Wolin Slav and Viking Festival

PLACE
Wolin,
Poland
DATE
31 Jul, '26
02 Aug, '26
TYPE
Reenactment,
Slavic,
Viking
MORECLOSE
Location:
Timing:
All Day
Entry Fees:
22 $
Booking:
Not Needed
General Rules:
No Glass Objects
Photo Rules:
Free Access
No Drones
Date Proof:
Last update:
03 May, '26
General Rules:
- No Glass Objects
Photo Rules:
- Free Access
- No Drones

Intro

The Wolin Slav and Viking Festival is often praised as the biggest Viking-age historical reenactment in the world, held annually in a reconstructed historical village in Poland. The event takes place on the presumed site of Jomsborg, the legendary Viking stronghold, where over 2,000 participants live in authentic timber huts and canvas tents to recreate the 10th-century coexistence of Norsemen and Baltic Slavs. They do that by strictly following period-accurate lifestyles, cooking over open fires, and wearing hand-stitched linen and wool garments. These reenactors intentionally avoid all modern technology to maintain a total immersion in the medieval atmosphere for both themselves and the public.

Google Maps location of the main event activities can be found here.

Event Highlights

The main attraction is the massive, full-contact battle featuring hundreds of warriors clashing with steel weapons and wooden shields in an unchoreographed fight for dominance. Visitors can also explore a large market of traditional crafts - such as iron smelting, bone carving, and amber working - or board functional replicas of Viking longships and Slavic boats docked at the riverbank. The air is thick with the smell of woodsmoke and roasting meat as the village operates as a fully functional medieval community.

Event Chronology

Since the daily program is largely identical across the three days, visitors can witness the same core activities each morning through evening. The schedule starts with craft demonstrations within the village, followed by midday tribal rituals and ship maneuvers on the Dziwna River, peaking with the "Battle of the Legions" in the afternoon. Each day concludes with historical folk music and participants gathering around campfires for shared feasts and storytelling.