Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship

In 1962, the remains of five late Viking Age ships were excavated from Roskilde Fjord, near Skuldelev on the Danish island of Zealand (See Figure 1: Crumlin-Pedersen and Olsen, 2002). Twenty years later, the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde began the process of building its first full-scale Viking shi...

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Auteurs principaux: Tríona Sørensen, Martin Rodevad Dael
Format: article
Langue:EN
Publié: EXARC 2020
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Accès en ligne:https://doaj.org/article/b74e127b21714b3b922a862d0b91a6a8
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:b74e127b21714b3b922a862d0b91a6a82021-12-01T14:42:34ZRoar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship2212-8956https://doaj.org/article/b74e127b21714b3b922a862d0b91a6a82020-05-01T00:00:00Zhttps://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10502https://doaj.org/toc/2212-8956In 1962, the remains of five late Viking Age ships were excavated from Roskilde Fjord, near Skuldelev on the Danish island of Zealand (See Figure 1: Crumlin-Pedersen and Olsen, 2002). Twenty years later, the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde began the process of building its first full-scale Viking ship reconstruction, the 14 m long coastal transport and trading vessel, Skuldelev 3. Over the next two years, Roar Ege was built at the Museum boatyard and the Roar Ege Project marked the start of a process that would form the core of the Museum’s research endeavours: the experimental archaeological reconstruction of ship and boat finds.Tríona SørensenMartin Rodevad DaelEXARCarticleboat / ship(re)constructionviking agedenmarkMuseums. Collectors and collectingAM1-501ArchaeologyCC1-960ENEXARC Journal, Iss 2020/2 (2020)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic boat / ship
(re)construction
viking age
denmark
Museums. Collectors and collecting
AM1-501
Archaeology
CC1-960
spellingShingle boat / ship
(re)construction
viking age
denmark
Museums. Collectors and collecting
AM1-501
Archaeology
CC1-960
Tríona Sørensen
Martin Rodevad Dael
Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship
description In 1962, the remains of five late Viking Age ships were excavated from Roskilde Fjord, near Skuldelev on the Danish island of Zealand (See Figure 1: Crumlin-Pedersen and Olsen, 2002). Twenty years later, the Viking Ship Museum in Roskilde began the process of building its first full-scale Viking ship reconstruction, the 14 m long coastal transport and trading vessel, Skuldelev 3. Over the next two years, Roar Ege was built at the Museum boatyard and the Roar Ege Project marked the start of a process that would form the core of the Museum’s research endeavours: the experimental archaeological reconstruction of ship and boat finds.
format article
author Tríona Sørensen
Martin Rodevad Dael
author_facet Tríona Sørensen
Martin Rodevad Dael
author_sort Tríona Sørensen
title Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship
title_short Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship
title_full Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship
title_fullStr Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship
title_full_unstemmed Roar Ege: The Lifecycle of a Reconstructed Viking Ship
title_sort roar ege: the lifecycle of a reconstructed viking ship
publisher EXARC
publishDate 2020
url https://doaj.org/article/b74e127b21714b3b922a862d0b91a6a8
work_keys_str_mv AT trionasørensen roaregethelifecycleofareconstructedvikingship
AT martinrodevaddael roaregethelifecycleofareconstructedvikingship
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