ANNEXING GREENLAND AND THE VIKING GHOSTS: 2/8: Embers of the Hands: Hidden Histories of the Viking Age Hardcover – August 29, 2024
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 20 July 2025
⏱️ 7 minutes
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Summary
1874 GREELAND
https://www.amazon.com/Embers-Hands-Eleanor-Barraclough/dp/1788166744
magine a Viking, and a certain image springs to mind: a nameless, faceless warrior, leaping ashore from a longboat, and ready to terrorise the hapless local population of a northern European country.
Yet while such characters define the Viking Age today, they were in the minority. This is the history of the other people who inhabited the medieval Nordic world-not only Norway, Denmark and Sweden, but also Iceland, Greenland, parts of the British Isles, Continental Europe and Russia- a history of a Viking Age filled with real people of different ages, genders and ethnicities, as told through the traces that they left behind, from hairstyles to place names, love-notes to gravestones.
It's also a history of humans on an extraordinarily global stage, spanning the centuries from the edge of the North American continent to the Russian steppes, from the Arctic wastelands to the Byzantine Empire and the Islamic Caliphate.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is CBSI on the world. I'm John Batchel. It's a delight to spend time with Eleanor Barakloff. Her new book is Embers of the Hands, Hidden Histories of the Viking Age. We have the Vikings as raiders, but what about us conquerors? Quickly now, the Carolingian Empire is falling apart in mainland Europe. |
| 0:22.8 | The Vikings are very good raiders, and they do very well. |
| 0:26.1 | They raid Paris, and Eleanor reports that they walked away with 7,000 pounds of gold. |
| 0:32.4 | Good God. |
| 0:33.6 | At the same time, they decide to bring an army and conquer England. |
| 0:40.2 | East Anglia, Northumbria, and Mercia all fall. |
| 0:44.8 | Only Wessex holds out. |
| 0:46.1 | So you're English, Eleanor, but you're Norse. |
| 0:49.7 | Is that it? |
| 0:50.4 | Is this your origin story in the United Kingdom? |
| 0:54.9 | So the thing with the United Kingdom is there are so many origin stories, and that's what |
| 1:00.7 | makes it such a fascinating melting pot of cultural influences and in commerce. |
| 1:06.2 | I mean, the Anglo-Saxons, sort of what we tend to characterize these kingdoms at the time of the |
| 1:13.5 | sort of Norse incursions, as you say, you know, this proper, you know, more military conquest |
| 1:20.9 | style invasion. But of course, the Anglo-Saxons themselves are different cultural groups that have come |
| 1:29.7 | over to England a few centuries earlier. Before then it's the Romans, you know, so it's much more |
| 1:36.6 | interesting, you know, and it's much more complicated, that sort of melting pot. But certainly, |
| 1:42.5 | yes, what's sometimes called the Great Heathen Army that like Mitchell, |
| 1:47.4 | Haveneher in Old English, arrives in around 865. And it's been suggested that actually, |
| 1:55.8 | rather than thinking of it as one big invading force, it's more useful to think of it as smaller mobile war bands |
| 2:03.5 | with different leaders, which makes it much more possible for them to essentially, you know, |
| 2:09.1 | nipping through the waterways, they can overwinter, and then they can keep going inland, |
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