30-64
about 100
According to the sagas and the archaeological evidence, there were basically four important types: The "knarr" was a sturdy trading vessel manned by a crew of +-20. The "Karven" could carry up to 30 people, including more goods, slaves and horses. The "snäcka" (= shell) was sturdier and slower than a longship, but a warship nonetheless. It had 20 benches for rowers, could carry horses and supplies, and was the most common warship. The "longship" is the most fabled of Viking warships. Sleek, narrow and short of draft it could, according to the sagas, carry 100 warriors, and often more.
If the wind was favourable, they could stop rowing and rest, while their single rectangular sail helped to carried their longboat along.
Over 100 Viking warriors.
The common size of the crew on a Viking longship typically ranged from 20 to 60 men, depending on the ship's size and purpose. Smaller vessels, used for quick raids or coastal navigation, might have a crew of about 20, while larger ships designed for longer voyages could accommodate up to 60 or more. The crew consisted of oarsmen, navigators, and warriors, all essential for the ship's operation and combat readiness.
A Viking longship could typically carry around 30-60 warriors, depending on the size and design of the ship. The longships were designed to be agile and could navigate shallow waters, allowing them to approach and land troops quickly during raids or battles.
about 100
A Viking merchant ship known as a knarr. Alternately he could have used a Karve, a shallow draft vessel good for approaching shores or a Longship, the type favoured for exploration.
According to the sagas and the archaeological evidence, there were basically four important types: The "knarr" was a sturdy trading vessel manned by a crew of +-20. The "Karven" could carry up to 30 people, including more goods, slaves and horses. The "snäcka" (= shell) was sturdier and slower than a longship, but a warship nonetheless. It had 20 benches for rowers, could carry horses and supplies, and was the most common warship. The "longship" is the most fabled of Viking warships. Sleek, narrow and short of draft it could, according to the sagas, carry 100 warriors, and often more.
If the wind was favourable, they could stop rowing and rest, while their single rectangular sail helped to carried their longboat along.
Over 100 Viking warriors.
Brage was the viking god of poetry. the viking gods where the only gods that where real and that could die. vikings where the most dangerous warriors on the planet.
It actually depends on witch viking ship you are asking about the viking long ships were built for speed and had to be maneuverable enough that they could just pull in at land and not have to tie the boats up these ships would carry up to 28 men but couldn't carry much cargo but the viking merchant ships were built mainly for carrying large amounts of cargo that could way up to 4 tons. :) hope i helped.
the vikings were an extremely exploration and discovery based civilisation obviously adapted from hating the cold harsh unyielding area of the Norse-lands their first ships were indeed meant for speed and agility meant for open sea and rivers so they were light and could take up to about 36 to 50 or so oarsmen or rowers and the bigger warships which invaded England carried about an extra 100 soldiers.
it could be any but i would guess probably green
they often wore whatever they could, as barbarians were not an organized military. This includes armor taken from the dead, stolen armor, or just things they put together themselves.
Norse is a term used to coin the predominant culture, language and mythology of Scandinavians in pre-Christian times. This period of Norse culture largely coincides with the Viking era, when Scandinavians excelled in ship building and both raided and traded in Europe by help of their innovative and superior longship technology. The name "Viking" has several interpretations, but most probably it´s connected to the Norse (and also modern Norwegian) word "Vik" which means "bay" or "fjord". When travelling by ship to Europe and elsewhere, men went into "Viking". So originally "Viking" is an act, not the name of a people - only men who travelled by ship did Viking.