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 With their invention of the longship, the Vikings
spurred a literal sea change in medieval European
affairs.
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Secrets of Norse Ships
by Evan Hadingham
For three turbulent centuries, the glimpse of a square sail
and dragon-headed prow on the horizon struck terror into the
hearts of medieval Europeans. Indeed, the Viking Age, from
A.D. 800-1100, was the age of the sleek, speedy longship.
Without this crucial advance in ship technology, the Vikings
would never have become a dominant force in medieval warfare,
politics, and trade.
The drekar, or dragon-headed longships, were stealthy
troop-carriers. They could cross the open oceans under sail
and then switch to oars for lightning-fast hit-and-run attacks
on undefended towns and monasteries. Far surpassing
contemporary English or Frankish vessels in lightness and
efficiency, longships carried Viking raiders from northern
England to north Africa.
Viking expertise in naval craftsmanship soon led to the
evolution of other types of ship. Among these were the
knarr, or ocean-going cargo vessel, which facilitated
far-flung trade networks and the colonization of Iceland,
Greenland, and America. The knarr drew on similar
design principles as the longship but was higher and wider in
relation to its length and had only limited numbers of oars to
assist with maneuvers in narrow channels. Cargo decks were
installed fore and aft.
Proof in the planking
The secret of the Viking ship lay in its unique construction.
Using a broad ax rather than a saw, expert woodworkers would
first split oak tree trunks into long, thin planks. They then
fastened the boards with iron nails to a single sturdy keel
and then to each other, one plank overlapping the next. The
Vikings gave shape to the hull using this "clinker" technique
rather than the more conventional method of first building an
inner skeleton for the hull.
 Discovered in Norway in 1906, the Oseberg ship
(above), the best preserved Viking ship ever found,
reveals its Norse shipbuilders' graceful construction
style.
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Next, the boatbuilders affixed evenly spaced floor timbers to
the keel and not to the hull; this insured resilience and
flexibility. They then added crossbeams to provide a deck and
rowing benches, and secured a massive beam along the keel to
support the mast.
The longships' light, economic construction was a major factor
behind their success. Modern replicas have achieved speeds of
up to 14 knots. In marked contrast to modern sailboats, the
ships' lack of a big, vertical keel meant that they were
highly maneuverable and could easily penetrate shallow surf
and river estuaries. Seafarers steered using a single side
rudder on the right, the 'starboard' or "steering board" side.
(The term 'starboard' is thought to have originated in the
Viking era.) They could also reef the square sails in strong
winds and adjust them to permit rapid tacking.
Preserved to the present
Famous discoveries of Viking ships at Gokstad and Oseberg,
Norway, in 1880 and 1906, respectively, established the
classic image of the dragon-headed warship. Longships from
both sites were preserved almost intact, with lavish carved
decoration, in the waterlogged clay of royal burial mounds.
Built around A.D. 890, three quarters of a century after the
Oseberg ship, the Gokstad vessel shows great improvements in
design, particularly in the sturdiness of the mast supports.
Not surprisingly, this era, during which the Norse perfected
longship design, coincides with the eruption of seaborne
Viking raids on the monasteries and towns of Europe.
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 Astoundingly, a veritable flotilla of sunken Viking
vessels turned up on the grounds of the very museum
being built to house other Viking boats.
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The modern phase of Viking ship investigation began with the
recovery of five vessels at Skuldelev in Roskilde fjord,
Denmark, between 1957 and 1962. The excavation involved
building a coffer dam around the ships, which Norsemen
deliberately sunk in a desperate bid to barricade the fjord
against invaders.
The major revelation at Skuldelev was the variety of the
vessels, which ranged from a stocky cargo ship with a capacity
of 24 tons to two sleek longships. The larger of the
longships, measuring 95 feet in length, had made at least one
successful crossing of the North Sea, for
tree-ring analysis
of its oak timbers revealed that they had been cut down around
A.D. 1060-70 near Dublin, suggesting the presence of a major
shipyard at this key Viking stronghold in Ireland.
Even more remarkable discoveries were to follow in 1996, when
contractors began expanding Roskilde's waterfront museum,
originally built to house the finds from Skuldelev. As
astonishing as it sounds, no fewer than nine wrecked medieval
ships eventually turned up in different spots around the
building site, including one under the museum's car park.
Continue: The most striking discovery...
Explore a Viking Village
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Who Were the Vikings?
Secrets of Norse Ships
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The Viking Diaspora
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