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Judi Lynn

(162,815 posts)
Mon Feb 3, 2025, 01:06 AM Monday

Norway's Viking Societies Found to Be More Violent Than Denmark's

By
Abdul Moeed
January 31, 2025

Researchers have discovered that violence in Viking Age Norway was more common than in Denmark. This goes against what many previously thought.

The study, led by David Jacobson, a sociologist from the University of South Florida, found that people in Norway experienced more violence from others, not just from authorities. This conclusion comes from the higher number of injuries on skeletons and the large number of weapons found in Norway.

The research, published in the Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, reveals new insights into how life in Norway and Denmark differed during the Viking Age, especially in terms of violence and social structures.

Violence in Viking Age Norway and Denmark and differences
Jacobson is working with a team of experts from Norway and Germany to uncover the differences in violence between Viking Age Norway and Denmark.

This team used a mix of archaeology, sociology, and the study of skeletons and runestones—stones with ancient inscriptions—to explore how violence, social hierarchies, and authority shaped life in these regions.

More:
https://greekreporter.com/2025/01/31/norway-viking-societies-violence-denmark/

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Norway's Viking Societies Found to Be More Violent Than Denmark's (Original Post) Judi Lynn Monday OP
I remember reading about the "beserkers". CentralMass Monday #1
Had never heard this information. Completely interesting, makes sense! Judi Lynn Monday #2

CentralMass

(15,834 posts)
1. I remember reading about the "beserkers".
Mon Feb 3, 2025, 01:19 AM
Monday

Explainer
Who Were the Tripped-Out, Nearly Naked Berserkers?
And can we have what they were taking?
By Madison Margolin
March 4, 2024


Who were the Berserker warriors featured in Vikings: Valhalla? Madison Margolin, editorial director and co-founder of the psychedelics and mental health publication DoubleBlind, dives into the wild world of the bearskin-clad battlers.

Like ferocious, feral animals, a wild pack of Viking warriors would work themselves into crazed, rabid states before battle, wearing bearskin coverings and little else over their nearly naked bodies. Meet the Berserkers, the legendary warriors of the Viking era.

The etymology of the word berserk comes from the Old Norse berserkr, which means “raging warrior of superhuman strength.” The term is a combination of the words for ‘bear’ or ‘bare’ (which of these it is specifically is up for debate), and ‘shirt’ or ‘coat’ (serkr), and in the words of 9th-century poet Þorbjörn Hornklofi, “The Berserkers howled [and] gods were in their minds.”

Leo Suter as Harald Sigurdsson in Vikings: Valhalla
Bernard Walsh/Netflix
Indeed, some historians speculate that the frenzied, trancelike states that characterized the Berserkers’ savage behavior and consciousness were endowed to them by psychoactive plants native to the region.

While some theories posit that magic mushrooms in the form of Amanita muscaria, or fly agaric, were responsible for these “warrior shamans” going berserk, academics of today have dispelled this as myth, despite the region having damp, fertile ground where fungi can sprout. According to the Viking Museum in Stockholm, “If anything, fly agaric would have made them particularly worthless warriors, since the side-effects include drowsiness, vomiting, muscle spasms and numbness in arms and legs.”

Rather, it’s more likely that the Berserkers were getting high off henbane or alcohol, although there’s also evidence that cannabis (especially in the form of hemp) was present in the region. Belonging to a group of plants in the Solanaceae, or nightshade, family, black henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) was an important herb for Viking and Druid rituals and has been connected to witchcraft. It produces effects that are consistent with what’s been described in Old Norse literature about the Berserkers, according to ethnobotanist Karsten Fatur from the University of New Brunswick. Henbane has been used for medications and are known to cause psychoactive effects, not to mention delirious states, dissociation from reality, or dark and realistic hallucinations, according to Fatur. “I've heard many stories of people who take [black henbane] and wake up days later, not knowing what happened to them,” he says. “People tend to behave in strange ways, aggressively imitating animals.” Other physiological effects include swelling and reddening of the skin, widening of the pupils, teeth chattering, body chills or fever, lowered blood pressure, and pain relief, which could have been what enabled the Berserkers to continue brutally battling in the face of injury. "

https://www.netflix.com/tudum/articles/vikings-valhalla-who-are-berserkers-psychedelic-drugs

Judi Lynn

(162,815 posts)
2. Had never heard this information. Completely interesting, makes sense!
Mon Feb 3, 2025, 04:03 AM
Monday

It's real food for thought.

Thank you, CentralMass.

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