A
wooden toy discovered during an excavation of an Iron Age site in
central Norway hints that 1,000 years ago, a child may have imagined
ferocious Viking battles by playing with a carved replica of a ship.
Found
buried in a dry well at a small farm in the town of Ørland on the
coastal tundra, the boat is whittled in a style resembling Viking vessels, with an uplifted prow and a hole in the center that likely held a mast for a sail.
The
Viking Age, dating from around A.D. 800 to 1066, marked a time when
Scandinavian sailors and explorers voyaged to Europe's coastal regions
and as far as Bahdad, and their distinctive sailing vessels were
well-known — apparently, even by inland farmers, who carved replicas of
their boats for children. [Fierce Fighters: 7 Secrets of Viking Culture]
"This
toy boat says something about the people who lived here," Ulf Fransson,
a field leader for the dig and an archaeologist at the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology (NTNU) University Museum, said in a statement.
Not
only does the wooden toy indicate that a child — or children — lived on
the farm, it suggests what that child's lifestyle may have been like,
Fransson said.
"It
also shows that the children at this farm could play, that they had
permission to do something other than work in the fields or help around
the farm," he said.
Wooden toys and leather shoes
Also
found in the well — and in another well nearby — were leather pieces
from shoes, dating to approximately A.D. 1015 to 1028. Seven farms and
farmyards at least 1,500 years old have been uncovered at the site, and
archaeologists are piecing together what these clustered homesteads
might reveal about community life
during the Middle Ages, according to Ingrid Ystgaard, an archaeologist
at the NTNU University Museum and project manager of the dig

"This
is one of the biggest questions we are studying, the development of
farms in this area over a span of 1,500 years in the past. It is
fantastic material," Ystgaard said in the statement.
Located far from the ocean, the farm where the toy boat was found was not near any large trade routes or cities, and was likely not one of the most prosperous farms in the region, Ystgaard said.
Nevertheless,
life on the farm provided enough leisure time for an adult to carve a
child's toy, and for a child to play with that toy, according to
Fransson.
Well-preserved toy
The
fragile toy boat was probably so well-preserved because of the high
water table in the well where it was found — in a drier location, it
would probably have decomposed, the archaeologists said in the
statement.
Though
Vikings were long regarded as pillagers and raiders of coastal
villages, recent discoveries have challenged that idea. A study
published December 2014 in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B suggested that Vikings embarked on seafaring voyages to establish colonies and trade routes — and that women sailed on the Viking ships as well.
Perhaps
that idea resonated with a young Norwegian farm girl playing on the
tundra 1,000 years ago, as she wielded her toy Viking boat and dreamed
about sailing the open sea.
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