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Stephen Beech

Vikings Brought Their Own Animals When They Invaded

(Durham University via SWNS)

Marauding Vikings brought their own animals with them when they invaded Britain, suggests a new study.

Archaeologists have found what they say is the first solid scientific evidence suggesting that Vikings crossed the North Sea to Britain with dogs and horses.

At Heath Wood in Derbyshire, archaeologists examined human and animal remains from Britain’s only known Viking cremation cemetery. (Durham University via SWNS)

They examined human and animal remains from Britain’s only known Viking cremation cemetery at Heath Wood in Derbyshire.

Scientists looked at strontium isotopes contained within the remains. Strontium is a natural element found in different ratios around the world and provides a geographical ‘fingerprint’ for human and animal movements.

The analysis, published in the journal PLOS One, showed that within the context of the archaeology, one human adult and several animals almost certainly came from the Baltic Shield area of Scandinavia, covering Norway and central and northern Sweden, and died soon after arrival in Britain.

The research team says it suggests that Vikings were not only stealing animals when they arrived in Britain, as accounts from the time describe, but were also transporting animals from Scandinavia too.

As the human and animal remains were found in the remnants of the same cremation pyre, the researchers believe the adult from the Baltic Shield region may have been someone important who was able to bring a horse and dog to Britain.

The analyzed remains are associated with the Viking Great Army, a combined force of Scandinavian warriors that invaded Britain in 865 AD.

Lead author Tessi Löffelmann, a doctoral researcher, said: “This is the first solid scientific evidence that Scandinavians almost certainly crossed the North Sea with horses, dogs and possibly other animals as early as the 9th Century AD and could deepen our knowledge of the Viking Great Army.

“Our most important primary source, the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, states that the Vikings were taking horses from the locals in East Anglia when they first arrived, but this was clearly not the whole story, and they most likely transported animals alongside people on ships.”

The geographical fingerprint of the element strontium discovered in human or animal remains can assist in identifying the origin or location of the remains because strontium ratios differ geographically. (Durham University via SWNS)

Ms. Löffelmann, jointly working in the Department of Archaeology at Durham University, and the Department of Chemistry at Vrije Universiteit in Belgium, added: “This also raises questions about the importance of specific animals to the Vikings.”

The researchers analyzed strontium ratios in the remains of two adults, one child and three animals from the Heath Wood site.

Strontium occurs naturally in the environment in rocks, soil and water before making its way into plants. When humans and animals eat those plants, strontium replaces calcium in their bones and teeth.

As strontium ratios vary in different parts of the world the geographical fingerprint of the element found in human or animal remains can help show where they came from or settled.

Strontium ratios in one of the adults and the child showed that they could have been from the area local to the Heath Wood cremation site, southern or eastern England, or from Europe, including Denmark and southwest Sweden which were outside of the Baltic Shield region.

But the remains of the other adult and all three animals – a horse, a dog and what the archaeologists believe was a pig – had strontium ratios normally found in the Baltic Shield area.

While the researchers say their findings suggest the horse and dog were transported to Britain, it may be that the pig fragment was a piece from a game or another talisman or token brought from Scandinavia, rather than a live pig.

The researchers speculate that the animal remains had also been cremated and buried beneath a mound may be a reference to Scandinavian customs from when cremation was not practiced in Britain. (Durham University via SWNS)

The remains had also been cremated and buried under a mound, which the researchers say could be a link back to Scandinavian rituals at a time when cremation was absent in Britain.

Research co-author Professor Janet Montgomery, of Durham University, said: “Our study suggests that there are people and animals with different mobility histories buried at Heath Wood, and that, if they belonged to the Viking Great Army, it was made up of people from different parts of Scandinavia or the British Isles.

“This is also the first published strontium analysis on early medieval cremated remains from Britain and shows the potential that this scientific method has to shed further light on this period in history.”

The research team also included archaeologists from the University of York, who excavated the Heath Wood cemetery between 1998 and 2000.

York University’s Professor Julian Richards, who co-directed the excavations at the Heath Wood Viking cemetery, said: “The Bayeux Tapestry depicts Norman cavalry disembarking horses from their fleet before the Battle of Hastings, but this is the first scientific demonstration that Viking warriors were transporting horses to England two hundred years earlier.”

He added: “It shows how much Viking leaders valued their personal horses and hounds that they brought them from Scandinavia, and that the animals were sacrificed to be buried with their owners.”
 

Produced in association with SWNS Talker.

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