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Chapter 37 Engraving Knowledge on Wooden Boards

In the huge chief priest's house, the fire pit heated the entire house so warm that the people inside could wear only ordinary linen clothes.

There are only a few priests in the tribe, and they are all women. In order to take on this job, they also gave up their rights as mothers.

They are all people who receive support from the tribal people. Except for performing sacrificial activities on necessary days throughout the year, they spend most of their time in the chief priest's house.

Many priests spent a lot of their free time weaving their own clothing with flax and boiling animal fat to make flammable lamp oil.

When Rurik was invited to enter this area, he immediately smelled an alluring aroma.

Although the entire longhouse is warm, it still has a lot of loopholes. The air heated by multiple braziers seeps out from the gaps on the top floor, and the cool air from outside also penetrates through the gaps in the lower floors. There is no possibility of carbon monoxide poisoning here, nor

As the charcoal in the brazier goes out, the indoor temperature will drop quickly.

The younger priests built a simple stove on the brazier, and placed some seal fat in the thick cast iron basin.

Otto happened to catch a few plump Baltic seals when he returned, so boiling oil was a necessary operation.

When the bay is frozen, drilling holes in the ice to catch seals is part of the tribe's normal work.

The meat and offal of these captured seals are all used as food, the skins are used as clothing, and the seal oil is naturally an excellent fuel.

The aroma of roasted fat made Rurik very comfortable. He was not hungry now. He came to the longhouse of the priests today and learning the knowledge was his first priority.

Rurik came with a great purpose, and the priest Vilia who would serve as his one-to-one teacher also came with a great purpose.

But no matter how great your achievements are, they all have a small beginning.

There was light snow in the sky, and Rurik knew that his father was going to lead the tribe to the north for collective hunting. According to past experience, they would be able to return with a full load of prey in more than ten days. With luck, he could eat venison all winter long.

.

Rurik had his own job, and while he was very young and had a lot of free time, it would be best to learn that knowledge in a short period of time.

He entered the warm long house, sighed at the warmth, and put aside the leather jacket he was wearing.

Vilia, who was on crutches, was as kind as his grandmother.

"My child, you arrived as promised."

"Yes, great priest." Rurik bowed deliberately and was very respectful in his words.

The tribe does not bow or even have clear ceremonial actions.

Of course, Vilia felt very comfortable. She couldn't help but stretched out her old and skinny right hand and covered Rurik's head with golden braids.

She couldn't help but praise: "You are indeed different from those children. Let's get started! The rest of my life will be satisfied by cultivating you into a talented person. This is the biggest task of the rest of my life."

"Would you like to start studying now?" Rurik immediately raised his head.

"Yes! From now on, there will be time in the future. Since you intend to learn, tell me clearly, are you willing to master all the wooden boards in that room?!"

"Of course." Rurik replied without hesitation.

"Very good. That's a lot of knowledge. I hope you can keep your promise."

There was a lot of knowledge on the wooden board? Rurik didn’t realize it at all!

The Babylonians recorded knowledge on clay tablets, the ancient Egyptians recorded knowledge on straw paper, the Greeks recorded knowledge on sheepskins, and very far away in the East, bamboo slips and paper.

However, by this era, paper should be widely used in Europe.

Rurik estimated this. How could the situation be so ideal?

The real historical process, from the third century to the thirteenth century, for a thousand years, the best carrier of recorded documents and books in Europe was parchment. Until the invasion of Menggu, papermaking technology from the East spread

In just a few decades, the whole of Europe began to use cheaper paper for writing, which objectively promoted the rapid spread of the Renaissance.

Because ordinary people can buy cheap books without spending too much money. They will no longer be dull for a long time because of the priests' monopoly on knowledge. They can use books to have their own understanding of the entire world and have their own independent thinking.

In the first half of the ninth century, due to the decline of the Tang Dynasty, the order of trade routes from Dongtu to Dashi and even Eastern Rome became increasingly worse. Commercial activities were hit by wars, and those desperate merchants were more willing to transport silk with higher added value.

