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Silver and the Origins of the Viking Age

Description du projet

Une étude numismatique de l’expansion des guerriers scandinaves

Durant l’Âge Viking (750-1050), des guerriers maritimes scandinaves ont commencé à attaquer une grande partie de l’Eurasie et à s’y installer. Mais où, quand et pourquoi l’Âge Viking a-t-il commencé? Le projet SILVER, financé par l’UE, mènera les premières recherches systématiques et empiriques à grande échelle sur l’argent du début de l’Âge Viking en Scandinavie. En tant que principal matériau documenté de leurs butins, il peut nous apporter des informations sur les prémisses de l’Âge Viking. L’argent n’ayant jamais été étudié à cette fin, le projet établira un nouvel ensemble de données des «archives de l’argent» du IXe siècle en recourant à différentes sources. Afin de mener une étude numismatique et archéologique pratique, SILVER utilisera des méthodes révolutionnaires dans le cadre d’une analyse archéométrique.

Objectif

This project will address one of the enduring questions of medieval studies - the origins of the Viking Age (c. 750-1050 AD) - through an interdisciplinary (archaeological, archaeometric and numismatic) study of silver from early Viking-Age Scandinavia.  In doing so, it will provide the first large-scale, systematic and empirically-based answers to the outstanding questions of where, when and why the Viking Age began, casting vital new light on what is widely recognised to be a pivotal episode of cultural expansion in Eurasia.

As the only surviving physical evidence from the spoils of Viking expansion, silver has unique potential to elucidate the early development of the Viking Age. Its geographic origins can reveal where Viking activity was concentrated (Western Europe vs. Baltic/ Russia); its uses can indicate why the Vikings were prepared to risk their lives acquiring it (social vs. monetary function); and its chronology can unlock the timings of the main periods of expansion (ninth century, as widely believed, vs. a century earlier). Yet, due to its poor characterisation and the lack of scientific approaches to its study, silver has never before been harnessed to address these fundamental topics.

This project will build an entirely new dataset of the ninth-century ‘silver record’ from a combination of access to museum collections and fresh artefact and coin identifications made by the project team. We will analyse this material in new ways. First-hand archaeological and numismatic study will be combined with pioneering methods in archaeometric analysis, the enormous potential of which for revealing Viking silver sources has recently been demonstrated by the PI. The PI has negotiated unprecedented permissions from national museums to extend scientific analyses to early Viking silver objects from across Northern Europe. There is now a tremendous opportunity to transform understanding of one of Europe’s most significant cultural movements.

Régime de financement

ERC-STG - Starting Grant

Institution d’accueil

THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 1 068 115,12
Adresse
WELLINGTON SQUARE UNIVERSITY OFFICES
OX1 2JD Oxford
Royaume-Uni

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Région
South East (England) Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Oxfordshire
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 1 068 115,12

Bénéficiaires (3)