Conditions and rights Thralls were the lowest class of workers in Scandinavian society. They were Europeans who were enslaved by being prisoners of war, incurring debt or being born into the class via their parents. The living conditions of thralls in Scandinavia varied depending on the master. The thrall trade as the prize of plunder was a key part of the Viking economy. While there are some estimates of as many as thirty slaves per household, most families owned only one or two slaves. In 1043,
Hallvard Vebjørnsson, the son of a local nobleman in the district of greater
Lier, was killed while he was trying to defend a thrall woman from men who accused her of theft. The Church strongly approved of his action, recognised him as a
martyr and
canonized him as Saint Hallvard, the
patron saint of
Oslo. Despite the existence of a caste system, thralls could experience a level of social fluidity. They could be freed by their masters at any time, be freed in a will or even buy their own freedom. Once a thrall man was freed, he became a "freedman", or
leysingi, a member of an intermediary group between slaves and freemen. He still owed allegiance to his former master and had to vote according to his former master's wishes. It took at least two generations for freedmen to lose the allegiance to their former masters and become full freemen. If a freedman had no descendants, his former master inherited his land and property. While thralls and freedmen did not have much economic or political power in Scandinavia, they were still given a
wergeld, or a man's price: there was a monetary penalty for unlawfully killing a slave. Most of the thralls taken by the vikings were sold on the international slave market. Of those kept by Norse masters, male thralls were often tasked to tend to chattel and animals, to be fishermen or work in the forests; and female thralls cooked, milked cows (or in a minority of cases were kept as concubines); both male and female thralls can be assumed to work in agriculture and tend to the harder farm labor, such as constructing chattel fences. A
Bryte was a (normally male) thrall who was appointed trustee or governor of a farm owned by an absent landowner. A
Fostre (male) or
Fostra (female) was a privileged thrall, whose status has been interpreted as born and raised among the children of the owner rather than purchased; such thralls could only be legally sold in front of witnesses, they could marry free men or women and in that case their children would be born free; and male fostre could serve alongside free men in the
ledung. The Fostre or fostra could be appointed to serve as the bryte or governor of a farm for an absent owner, and even as the guardian of free child; in some county laws such as in
Västmanland, a widow could not remarry and settle in the home of her husband without appointing a male fostre or female fostra to manage the farm she inherited from her late husband. It was in the interest of the owner to keep their thralls physically healthy. Many masters gave their thralls an opportunity to buy their freedom with labor.
Erling Skjalgsson, for example, mandated a particular amount of work from his thralls, and let them keep the earnings of any additional work; he gave them land to cultivate their own crops to keep or sell, and gave each of his thralls a set worth and ransom, which made it possible for them to buy their freedom after a year or two, after having earned money enough to pay their price. On Iceland, slavery was allowed in the
Gray Goose Laws, which applied until 1270, but the law text
Kristinna laga þáttur from 1122-1133 is the last time slavery is mentioned to have existed, and no existing slaves are mentioned anywhere from the late 12th century. In Denmark, slavery was phased out during the 12th century, likely from economic reasons and influence from Christian anti-slavery rhetoric. Existing slaves were last mentioned in the will of Bishop Absalom from 1201, in which he manumitted a couple of his existing slaves, and in a letter between the Pope and Anders Suneson, which mention the slaves of Suneson; after the early 13th century however slaves were no longer mentioned in Denmark, and the law text Jyske lov from 1241 has no mention of any slavery in existence in Denmark. In Norway, slavery appears to have been phased out from the late 12th century onward, when existing law text dealt more with the status of former thralls than existing thralls, until no slavery was longer recognized to exist in the
Magnus Lagabøtes landslov of 1274. The reason for the end of slavery appears to have been: a change in economy, which made it more profitable for big landowners to rent their lands to free farmers than to work it themselves, in combination with the Christian anti slavery rhetoric against Christians having other Christians as slaves, which made it more difficult to acquire slaves, as they had to be non-Christian in a now almost totally Christian Europe. In Sweden, slavery was phased out during the course of the 13th century, banned in one county after another, and finally abolished in the last remaining county in 1335. ==See also==