The British Museum is a vast repository of artifacts and relics, encompassing histories and cultures (with all the fraught issues of cultural appropriation and looting from other countries). I concentrated on Great Britain and was struck by the recorded history of successive invasions/settlements/migrations, that brought displacement, war and cultural mixing: Celts, Romans, Anglo Saxons, Vikings, Normans.
The map above shows areas of Viking influence from the 700s to the 1100s, with Viking settlements (in grey). "The term Viking is commonly used to to describe the Old Norse-speaking peoples of Norway, Denmark and Sweden. During these centuries, Viking voyaged overseas to raid, trade and settle new lands. By 1100, they had travelled as far east as central Asia and as far west as North America, aided by expertise in ship-building and seamanship. Vikings are still remembered as fierce raiders. While violence and raiding are important parts of the Vikings' story, archaeology has provided a fuller picture of their lives, cultures and beliefs."
"These objects reflect the mixing of Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian art at this time. The speckled beasts on the silver casket panels are Anglo-Saxon in style, but their double-lined bodies are influenced by Viking art. The snake and four legged creature entwined on the disc brooch are of Viking style but the dots on the snake's body and brooch's border are Anglo-Saxon features."
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