731 Results

Type

Item

Collection

Ascribed Culture

  • No Matches

Date

Gender

Material

  • No Matches

Object Type

  • No Matches

Original/Reproduction

Style

  • No Matches

Tag

  • No Matches
Viking Names

Saltfleetby

Saltfleetby, in the Louth Eske Wapentake of Lincolnshire, comes from the stream-name Saltfleet (Old English salt and flēot) and the Old Norse element by ‘farm, settlement’, referring to the latter’s location. There are actually three Saltfleetbys, now identified by the dedications of their parish churches, Saltfleetby All Saints, Saltfleetby St Clement, and Saltfleetby St Peter.

Read More
Viking Names

Roston

Roston, in the Appletree Hundred of Derbyshire, comes from the Old Norse male personal name Hrosskell and the Old English element tun ‘farm, settlement’. It is thus a hybrid name. Roston is a joint parish with Norbury.

Read More
Viking Objects

Decorated Key (DENO-4259B3)

This cast copper-alloy key handle is decorated with Scandinavian-influenced designs reminiscent of the Urnes style of Viking art. Keys were not only practical items but also symbols of status. Women often carried the keys to the family’s chests of valuables. They also are often buried with keys, representing their authority in the household. See also the blog post on keys in the Viking Age.

Read More
Viking Names

Ranskill

Ranskill, in the Bassetlaw Wapentake of Nottinghamshire, probably comes from the Old Norse male personal name Hrafn (which is also the word for ‘raven’) and the Old Norse element skjalf ‘seat, ledge, slope’. It is on a slight slope above the level ground.

Read More
Viking Names

Revesby

Revesby, in the Bolingbroke Wapentake of Lincolnshire, comes from the Old Norse male personal name Refr (which is also the word for ‘fox’) and the Old Norse element by ‘farm, settlement’.

Read More
Viking Names

Frisby on the Wreake

Frisby on the Wreake, in the East Goscote Hundred of Leicestershire, takes its name from a Scandinavian form of an ethnonym Frisa (gen. pl.) ‘Frisians’ and the Old Norse element by ‘farmstead, village’. The affix ‘on the Wreake’ was added at a later date to distinguish this Frisby from another in the Gartree Hundred of Leicestershire and refers to the site’s  location on the river, adjacent to Kirby Bellars. Traditionally, the place-name has been interpreted as referring to Frisians who took part in the Viking invasions. However, the exact implications of such a name are not yet fully understood and are the subject of ongoing work by Dr Jayne Carroll of the Institute for Name-Studies, University of Nottingham.

Read More
Viking Names

Owthorpe

Owthorpe, in the Bingham Wapentake of Nottinghamshire, comes from the Old Norse male personal name Úfi and the Old Norse element þorp ‘a secondary settlement, a dependent outlying farmstead or hamlet’.

Read More
Viking Objects

Danish Silver Sceat (LIN-6C0EBC)

This silver sceat is classified as part of the Danish Woden/Monster Series X which date to around 710 – 800. The obverse depicts the head of Woden with crosses to either side of rounded beard and pellet above. The reverse depicts a monster facing left. These coins are considered to be associated with the early trading center at Ribe. It is very likely that they made their way to England by means of Vikings.

Read More
Viking Names

Grainsby

The first element of Grainsby, in the Haverstoe Wapentake of Lincolnshire, is of uncertain origin. It is likely the Old Norse male byname Grein, Old East Scandinavian Gren, from Old Norse grein, Old Danish gren ‘a branch’. Alternatively the element could be the Old Norse appellative grein ‘a branch (of a tree); a fork (of a river)’. This word survives in dialect as ‘a small valley forking off from another’, but there is nothing in the topography of Grainsby that supports this sense. The second element is Old Norse by ‘a farmstead, a village’.

Read More
Viking Objects

Danish Silver Sceat (LEIC-5608D1)

This silver sceat is classified as part of the Danish Series X Type 31. The obverse depicts the head of Woden with crosses to either side of a rounded beard and pellet above. The reverse depicts a monster facing left. These coins are considered to be associated with the early trading center at Ribe in Denmark. It is very likely that they made their way to England by means of Vikings.

Read More
Viking Names

Tollerton

The place-name of Tollerton, in the Bingham Wapentake of Nottinghamshire, has suffered a good deal of corruption. Twelfth-century spellings of the name point to the Old Norse male personal name Þórleifr as the first element. Later there seems to have been confusion with another Old Norse male personal name, Þórleikr. The second element is Old English tun ‘an enclosure; a farmstead; a village; an estate’, making it a hybrid name.

Read More