Jorvik Viking Centre
The Jorvik Viking Centre is a museum and visitor attraction in York, England. It was created by the York Archaeological Trust in 1984. It suffered flooding over Christmas 2015 and is closed. It is due to re-open on 8 April 2017.
Background
Cravens, a firm of confectioners was founded in 1803. Cravens relocated from their factory in Coppergate in central York in 1966. Between 1976 and 1981, after the factory was demolished, and prior to the building of the Coppergate Shopping Centre (an open-air pedestrian shopping centre which now occupies the enlarged site), the York Archaeological Trust, a charity founded in 1972 by Peter Addyman, conducted extensive excavations in the area. Well-preserved remains of some of the timber buildings of the Viking city of Jorvík were discovered, along with workshops, fences, animal pens, privies, pits and wells, together with durable materials and artefacts of the time, such as pottery, metalwork and bones. Unusually, wood, leather, textiles, and plant and animal remains from the period around 900 AD, were also discovered to be preserved in oxygen-deprived wet clay. In all, over 40,000 objects were recovered.
The trust recreated the excavated part of Jorvik on the site, peopled with figures, sounds and smells, as well as pigsties, fish market and latrines, with a view to bringing the Viking city fully to life using innovative interpretative methods. The Jorvik Viking Centre, which was designed by John Sunderland, opened in April 1984. Since its formation, the Centre has had close to 20 million visitors.
The Centre today
In 2001, the centre was refurbished and enlarged at a cost of £5 million, a further investment of £1 million followed in February 2010.[1] These investments were used to "intensify the message" at Jorvik, and included such changes as extending the ride time to 12 minutes, as well as adding more high-tech elements, which included a hike in "the technology and animation elements," and increasing "the sensory stimuli to include smells, more sounds, heat, cold and damp."[2] Visitors are taken back to 5:30 pm 25 October 975 AD in a time-capsule, and then embark on a tour of a reconstructed Viking settlement which includes Viking voices speaking in Old Norse, as well as aromas and "life-like animated figures, made by laser technology from skeletons found on the site."[3] Beyond this is an extensive museum area, which combines an exhibition of some 800 finds from the site with interactive displays and the opportunity to learn about tenth-century life and to discuss it with "Viking" staff. Among the exhibits is a replica of the Coppergate Helmet, which was found near the site of the centre and is now in the Yorkshire Museum. A new museum was opened on 13 February 2010, coinciding with the start of the annual Viking Festival in York. The centre contains new exhibitions and features.
Jorvik Viking Models
Graham Ibbeson created the lifelike mannequins used in the Jorvik experience. At first the faces of these mannequins were modelled from modern day people. Through advances in facial reconstruction technology eight new mannequins have been modelled through this process, which uses a low-powered laser beam and a video camera. These recreations were based on skulls found in a Viking age cemetery, although there is no guarantee that the skulls were Norse, and there is the possibility that they were Saxon.[4]
Viking Festival
The centre also organizes an annual Viking Festival that takes place in the second week of February.[5] The festival is set up in tradition of an ancient Viking festival known as "Jolablot".[6] The festival includes Combat re-enactment involving volunteers from all over the world.
"Time Warp" experience
Jorvik Viking Centre is not billed as a museum but as an “experience”; this type of educational representation of the past, known as a “Time Warp” experience, has become increasingly popular with the creation of Jorvik. It inspired other such sites as the “Canterbury Pilgrims Way” where visitors can join Geoffrey Chaucer's pilgrimage.[7]
Flood damage (2015)
The centre was significantly affected by the flooding in Northern England in December 2015 with extensive water damage to the building and exhibits. The most valuable Viking artifacts were moved to prevent damage.[8] The museum is presently closed due to the flood damage and is due to re-open in spring 2017.[9]
Public response
The Jorvik Viking Centre has been called "one of Britain's most popular attractions."[10] The BBC spoke of the "Time Warp" experience as "a new art form".[7]
Criticisms
The Jorvik Centre has been criticized as a “pop-up book view of history.”[7] and its presentation of the past has been labelled “Disney-like”.[10] Anthony Gaynor, one of the creators of the Centre, responded by stating: "We're making history accessible and enjoyable to the general public. You can't do that if you wrap it in a lot of academic foliage."[10]
In late 2013 and early 2014, it was widely reported in English-language media outlets that Ragnarök, a series of cataclysmic events foretold in Norse mythology, would occur on 22 February 2014. Apparently patterned after the 2012 phenomenon, the claim was at times attributed to a "Viking Calendar".[11] No such calendar is known to have existed, and the source was a "prediction" made to media outlets by the Jorvik Viking Centre, and intended to draw attention to an event that the institution was to hold on that date. The Jorvik Viking Centre was criticized for intentionally or unintentionally misleading the public; however, in an article on the incident, Joseph S. Hopkins perceives the media response as an example of a broad revival of interest in the Viking Age and ancient Germanic topics.[12]
Notes
- Evans, Antonia, ed. (2002). The York Book. York: Blue Bridge. ISBN 0-9542749-0-3.
- ↑ "About Jorvik". Jorvik Viking Centre. York Archaeological Trust. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
- ↑ Koranteng, Juliana (25 June 2001). "Jorvik Viking Centre used as TiLE example". Amusement Business. 113 (25): 1. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
- ↑ Wilson, Peter (16 July 2005). "High-tech wizardry beams Jorvik visitors into Viking past". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
- ↑ Adams, Phoebe-Lou (March 1995). "From York to Yorvik". The Atlantic Monthly. 275 (3): 46–50.
- ↑ "Viking Festival". Jorvik Viking Centre. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
- ↑ "Jolablot comes to York!". Where I Live North Yorkshire. BBC. April 2004. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
- 1 2 3 "These trips really take you back in time". Ottawa Citizen. 14 May 1988.
- ↑ "UK floods: Storm Frank threatens more misery". BBC News. December 2015. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
- ↑ "Jorvik |". Jorvik Viking Centre. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
- 1 2 3 "Purists rage, but alas, poor Yorvik's doing well". The Vancouver Sun. 4 February 1989. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
- ↑ Examples include the Daily Mail ("Will the world end in 100 days? Sounding of ancient trumpet in York warns of Viking apocalypse on 22 February 2014", 15 November 2013), People.com ("What to Expect from the Norse Apocalypse", 22 February 2014), and International Business Times ("All About the Norse Term That Heralds Viking Apocalypse", 22 February 2014).
- ↑ Hopkins 2014, pp. 7-12.
References
- Hopkins, Joseph S. (2014). "The 'Viking Apocalypse' of 22nd February 2014: An Analysis of the Jorvik Viking Center's Ragnarök and Its Media Reception" (PDF). RMN Newsletter. University of Helsinki. 8: 7–12. ISSN 2324-0636.
External links
Coordinates: 53°57′28″N 1°04′50″W / 53.95778°N 1.08056°W