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NewsAugust 27, 2019

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — It’s safe to cross when the green Viking is walking, but stop when the red one is standing. That’s the message to pedestrians in Aarhus as it unveils new crossing signals to celebrate the history of Denmark’s second largest city. ...

Associated Press
Moesgaard Museum director Mads Kohler Holst replaces the first of many pedestrian signals for Viking signals Monday in Aarhus, Denmark. The red and green Viking inspired signs have been chosen to symbolise Aarhus's special Viking history.
Moesgaard Museum director Mads Kohler Holst replaces the first of many pedestrian signals for Viking signals Monday in Aarhus, Denmark. The red and green Viking inspired signs have been chosen to symbolise Aarhus's special Viking history.Henning Bagger ~ Ritzau Scanpix via AP

COPENHAGEN, Denmark — It’s safe to cross when the green Viking is walking, but stop when the red one is standing. That’s the message to pedestrians in Aarhus as it unveils new crossing signals to celebrate the history of Denmark’s second largest city.

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City council member Buenyamin Simsek, in charge of technical matters, on Monday unveiled the first of 17 traffic signals featuring Vikings holding axes and shields, but no horned helmets — there is no evidence Viking helmets really did have horns.

The lights will form a circle around downtown Aarhus, which was founded by the Vikings in the eighth century and became a bustling harbor city.

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