Archaeologists Discover the Remains of a Viking Neighborhood Near Istanbul, Turkey
by Sons Of Vikings Sun, Aug 30, 20Şengül Aydıngün leads the excavation team of 75 experts. He commented to Istanbul’s Hurriyet Dailey News, and 11th centuries in the Bathonea excavations.”
“We unearthed seven clues that indicated the Vikings once lived here,” added Polish Viking expert, Blazei Stanislawski. “We found a cross made of ambergris, which was only found in northern Europe at that time, where Vikings firstly originated. And a necklace on which a snake is drawn. In Vikings myth, the snake is Jörmangandr [the World-Coiling Serpent]...”
A Quick History of the Vikings in Constantinople
century, Swedish Vikings that established a network along the riverways of what are now Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus attacked Byzantine territory.
Byzantine and Slavic sources call the Vikings “Varangians," which means "sworn companions.” These Varangians and a confederation of 25 or so Slavic tribes formed a people that came to be called the Rus’ (pronounced “Roos”).
-century, Rus’ leaders like Oleg (Norse, Helgi) and Igor (Norse, Ivar – though not Ivar the Boneless like on TV) found that fighting the Byzantine Empire was like a wolf trying to eat an elephant. Instead, they used their military strength to encourage the Byzantines to "buy them off" with lucrative trade agreements.
Under these trade agreements, the Vikings were welcome to bring their furs, honey, wax, and European slaves to Byzantine markets to exchange for silks and the splendors of the East. These treaties specified, though, the Byzantines didn’t want more than 50 Viking merchants in the city at any given time, and they had to be out by dark. Igor’s treaty (circa 945) preserved in summary within The Russian Primary Chronicle (page 74-76) assigns the Viking merchants their quarter "by Saint Mamas’s church,” which may refer to Bathonea.
century. As a gift, the Rus’ ruler sent Basil 6000 Viking mercenaries to help his campaigns against the Bulgars. These Vikings became the Varangian Guard, one of the most famous elite warrior groups in history.
The Varangian Guard was a bodyguard in the sense that the emperor always had them with him when he went into battle, and numerous sources mention various emperors being followed around by tall men with giant axes. But the Varangian Guard was also what we would think of as special forces. They were used as shock troops, marching into battle shoulder to shoulder with the southern sun shining on their mail and glittering scales, filling the air with dread-inspiring battle cries.
The Varangian Guard was well-equipped with armor, shields, helmets, swords, spears, and various armaments. The signature weapon of the Varangian Guard, and symbol of their identity and status, was the long-hafted, single-bitted "Dane ax." This weapon required strength and skill to use, but was matchless in power, reach, and penetration. Primary sources describe the Varangians using these fearsome axes to take out Norman cavalry and cut through Turkic battle wagon formations. Modern cutting tests suggest that in trained hands, this ax could hew a man in half. Archaeological findings show that these long-hafted (i.e., from the ground to the warrior's mid-sternum or so), large-bladed axes represent only a small percentage of axes from the Viking Age. Such findings emphasize the high-status of the Varangian's ax and the exceptional abilities of the men who used it.
As Basil’s 6000 Varangians needed replacements, new members volunteered from the Swedish Vikings and the Rus’. They sailed down the Volga and Dnieper Rivers on what some Norse sagas call “the road to Miklagard” (their name for Constantinople). Over time, word of the splendors of Miklagard and the tremendous opportunities there spread all over the Viking world. Soon, the Varangian Guard also featured many western Vikings from Norway, Denmark, and elsewhere. These included many heroes and men from noble houses, including Harald Hardrada, later king of Norway.
When William the Conqueror forced Norman rule on England after five years of brutal war (1066-1070), the Varangian Guard was inundated by dispossessed Anglo-Saxon and Danish warriors fleeing the collapse of the Viking Age and yearning for revenge. The avaricious Normans (who were also Viking descendants, of course) were often at war with the Byzantines. The Varangians got their epic showdown with the Normans in 1081.
The Varangian Guard gradually disappear from the written record, but there were almost certainly Viking descendants fighting for Constantinople when that long-lived Empire finally came to an end in 1453.
Conclusion
Sons of Vikings is an online store offering hundreds of Viking inspired items, including Viking jewelry, Viking clothing, Drinking horns, home decor items and more.
To learn more about Viking history, we recommend our 400+ page, self titled book that is available here.
References
- Archaeologists unearth Viking neighborhood in Istanbul. Hurriyet Daily News. August 24, 2020. https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/archaeologists-unearth-viking-neighborhood-in-istanbul-157658
- The Russian Primary Chronicle: The Laurentian Text. Translated by S. H. Cross & O. Sherbowitz-Wetzor. Medieval Academy of America. Cambridge, MA. 1953. https://www.mgh-bibliothek.de/dokumente/a/a011458.pdf
- Rodgers, D.G. & Noer, K. Sons of Vikings: History, Legends, and Impact of the Viking Age. KDP. USA. 2018.
- D’Amato, R. The Varangian Guard, 988-1453. Men-at-Arms. Osprey, Long Island. 2010.
- Norwich, J. J. Byzantium: The Apogee. New York. 1992
- Norwich, J. J. Byzantium: The Early Centuries. Knopf. New York. 1989.
Picture Credits
- After Being Stricken by Drought, Istanbul Yields Ancient Treasure
By Jennifer Pinkowski https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/24/science/istanbul-yields-a-treasure-trove-in-ancient-bathonea.html
- After Being Stricken by Drought, Istanbul Yields Ancient Treasure
By Jennifer Pinkowski https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/24/science/istanbul-yields-a-treasure-trove-in-ancient-bathonea.html
- Theodosian Walls of Constantinople by Crni Bombader!! https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Car_bed_1.jpg
- Lake Küçükçekmece at Golden Hour.jpg by Pixabay. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lake_K%C3%BC%C3%A7%C3%BCk%C3%A7ekmece_at_Golden_Hour.jpg
- Graffiti presumably inscribed by Viking mercenaries on the second floor of the Hagia Sofia by NotHome. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hagia-sofia-viking.jpg