lavishly furnished with jewelry, commodities, weapons and armor set apart from more humble inhumation sites indicate an established degree of stratification among Hedeby’s society.
The trade and production of beads was tied to a robust fashion within Hedeby. Beads made of varying materials such as carnelian, rock crystal, amber, jet, silver, brass, bronze, and mosaic glass have been found in the harbor excavation sites, burials, and throughout the settlement. Dating of these finds reveals that there was a change in style roughly every 10-35 years within the settlement.
Al-Tartushi, a late 10th-century traveller from al-Andalus, provides one of the most colourful and often quoted descriptions of life in Hedeby. Al-Tartushi was from Cordoba in Spain, which had a significantly more wealthy and comfortable lifestyle than Hedeby. While Hedeby may have been significant by Scandinavian standards, Al-Tartushi was unimpressed:
- "Slesvig (Hedeby) is a very large town at the extreme end of the world ocean... The inhabitants worship Sirius, except for a minority of Christians who have a church of their own there.... He who slaughters a sacrificial animal puts up poles at the door to his courtyard and impales the animal on them, be it a piece of cattle, a ram, billy goat or a pig so that his neighbours will be aware that he is making a sacrifice in honour of his god. The town is poor in goods and riches. People eat mainly fish which exist in abundance. Babies are thrown into the sea for reasons of economy. The right to divorce belongs to the women.... Artificial eye make-up is another peculiarity; when they wear it their beauty never disappears, indeed it is enhanced in both men and women. Further: Never did I hear singing fouler than that of these people, it is a rumbling emanating from their throats, similar to that of a dog but even more bestial."
Destruction
The town was sacked in 1050 by King Harald Hardrada of Norway during a conflict with King Sweyn II of Denmark. He set the town on fire by sending several burning ships into the harbour, the charred remains of which were found at the bottom of the Schlei during recent excavations. A Norwegian skald, quoted by Snorri Sturluson, describes the sack as follows:
- Burnt in anger from end to end was Hedeby
- High rose the flames from the houses when, before dawn, I stood upon the stronghold's arm
In 1066 the town was sacked and burned by West Slavs. Following the destruction, Hedeby was slowly abandoned. People moved across the Schlei inlet, which separates the two peninsulas of Angeln and Schwansen, to the growing town of Schleswig. Hedeby’s royal tolls and levies were transferred to the town by the monarchy.
Archaeology
20th-century archaeology
After the settlement was abandoned, rising waters contributed to the complete disappearance of all visible structures on the site. It was even forgotten where the settlement had been. This proved to be fortunate for later archaeological work at the site.
The exact location of the site was rediscovered by Sophus Muller in 1897. Archaeological work began at the site in 1900 after the rediscovery of the settlement with small-scale excavations by Johanna Mestorf. Excavations were conducted for the next 15 years, and additionally in 1921. These early efforts would result in over 350 small trenches being dug, and the discovery of a burial site within the rampart dating from earlier in the site's history, they were led by Wilhelm Splieth and Friedrich Norr.
Further excavations were carried out between 1930 and 1939 by Nazi Germany’s Ahenerbe, the pseudoscientific organization within the SS under Herbert Jankuhn. The results of Jankuhn’s discoveries were never published in detail. What has been published shows that this period saw the digging of several trial trenches, discovering a group of ten chamber burials, a cremation burial site, and two inhumation graves.
Excavation in 1956 found more inhumation and cremation burials south of the rampart, which prompted many large-scale excavations. Klaus Raddatz, Heiko Steuer, and Konrad Weidemann investigated much of the cemetery site at that time, but their findings have not been published in detail.
In 1963, Torsten Capelle and Kurt Schietzel conducted further work on the site, they were the source of the youngest find at the site, with an excavated well dated to 1020 A.D. by dendrochronology.
Archaeological work on the site was productive for two main reasons: that the site had never been built on since its destruction some 840 years earlier, and that the permanently waterlogged ground had preserved wood and other perishable materials. The embankments surrounding the settlement were excavated, and the harbour was partially dredged, during which the wreck of multiple Viking ships were discovered, including the Hedeby 1. Despite all this work, only 5% of the settlement (and only 1% of the harbour) has as yet been investigated.
The most important finds resulting from the excavations are now on display in the adjoining Hedeby Viking Museum.
21st-century archaeology
Work has continued on the site since the earlier projects.
In 2002 a large scale geophysical project was started by teams from Marburg, Munich and Vienna. Over the course of three weeks, a total of ca 29 ha in and around the semi-circular rampart were analysed using Fluxgate, Caesium magnetometer and ground-penetrating radar.
Further work continued in 2003 when the Archäolgisches Landesmuseum began a metal detector survey with the help of the Bornholmske Amatørarkaologer and a group from Schleswig-Holstein. Throughout their work, 11,500 metal finds were collected and catalogued with a D-GPS system.
In 2005 an ambitious archaeological reconstruction program was initiated on the original site. Based on the results of archaeological analyses, exact copies of some of the original Viking houses have been built.
See also
Notes
- "Zur Geschichte - Wikinger Museum Haithabu". haithabu.de (in German). Retrieved 2020-04-08.
