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  • The Viking Ship Museum in Bygdøy (Oslo) displays the large Viking ships Oseberg, Gokstad and Tune, the best preserved Viking ships known (found in royal burial mounds in the Oslo fjord). This is a monument to Anne Stine and Helgo Ingstad, husband and wife explorers who were the first to prove that the Vikings of Greenland had found a way across the Atlantic to Newfoundland, Canada, roughly 500 years before Christopher Columbus.
    Viking-Ship-Museum-1946.jpg
  • The Viking Ship Museum in Bygdøy (Oslo) displays the large Viking ships Oseberg (seen here), Gokstad and Tune. These three ships are the best preserved Viking ships known, found in royal burial mounds in the Oslo fjord.
    Viking-Ship-Museum-1949.jpg
  • The Viking Ship Museum in Bygdøy (Oslo) displays the large Viking ships Oseberg (seen here), Gokstad and Tune. These three ships are the best preserved Viking ships known, found in royal burial mounds in the Oslo fjord.
    Viking-Ship-Museum-1966.jpg
  • Steps and doorway lead to a viewing area above a Viking ship relic at the Viking Ship Museum in Oslo, Norway
    Viking -Ship-Museum-1971.jpg
  • A crowd pleaser playing to tourists is decked out in Viking attire on the streets of Copenhagen, Denmark
    Viking-Copenhagen-1189.jpg
  • Three enormous bronze swords stand monument to the Battle of Hafrsfjord in the year 872, when Harald Hårfagre (Fairheaded Harald) united Norway into one kingdom. The monument was designed by local artist Fritz Røed and unveiled by Norway's King Olav in 1983.<br />
<br />
The swords, which are about 10 meters tall, stand for peace and unification. One sword is larger than the others. This was Fairheded Harald's sword. The crowns on the top of the swords represent the three districts that participated in the battle. The swords are planted in solid rock - representing peace. The monument is called Sverd i Fjell (Swords in Rock).
    Swords-Stavanger-Norway-2435.jpg
  • Three enormous bronze swords stand monument to the Battle of Hafrsfjord in the year 872, when Harald Hårfagre (Fairheaded Harald) united Norway into one kingdom. The monument was designed by local artist Fritz Røed and unveiled by Norway's King Olav in 1983.<br />
<br />
The swords, which are about 10 meters tall, stand for peace and unification. One sword is larger than the others. This was Fairheded Harald's sword. The crowns on the top of the swords represent the three districts that participated in the battle. The swords are planted in solid rock - representing peace. The monument is called Sverd i Fjell (Swords in Rock).
    Swords-Stavanger-Norway-2422.jpg
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Rozanne Hakala Photography

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