The Vikings built fast ‘dragon-ships’ and ‘long ships ... and furs to keep warm. Viking long ships could sail in shallow water so they could travel up rivers as well as across the ...
Preserved to the present Famous discoveries of Viking ships at Gokstad and Oseberg, Norway, in 1880 and 1906, respectively, established the classic image of the dragon-headed warship. Longships ...
Most Viking armies were smaller ... The Vikings built fast ‘dragon-ships’ and ‘long ships’ for raiding and war. They also had slower passenger and cargo ships called ‘knorrs’.
Bristling with spears and swords, Viking and Slav reenactors face off ... as the crowd belts out old songs of sea kings and dragon ships, the torchbearers tow the vessel into a walled field.
The strakes of the ship were much thinner than most people realize, often only 0.78-1.18 inches thick (almost paper thin).