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[[File: Olav_Tryggvason_Trondheim.jpg|300px250px|thumbnail|left|State of Olav Tryggvason in Trondheim, Norway]]__NOTOC__
The Vikings are known today for being piratical raiders of Europe, capturing whatever goods they could, including people, in lighting raids and then returning to their homes in Scandinavia. Churches and monasteries were among their favorite targets because the structures were usually not very well protected yet they often held great amounts of gold and other treasures.
====Denmark and the First Christian Missions====
[[File: Europe_map_1092.png|300px250px|thumbnail|left| A Map Showing the Scandinavian Kingdoms in relation to the Rest of Europe in the Late Eleventh Century]]
Due to its proximity to the Holy Roman Empire and the rest of Europe, Denmark was the first of the Viking lands to accept Christianity. The Christianization of Denmark began when missionaries, such as Ansgar, began visiting the land in the early ninth century. Ansgar was a German monk who would later become the archbishop of Bremen. <ref> Rosendahl, Else. <i> The Vikings.</i> Translated by Susan M. Margeson and Kirsten Williams. (London: Penguin, 1998), p. 159 </ref>
===Christianity in Iceland, Greenland, and Sweden===
[[File: Viking_cross_Lund.jpg|300px250px|thumbnail|left|A Viking Age Crucifix from Lund, Sweden]]
Iceland was settled by explorers from Norway in the ninth century and although it was from that point forward part of Scandinavia, it was always unique in the northern lands. Iceland never had a king and its geographic distance meant that it was not introduced to Christianity until later. Once Iceland was introduced to the new religion, though, the people of the island quickly converted. The people of Iceland converted to Christianity in 1000, which was largely through the efforts of Olav Tryggvason. <ref> Rosendahl, p. 165</ref> The sagas offer an interesting anecdote that describes how Olav convinced one prominent Icelander to convert only after he promised him the material reward of his “friendship.”