Norse Gods
Viking Raids
Ships & Warfare
Daily Life
Mythology & Legends
200

This one-eyed god of wisdom and war traded his eye for a drink from the well of knowledge.

The God Odin

200

This English monastery, attacked in 793 AD, marks the traditionally accepted start of the Viking Age

Raid of Lindisfarne

200

This type of Viking longship, meaning "snake" or "dragon," was the primary warship used for raids

 The drakkar

200

This writing system of angular symbols carved in stone or wood was used throughout the Viking world.

the Writing of Runes

200

This great world tree connects the nine realms of Norse cosmology

The World of Yggdrasil

400

the trickster god who could shape-shift and eventually caused the death of Baldr

The God Loki

400

Vikings named this large island "Land of Ice" to discourage settlers.

Iceland

400

Vikings used this tight shield formation as their primary defensive tactic in land combat

the shield wall

400

This fermented honey drink was the prestigious beverage of Viking feasts, associated with poetry and wisdom

mead

400

These two wolves chase the sun and moon and will finally catch them at Ragnarok

The Wovles Skoll and Hati

600

This god of thunder wielded a hammer called Mjolnir and was worshipped by many Norse warriors

The God Thor

600

This Viking explorer is credited as the first European to reach North America around 1000 AD.

Leif Eriksson

600

This legendary battle frenzy caused some Viking warriors to ignore pain and fight recklessly

Going berserk

600

Viking women had the right to do this — something unusual in medieval Europe

To Divorce
600

This is the Norse apocalypse or the twilight of the gods or when the world is destroyed in a great battle

Ragnarok

800

These female figures chose who would die in battle and brought the slain to Valhalla.

The Goddess Valkyries

800

This settlement in present-day Newfoundland is the only confirmed Norse site in North America

The L'Anse aux Meadows

800

The shallow draft of Viking longships allowed them to do this in rivers that typical warships couldn't

Sail in shallow water

800

The great mead hall was the center of Viking social life; this famous hall in Norse legend belonged to Odin

The Valhalla

800

Odin's two ravens fly across the world each day and report everything they see back to him.

Huginn and Muninn

1000

This goddess of love and war led the Vanir gods and could transform into a falcon.

The goddess Freya

1000

This city, formerly known as Jorvik, was a major Viking settlement and trading hub in England (LIKE one of the States in America)

The city of York

1000

This two-handed axe was a signature Viking weapon, sometimes used to hook and pull aside an enemy's shield

A Dane axe

1000

Vikings used this outdoor assembly for law and dispute resolution, a forerunner of modern democracy.

the Thing

1000

This fierce sea creature in Norse legend could sink ships and was sometimes mistaken for an island and looks like Squid

The Kraken