Coppergate & Jorvik Viking Centre
JORVIK Viking Center
Our knowledge of Viking life was transformed in the late 1970's by the discoveries made on the site of a new shopping centre in Coppergate.
Digging in the layers of moist, spongy earth, experts from the York Archaeological Trust found it had preserved Viking homes, clothes, games and goods.
The remains of timber buildings were laid out along the street of Coppergate, each separated from its neighbour by fences.
Archaeologists unearthed remarkable evidence of Viking cottage industry, including metalworking, jewellery making and the craft that gave Coppergate its name – the manufacture of wooden cups and bowls. Coppergate means ‘street of the cup-makers’.
An astonishing 40,000 items were revealed during the excavation between 1979 and 1981.
The site of this astounding archaeological discovery is now home to the JORVIK Viking Centre where visitors are taken on a journey to the Viking Age city of York.
Resources
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Jorvik Viking Centre
Jorvik's website
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