Re: Female Viking Warriors
Interesting to have it confirmed.
I always assumed they had female warriors anyhow. The pre-christian germanic cultures have too many 'shield maidens' as opposed to damsels in distress that I'd have no doubt that there'd be woman warriors as well. Myths tend to say more about the society them come from and their ideals. Boudicca though of a different culture and time is a good example of a celtic warrior woman, it'd be no stretch to assume the the germanic/scandinavian warrior cultures had the same prior to adopting Christianity.
Don't forget that Freyja was also a goddess of war and received half the dead of battles. The other half went to Valhalla.
I've never thought it as prolific as portrayed in TV dramatizations such as 'Vikings' and 'The Last Kingdom' do.
Re: Female Viking Warriors
There's always Freydis in Grænlendinga saga. But - nice!
Re: Female Viking Warriors
The article is misleading, nothing has been confirmed and it is actually more probable that the woman in the tomb had nothing to do with fighting.
Only thing proved is that a skeleton, of fragile health and with no combat wounds, that may have been buried with weapons belonged to a malnourished woman.
Imo, the results have been exaggerated in a very unscientific manner, in order to attract donators and publicity.
https://www.academia.edu/30959621/Pe...al_Perspective
All credit goes to sumskilz and MMFA in TWC.
Re: Female Viking Warriors
Quote:
Originally Posted by
spmetla
Interesting to have it confirmed.
I always assumed they had female warriors anyhow. The pre-christian germanic cultures have too many 'shield maidens' as opposed to damsels in distress that I'd have no doubt that there'd be woman warriors as well. Myths tend to say more about the society them come from and their ideals. Boudicca though of a different culture and time is a good example of a celtic warrior woman, it'd be no stretch to assume the the germanic/scandinavian warrior cultures had the same prior to adopting Christianity.
Don't forget that Freyja was also a goddess of war and received half the dead of battles. The other half went to Valhalla.
I've never thought it as prolific as portrayed in TV dramatizations such as 'Vikings' and 'The Last Kingdom' do.
Probably not as common as some media portrayals, but I would not be surprised if they had some. I would have to read it again, but I have read "Egil's Saga" (I was given the book The Sagas of Icelanders several years ago) and don't remember anything about female warriors in it, so it was probably not the norm. Much of the Saga takes place outside of Iceland, and much is in Scandinavia. Also, outside of the deities, there is not much mention of them in the Prose Edda. Then again, maybe the other Sagas mention them, I have only read the first.
Good points, though, guys about the roles of the females in Norse mythology and their part with battles, especially Freyja. My question is, what does Freyja want with them? Is she creating her own army? Aha! She is planning on seizing power after Odin's army gets destroyed and he killed at Ragnarok!
Re: Female Viking Warriors
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Vincent Butler
Probably not as common as some media portrayals, but I would not be surprised if they had some. I would have to read it again, but I have read "Egil's Saga" (I was given the book The Sagas of Icelanders several years ago) and don't remember anything about female warriors in it, so it was probably not the norm. Much of the Saga takes place outside of Iceland, and much is in Scandinavia. Also, outside of the deities, there is not much mention of them in the Prose Edda. Then again, maybe the other Sagas mention them, I have only read the first.
As I've pointed out, read Grænlendinga Saga and see about Freydis. But any female warriors were the exception rather than the norm in any case.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vincent Butler
Good points, though, guys about the roles of the females in Norse mythology and their part with battles, especially Freyja. My question is, what does Freyja want with them? Is she creating her own army? Aha! She is planning on seizing power after Odin's army gets destroyed and he killed at Ragnarok!
Suggested reading (;)).
Re: Female Viking Warriors
Re: Female Viking Warriors
A critical approach to methodology is important, but more important I think is acknowledging that in archaeology as in textual analysis when we are reconstructing something, whether physical artifact or anthropological projection, we are not learning anything new. Rather, we are applying existing or available knowledge to a coherent picture of the subject. These pictures therefore aren't very stable and we are better off entertaining multiple coherent applicable interpretations simultaneously.
So while competing interpretations and models are available and encouraged, keep in mind that it is difficult to think of an archaeological arrangement that could definitively prove the existence of female warriors or inform us on their exact roles and relations, even as there is no possible arrangement that allows us to reject their existence.