When the sleek, beautiful silhouette of Roskilde 6 appeared on
the horizon, 1,000 years ago, it was very bad news. The ship was part of
a fleet carrying an army of hungry, thirsty warriors, muscles toned by
rowing and sailing across the North Sea; a war machine like nothing else
in 11th-century Europe, its arrival meant disaster was imminent.
Now the ship's timbers are slowly drying out in giant steel tanks at the Danish national museum's conservation centre at Brede outside Copenhagen, and will soon again head across the North Sea – to be a star attraction at an exhibition in the British Museum.
The
largest Viking warship ever found, it was discovered by chance in 1996
at Roskilde. It is estimated that building it would have taken up to
30,000 hours of skilled work, plus the labour of felling trees and
hauling materials. At just over 36 metres, it was four metres longer
than Henry VIII's flagship Mary Rose built 500 years later, and six
metres longer than the Viking ship spectacularly recreated as Sea
Stallion, which sailed from Scandinavia around Scotland to Dublin in
2007.
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