Thank you, Iceflower
This picture is interesting:
http://www.billedbladet.dk/Kongelige/Artic...be%20-%205.aspx
Her dress indentify her as an umarried girl from the Viking Age.
Married women wore head scarfs as a sign of their status and often keys, while unmarried girls flaunted their hair.
The semi-long sleeves is no coincidence either. Bare forearms were sexy.
ADDED:
A little more on Ribe.
Ribe were among the three major (known) trading centres in Scandinavia in the biginning of the Viking age. Hedeby and Birka being the two others.
If you look at a map, you see that Ribe is located some distance inland. Very simple because it was more practical and safe to place Ribe away from the coast and bad weather and not least raiders. The main threath came from the sea not land.
So Ribe was placed next to a small river, where the ships could be safe from the weather.
The interesting thing is that Ribe may not initially have been placed where it is now, it may very well have moved according to changes in the coastline.
Anyway, it was from Ribe you traded with the west and sometimes official raids would have been launched or at least financed from here. As such it would have been one of the most important town in Denmark at the time and the king would often have been here. Including King Canute (Knud), (you know, he who tried to command the waves and thus making a point) who ruled over what could have become a big northern European empire.
Centuries passed, the central government in the shape of the king became more powerful and more towns sprung up all over the country and by 11-1200's larger ships combined with increased competition from the emerging Hansa Leaque and other towns in Denmark, meant that Ribe wasn't located so well anymore. Ships now sailed to Aalborg, Århus, Skanderborg, Copenhagen or Randers from where they could sail further into the Baltic or offload goods and take on goods from the Baltic. The road system in DK was hardly worth writing home about and Ribe was left behind.
Nowadays, Ribe is a small charming medieval town, with narrow cobbled streets and centuries old houses with a cathedral as the natural centre. In the tourist season a night-watchman walk the streets carrying a lantern and a murderous looking morning star on a pole. When the clock strikes at the cathedral he sings that the time is say eleven and that all is well and hoping that God may preserve the peace and Ribe. - Just like his predecessors did 150 years ago.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_eGroqPGYw0...feature=related
ADDED AGAIN:
There is a gallery from JyskeVestkysten
http://www.jv.dk/artikel/924612:Esbjerg--S...?image=26#image
Here from the Viking Centre.
Notice the bow, it's similar in construction and style as the much more famous English longbow, albeit smaller. The Vikings certainly did not consider the use of a bow as being beneath their dignity, on the contrary, they regarded it as a very practical weapon. Not least for fighting onboard ships, which happened very often.
http://www.jv.dk/artikel/924612:Esbjerg--S...?image=29#image
Notice the woman on the left. She is married, even though she is nor wearing a headscarf. Wearing an apron with her hair tied up and all the bags and what not that signifies a busy housewife. And not least long sleeves as befits a decent, mature woman who deserve respect due to her status. The flirtatous days of her youth are over.
Women were not subserviant to their husbands as they were in the later Christian age. The wife ran the household with a firm hand! She would be in charge of the farm, when her husband was away, going Viking or whatever he was doing, that included any free male on the farm, with the exception of very close relatives of her husband. (There were always some men around, just in case). She naturally knew how to use a weapon, the concept of shieldmaidens was neither a myth nor a Joke. And as she was the one staying at home, she had the key to the money chest.
This picture is also very interesting:
http://www.jv.dk/artikel/924612:Esbjerg--S...?image=30#image
The children are dressed up as people were around the Reformation (1530's). Notice the halbards carried by the boys, "bysvende" as they would have been called back then. Townspeople were not eligable to be drafted into the army, instead they were required to defend their town. Bysvende were either citizens who took turn policing the town, or more often young men, who apart from their dayjob also patrolled the city at night - and they had plenty to do! Drunkeness and brawls were very common. Life back then was much more violent than you may think.