Before it could be woven though, it needed to be washed in cold water and beaten with sticks to remove debris. Once the debris was removed form the wool, the fibers were combed or carded to make sure all the fibers ran in the same direction. When the carding was completed, the wool was once again washed but in warm, soapy water. The final step prior to weaving was dying the wool according to how it was to be used. Cloaks were either dyed brown or left in their natural color, tunics were dyed red for the legions.…
WOOL it was a cheaper and warmer fabric, many lower class garments used it.…
On June 8th 793ce foreign ships brought an unexpected surprise to the Lindisfarne monastery, the Northmen had arrived. This attack marked the beginning of the Viking Age, an era of raids that shook the western world until its end at the battle of Hastings in 1066. These Northmen arrived and promptly the “heathen miserably destroyed God's church by rapine and slaughter .” It is important to note that the Vikings had an oral tradition and no known sources exist depicting events from their perspective. “We see the attack through the eyes of the victims, who spread the word that the Vikings were bloody and violent. In fact, they were violent, but no more than anyone else at the time. Compared to Charlemagne’s armies, the Vikings were amateurs.…
Before the Industrial Revolution, most families made their clothes themselves. Clothes had a special meaning to these people as told in Passage 2, "part of this practice took on a religious significance and was conducted in sacred spaces. Fabric itself could be very meaningful." The fabric was difficult to make, and as a result, was very expensive. Since the fabric was expensive, most cultures had a robe that was common among people, since robes wasted less fabric. There was no such thing as a zipper or even a button, so clothes were harder to get on and keep on. Clothes were not replaceable, they got handed down to each person in a family and merely got mended, to help save the money they didn't have.…
5.1 Explain why it is important to have positive relationships with adults in the play environment…
The Vikings came from what is known as Sweden, Norway, and Denmark. During the time from the 8th to the 11th centuries the Vikings traveled in their longboats to the British Isles and the coast of Europe raiding the settlements.…
The way they obtained these articles of clothing was by hunting and making traps for the bunnies and many other animals to make houses and clothing and often had to chew their animal’s skins in order to make me pliable for making clothing…
The term Viking is generally applied to medieval Scandinavian culture as it prospered between the 8th-11th centuries CE. Viking art, also known as Norse art or the art of Scandinavia included the British Isles and Iceland. It has design elements in common with Celtic, Germanic, Romanesque and Eastern European art. Besides being known as plunderers, the Vikings were also excellent tradesmen and known for being traders along their coasts. They traded timber, amber, furs, and slaves with Byzantine and Arab merchants in the Mediterranean and Middle East and the Scandinavian colonies throughout Europe. Between their trading and plundering ventures, the Vikings travelled great distances by ship and which exposed them to a variety of arts along…
vikings would be quite large family groups including grandparents, parents and children. families live in houses called a long house. they shared the space with the best animals, the food storage and work shoppes. the most important animal to the vikings was the horse. as they were used to pull heavy loads, plow fields ect.…
When we hears the term Viking an immediate image of bloodthirsty men with long beards and horned helmets is conjured up in our minds. This is the image the historical sources have given us, and it is partly true. Vikings were merciless when raiding, but they were peaceful when they traded. Their navigational technology was exceptional, and the ones who settled in foreign lands contributed greatly to the lands’ culture.…
The vikings had weapons for long range. There were not many weapons for long range combat and so, there is little research about the different kinds of weapons but not the weapons that were for long range. The bow was the only weapon that credible resources could provide. Viking bows were made from the wood of yews, ash, or elm and ranged from 60 to 80…
The Vikings were vicious people living in Scandinavia. The raids by the Vikings first began around in c.790 in England but these lead to further raids over the years in other English and European countries; they were finally defeated in 1066 by King Harold Godwinson. The Vikings impact on the people can on the whole be seen as destructive with people’s properties being destroyed, belongings being stolen, villagers being captured and even some killed. But it also saw the exploration of trade, new skills, farming and craft as well new language, traditions, beliefs and cultural influences.…
The Federal Bureau of Investigation tracks four offenses murder, forcible rape, robbery, and aggravated assault in its Violent Crime Index. The juvenile arrest rate for each of these offenses has been declining steadily since the mid-1990s. The murder rate fell 70% from its 1993 peak through 2001 (Snyder, 2003).…
When one asked people about what they know about the Vikings, people usually answered back with several myths about Vikings. The images that usually comes up are filthy, unkempt, bearded men who love to destroys and pillages through the lands. Men and women who had blond hair, muscular, and tall; including they wore furry boots, furry armor, horn helmets, and love to drink out of their enemies’ skull. However, after being in a semester in Pagans, Barbarians, and Vikings; I have learned that is not the truth about Vikings. They were actually farmers who were successful traders whose beliefs came to understand economics, a religious concept, brought art and literacy to and from the place that they went. They value some virtues that people today…
Clothes:-A grandmother who knitted beautiful outfits for all the new babies who arrived into the family. Endless sweaters made from lambswool,.Outfits, dresses, made on an old tredmill of a sowing machine. Our grandparents' clothes were made in natural materials like wool and cotton. Sometimes their clothes were made at home or in the local dressmakers. They were expensive to buy or make.…