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Presentation Plus!

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Title: Presentation Plus!


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SECTION 1 The Land SECTION 2 Daily
Life SECTION 3 Raiders and Adventurers
3
Terms to Learn
People to Know (cont.)
  • Leif Eriksson
  • jarls
  • berserkers
  • Eddas
  • runes
  • Canute
  • Rollo

Places to Locate
People to Know
  • Scandinavia
  • Rurik
  • Jutland
  • Vinland
  • Norselaw
  • Erik the Red

4
The Land
  • Scandinavia, the Viking homeland, was mostly
    forests and long, rugged coastlines.
  • The southern part, known as Jutland, or Denmark,
    had many natural harbors and was well suited for
    farming grains and pasturing cattle, sheep, and
    pigs.
  • As the rest of Scandinavia had rocky soil, a
    short growing season, and many fjords, or narrow
    bays, the people turned to the sea to make a
    living.

5
Ships and Trade
  • The Vikings built large, long, and narrow ships
    with timber from the dense forests.
  • The Vikings plotted their search of good fishing
    areas and trade by the positions of the sun and
    the stars.
  • They carried furs, hides, fish, and enslaved
    people to western Europe and the Mediterranean
    they returned with silk, wine, wheat, and silver.

6
Towns, Villages, and Jarls
  • Trade led to the growth of market towns in
    Scandinavia.
  • Most Vikings lived in log or board houses in
    villages scattered all through the country.
  • There was no central government as distance and
    cold winters isolated the villages.
  • The people were divided into groups ruled by
    elected or inherited military chiefs called
    jarls.
  • When a jarl had enough land under his rule, he
    was looked upon as a king.

7
Daily Life
  • Vikings valued family life, and most households
    had 20 to 30 members, including parents,
    grandparents, married children, and
    grandchildren.

8
The People
  • Viking warriors were called berserkers.
  • They fought to gain wealth, honor, and fame,
    believing that a liking for war brought special
    honors from the gods.
  • To call their warriors to battle, the Vikings lit
    bonfires on mountaintops.
  • The women encouraged their men to fight, took
    complete charge of the home, and could own
    property and get a divorce.
  • The Vikings had no schools.

9
Religion
  • The Vikings worshiped many gods at first that
    were similar to the Germanic gods, and then they
    changed their gods to suit the hard life of
    Scandinavia.
  • The Vikings offered sacrifices and prayed to
    their gods to get what they wanted.
  • The Vikings told proud stories of the gods' great
    deeds that later became written poems called
    Eddas.
  • Over time, the Vikings language developed into
    fourDanish, Norwegian, Swedish, and Icelandic.

10
Religion (cont.)
  • These languages were written with letters called
    runes, which few people except priests could
    understand or use.
  • When the Vikings accepted Christianity, they
    began to write their languages with Roman
    letters.

11
Raiders and Adventurers
  • By the end of the 800s, many Viking villages were
    overcrowded, food was in short supply, there was
    no central government, and the kings constantly
    fought one another.
  • Viking warriors began to set sail to seek their
    fortunes in other lands.

12
From East Europe to North America
  • Viking adventurers traveled to and raided areas
    from east Europe to North America.
  • Swedish Vikings crossed the Baltic Sea and
    traveled down the rivers toward what is now
    Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia.
  • In 862, a Swedish chief named Rurik founded a
    Viking settlement that became the Kievan Rus
    state.
  • Norwegian Vikings set up trading towns in
    Ireland, explored the North Atlantic, and founded
    a colony on Iceland.

13
From East Europe to North America (cont.)
  • Led by Erik the Red, they founded a colony on the
    island of Greenland in 986.
  • Eriks son, Leif Eriksson, landed on the
    northeast coast of North America and named the
    spot Vinland because of the wild grapes growing
    there.
  • Viking adventurers went to western and southern
    Europe in search of food and valuables.

14
From East Europe to North America (cont.)
  • Because they stole, destroyed homes, burned
    churches, and killed or enslaved people, all of
    Europe feared the Vikings.

15
The Danes
  • The Danes were among those Vikings who raided
    western and southern Europe.
  • In 1016, a powerful Danish king called Knut, or
    Canute, conquered England and made it part of his
    North Sea Empire.
  • Led by a warrior named Rollo, the Danes began
    settling along the French coast opposite England.
  • In 911, the French king signed a treaty with
    Rollo to give the Danes this land.

16
The Danes (cont.)
  • The region in which the Danes settled became
    known first as the Norselaw and then as Normandy
    the people became known as Normans.
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