Alex The Viking

Alex The Viking Hello and welcome to my page let me introduce myself I'm Alex The Viking. I am currently camped at c

Winter is here, I'm  still open for school classroom visits or can set up full encampment in a school hall
02/12/2021

Winter is here, I'm still open for school classroom visits or can set up full encampment in a school hall

Still offering school visits and talks. For any information please email me either on here or to alexcrawley0403@gmail.c...
16/09/2021

Still offering school visits and talks. For any information please email me either on here or to
[email protected]. Below are a few pictures of my encampment and some of the items made by myself.

From a few years back but just refund this little gem. I was invited to be part of this exciting endeavour and be part o...
21/05/2021

From a few years back but just refund this little gem. I was invited to be part of this exciting endeavour and be part of a music video in the background fighting

https://youtu.be/sELgPInv6r4

The massive hit single from the new album ''Excalibur''Official Album Release Date: October 26 , 2018Doom Metal from the United Kingdom(c) Iron Void & Shad...

Welcome to the new year and a new way of learning all courses will now be offered online. Whether thats via zoom or some...
08/01/2021

Welcome to the new year and a new way of learning all courses will now be offered online. Whether thats via zoom or some other provider prices will also be lowered. So welcome the new year by learning new skills. Whether its learning to make rawhide glue or how to fletch an arrow.

I am looking into making some children's shields about 21" diameter. Before I make them I would like to know if anyone w...
03/10/2020

I am looking into making some children's shields about 21" diameter. Before I make them I would like to know if anyone wud be interested in placing an order. These will be £25 each. Similer to picture below but plain face and will use rawhide around the edge. For more info please message me

22/09/2020

Come down today to meet a 'real' life viking and his authentic encampment, including furs, clothes, weapons and domestic items. Also there are some activities for the children aswell. So come down to cornerstones. I will be here from 10- half 1.

16/09/2020

I need someone to assist me with my living history display within cornerstones arts centre, basic knowledge about vikings preferred but not essential. You will be interacting with the public so confidence and manners is a necessity.
Please contact me through messenger for any questions

15/09/2020

Here Are
10 Facts About Vikings You Probably Didn't know

1. Vikings did not wear horned helmets.
Forget almost every Viking warrior costume you have ever seen. Sure, the pugnacious Norsemen probably sported headgear, but that whole horn-festooned helmet look? Depictions dating from the Viking age do not show it, and the only authentic Viking helmet ever discovered is decidedly horn-free. Painters seem to have fabricated the trend during the 19th century, perhaps inspired by descriptions of northern Europeans by ancient Greek and Roman chroniclers. Long before the Vikings’ time, Norse and Germanic priests did indeed wear horned helmets for ceremonial purposes.

2. Vikings were known for their excellent hygiene.
Between rowing boats and decapitating enemies, Viking men must have stunk to high Valhalla, right? Quite the opposite. Excavations of Viking sites have turned up tweezers, razors, combs and ear cleaners made from animal bones and antlers. Vikings also bathed at least once a week—much more frequently than other Europeans of their day—and enjoyed dips in natural hot springs.

3. Vikings used a unique liquid to start fires.
Clean freaks though they were, the Vikings had no qualms about harnessing the power of one human waste product. They would collect a fungus called touchwood from tree bark and boil it for several days in urine before pounding it into something akin to felt. The sodium nitrate found in urine would allow the material to smoulder rather than burn, so Vikings could take fire with them on the go.

4. Vikings buried their dead in boats.
There is no denying Vikings loved their boats—so much that it was a great honour to be interred in one. In the Norse religion, valiant warriors entered festive and glorious realms after death, and it was thought that the vessels that served them well in life would help them reach their final destinations. Distinguished raiders and prominent women were often laid to rest in ships, surrounded by weapons, valuable goods and sometimes even sacrificed slaves.

5. Vikings were active in the slave trade.
Many Vikings got rich off human trafficking. They would capture and enslave women and young men while pillaging Anglo-Saxon, Celtic and Slavic settlements. These “thralls,” as they were known, were then sold in giant slave markets across Europe and the Middle East.

6. Viking women enjoyed some basic rights.
Viking girls got hitched as young as 12 and had to mind the household while their husbands sailed off on adventures. Still, they had more freedom than other women of their era. As long as they weren’t thralls, Viking women could inherit property, request a divorce and reclaim their dowries if their marriages ended.

7. Viking men spent most of their time farming.
This may come as a disappointment, but most Viking men brandished scythes, not swords. True, some were callous pirates who only stepped off their boats to burn villages, but the vast majority peacefully sowed barley, rye and oats—at least for part of the year. They also raised cattle, goats, pigs and sheep on their small farms, which typically yielded just enough food to support a family.

8. Vikings skied for fun.
Scandinavians developed primitive skis at least 6,000 years ago, though ancient Russians may have invented them even earlier. By the Viking Age, Norsemen regarded skiing as an efficient way to get around and a popular form of recreation. They even worshipped a god of skiing, Ullr.

9. Viking gentlemen preferred being blond.
To conform to their culture’s beauty ideals, brunette Vikings—usually men—would use a strong soap with a high lye content to bleach their hair. In some regions, beards were lightened as well. It is likely these treatments also helped Vikings with a problem far more prickly and rampant than mousy manes: head lice.

10. Vikings were never part of a unified group.
Vikings did not recognize fellow Vikings. In fact, they probably did not even call themselves Vikings: The term simply referred to all Scandinavians who took part in overseas expeditions. During the Viking Age, the land that now makes up Denmark, Norway and Sweden was a patchwork of chieftain-led tribes that often fought against each other—when they were not busy wreaking havoc on foreign shores, that is.

11/09/2020

Just finished some kids activities, including colouring in and long ship making. So come on down with your children and enjoy some artwork of different genres and see an authentic viking encampment and maybe be lucky enough to meet myself.

Viking Life
10/09/2020

Viking Life

09/09/2020

All Workshops will need at least 24 hours prior notice to cancel or to arrange

09/09/2020
09/09/2020

Address

70 Northgate
Darlington
DL11PR

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+447796572019

Website

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