What Were Viking Women Doing While Their Men Were on Violent Raids?
We picture the Viking Age in a very particular way. A longship cutting through grey water. A shield wall. A horn lifted in the firelight, full of mead, passed from one warrior's hand to the next. It's a story built almost entirely around the men who left. But every time a ship pushed off from a Norse shoreline, somebody stayed behind. And that's the half of the story we almost never tell. So, let's tell it. The Empty Half of the Hall For a raiding or trading voyage, a Viking man might be gone for a single season. For something longer — settling new land, fighting in a foreign king's army, working a trade route as far as Constantinople — he could be gone for years. Sometimes he never came back at all, and his wife would only learn this from another ship's crew, months later, secondhand. What did the women do with all that time, all that risk, all that silence? They ran everything. This wasn't a side detail of Viking society — it was the engine of it. ...