- "Archaeological Border complex of Hedeby and the Danevirke". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. UNESCO. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
- Elsner, Hildegard (1989). Wikinger Museum Haithabu: Schaufenster einer frühen Stadt. Neumünster: Wachholtz., p. 13
- Project Samnordisk Runtextdatabas Svensk - Rundata entry for DR 1.
- "Old English Orosius". The British Library. Digitised image 18 — f. 9v. Archived from the original on 3 August 2020. Retrieved 27 October 2018.
- Orosius, Paulus; Alfred, King of England; Bosworth, Joseph; Hampson, Robert Thomas (1859). King Alfred's Anglo-Saxon version of the Compendious history of the world by Orosius. London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
- Unser Amt (haddeby.de)
- "Haddeby, vormals Heidabu, Haithabu, Heidebo, Hethäbye" Heinrich Karl Wilhelm Berghaus, Schweden, Norwegen u. Dänemark die 3 skandinavischen Reiche Hasselberg (1858), p. 890.
- von Steinsdorff, Katja; Grupe, Gisela (2006). "Reconstruction of an Aquatic Food Web: Viking Haithabu vs. Medieval Schleswig". Anthropologischer Anzeiger. 64 (3): 285. JSTOR 29542750.
- Hardy, Thomas Duffus; Petrie, Henry, eds. (1848). Monumenta Historica Britannica, Or Materials for the History of Britain from the Earliest Period (in Latin). Eyret. p. 502.
- Giles, John Allen, ed. (1906). Old English chronicles: including Ethelwerd's chronicle, Asser's Life of Alfred, Geoffrey of Monmouth's British history, Gildas, Nennius, together with the spurious Chronicle of Richard of Cirencester. London: G. Bell. p. 5.
- Kalmring, Sven (2010). Der Hafen von Haithabu [The Harbour of Haithabu] (PDF) (in German). Neumünster: Wachholtz Verlag. pp. 42–43. ISBN 9783529014147.
- Elsner, Hildegard (1989). Wikinger Museum Haithabu: Schaufenster einer frühen Stadt. Neumünster: Wachholtz.
- Smith, Jillian R. (May 2010). "2". Hanseatic Cogs and Baltic Trade: Interrelations Between Trade, Technology and Ecology (Thesis). University of Nebraska at Lincoln. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
- "The Slave Market of Dublin". 23 April 2013.
- The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024. (1995). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 91
- The World of the Khazars: New Perspectives. Selected Papers from the Jerusalem 1999 International Khazar Colloquium. (2007). Nederländerna: Brill. p. 232
- The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 3, C.900-c.1024. (1995). Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. p. 504
- ^ Consulate General of Denmark in New York. "Factsheet". Archived from the original on January 13, 2006. Retrieved January 14, 2006.
- Corsi, Maria R. D. (2020). Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town. Amsterdam University Press.
- Corsi, Maria R. D. (2020). Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town. Amsterdam University Press.
- Delvaux, Matthew C. (2018). "Colors of the Viking Age: A Cluster Analysis of Glass Beads from Hedeby". Journal of Glass Studies. 60: 41–68. ISSN 0075-4250.
- Corsi, Maria R. D. (2020). Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town. Amsterdam University Press.
- Lorenzen, Daniel Henvig (2018-01-01). "The Vikings of Haithabu (8th -10th Century AD): Burials and Identity (Master's thesis 2018)".
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - Delvaux, Matthew C. (2018). "Colors of the Viking Age: A Cluster Analysis of Glass Beads from Hedeby". Journal of Glass Studies. 60: 41–68. ISSN 0075-4250.
- "Sagan af Haraldi harðráða – heimskringla.no".
- Nancy Marie Brown (6 October 2008). "The Far Traveler: Voyages of a Viking Woman". p. 95. ISBN 9780547539393. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
- Corsi, Maria R. D. (2020). Urbanization in Viking Age and Medieval Denmark: From Landing Place to Town. Amsterdam University Press.
- "Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- "Graben für Germanien, Graben für Germanien. Archäologie unterm Hakenkreuz. Hrsg. v. Focke-Museum unt. Mitarb. v. Sandra Geringer, Frauke von der Haar, Uta Halle u. a. Stuttgart, Theiss 2013". Historische Zeitschrift. 301 (2): 566–567. 2015-10-13. doi:10.1515/hzhz-2015-0450. ISSN 2196-680X.
- "Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- "Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- "Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- "Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
- "Hedeby in Wulfstans Days PDF | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2024-12-12.
Bibliography and media
- A number of short archaeological films relating to Hedeby and produced by researchers during the 1980s are available on DVD from the University of Kiel's Archaeological Film Project.
- Most publications on Hedeby are in German. See Misplaced Pages's German-language article on Hedeby.
- Crumlin-Pedersen, Ole (1997). Viking-Age Ships and Shipbuilding in Hedeby/ Haithabu and Schleswig. Ships and Boats of the North 2. Schleswig and Roskilde: Archaeologisches Landesmuseum der Christian-Albrechts-Universitat, Wikinger Museum Haithabu, The National Museum of Denmark, and The Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde.
External links
- Website of the Haithabu Viking Museum
- Pictures from the Haithabu Viking Museum Archived 2018-01-30 at the Wayback Machine
- Flickr Photo Gallery: Viking houses and museum
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