Posted on 12/03/2009 7:58:22 AM PST by BGHater
THEIR reputation for raping and pillaging may not have set them out as the ideal role-models for an environmentally-friendly way of life. But it seems that lessons could perhaps be learnt from the Vikings after the intriguing discovery in Yorkshire of what is believed to be a metal recycling centre dating back to the 11th century.
Historians and metal detector enthusiasts have made the find which is being heralded as evidence of how the Norse invaders recycled their fearsome array of weapons.
Hundreds of pieces of metal including arrowheads, shards of swords and axe heads have been unearthed as part of a 10-year research project to establish the exact location of the Battle of Fulford which took place on September 20, 1066.
The battle on the outskirts of York, when the invading Viking army, led by Harald Hardrada, triumphed over the English forces, is seen as crucial in the run-up to the Battle of Hastings and William the Conqueror ultimately being crowned King of England.
Historians have attempted to pinpoint the location of the battlefield as campaigners tried to halt a new development of 720 homes at Fulford.
Now more than 1,000 pieces of metal have been unearthed by members of the York Metal Detectorists Club, who have been helping to gather evidence during the decade-long study.
X-rays of the finds are being taken at York University's archaeology department at King's Manor in an attempt to glean more information about their history and prove the location of the battle.
Historian Chas Jones, who has been leading the research, said: "We found several smithing hearth bottoms the remains of the molten metal which dribbles down during the reprocessing of weaponry ironwork.
"You could say this was one of the first metal recycling centres."
The plans for the 720-home Germany Beck scheme sparked opposition from academics and historians, who have claimed that the development could actually be built on the site of the Battle of Fulford.
But the developers remain adamant that the land is not where the battle took place, and have carried out their own archaeological studies of the site.
Following a public inquiry, ministers ruled that there was insufficient evidence the Germany Beck site was the location, although they admitted that archaeological finds unearthed there were of "regional importance".
Academics specialising in Viking history from as far away as Sweden and Norway voiced their opposition to the Government after the housing scheme was given outline planning permission two years ago.
The archaeological digs have been co-ordinated by the Fulford Battlefield Society, which was established nine years ago to investigate the site.
A series of finds which have been unearthed include fragments of what could be 11th century swords and arrows. Other pieces of worked metal have also been discovered, suggesting that Norse blacksmiths could have been operating there.
According to Mr Jones, the iron finds support the theory that metal had been gathered and recycled in an area close to where the battle took place once the fighting had ceased.
Archaeological experts believe the metal artefacts discovered at Fulford were being refined and recycled by the Norse victors when the Battle of Stamford took place on the border of North and East Yorkshire just five days later.
The Fulford site was abandoned by the Vikings as they switched their attention to Stamford Bridge, explaining why so much material has been left behind.
A full report on the 10-year research project into the Battle of Fulford is due to be published in February.
BATTLE CHANGED COURSE OF HISTORY
The Battle of Fulford has often been dismissed as no more than a curtain-raiser to the most famous conflict on English soil.
But historians have emphasised the events of Wednesday, September 20, 1066, on the outskirts of York were to have a huge impact on the Battle of Hastings.
The Battle of Fulford placed the English forces under immense pressure and losses suffered in Yorkshire were to have a dramatic impact on resistance at Hastings.
After sailing up the Ouse with about 10,000 men in 300 longships, Harald Hardrada and rebel English earl, Tostig, defeated the earls Edwin and Morcar.
Harold scraped together a scratch force and raced 180 miles north in just four days to rout the Norwegian army outside York at Stamford Bridge on September 25.
Then on October 14, Harold was defeated as he tried to block the Norman advance at Hastings with an army of little more than 5,000 weary troops.
FIGHTING CHANCE: Historian Chas Jones studies an axe head at York Universitys archaeology department
REMNANTS OF WAR: Chas Jones with some of the artefacts from the Battle of Fulford. More than 1,000 ferrous finds have been collected.
Tiny anvils that were driven into logs to help with the repair of weapons after the Battle of Fulford in 1066.
A tanged arrowhead.
Green warriors, ping.
>Seems obvious that a expeditionary force would reuse broken weapons, etc. Hard to believe this is a first.
That is true; for an expeditionary force you would want to be as self-sufficient as possible so as to maximize the length of time of the expedition.
Another example of bias in science.
Any practical observer would note that the remains were damaged weapons being melted down to MAKE NEW WEAPONS.
What kind of moron with a first grade education could consider this to be a recycling plant for concerned environmentalist whackos.
I want proof; i.e. where did they process paper, plastic and asbestos waste.
We have a giant smelter in Holt, Alabama near Tuscaloosa. It can melt down metals for reuse but the Greens like it closed because it seems that those furnaces produce a bit of air pollution.
So I guess these Vikings were polluters too.
To go one step further, when you consider how difficult it was in pre-industrial days to even get metal mined (every bit being extracted by human muscle power) smelted (ditto) and made into an implement (again, all by individual efforts) you would have to be crazy *not* to recycle as much as you could. Although that recycling would involve charcoal fires (very messy) and not a lot of environmental restoration of the area afterward (because zero-environment-impact anything had do be done by hand in a subsistance-level economy).
Say it ain't so, Brett.
It is hardly noteworthy that metal weapons were recycled or refashioned into other useful tools. It was common for used or useless metal to be melted into musket-balls during the Revolutionary War. Swordsmiths and gunsmiths reused parts and remelted metal all the time. This is not a particularly unique scenario.
Maybe environmentalists aren’t the people to ask about the realtities of ancient warfare.
SnakeDoc
Gee... Warriors gathered up expensive loot from the battlefield. Metal at the time was worth a great deal. To make this into some kind of ecological lesson is well... nuts.
You could also say that this is where they piled their dead enemey's weapons after a battle and just forgot about them.
You could say this is where Bug Bunny and Elmer Fudd left their weapons after filming the "Kill the Wabbit" cartoon.
Mostly BS and conjecture to fit a pre-detirmined conclusion.
The vikings obviously didn’t produce enough CO2 to prevent their villages in Greenland from being overrun with ice.....
A fat lot of good “being green” did for them....
If we put all these broken axes into a mail truck and drive to Michigan, it just might pencil out...
Somehow, I don’t think they were trying to ‘save the planet’...its just an indication of how precious metals were before mechanized mining.
I seriously doubt that the 11th century was the first time that scrap metal was melted down and re-used.
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Thanks BGHater. They also introduced interior decorating, tutoring for slow learners, and glee clubs. [expletives follow] |
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Historians and metal detector enthusiasts have made the find which is being heralded as evidence of how the Norse invaders recycled their fearsome array of weapons.
Oh! Good Grief! Gimme A Break!
(Please allow me to make a slight "correction")
Historians and metal detector enthusiasts have made the find which is being heralded as evidence of how the Norse invaders recycled REPAIRED their fearsome array of weapons.
There!
Fixed It!
Greenie Idiots! "Recycled"! Yeah! Right! My @ss!
These early eco-warriors sure left a lot of trash lying around... /irony
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