- Medieval European maritime culture
The medieval European maritime culture began with the remnants of the naval tradition of the
Roman Empire , included the technological advances that enabled theVikings to colonize North America in 982, suffered tremendously during thecrises of the 14th century , prospered to serve the European demand forcod onRoman Catholic days of abstinence , and ultimately culminated in theColumbian exchange that began in 1493.After the Fall of Rome
The inhabitants of ancient Denmark began building large seaworthy vessels in ancient times. A crew of some two dozen
paddle d the woodenHjortspring boat across theBaltic Sea long before the rise of theRoman Empire . Scandinavians continued to develop better ships, incorporatingiron and other metal into the design and developingoars for propulsion. TheNydam Oak Boat of 315 AD measured 75 feet in length.The Vikings, Norse, and Danes
During the
Early Middle Ages , theVikings (also known as Norse orDanes ) developed thelongship , capable of voyaging beyond sight of shore. This ship developed a reputation for speed and agility. The Vikings learnedcelestial navigation and developed other means of finding land. They used thesail to propel their boats quickly in the winds of theNorth Sea .Norwegian Vikings first attacked the
Isle of Portland in theBritish Isles in 787. They continued to demonstrate their naval prowess to dominate European trade and commerce for the next few centuries, establishing colonies along the European coast from the Baltic to the Balkans. They also sailed up many rivers, establishing their dominance well inland through much of Russia. TheNormans successfully invadedAnglo-Saxon England in 1066 and installedWilliam the Conqueror as King.The Vikings dominated all European maritime culture around the year 1000 and developed a
square rigged sailboat , theknaar as a merchant ship. Historians speculate that the Vikings used this boat to form and trade with their colonies in theOrkney Islands ,Shetland Islands ,Faroe Islands ,Iceland , andGreenland . The Greenland colony began with the expulsion ofEric the Red from Iceland in 982. Icelandicsagas reveal much about the maritime culture of this North American outpost.The Vikings continued beyond Greenland toward
Helluland ,Markland , andVinland . Many scholars interpret these regions asBaffin Island ,Labrador , and Newfoundland, although others contend that the Vikings sailed as far south as New England.Leif Ericson led a seminal expedition to Vinland in 1000. At least one colonization attempt followed during the next few decades. Thearchaeological record reveals an outpost inL'Anse aux Meadows on the shore of Newfoundland. The Greenland colony--mostly a glacialice cap with sometundra along the coast--lacked trees and timber; therefore, these voyages enabled the Vikings to obtain precious wood necessary forshipbuilding . Although the Vinland enterprise ultimately failed because the small population of Viking sailors who reached its shores could not defend themselves against the indigenousSkræling , it proved that medieval Europeans technologically could reach theNew World .The Vikings continued to prosper throughout their far-flung realm for a couple centuries. On the European continent and in Great Britain, they integrated with the local populations. Their navigation technologies helped European trade to flourish throughout the
High Middle Ages and enabled large numbers of medieval Christians to participate in theCrusades to theHoly Land .The Scots used the
birlinn galley in theHebrides .The Little Ice Age
Norse dominance of European maritime culture could not last forever. Although demonstrably capable of making the voyages across the rough North Atlantic Ocean, Viking ships frequently sank or were blown off course along the way; as many as a quarter to a third of ships that departed
Scandinavia never returned to the home port. As theMedieval Warm Period closed in the 13th century,pack ice began to advance southward. Fierce ocean storms associated with theIcelandic low increased in frequency and intensity, sinking ships even during the mid- and late-summer navigation season.Because of the dangers inherent in open-sea navigation, Viking mariners preferred to travel along the shoreline whenever possible. To reach the most marginal colonies of
Greenland fromIceland , they traditionally sailed due westward across theDenmark Strait then followed the Greenland coast toward the Eastern Settlement near the southern tip of the island. The Western Settlement lay further north along the opposite coast. Even sailing near shore posed its risks; sailors on one voyage ran aground and reached shore only to perish stranded of starvation. Pack ice advancing southward, however, choked this preferred route with sea ice, leading mariners to undertake a more perilous route southwestward through the open sea. Greenlanders consequently suffered from a lack of trade opportunities; shipping to the Western Settlement disappeared entirely with the onset of theLittle Ice Age in the 14th century.As the Greenland tundra cooled through the 13th century, the economic mainstay of the Viking colonies shifted from
pastoral livestock --which requiredhay to survive the long, bitter winters--towardfishing ,hunting ,gathering , and consuming suchmarine mammals as seals.Glaciers advanced from theGreenland ice cap toward the farms along thefjords . Summers provided a critical grazing and hay-raising season for the livestock because deep snow covered the ground, prohibiting grass growth, through most of the year. By the 14th century, summers frequently failed entirely, sometimes in succeeding years, in the Western Settlement. Trading ships could not reach the isolated colony, and grass failed to produce pasturage and hay, so the desperate colonists ate their livestock and even their prized hunting dogs to stay alive. They then abandoned the Western Settlement. Historians do not know where they fled, but they might have joined theInuit , settled in the Eastern Settlement or in Iceland, or sunk at sea.Other developments on the European continent left mariners less willing to make the daring voyage to the marginal, forlorn colonies.
