The Volga Vikings
Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Volga Vikings. Between the 8th and the 10th centuries AD, fierce Scandinavian warriors raided and then settled large swathes of Europe, particularly Britain, Ireland and parts of northern France. These were the Vikings, and their story is well known today. Far fewer people realise that groups of Norsemen also travelled east.These Volga Vikings, also known as the Rus, crossed the Baltic into present-day Russia and the Ukraine and founded settlements there. They traded commodities including furs and slaves for Islamic silver, and penetrated so far east as to reach Baghdad. Their activities were documented by Arab scholars: one, Ahmad ibn Fadlan, recorded that the Volga Vikings he met were perfect physical specimens but also “the filthiest of God’s creatures”. Through trade and culture they brought West and East into regular contact; their story sheds light on both Scandinavian and early Islamic history.
→ Listen on BBC Sounds website
Guests
- James Montgomery
4 episodes
Professor of Classical Arabic at the University of Cambridge -
Neil Price No other episodes
Professor of Archaeology at the University of Aberdeen - Elizabeth Rowe
2 episodes
Lecturer in Scandinavian History of the Viking Age at Clare Hall, University of Cambridge
Related episodes
-
The Danelaw
28 Mar, 2019 940 History of Europe -
Icelandic Sagas
9 May, 2013 830 German and related literatures -
Baltic Crusades
24 Nov, 2016 940 History of Europe -
The Orkneyinga Saga
6 Jun, 2024 940 History of Europe -
The Celts
21 Feb, 2002 930 History of the Ancient World -
Arianism
15 Apr, 2021 270 History of Christianity -
Byzantium
19 Jul, 2001 940 History of Europe -
Alfred and the Battle of Edington
7 Apr, 2005 940 History of Europe -
The Venetian Empire
31 Oct, 2024 940 History of Europe -
The Druids
20 Sep, 2012 290 Other religions
Programme ID: b00vrx8g
Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00vrx8g
Auto-category: 948.022 (Vikings - Volga Vikings)
Hello (First sentence from this episode)
Hello, in 793 the Northumbrian Christian island monastery of Lindisfarne was raided and destroyed by a group of warriors who arrived in amazing boats from Scandinavia.