faber
Well-Known Member
And you can have that intra-Scandinavian debate with someone from Norway.
Archaeologists have yet to recover any evidence of (early) medieval beer from anywhere in Scandinavia, and organics survive oddly well in the soil there (as well as the inorganics). But there is abundant evidence of trade.
Since ale is mentioned in the literature, in accounts of travel, the conclusion is pretty clear...
And, yes, there is ample arable land in Sweden, but in the Viking period the knowledge and techniques of farming were poor, relative to, say, the Mediterranean basin, or other parts of Continental Europe. Until they brought that knowledge back through extended trade, their knowledge of ale was probably limited to trade and consumption.
I grew up in Europe, too, and went to a school that was over a thousand years old. It wasn't uncommon to find bits of old rubbish in the ground. (I once found a handful of Roman coins.) Never did find an ancient brewery, though
Archaeologists have yet to recover any evidence of (early) medieval beer from anywhere in Scandinavia, and organics survive oddly well in the soil there (as well as the inorganics). But there is abundant evidence of trade.
Since ale is mentioned in the literature, in accounts of travel, the conclusion is pretty clear...
And, yes, there is ample arable land in Sweden, but in the Viking period the knowledge and techniques of farming were poor, relative to, say, the Mediterranean basin, or other parts of Continental Europe. Until they brought that knowledge back through extended trade, their knowledge of ale was probably limited to trade and consumption.
I grew up in Europe, too, and went to a school that was over a thousand years old. It wasn't uncommon to find bits of old rubbish in the ground. (I once found a handful of Roman coins.) Never did find an ancient brewery, though