African elephant ivory entered European markets as Arab and Muslim trading caravans brought goods across theSahara from West Africa. This ivory displaced the prized Greenland export ofwalrus tusk ivory, and obtaining it carried much less risk. TheGreat Famine of 1315-1317 ,Black Death , andpopular revolt in late medieval Europe caused the population of Europe to decline precipitously. Many mariners and merchants died of starvation and disease before they could pass their skills to apprentices or descendants. The Famine hit northern Europe particularly hard but largely spared southern Europe. The old Vikings declined rapidly, unable to afford trade with destitute "charity" colonies.Still another development directed Atlantic maritime commerce away from Greenland and even Iceland. The original
Viking fleets subsisted onAtlantic cod andherring while afloat and brought extra fish back to Europe for consumption. The disciplinary requirements ofFasting and Abstinence in the Roman Catholic Church at the time forbade many Christians from consuming "hot" flesh--usually the flesh of any non-marinewarm-blooded animal--on most Friday, duringLent , and on several other days during the year. By the end of theMiddle Ages , papal edicts extended these requirements to a majority of days during the year. Although many Europeans simply ignored the rules, the clergy (two to ten percent of the population including monks and nuns) and the pious laitydemand ed so much fish to eat that all the rivers and near-shore marine fisheries of Europe could notsupply them. Because it kept well when dried and salted, the untasteful Atlantic cod largely fulfilled this demand. As the oceans cooled below 2 °C, however, these fisheries largely moved south the Icelandic coast.Cod-fishing Fleets
Scandinavian shipbuilding technology failed to advance beyond that of the Viking days. The traditional Viking ships performed quite well in the relatively tranquil summer seas of the
medieval warm period , but the stormier climates rendered these vessels particularly dangerous to the point of obsolescence. Viking technology spread earlier throughout Europe, and craftsmen along the Atlantic seaboard of western Europe began to develop ships capable of withstanding heavy seas and the gales that struck commonly even during mid-summer. Rarely did a medieval mariner without a death wish dare to venture beyond easy sight of port during the long winter season.The
Hanseatic league promoted trade throughout theBaltic Sea aboardcog s andhulk s that mariners propelled with square sails and oars. The pious European population--especially the monasteries, convents, andbishop s--demanded enormous quantities of fish, and Dutch, English, other British, Breton and Basque mariners sought suitable fishing grounds. Earlier generations of Europeans frequently fished in Norwegian waters and in theNorth Sea ; however, the cooling climate led to the decline of the former fisheries, and the reduced supply in the latter could not satiate the increasing demand for salted cod, herring, and other fish.In an era of very brief life expectancies and an imploding
medieval demography , the clearly risky maritime culture provided an attractive means of subsistence. Death constantly haunted medieval Europeans, who took risks unconscionable to the modern mind; the overwhelming majority of the population lived in a state of desperate poverty comparable or perhaps even worse than most Third World countries today. Most medieval Europeans toiled long hours to produce or earn much less than the equivalent of $2 per person per day, from which they paid tithes, taxes, and rents. To make fishing a viable economic alternative to other means of subsistence, however, a significant majority of fleets leaving port had to reach the fisheries and return alive and intact.The cooling climate and increasing storminess, however, led to a sharp increase in the proportion of traditional Norse-style boats that left port never to return. These casualties at sea led shipbuilders to develop a stronger boat that could ply the
Dogger Bank and return full of fish with some reliability. Boat builders, especially prominent in Dutch ports and Basque seaside towns, however, prospered as they provided new vessels to budding mariners or to replace those wrecked or lost at sea. These new ships proved adequately seaworthy for the expectations of the era.Declining fishing stocks and frequent tax evasion led the
Hansa cabal to close the fisheries near Bergen off the Norwegian coast in 1410. English fishermen responded by taking their craft to the closedIceland ic colony and trading and fishing there in 1412. Besides several local fishing boats, very few if any ships had visited Iceland in several decades. English ships, however, began to set sail for Iceland early each spring through the frigid gales and freezing spray to trade and fish just as their Danish predecessors did centuries earlier. Each dogger that successfully returned to Britain in the autumn carried roughly 30 tons of fish. Although the Danish masters of Iceland convincedKing Henry V of England to forbid the Icelandic cod trade, English fleets continued to visit the otherwise isolated island. TheHanseatic League copied the shipbuilding technologies of their English rivals and began to reassert Scandinavian sovereignty over Iceland. This struggle led topiracy and pillaging on the high seas and ultimately to the development of modernnaval warfare .The settlement probably disappeared during the 15th century.
The historical record, however, does reveal a competition between Basque, English, and other fishermen and pirates for the North Atlantic fisheries. Foreigners moved beyond peaceful trade with
Iceland , andpirates plundered the utterly defenseless Scandinavian community severely and repeatedly during the late 15th century. Some English fleets began to reach the westernNorth Atlantic Ocean by 1480 and found fish so plentiful that the British port ofBristol prospered immensely from the trade. Many historians suspect that the Basque, English, and perhaps other fishing fleets in theGrand Banks occasionally sailed into the fjords of Labrador to dry their catch, repair their vessels, and perhaps even gather local food supplies.dubiousee also
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Medieval ships References
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