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Vikings : ウィキペディア英語版
Vikings


Vikings (Norwegian and (デンマーク語:Vikinger); Swedish and (ノルウェー語(ニーノシュク):Vikingar); (アイスランド語:Víkingar)), from Old Norse ', were Germanic Norse seafarers, speaking the Old Norse language, who raided and traded from their Scandinavian homelands across wide areas of northern and central Europe, as well as European Russia, during the late 8th to late 11th centuries.〔(Viking (people) ), Encyclopædia Britannica.〕〔Roesdahl, pp. 9–22.〕 The term is also commonly extended in modern English and other vernaculars to the inhabitants of Viking home communities during what has become known as the Viking Age. This period of Norse military, mercantile and demographic expansion constitutes an important element in the early medieval history of Scandinavia, the British Isles, France, Kievan Rus' and Sicily.〔Brink 2008〕
Facilitated by advanced seafaring skills, and characterised by the longship, Viking activities at times also extended into the Mediterranean littoral, North Africa, the Middle East and Central Asia. Following extended phases of (primarily sea- or river-borne) exploration, expansion and settlement, Viking (Norse) communities and polities were established in diverse areas of north-western Europe, European Russia, the North Atlantic islands and as far as the north-eastern coast of North America. This period of expansion witnessed the wider dissemination of Norse culture, while simultaneously introducing strong foreign cultural influences into Scandinavia itself, with profound developmental implications in both directions.
Popular, modern conceptions of the Vikings—the term frequently applied casually to their modern descendants and the inhabitants of modern Scandinavia—often strongly differ from the complex picture that emerges from archaeology and historical sources. A romanticized picture of Vikings as noble savages began to emerge in the 18th century; this developed and became widely propagated during the 19th-century Viking revival.〔Wawn 2000〕〔Johnni Langer, "The origins of the imaginary viking", ''Viking Heritage Magazine,'' Gotland University/Centre for Baltic Studies. Visby (Sweden), n. 4, 2002.〕 Perceived views of the Vikings as alternatively violent, piratical heathens or as intrepid adventurers owe much to conflicting varieties of the modern Viking myth that had taken shape by the early 20th century. Current popular representations of the Vikings are typically based on cultural clichés and stereotypes, complicating modern appreciation of the Viking legacy.
==Etymology==

One etymology derives ''víking'' from the feminine ''vík'', meaning "creek, inlet, small bay".〔(The Syntax of Old Norse by Jan Terje Faarlund; p 25 ) ISBN 0-19-927110-0; ''The Principles of English Etymology'' By Walter W. Skeat, published in 1892, defined Viking: ''better Wiking, Icel. Viking-r, O. Icel.
*Viking-r, a creek-dweller; from Icel. vik, O. Icel.
*wik, a creek, bay, with suffix -uig-r, belonging to ''(Principles of English Etymology By Walter W. Skeat; Clarendon press; Page 479 )〕 Various theories have been offered that the word ''viking'' may be derived from the name of the historical Norwegian district of Viken (or Víkin in Old Norse), meaning "a person from ''Viken''". According to this theory, the word simply described persons from this area, and it is only in the last few centuries that it has taken on the broader sense of early medieval Scandinavians in general. However, there are a few major problems with this theory. People from the Viken area were not called 'Viking' in Old Norse manuscripts, but are referred to as víkverir (Modern Norwegian: vikvær), 'Vík dwellers'. In addition, that explanation could only explain the masculine (Old Scandinavian víkingr) and ignore the feminine (Old Norse víking), which is a serious problem because the masculine is easily derived from the feminine but hardly vice versa.〔Walter W. Skeat: ''Principles of English Etymology'' Clarendon press, p. 479〕 The form also occurs as a personal name on some Swedish rune stones. There is little indication of any negative connotation in the term before the end of the Viking Age.
Another etymology derives ''viking'' from the same root as ON ''vika'', f. ‘sea mile’, originally ‘the distance between two shifts of rowers’, from the root
*weik or
*wîk, as in the Proto-Germanic verb
*wîkan, ‘to recede’. This is found in the Proto-Nordic verb
*wikan, ‘to turn’, similar to Old Icelandic víkja (ýkva, víkva) ‘to move, to turn’, with well-attested nautical usages. Linguistically, this theory is better attested,〔 and the term most likely predates the use of the sail by the Germanic peoples of North-Western Europe, because the Old Frisian spelling shows that the word was pronounced with a palatal k and thus in all probability existed in North-Western Germanic before that palatalization happened, that is, in the 5th century or before (in the western branch). In that case, the idea behind it seems to be that the tired rower moves aside for the rested rower on the thwart when he relieves him. The Old Norse feminine víking (as in the phrase fara í víking) may originally have been a sea journey characterized by the shifting of rowers, i.e. a long-distance sea journey, because in the pre-sail era, the shifting of rowers would distinguish long-distance sea journeys. A víkingr (the masculine) would then originally have been a participant on a sea journey characterized by the shifting of rowers. In that case, the word Viking was not originally connected to Scandinavian seafarers but assumed this meaning when the Scandinavians begun to dominate the seas.
In Old English, the word ''wicing'' appears first in the Anglo-Saxon poem, ''Widsith'', which probably dates from the 9th century. In Old English, and in the history of the archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen written by Adam of Bremen in about 1070, the term generally referred to Scandinavian pirates or raiders. As in the Old Norse usages, the term is not employed as a name for any people or culture in general. The word does not occur in any preserved Middle English texts. The word ''Viking'' was introduced into Modern English during the 18th-century Viking revival, at which point it acquired romanticised heroic overtones of "barbarian warrior" or noble savage. During the 20th century, the meaning of the term was expanded to refer not only to seaborne raiders from Scandinavia and other places settled by them (like Iceland and the Faroe Islands), but secondarily to any member of the culture that produced said raiders during the period from the late 8th to the mid-11th centuries, or more loosely from about 700 to as late as about 1100. As an adjective, the word is used to refer to ideas, phenomena, or artefacts connected with those people and their cultural life, producing expressions like ''Viking age'', ''Viking culture'', ''Viking art'', ''Viking religion'', ''Viking ship'', and so on.

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