Decolonizing the Viking Age 1 argues that the Scandinavian “Viking Age” can be seen as a system of knowledge constructed in the late 19th century and in its basic structures maintained up to the present day. This system of knowledge was heavily influenced by the nationalistic and evolutionary ideas of its time of making and may be described as a colonialism of the past. The book follows the making of the Viking Age from the start, through the most influential academic studies of the 20th century and up to the most authorative recent works. A deconstruction of its main ideas is then suggested.
In the second half of the book, a study of south-east Scandinavia is presented. This study is based upon discussions of “Old Norse” semantics of cultural landscapes, temporality and of the important connection between collective death rituals and the community of large groups of people. The results of this study are found to be incompatible with the knowledge structures of the “Viking Age” and, in a third and concluding part of the book, ways of “decolonization” and of reaching beyond the Viking Age are suggested.
Decolonizing the Viking Age 1 is the first part of a dissertation in archaeology in two parts. The second volume, Death Rituals in South-East Scandinavia AD 800–1000. Decolonizing the Viking Age 2, is an archaeological work that creates the empirical foundation for the study of south-east Scandinavia found in the second part of the present volume.