While the Vikings originated from Northern Europe within Scandinavia that became the modern-day Denmark, Sweden, and Norway – during the Viking Age, dominated from the 9th century to the 11th century, their travels encompassed the entire Nordic region across the Baltic Sea to Finland, and on to Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Greenland. At places where archaeologists have found Viking settlements often rune stones with runic inscriptions for a Viking warrior or even recounting trade within the Byzantine empire were discovered.
Viking history from the 9th century onwards was dominated by exploration and trading.
Archaeological finds reveal that during the Viking period not only the Viking warrior but also that the Norseman and the Viking woman explored the far north up into the Artic territories of northern Scandinavia and across into Russia. Within these remote communities, Viking society fostered important connections for trade within the northern regions and a source of force and wealth was built.
The northern tips of Sweden, Finland and Norway as well as Greenland and Iceland are part of the Artic Circle which is one of the two polar circles, and the most northerly of the five major circles of latitude as shown on maps of our planet. Undoubtedly, the Vikings would have experienced the wonders of the northern lands in a similar way that we do today: the marvellous northern lights, majestic frosts, endless fire and ice, many different sources of water and the wonders of the underwater world that is so precious and diverse in the northern seas.
Differentiation occurred within Viking society: There where the bands of Viking brothers who were part-time warriors gone rogue within the Viking army, originally farmers, and the Norseman called Norse who were full-time traders on the move across the Atlantic as far as Vinland and south, overland to Persia.
The Sami
One important connection within Viking society were the Arctic Sami (also called Finnar and formerly known as Laplanders, sometimes spelled Saami). Archaeological finds reveal that the Sami livelihood was part of the Viking culture, and the Sami were also semi-nomadic hunters.
The Sami heritage – for this indigenous population up in the Sami homeland – that today is represented by Finnish Sami, the Swedish Sami and Norwegian Sami, was typically pursued as they do today with reindeer husbandry, they lived in movable hide huts, where reindeer herders often aimed to farm wild reindeer. The Saami kept these animals for reindeer meat and reindeer fur as well as being were fishermen and fast on their skis. The northernmost part of Scandinavia is called Finnmark and the name relates to its location, the Finnar who occupied the region and to assumed boundaries that were as real as they were illusive.
Viking history tells us that within Viking culture the Sami indigenous people were regarded as highly skilled wizards and sorcerers and have been spoken about in the famous medieval Icelandic sagas which involve an unparalleled diversity of geography, history and the people. Some members of the Sami population are not only presented as practitioners of witchcraft but also as teachers of the magic arts. A fine balance between power and admiration and fear and apprehension stems from this knowledge amongst the old Norse.
Acknowledging or believing in the Sami was forbidden in early Norwegian law. The History of Norway, a Latin text most likely written in the 12th century, refers to the Sami as “ungodly” and “exercising the art of magic” reciting an event where the Norse had been present during a shamanistic ritual and at a time when the rest of Scandinavia was already Christian. In the 18th century the Sami population was converted officially to Christianity but nonetheless until the present day their magic seems to be still a topic for locals and travellers alike.
Darker times in the history of the Sami homeland occurred, starting with the transition period from the Middle Ages to the early modern period, when their so called evil and unpredictable pagan powers set in motion terrible consequences. Finnmark known for its remote location, snowy mountains and wild reindeer also made an unsavoury wave in history books by a terribly high number of witch trials that took place in the 17th century. Witch-hunts started in the 15th and lasted until the 18th century stretching all over Europe and its American colonies and Finnmark wasn’t excluded from the tragic that happened during those trials. The north and the Sami culture after all had long before those trials been associated with the supernatural and the people that participated in it – all documented in the saga(s) of Norse society.
Vardo and the monument to the Sami and Norse mythology
The town called Vardø in the Arctic circle is the most eastern town in Scandinavia and is further east than Istanbul, Kiev, or St Petersburg. Near the seashore of the town of Vardo, a monument was built to remember the darkest and bloodiest era this part of the world had experienced during the Sami period as well to commemorate the individuals from the Sami indigenous population that have died terrible deaths engulfed in fire. This memorial to the Sami heritage was designed by artist Louise Bourgeois and architect Peter Zumthor and was opened in 2011. The Steilneset Memorial is made up of two individual buildings near the site at which the victims most likely were executed.
The first building is a monumental over 100 metres long structure, consisting of a fiberglass membrane cocoon fastened by steel wires to a wooden frame and covered by a corrugated metal roof. Inside is almost total darkness besides a series of 91 tiny square windows within a narrow corridor. The 91 trial victims are remembered by 91 light bulbs hanging from the ceiling. A piece of silk printed with texts from the trial’s historical documents is positioned to the left of each window and almost all the texts end with “condemned to be burnt at the stake”. The other part of the memorial is a cube entirely made of smoked glass and weathering steel. A sculptural installation by French American artist Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010) makes up the centre of the cube. Entitled “The Damned, The Possessed and The Beloved”, the installation consists of a single metal chair crossed by five gas flames, burning without mercy, surrounded by seven oval mirrors resembling silent witnesses, or we could assume the judges, encircling the victim.
Myths from the Viking era about the magical powers of the northern Sami from the arctic circle region, their ability to shape-shift, tell the future or haver power over all wild beasts, are until today a theme of Nordic folklore and fairy tales (Norse sagas). While its close connection to the Scottish and Irish folklore with their “selkies” is not a surprise since the Norseman sailed in their longship to inhabit and rule parts of these regions too. Many modern writers such as Hans Christian Andersen, C.S. Lewis and Philip Pullman dreamed up creatures of magic, ice and fire and brought to life on paper what started many centuries ago as a Viking saga.
And if there are still doubts about the Viking heritage and whether the Vikings and their story is relatable and piques a modern small group traveller’s interest, The Times newspaper of England in 2014 draw a remarkably contemporary connection between the Viking warrior’s notorious reputation and modern British politics:
“A longboat full of Vikings, promoting the new British Museum exhibition, was seen sailing past the Palace of Westminster yesterday. Famously uncivilised, destructive and rapacious, with an almost insatiable appetite for rough sex and heavy drinking, the MPs nonetheless looked up for a bit to admire the vessel.”