"Vikings: Life and Legend", which opens tomorrow and runs until June 22, seeks to go beyond the stereotypical image of terrifying bearded axemen, raping and pillaging their way around Europe between the ninth and 11th centuries.
Their uncultivated reputation was certainly ingrained at the time, far beyond their Scandinavian homelands.
"They are the filthiest of God's creatures," wrote Arab diplomat Ahmad ibn Fadlan in 921.
"They do not clean themselves after urinating or defecating, nor do they wash after having sex. They do not wash their hands after meals. They are like wandering asses."
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The exhibition -- the museum's first on the Vikings in more than 30 years, costing USD 16.50 to enter -- shows how the Nordic warriors created an international network of trade, plunder and power spreading across four continents.
They generally treated their slaves well to maintain their market value. And when the exhibition finally turns to bones and remains, they belong to the Vikings and not to those they attacked.
"They were traders, they were craftsmen, they were explorers, they were many different things. An important part of the message we want to give people here is that this is a complex and multi-layered society."
Their shipbuilding and seafaring skill was at the heart of their culture and achievements and the centrepiece of the exhibition is the surviving timbers from the longest Viking warship ever found.
Discovered in a Danish fjord in 1997, the 37-metre long ship, since given the name Roskilde 6, dates back to around 1025 -- the high point of the Viking Age.