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VIKINGS

Danish researchers plan book on Viking leadership

Danish researchers and historians have won funding to research a book which hopes to uncover the truth and dispel some of the the myths about the much-vaunted Viking leadership style.

Viking Ship Museum
The Viking Ship Hall at the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde. Photo: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Ritzau Scanpix

Over the last decade or so, books of management theory like “Return of the Vikings” and “The Viking Manifesto”, have sought to establish a link between historic Viking history and the modern-day Scandinavian flat management style, where everyone in a team is asked their opinion before a decision is taken. 

The Augustinus Foundation has now provided 1,950,000 Danish kroner (€260,000) to research Viking leadership, with the two year project led by researchers at Denmark’s Viking Ship Museum, with support from the Moesgaard Museum, the Danish National Museum, the University of Copenhagen and the University of Iceland. 

“It is far more complex than how it’s normally described by people claiming to be inspired by ‘Viking leadership’,” Morten Ravn, curator at the Viking Ship Museum, told The Local. “Often, their only reference is only to very few pieces of written evidence from the Viking Age, and it’s far more complex if you read the sagas, skaldic poetry, and other sources.”

Some Viking leaders, he argued, had been very powerful, whereas others had been relatively weak. 

“It can be quite hierarchical, where you have a leader who is a magnate or king,” he said. “But you could not be a king unless the people who elected you supported you, so we normally we say that a king at that time was only primus inter paras, which means “the first among equals”, because all his power was only his power so long as his magnates supported him.” 

He said this meant that the way Viking kings had wielded their leadership had varied enormously.  

“We have very mighty Viking kings who had a lot of possibilities to conduct their power, and others who who were not able to do anything at all,” he said. 

In addition, he added what constituted good leadership as a king could be very different from what was required when sailing or building a Viking ship, or when living in a small community. 

The researchers aim to spend two years examining the examples of good and bad leadership found within the Viking Sagas, skaldic poetry, legal texts, and chronicles, as well as in The King’s Mirror, a didactic Viking text on kingship. 

Ravn said that the researchers would also draw on experimental archeology carried out at the Viking Ship Museum, primarily the insights they have gained from building and sailing longships using only Viking era tools and equipment. 

He said that the ambition was for the final book to appeal both to the general reader and to other researchers.

“We will write it as an academic book in regard to references, but we will try and also write for a broader audience, because we think a lot of people are interested in leadership more broadly,” he said. 

It would not, though, be just another book jumping on the Viking Management bandwagon. 

“We are going to leave it up to modern leaders to whether they think they can use it, because there will be both examples of good leadership and bad leadership. But we will end up with a book in the style of ‘How to be a good Viking leader’, because a lot of people have written books about that.” 

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CULTURE

Rare Danish coin collection up for auction after 100 years

Like Sleeping Beauty cursed to sleep for 100 years, a Danish coin collection decreed to be kept off the market for a century will finally go under the hammer late this year.

Rare Danish coin collection up for auction after 100 years

Denmark’s National Museum, exercising its right to first dibs, paid one million euros ($1.09 million) for seven of the collection’s around 20,000 coins.

“The quality is extraordinary. The collection has become a thing of legend. It’s like the princess had been sleeping for 100 years,” Helle Horsnæs, head of the National Museum’s coin and medallion collection, told AFP.

In 1922, Lars Emil Bruun, a Danish entrepreneur and coin expert, bought the collection from the aristocratic Bille-Brahe family, agreeing to respect the National Museum’s pre-emptive right to the collection.

He died the following year, adding in his will a condition to the sale of the collection.

“The story goes that Bruun, after having seen the devastation of the First World War, was very afraid that something would happen to the (museum’s) national collection,” Horsnaes said.

“And therefore he made a will, saying that his collection should be kept as a reserve for the national collection for 100 years after his death,” she added.

Kept hidden away in a secret location for 100 years, a board of trustees handed the collection over to his heirs on November 21, 2023.

It is estimated to be worth $72.5 million.

“People have been talking about it and talking about what will happen now when it is released,” Horsnæs said. “It has taken on a special history of its own.”

The seven pieces acquired by the museum date from the end of the 16th and early 17th centuries.

The rest will be sold by the Stack’s Bowers auction house in the autumn.

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