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Schoolchildren are to be taught that Vikings were "not all white" and some were Muslim, according to guidance from an educational charity urging tutors to abandon "Eurocentric" ideas.
The Brilliant Club has instructed tutors placed in schools to ditch traditional narratives in favour of a "decolonised" approach that moves subjects away from a Western focus.
A guide produced by the charity suggests abandoning the idea that Vikings were a "homogenous community of blonde Scandinavians".
Instead, tutors are told to consider teaching that Vikings were "a very diverse group of people" with "diverse religious beliefs".
Schoolchildren are to be taught that Vikings were 'not all white' and some were Muslim, according to guidance from an educational charity urging tutors to abandon 'Eurocentric' ideas
Getty
The guidance urges tutors to consider that "some Vikings became practising Muslims" due to Islamic goods being found in the graves of some Vikings, thought to have been attained by trade.
The charity states there is an "imperative to provide material to students that they can relate to and connect with".
The last large-scale study of Viking DNA, conducted by the University of Cambridge in 2020, suggested that diversity in Scandinavian genetics came from other parts of Europe and what is now Russia.
The guidance is intended to make lessons more "relatable" for pupils.
The Brilliant Club has instructed tutors placed in schools to ditch traditional narratives in favour of a "decolonised" approach that moves subjects away from a Western focus.
A guide produced by the charity suggests abandoning the idea that Vikings were a "homogenous community of blonde Scandinavians".
Instead, tutors are told to consider teaching that Vikings were "a very diverse group of people" with "diverse religious beliefs".

Schoolchildren are to be taught that Vikings were 'not all white' and some were Muslim, according to guidance from an educational charity urging tutors to abandon 'Eurocentric' ideas
Getty
The guidance urges tutors to consider that "some Vikings became practising Muslims" due to Islamic goods being found in the graves of some Vikings, thought to have been attained by trade.
The charity states there is an "imperative to provide material to students that they can relate to and connect with".
The last large-scale study of Viking DNA, conducted by the University of Cambridge in 2020, suggested that diversity in Scandinavian genetics came from other parts of Europe and what is now Russia.
The guidance is intended to make lessons more "relatable" for pupils.