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Originally posted by Patroklos
Are we sure this stuff is not just loot from raiding trips? I know the Vikings had an extensive trade network, but they participated in some other activities as well.
They traded directly with merchants from the Abbasid Caliphate who were lodged with the Bulgars in Russia. The Caliphate wanted honey, slaves, amber, furs and hunting birds amongst other things, and the discovery of silver deposits in Afghanistan had set off a trading boom.
Trade from the east mostly went via Viking settlements in Russia to Gotland and then through Gotland to Denmark and Norway and Sweden, and also to the Franks, and of course to Viking settlements in the Ireland and Great Britain.
Stolpe found numerous ninth-century merchants' graves containing Arab silver dirhems, similar to the thousands found in hoards in western Russia and around the shores of the Baltic. Many of these coins were defaced with Scandinavian runes, as if to destroy their ideological power. Other oriental grave-goods include silks and collapsible balances. Notable discoveries included a finger-ring bearing the legend Allah in Arabic from grave 515, and a cylindrical glass vessel of likely Syrian manufacture decorated with bird and plant motifs from grave 542. Similar finds have been found at other trading sites around the Baltic. Hedeby, for example, the Danish-planned emporium situated at the base of Jutland, boasts not only Arabic objects, but also a lead seal dated c.840 belonging to a certain Theodosius, patrikos, imperial protospatharius and chartularius of the public vestiary, chief of the Byzantine emperor's personal security.
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