The Viking Age. Volume 1 (of 2) by Paul B. Du Chaillu

(8 User reviews)   1684
By Lucas Moreau Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Archaeology
Du Chaillu, Paul B. (Paul Belloni), 1835-1903 Du Chaillu, Paul B. (Paul Belloni), 1835-1903
English
Okay, so you know those big, epic stories about Vikings? The ones with longboats and raids? This book is where a lot of that popular image actually started. It's not a novel, but a massive, detailed history written back in the late 1800s by a real-life adventurer, Paul Du Chaillu. He's the guy who first brought gorillas to the Western world's attention, and then he turned his obsession to the Vikings. The 'conflict' here isn't just between Vikings and monks—it's the book itself wrestling with a mountain of old sagas, archaeology, and myths to answer one huge question: Who were these people, really? It's like watching a detective from another century piece together a puzzle, and sometimes his conclusions are wild. It’s a foundational text, a bit dusty and opinionated, but reading it feels like uncovering the original source code for everything we think we know about the Viking Age. If you've ever wondered where our Viking fascination began, this two-volume beast is Patient Zero.
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Let's be clear from the start: this isn't a fast-paced novel. The Viking Age, Volume 1 is a sweeping historical work from 1889. Paul Du Chaillu, a famous explorer of his day, uses everything from the Icelandic sagas to ancient artifacts to build his case. He doesn't just list dates and battles. He tries to reconstruct their entire world—their homes, their ships, their gods, and their daily lives. The book moves from the shadowy origins of the Norse people all the way through their legendary explorations and the complex societies they built back in Scandinavia.

Why You Should Read It

Reading Du Chaillu is a unique experience. You're not just learning about Vikings; you're seeing how a brilliant, eccentric 19th-century mind understood them. His passion is contagious. He treats the sagas not as mere stories, but as historical documents, reading between the lines to find truths about law, culture, and character. Sure, some of his theories are outdated, and his writing has the biases of his time. But that's partly what makes it fascinating. You get the history, plus a layer of historical perspective on how history itself is written. It feels like sitting in a grand old study, listening to an enthusiastic, slightly stubborn professor connect dots across centuries.

Final Verdict

This book is a project, not a light read. It's perfect for history buffs who want to go beyond modern summaries and see the raw materials—the sagas and chronicles—through the eyes of a pioneering popularizer. It's also great for anyone interested in the history of exploration or archaeology. If you love the Viking Age in games, shows, or novels, this two-volume set shows you where a lot of those ideas were first seriously packaged for a mass audience. Come for the Vikings, stay for the adventure of 19th-century scholarship.

Anthony Lewis
7 months ago

To be perfectly clear, the content flows smoothly from one chapter to the next. A true masterpiece.

Mark Hernandez
1 year ago

Great reference material for my coursework.

Donna Nguyen
1 year ago

As someone who reads a lot, it manages to explain difficult concepts in plain English. Highly recommended.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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