, tea, porcelain, spices, and various types of paper that are not expensive in the East are not the main commodities. Even these commodities were eagerly sought by the nobles of Eastern Rome. After they bought them all, it was difficult for Western Europe and even Northern Europe to obtain these supplies.

.

Unless, the various Viking tribes around the Mediterranean have greater ambitions to trade with Eastern Rome.

The time is 828 AD, and so far, no Viking force has truly had commercial contact with the Eastern Roman Empire.

Because now, the "Viking Age" has actually just begun.

Here, the most likely person to complete it is the Rus tribe branch of the Swedish Siya people alliance. If they move to Novgorod according to the historical process, the mixed Varyag-Slavs will trade with Eastern Rome.

The era of competition also begins immediately.

Rurik is basically aware of this historical process, and he also knows very well that he should be the historical driver of this process. However, these inner words are too metaphysical and grand, and ordinary people may find it unbelievable to speak them out.

She would probably believe it, so what if she believed it? In the end, she sighed with "Odin's blessing".

It stands to reason that the Russians could also use sheepskin or cowhide to make writing carriers, but they did not do so, probably because this operation is time-consuming and labor-intensive.

If you think about it carefully, they don't seem to have strong motivation to do so.

There are thousands of people in the entire tribe, and only one hand can count those who love learning book knowledge. Most of them are not anti-intellectual, on the contrary, everyone understands the importance of knowledge.

Ordinary people disdain the knowledge recorded in runes on wooden boards, and because in order to understand the knowledge, you must first learn the runes, which discourages many people.

What they know best is actually some symbols marking numbers in the runes. After all, trade requires understanding decimal numbers.

Only a few of them know how to mark their names with runes, and everything is basically limited to this.

They pay more attention to technical teaching through words and deeds. Shipbuilders teach their sons how to build ships, and professional blacksmiths teach their sons how to select ore, smelting and forging. Women in the family also teach their daughters how to make linen threads, how to weave cloth, and

Processing of animal skins.

The living environment is so harsh that any young boy or girl must learn the most practical life skills and obscure theoretical knowledge in a short period of time. The male parents of the family are not willing at all for their young children to leave work and learn some "eating and worshiping"

Obscure figures compiled by the priests of grain".

Yes, most people are members of the Rus tribe. Unfortunately, they don't even know the written alphabet of their own tribe.

It is not surprising that Ron letters have always been a niche text and are dying out rapidly.

Therefore, the entire tribe essentially dislikes books because they cannot yet understand the use of learning obscure things.

Without the help of their tribesmen, the historical development of the tribe must also be recorded. The Villians are afraid that their tribesmen will forget who they are after a few generations.

Based on her own memory, she selected some elastic oak boards, baked them until they were very dry, then polished them with a whetstone, and finally engraved ancient knowledge in rune letters.

But she possessed more than just this knowledge. Even the majority of the tribe members did not know that the young Vilia had the good fortune to meet a man in black who claimed to be from the "Warm Beach".

The men in black persuaded Vilia to believe in a supreme being, and Vilia told them bluntly that the only supreme being was Odin.

However, Villa still got a treasure, which was a book compiled from dozens of parchments in a small wooden box. The exquisite cover of the book fully showed the Eastern Roman style, and the content was written in two sets of words -

—Latin and Greek characters.

As for the content, they all praise an apostle and the apostle's teachings to ordinary people.

Verya's knowledge is known as a wise one, but her knowledge is still extremely limited.

She didn’t want to be a follower of that apostle, she just wanted to be a servant of Odin. Villa respected those men in black from Rome, and based on her own understanding, she simply determined that those who had been sealed in wooden boxes for decades

The book is the "oracle book" of the Romans.

Odin controls the cold north, but the Roman south is not within Odin's control.

Villa kept the book well because she felt that when the tribe had the opportunity to have further contact with the Romans in the future, this book would serve as a medium for friendly exchanges. After all, fighting-style contact was the last resort.

In addition, she marveled that Roman books and texts were preserved on soft parchment. How could animal skin be processed into such a writing instrument? She had no idea at all, and she was envious but helpless.

She could only record the tribe's knowledge on oak, because the area was cold and dry, and the oak was strong enough. Judging from the preservation time, the writing on the oak board was still very clear after decades.


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