Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.

Late Iron Age and medieval trade in northern Fennoscandia has arguably often thought to have been primarily fur trade. However, recent discoveries of Late Iron Age and early medieval sites in the north together with the re­examination of previous evidence reveals a more nuanced picture and indicates...

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Main Authors: Jari-Matti Kuusela, Anna-Kaisa Salmi, Tiina Äikäs
Language:English
Published: Estonian Academy Publishers 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17613/1cph-wf51
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spelling fthcommons:oai:hcommons.org/hc:40753 2024-10-29T17:43:38+00:00 Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network. Jari-Matti Kuusela Anna-Kaisa Salmi Tiina Äikäs 2021 https://doi.org/10.17613/1cph-wf51 English eng Estonian Academy Publishers 812938:Archaeology:topical 869279:Commerce:topical 958352:History Ancient:topical 1020301:Middle Ages:topical 1245081:Northern Europe:geographic 2021 fthcommons https://doi.org/10.17613/1cph-wf51 2024-10-15T01:04:47Z Late Iron Age and medieval trade in northern Fennoscandia has arguably often thought to have been primarily fur trade. However, recent discoveries of Late Iron Age and early medieval sites in the north together with the re­examination of previous evidence reveals a more nuanced picture and indicates that trade in bulk goods – namely inland stockfish and reindeer products – may have played a significant role in the northern trade. This article examines both archaeological and zooarchaeological evidence from several sites in northern Fennoscandia from the perspective of trade economy, and it is suggested that the northern trade began to flourish at the beginning of the Viking Age in the early 9th century and may have been driven by the demand of fish by the European markets. It is also suggested that at the beginning of the 13th century at the latest, the trade economic importance of reindeer became prominent and would increasingly remain so up until the historical period. The authors therefore suggest that although the role of furs in the northern trade was significant, reindeer hunting and inland fishing should also be considered to have been of major trade economic importance. Other/Unknown Material Fennoscandia Fennoscandian Humanities Commons CORE Deposits
institution Open Polar
collection Humanities Commons CORE Deposits
op_collection_id fthcommons
language English
topic 812938:Archaeology:topical
869279:Commerce:topical
958352:History
Ancient:topical
1020301:Middle Ages:topical
1245081:Northern Europe:geographic
spellingShingle 812938:Archaeology:topical
869279:Commerce:topical
958352:History
Ancient:topical
1020301:Middle Ages:topical
1245081:Northern Europe:geographic
Jari-Matti Kuusela
Anna-Kaisa Salmi
Tiina Äikäs
Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.
topic_facet 812938:Archaeology:topical
869279:Commerce:topical
958352:History
Ancient:topical
1020301:Middle Ages:topical
1245081:Northern Europe:geographic
description Late Iron Age and medieval trade in northern Fennoscandia has arguably often thought to have been primarily fur trade. However, recent discoveries of Late Iron Age and early medieval sites in the north together with the re­examination of previous evidence reveals a more nuanced picture and indicates that trade in bulk goods – namely inland stockfish and reindeer products – may have played a significant role in the northern trade. This article examines both archaeological and zooarchaeological evidence from several sites in northern Fennoscandia from the perspective of trade economy, and it is suggested that the northern trade began to flourish at the beginning of the Viking Age in the early 9th century and may have been driven by the demand of fish by the European markets. It is also suggested that at the beginning of the 13th century at the latest, the trade economic importance of reindeer became prominent and would increasingly remain so up until the historical period. The authors therefore suggest that although the role of furs in the northern trade was significant, reindeer hunting and inland fishing should also be considered to have been of major trade economic importance.
author Jari-Matti Kuusela
Anna-Kaisa Salmi
Tiina Äikäs
author_facet Jari-Matti Kuusela
Anna-Kaisa Salmi
Tiina Äikäs
author_sort Jari-Matti Kuusela
title Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.
title_short Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.
title_full Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.
title_fullStr Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.
title_full_unstemmed Hunters, fishers, traders – An archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the Late Iron Age and medieval northern Fennoscandian trade network.
title_sort hunters, fishers, traders – an archaeological and zooarchaeological perspective on the development of the late iron age and medieval northern fennoscandian trade network.
publisher Estonian Academy Publishers
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.17613/1cph-wf51
genre Fennoscandia
Fennoscandian
genre_facet Fennoscandia
Fennoscandian
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17613/1cph-wf51
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