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History of Feminism
Related: About this forumBetter Identification of Viking Corpses Reveals: Half of the Warriors Were Female
Shieldmaidens are not a myth! A recent archaeological discovery has shattered the stereotype of exclusively male Viking warriors sailing out to war while their long-suffering wives wait at home with baby Vikings. (We knew it! We always knew it.) Plus, some other findings are challenging that whole rape and pillage thing, too.
Researchers at the University of Western Australia decided to revamp the way they studied Viking remains. Previously, researchers had misidentified skeletons as male simply because they were buried with their swords and shields. (Female remains were identified by their oval brooches, and not much else.) By studying osteological signs of gender within the bones themselves, researchers discovered that approximately half of the remains were actually female warriors, given a proper burial with their weapons.
Its been so difficult for people to envision womens historical contributions as solely getting married and dying in childbirth, but you cant argue with numbersand fifty/fifty is pretty damn good. The presence of female warriors also has researchers now wondering just how accurate the stereotypes of raping and pillaging actually are:
Women may have accompanied male Vikings in those early invasions of England, in much greater numbers than scholars earlier supposed, (Researcher) McLeod concludes. Rather than the ravaging rovers of legend, the Vikings arrived as marriage-minded colonists.
In many ways, this discovery is well-timed with the recent uproar over Thor becoming a title for both sexes instead of an exclusively male name. Fingers crossed this means that pop culture could start including more female warriors than just Sif and Lagertha (from The History Channels Vikings, above). Just so long as theyre not wearing boob plate armor.
Researchers at the University of Western Australia decided to revamp the way they studied Viking remains. Previously, researchers had misidentified skeletons as male simply because they were buried with their swords and shields. (Female remains were identified by their oval brooches, and not much else.) By studying osteological signs of gender within the bones themselves, researchers discovered that approximately half of the remains were actually female warriors, given a proper burial with their weapons.
Its been so difficult for people to envision womens historical contributions as solely getting married and dying in childbirth, but you cant argue with numbersand fifty/fifty is pretty damn good. The presence of female warriors also has researchers now wondering just how accurate the stereotypes of raping and pillaging actually are:
Women may have accompanied male Vikings in those early invasions of England, in much greater numbers than scholars earlier supposed, (Researcher) McLeod concludes. Rather than the ravaging rovers of legend, the Vikings arrived as marriage-minded colonists.
In many ways, this discovery is well-timed with the recent uproar over Thor becoming a title for both sexes instead of an exclusively male name. Fingers crossed this means that pop culture could start including more female warriors than just Sif and Lagertha (from The History Channels Vikings, above). Just so long as theyre not wearing boob plate armor.
http://www.tor.com/blogs/2014/09/female-viking-warriors-proof-swords
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Better Identification of Viking Corpses Reveals: Half of the Warriors Were Female (Original Post)
ismnotwasm
Sep 2014
OP
their low draft ships could go up rivers so the Irish monks built round towers
roguevalley
Sep 2014
#5
BlueJazz
(25,348 posts)1. I'll bet that most of the women were named Skittles.
(I'm a dead man).
Skittles
(161,215 posts)3. well I *AM* half-Norwegian
awoke_in_2003
(34,582 posts)4. It is the lutefish...
that makes you such an ass kicker.
niyad
(121,590 posts)2. k and r and thank you for posting this.
roguevalley
(40,656 posts)5. their low draft ships could go up rivers so the Irish monks built round towers
that were their refuge when they came. They were very violent and destructive around the British Isles. Their favorite treatment of captured leaders of the opposition was the tie them to the groud, cut their chest open and lay their lungs and heart as they were still alive out like wings of a bird. it was called the blood eagle.
Shivering Jemmy
(900 posts)6. That story messed things up a bit...
The actual research cited states that more than half of Viking *settlers* were female. And that both male and female settlers were buried with weapons. The point of the study was to show that being buried with weapons is not a reliable indicator as to who is a warrior.
Long story short: Viking culture was about more that pillaging. Although that was part of it.