Staraya Ladoga Is Called The First Capital Of Russia
Staraya Ladoga, of Leningrad Oblast, Russia, is located approximately 100 kilometers east of St. Petersburg. The village used to be a prosperous trading outpost in the 8th and 9th centuries. This city is a very important historic city and was an important port for the Vikings.
Staraya Ladoga (Старая Ладога) is a village near St. Petersburg. Here’s video of the village. The significant past of this place has not been forgotten. It’s a historic treasure that must be remembered. Staraya Ladoga is an ancient fortress. It is a political center of Russia. And possibly the beginning of Russia.
The historical significance of this region in the world has been underestimated. The trading routes of the Scandinavians began in such centers.
If we study the direction of Scandinavian tribes, it just makes common sense to follow the passage of the Runes, or more specifically the Runic alphabet. Where archaeologists discover runes, one would consider this to be the way of the Viking.
A history of the Swedish people might reveal some clues of the Viking path in history. While there appears to be a lack of written historical evidence, there are many exciting clues discovered by historians.
The work by Snorri Sturluson gives other clues, but overall is inconclusive. The Norse Sagas are believed to hold some answers to the questions. The myths and legends could provide historical clues to historians. The origin of the Norse peoples has created much interest.
Aldeigjuborg is mentioned on the way to Kiev and the Black Sea.
There is without doubt that Staraya Ladoga was originally inhabited by Slavs. Professor Anatoly Kirpichnikov, a prominent Russian historian, has suggested that Prince Rurik and his successor, Prince Oleg, united Eastern Slavs. This is where Russian history begins, in the year of 862 A.D. A holiday in Russia may be introduced in 2012.
“Slav and Finnish tribes asked Rurik to rule them at a meeting that took place in the town of Ladoga, now Staraya Ladoga in the Lenigrad region”, as published in The Voice of Russia.
This is the Normanist theory, which has been disputed among scholars. The purpose of this article is not to make a solid conclusion either way, only to acknowledge a theory of the Rus people.
Historians are unsure when Runes first came into use. The advance of the Futhark may shed more answers of the mysterious Viking past for those that are interested.
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