Viking names carry with them the weight of history. Monikers like Erik, Ingrid or Sigmund bring up vivid images of fierce ...
All the while embracing what it means to be a Viking via special units like Shieldmaidens and holy warriors! As if that’s not enough, the game got some special art and music made so that you can ...
Life as a Viking was never easy. Days were spent rowing longships, creating intricate art, or telling stories about duels between gods and giants. Their legacy, however, extends beyond the bloody ...
At Hyperallergic, we strive to make art more inclusive ... The truth is, the Viking textile from Birka has no Arabic on it at all. Evidence for contact between the Vikings and the Islamic world ...
Your support makes all the difference. Archaeologists in Sweden have discovered a mysterious Viking Age burial ground with graves shaped like stone ships. As many as 139 of these graves have been ...
It was supposed to be a routine Stone Age settlement excavation to clear a path for a new roundabout and water pipes near ...
Viking invasions made a lasting impression on the DNA map of Ireland, according to a massive study carried out by Trinity College Dublin. In their study "Insular Celtic population structure and ...
Viking Therapeutics reported clinical trial data on Sunday, which excited some investors. Despite signs that Viking's anti-obesity candidate could be a top seller in its category, the stock fell ...
The 10,000-acre working sheep and cattle ranch is both thrumming with art—site-specific sculptures, a concert hall, an open-air performance venue—and humbling in the wide-open vistas and ...
From the eighth to 11th centuries, as Norsemen from Scandinavia conducted raids into Europe and elsewhere, they became known as Vikings—named after a place called viken in the Oslo fjord.
Viking Therapeutics has two exciting pipeline candidates. The biotech could deliver excellent returns in the next five years if these programs perform well. There are also some risks to consider ...
By Jillian Steinhauer Tamara de Lempicka’s first major U.S. survey invokes her as a trailblazing techno-feminist who borrowed freely from art history. But it also buries her erratic second act.