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    Means of Exchange: Dealing with Silver in the Viking Age

    £37.80
    £42.00
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9788779343085
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorSkre, Dagfinn
    Pub Date01/04/2007
    BindingHardback
    Pages378
    Publisher: AARHUS UNIVERSITY PRESS
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    Excavation findings at a Norwegian Viking town reveal evolving economic exchanges through coins, hacksilver, ingots, and standardized weights. Shifting trade practices and increasing silver use illustrate how innovative commercial methods reshaped Viking society and integrated Scandinavia with medieval European markets.

    This second volume on the excavations of the Norwegian Viking town Kaupang 2000-2003 presents find types used in economic transactions - coins, hacksilver, ingots, weights and balances. Changes in type and volume of economic transactions at Kaupang and in Scandinavia are discussed, and the economic mentality of Viking crafts- and tradesmen is explored. In the early ninth century, silver and goods seem to have come to Kaupang mainly from the Carolinigian world. After the mid-ninth century this early system was altered. The increased availability of silver and the introduction in most of Scandinavia in the 860s-870s of standardized weights, paved the way for an increased use of silver as payment. The combined study of the find types and the sophisticated chronology of settlements' finds from sites like Kaupang give completely new insight into economy and exchange. The book demonstrates how sites like Kaupang led the way in economic development in Scandinavia and promoted an economic mentality that eventually led to the fundamental transformation of Scandinavian culture and society and culminated in the region's integration in High Middle Ages Christian Europe.