Viking warrior discovered
in Sweden was a woman, researchers confirm
The Independent
Swedish scientists have revealed that the
body of a Viking warrior long presumed to be male is, in fact, female. A team
of researchers from Stockholm University conducted a DNA analysis of the
skeleton and confirmed that it belonged to a woman. The 10th-century skeleton,
the researchers concluded, is the first confirmed female high-ranking Viking
warrior.
Scientists had long assumed that the skeleton
was male – despite early indications that she may have been female – largely
because of the status symbols buried alongside her.
Early archaeologists uncovered a sword, an
axe, a spear, armour-piercing arrows, a battle knife, two shields, and two
horses in the grave, signifying the buried individual’s status of as a
“professional warrior”. A set of gaming pieces found in the grave indicates the
individual’s “knowledge of tactics and strategy” and role as a high-ranking
officer, the scientists said.
Because of this – and because no such high-ranking female Viking has
been discovered before – most researchers assumed the body was male. When early
analyses indicated the body was female, some suggested that the objects buried
alongside her belonged to someone else.
“This type of reasoning takes away the agency of the buried female,” the
researchers write. “As long as the sex is male, the weaponry in the grave not
only belong to the interred but also reflects his status as warrior, whereas a
female sex has raised doubts.”
To quash those doubts, the researchers took a DNA sample from the
skeleton’s arm and tooth. The sample revealed a lack of Y chromosomes,
signalling that the individual was female. The scientists also noted that the
skeleton’s bones were “thin, slender and gracile” like a woman’s, further
supporting their conclusions.
The skeleton was first discovered in the 1880s in the Swedish town of
Birka. The city is located on the on the island of Björkö, and was an important
trading centre for Vikings. The area now contains more than 3,000 Viking
graves.
These latest findings, the researchers write, “provide a new
understanding of the Viking society, the social constructions and also norms in
the Viking Age.”
“Our results – that the high-status grave Bj 581 on Birka was the burial
of a high ranking female Viking warrior – suggest that women, indeed, were able
to be full members of male dominated spheres,” they conclude.
Great news - I now have historical evidence to support this army of Shadowforge female Vikings!
Good news...Wonderful (and sexy!) figures!
ReplyDeleteThanks Phil - these figures were a joy to paint - great detail made it simple to produce attractive female warriors - some 25 or 28mm females sculpts can be a bit on the ugly side but not these girls!
ReplyDelete