Sunday 22 September 2019

Ladia

Amazing photo. This is not a scene from a film about Vikings. This are barges on the River Emajõgi, 19th century. Emajõgi is a river in Estonia which flows from Lake Võrtsjärv through Tartu County into Lake Peipus




Ladja was an early medieval Slavic heavy cargo ship developed in South Baltic. Norse Vikings acquired the technological knowledge to build these large vessels when Harald Bluetooth made the alliance with the Baltic Slavs, which is why we find the word in Old Norse.

Before mixing with Slavs, Norse viking ships were small, narrow and fast. Ideal for small raiding parties. Only after, when they started building wide and large "ladja" ships, were they able to cary armies including cavalry. And only then were the vikings able to transport enough troops and equipment to Britain to launch the major invasion, which culminated during Canute (Cnut the Great).

This is based on archaeological data. Source for Slavic influence on Viking ship building (and the other way round) is "A comparative analysis of early medieval shipwrecks from the southern shores of the Baltic sea" by George Indruszewski, used to work in Viking Ship Museum, Roskilde, Denmark, now at Roskilde University....

3 comments:

  1. the root of the word is derived from a log = in Polish kłoda,
    https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c7/2017_Surowiec_drzewny_w_Romanowie.jpg/1024px-2017_Surowiec_drzewny_w_Romanowie.jpg

    k/łoda , łódź
    in the past boats were made of such logs = kłód
    https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/9/91/Dlubanka_swidnica_2.jpg/1024px-Dlubanka_swidnica_2.jpg

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    Replies
    1. Hello Jaro!
      Allow me to correct you if I may. Polish łódź comes from Proto-Slavic *oldi, which in turn came from Proto-Balto-Slavic *aldjāˀ, which came from Proto-Indo-European *h₂oldʰeh₂. It is also the Old English aldaht, Proto-Germanic *aldǭ, etc..all meaning "hollowed out tree trunk" (which was the basic Slavic "canoe" as you shown on the image).
      On the other hand, Polish kłoda (and almost the same in all Slavic languages - klada) is derived from Proto-Slavic *kolda/*kolti. It denoted a (hollowed) log. The root of the word *kolti denoted a striking, slashing (hollowing out) motion and survives in many similar Slavic words today.
      Hope that clears it out. łódź and kłoda = two different words with similar meanings.

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  2. Ladia surname is part of Marwadi businessmen community in India. Ladia is a sub-caste of Agarwal (Bindal). Ladia and Ladiya both are same. Ladia category as per Hindu religion is Vaishya. Ladia are originally from Mandawa (Jhunjhunu) - Rajasthan India but they got distributed into many states/cities of India. UP, MP, Bihar, Kolkatta, Asam, South India etc.

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