6 Reasons To Be Excited About Vikings Series 2

Vikings Vikings With second series landing a generally warm reception from audiences and critics alike as well as three Emmy award nominations, there€™s every reason to be excited about the second series of Vikings. That€™s Vikings as in the History Channel€™s recent nine part show about the impressively named Ragnar Lodbrok and his community. Not the historical raiders who terrorised medieval Europe. No one needs a reason to be excited about those vikings. They€™re already awesome. But in case you need further encouragement, here are five reasons you should be watching the second season when it airs next year.

6. For The History Channel, The History Is Actually Pretty Good

Vikings History I€™ll admit, when I heard that Vikings being produced by the same channel responsible for a dramatisation of the Bible (a dramatisation which apparently included angels who a) wore leather kilts and b) were ninjas) I was skeptical. But the historical bits were surprisingly well handled. For one thing, there wasn€™t a horned helmet in sight and the only character who got kidnapped was one rather unimpressive monk. Better still not only did they get the right location for the first viking raid in Britain (the monastery on Lindisfarne, an island on the North East coast of Britain) but it actually looks like the North of Britain, not what American studios tend to assume the British countryside looks like. When the main character starts having visions involving ravens and seeing a one-eyed man in a broad brimmed hat looking mysterious in the background the script just kind of expects you to think €œravens, one eye, must be Odin.€ Vikings is based on Ragnar Lodbrok, a semi-mythological figure from the Icelandic sagas. A word of warning though: don€™t go looking him up unless you€™re prepared to have the next season€™s plot points spoiled. To make matters worse you€™re unlikely to get much sympathy, seeing as the saga was originally written in the 13th century.
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Kate Taylor has a BA in English Literature and Creative Writing and an MRes in Creative Writing. Her nonfiction, reviews and other articles have appeared on Cuckoo Review and Mookychick as well as WhatCulture. Her fiction has been published in Luna Station Quarterly, Eternal Haunted Summer and in anthologies by Paizo and Northumbria University Press. She is 23 and lives in the North of England.