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The John Batchelor Show

S8 Ep279: ASSIMILATION AND THE SALME SHIP MYSTERY Colleague Eleanor Barraclough. Barraclough highlights how the Norse assimilated into Eastern cultures, adopting Slavic names and gods within generations. The focus then turns to a major mystery: the Salme ship buria

The John Batchelor Show

John Batchelor

Society & Culture, Arts, News, Books

4.52.8K Ratings

🗓️ 5 January 2026

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

ASSIMILATION AND THE SALME SHIP MYSTERY Colleague Eleanor Barraclough. Barraclough highlights how the Norse assimilated into Eastern cultures, adopting Slavic names and gods within generations. The focus then turns to a major mystery: the Salme ship burials in Estonia, discovered in 2013. These burials, dated to around 750 AD, predate the Lindisfarne raid and contain warriors buried with high honors, including gaming pieces and falcons, despite having died violently. Barraclough suggests this might have been a diplomatic mission gone wrong. A key artifact mentioned is a King piece from the board game hnefatafl found in a leader's mouth, adding to the mystery of who buried them. NUMBER 3

Transcript

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0:00.0

This is CBSI in the world.

0:06.8

I'm John Batchel with Eleanor Barracloff, the professor,

0:10.5

who is also the author of Embers of the Hands,

0:13.8

Hidden Histories of the Viking Age.

0:16.1

Eleanor is helping us understand that the Vikings,

0:18.9

who have this very large reputation in America because they got to North America, they got to Greenland in the news, they got to Iceland, always in the news, they got to England, yes, of course, but they also reached all the way into what is now Russia and Eastern Europe.

0:36.3

Eleanor, please continue. You had them at Novgorod around the middle

0:40.0

of the 9th century. Yeah, so pretty similar, just a couple of years before this great heathen army

0:45.8

lands in England. There is Rourik and his company in Novgorod in 862. This then becomes the starting point for what becomes known as

0:57.9

Kiev and Rus as a sort of cultural group. But the reason it becomes known as Kiev and

1:03.9

Rus is that a couple of decades later, their power base shifts south to Kyiv. But what's really interesting is that although you have

1:13.9

people of Norse descent and Norse heritage very much controlling this cultural area early on,

1:21.1

there are always a minority. And there are lots of other Slavic groups in particular who are very much operating within this

1:29.8

cultural sphere. And so what you end up with, a bit like sort of elsewhere in the North

1:34.5

world, in the North diaspora, you end up with a cultural melting pot where you have

1:40.4

Scandinavian elements, you have Slavic elements, and you have all sorts of other elements there too.

1:46.7

And what you find is that the Norse are, in a way, masters of cultural assimilation.

1:52.6

And so before too long, you see names, sort of in the rulers, for example,

1:58.0

that we might think of as being quite Slavic.

2:00.2

So we have names

2:02.1

like Igor and Olga, which actually sound very Slavic, but they come from Norse, you know,

2:11.4

their Ingvar and their Helga. But what you then find is that these people are naming their

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