Lakeside Arts
Part of University of Nottingham
Lakeside Arts

Opening weekend activity as part of Vikings exhibition programme

Danelaw Saga: Bringing Vikings back to the East Midlands

Professor Judith Jesch and Dr Roderick Dale
Centre for Study of the Viking Age, University of Nottingham

This exhibition ran between 15 December 2017 and 8 April 2018.

Invade…immigrate…integrate… inspire.  Danelaw Saga told the tale of how the Vikings shaped the East Midlands.

In the 860s the Great Heathen Army invaded the East Midlands, agreeing peace with the Anglo-Saxon King, Alfred the Great, in the 870s. The agreement established the Danelaw where Viking laws and government reigned, giving the Vikings half of England to rule. They settled in the five boroughs of the Danelaw (Derby, Leicester, Lincoln, Nottingham and Stamford) and integrated with the existing population. The legacy of these settlers can still be seen today in place-names like Gunthorpe, Nottinghamshire named after a Viking woman, Gunnhild.

Danelaw Saga told a local story of Viking culture with artefacts, maps and medieval documents from Manuscripts and Special Collections at the University of Nottingham and from regional museums. This exhibition presented an opportunity to see extraordinary Viking works brought together and to learn about the places whose names evoke the Viking past.

Visitors could map the routes of Viking expeditions, view coins brought from the Middle East to the East Midlands, and explore their heritage further with artefacts and jewellery worn by the Viking women that settled in the East Midlands. ‘Danelaw Saga’ told the story of Viking heritage hidden in plain sight, from place names in use since they were given by the Vikings to modern literature inspired by the East Midlands’ own Viking past. Danelaw Saga uncovered the legacy of the Vikings on our doorstep.

Danelaw Saga was jointly curated by Professor Judith Jesch and Dr Roderick Dale of the Centre for Study of the Viking Age, and by Manuscripts and Special Collections at the University of Nottingham. The Bringing Vikings back to the East Midlands project was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

Go to the Vikings in the East Midlands website