Sewer line workers stumble on Viking ship timber


The project in The Netherlands was paused so that the possibly 1,200-year-old piece of wood could be preserved.


BY ANDREW PAUL


Work on a sewer line southeast of Amsterdam was paused recently, after construction crews discovered an unexpected and very large obstacle. According to a recent social media post from the Dutch town of Wijk bij Duurstede, municipal workers encountered a timber slab measuring over 10 feet -that likely belonged to a Viking era ship from around the 9th century CE.

Although the maritime artifact will be the town’s first archaeological discovery of its kind if confirmed, Wijk bij Duurstede’s history extends even further back in time. Originally known as Dorestad, the riverside was a vital trading hub between the 7th and 9th centuries that linked the Scandinavian world to the north and Frankish world (present-day central Germany) to the south.

Archaeologists cautioned that while they still need to conduct dendrochronological analysis (dating based on tree rings), they believe the timber was likely part of a ship that sailed during the Carolingian period about 1,200 years ago. Named after the Frankish noble family that included Charles Martel and his grandson Charlemagne, the Carolingian era was a transformative time in medieval Europe, where power was consolidated and regional cultures began to blend.


The mystery ship’s crew may not have been interested in trade, however. All that maritime commerce also attracted its fair share of Viking raiders from Scandinavia. There is even a chance that the vessel is actually younger than archaeologists theorize. It’s possible that the timber was part of a cog—a large, fortified trading ship commonly seen in northern Europe during the 13th and 14th centuries.


Luckily, archaeologists aren’t under the same pressing deadlines as the sewer workers. After carefully removing and transporting the wooden artifact to a controlled environment storage facility, researchers can now begin to clean and examine it in detail. Regardless of its ultimate age and identity, there’s also a good chance that the timber will ultimately be displayed in the city’s local Dorestad Museum.

This article was originally published in Popular Science.

Published by Jules William Press

Jules William Press is a small press devoted to publishing the best about the Viking Age, Old Norse, and the Atlantic and Northern European regions. Jules William Press was founded in 2013 to address the needs of modern students, teachers, and self-learners for accessible and affordable Old Norse texts. JWP began by publishing our Viking Language Series, which provides a modern course in Old Norse, with exercises and grammar that anyone can understand. This spirit motivates all of our publications, as we expand our catalogue to include Viking archaeology and history, as well as Scandinavian historical fiction and our Saga Series.

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