Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg

The medieval castles of Northern NorwayWhile the medieval castles of Southern Norway were defensive fortifications on what traditionally was considered Norwegian territory, the castles of Northern Norway were frontier fortifications established on foreign territory. The northern part of what is toda...

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Published in:Viking
Main Author: Sørgård, Inge
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Norwegian
Published: Norsk arkeologisk selskap 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484
https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.6484
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spelling ftosloiunivojs:oai:ojs.www.journals.uio.no:article/6484 2023-05-15T16:13:33+02:00 Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg Sørgård, Inge 2018-11-30 application/pdf https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484 https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.6484 nor nor Norsk arkeologisk selskap https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484/5597 https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484 doi:10.5617/viking.6484 Viking; Vol 81; 171–190 Viking; Vol. 81; 171–190 2535-2660 0332-608X info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2018 ftosloiunivojs https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.6484 2022-04-22T05:15:45Z The medieval castles of Northern NorwayWhile the medieval castles of Southern Norway were defensive fortifications on what traditionally was considered Norwegian territory, the castles of Northern Norway were frontier fortifications established on foreign territory. The northern part of what is today Troms County and Finnmark County were considered Sami territory before 1200. The Sami people traded with and were taxed by both the Novgorod-supported Karelians and the Norwegians. This led to hostilities between the Karelians and the Norwegians in the 13th century. As part of the manifestation of Norwegian control over Troms County the castle Skansen was con188 structed in the mid-13th century. This ancient looking earth and wood fortification was considered a strong enough defence against the Karelian enemy. During the 14th century the income generated from the stockfish from the coast of Finnmark became increasingly important to the Norwegian King and Vardøhus further east in the County of Finnmark was constructed. Although still quite a weak fortification, this was a more modern castle constructed of stone. We know that in the Southern Norway naval leidang forces used castles as bases for attacks on Denmark in the 13th century, and there is reason to believe that Skansen and Vardøhus were also bases for this medieval naval force. Article in Journal/Newspaper Finnmark karelian karelians Northern Norway sami Finnmark Troms University of Oslo (UiO): FRITT (E-Journals) Norway Skansen ENVELOPE(9.297,9.297,62.646,62.646) Vardøhus ENVELOPE(31.095,31.095,70.371,70.371) Viking 81 0 171
institution Open Polar
collection University of Oslo (UiO): FRITT (E-Journals)
op_collection_id ftosloiunivojs
language Norwegian
description The medieval castles of Northern NorwayWhile the medieval castles of Southern Norway were defensive fortifications on what traditionally was considered Norwegian territory, the castles of Northern Norway were frontier fortifications established on foreign territory. The northern part of what is today Troms County and Finnmark County were considered Sami territory before 1200. The Sami people traded with and were taxed by both the Novgorod-supported Karelians and the Norwegians. This led to hostilities between the Karelians and the Norwegians in the 13th century. As part of the manifestation of Norwegian control over Troms County the castle Skansen was con188 structed in the mid-13th century. This ancient looking earth and wood fortification was considered a strong enough defence against the Karelian enemy. During the 14th century the income generated from the stockfish from the coast of Finnmark became increasingly important to the Norwegian King and Vardøhus further east in the County of Finnmark was constructed. Although still quite a weak fortification, this was a more modern castle constructed of stone. We know that in the Southern Norway naval leidang forces used castles as bases for attacks on Denmark in the 13th century, and there is reason to believe that Skansen and Vardøhus were also bases for this medieval naval force.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sørgård, Inge
spellingShingle Sørgård, Inge
Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
author_facet Sørgård, Inge
author_sort Sørgård, Inge
title Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
title_short Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
title_full Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
title_fullStr Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
title_full_unstemmed Middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
title_sort middelalderens nordnorske borganlegg
publisher Norsk arkeologisk selskap
publishDate 2018
url https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484
https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.6484
long_lat ENVELOPE(9.297,9.297,62.646,62.646)
ENVELOPE(31.095,31.095,70.371,70.371)
geographic Norway
Skansen
Vardøhus
geographic_facet Norway
Skansen
Vardøhus
genre Finnmark
karelian
karelians
Northern Norway
sami
Finnmark
Troms
genre_facet Finnmark
karelian
karelians
Northern Norway
sami
Finnmark
Troms
op_source Viking; Vol 81; 171–190
Viking; Vol. 81; 171–190
2535-2660
0332-608X
op_relation https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484/5597
https://journals.uio.no/viking/article/view/6484
doi:10.5617/viking.6484
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5617/viking.6484
container_title Viking
container_volume 81
container_issue 0
container_start_page 171
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