Våg Explained
A våg (plural våger)[1] or vog is an old Scandinavian unit of mass.
The standardized landsvåg, which was introduced in Norway with the new system of weights and measures in 1875, corresponded to three bismerpund, or 17.932kg (39.533lb).[2] The våg was used in Eastern Norway, Western Norway, and Northern Norway, but it varied in weight. Previously, it was often reckoned as 72 marks or approximately 18.52kg (40.83lb).[3] [4] In Sunnmøre the våg was equivalent to three lispund or about 8kg (18lb), but in Sunnhordland it was reckoned as three spann or 90 marks; that is, about 23.15kg (51.04lb).[4]
Further reading
- Språkrådet: Åtte potter rømme, fire merker smør - Om gammalt mål og gammal vekt I. Språknytt 4 (2006).
Notes and References
- http://ordbok.uib.no/perl/ordbok.cgi?OPP=v%C3%A5g&ant_bokmaal=5&ant_nynorsk=5&bokmaal=+&ordbok=bokmaal Språkrådet. Bokmålsordboka: våg.
- http://www.bjerknes.uib.no/artikler/nyheter/historisk-skattereduksjon-som-indikasjon-pa-klimaendringar Nesje, Atle. 2009. Historisk skattereduksjon som indikasjon på klimaendringar. Bjerknessenteret for klimaforskning.
- Richter-Hanssen, Einar. 2015. The History of the Norwegian–Spanish Salted Fish Trade. In: Knut Bjørn Lindkvist & Torbjørn Trondsen (eds), Nordic-Iberian Cod Value Chains: Explaining Salted Fish Trade Patterns, pp. 23–40. Heidelberg: Springer, p. 27.
- Brøndum-Nielsen, Johannes. 1936. Nordisk kultur. Stockholm: Bonnier, p. 107.