I hope you
were as excited as I was to start Season 3 of Vikings on the History channel,
and to follow the adventures of real-life Norwegian warrior Ragnar Lodbrok, the
former farmer now king.
Nearly as curious
as they were ruthless, the ancient Norse revered nature, minted no currency of
their own, allowed their women to fight and divorce their husbands, and believed
in the afterlife. The series is rich in pagan lore and symbolism. Here are some
of my favorites.
1.
Ravens and Odin. Ravens appear everywhere,
starting with the opening credits. The Norse God Odin has two named Huginn and
Muninn, meaning “thought” and “memory.” When ravens descend on a battlefield to
pick at the bodies of the slain, it represents Odin’s acceptance of the blood
sacrifice he’s been offered. The ravens were also his messenger, travelling the
earth during the day and returning to him at night to tell him of the deeds of
man.
When it comes
to worshipping Odin, there’s no better Viking than Ragnar, who feels a very
personal connection with the god. “Odin sacrificed an eye to look into the well
of knowledge, so I thought Ragnar should have the same impulses,” says series
creator Michael Hirst. Embracing “new” technology—sundials—Ragnar leads his
seafarers west for the first time and becomes intrigued with a captive monk.
Says Hirst, “He’s not just going on raids to plunder and steal and kill. Ragnar’s
actually curious about the world.” Ragnar also embraced the raven by
incorporating the image into his armor last season.
The gods have
been featured in many episodes of Vikings, in different forms. In the season
one episode “Sacrifice,” one of my favorites, we see Odin, his son Thor and the
god Greyr as three towering monuments inside the temple at Uppsale. Ragnar asks
Odin who will bear him a son, since it appears Lagertha cannot. Soon after he
meets the princess Aslaug. She gives him sons, but Ragnar’s troubles have just begun.
And by the
way, what’s up with Ragnar’s buzzcut-meets-braid hair? Is it true to Viking
tradition? “I was dreading the usual long hair biker look, but didn’t know how
we would escape it,” Hirst says. The solution came when star Travis Fimmel
showed up in a crew cut to begin filming. “He hadn’t grown his hair long enough
to have extensions so we couldn’t have orthodox long hair,” Hirst recalls.
Enter costume designer Joan Bergin. Joan said, “Leave it up to me. I’ll come up
with a look.”
So, is it
historically accurate? Maybe not. Researchers hypothesize Vikings may have
shaved their heads as a health precaution to prevent lice. What few records
exist report the back of the head was shaven and the front fringe left long.
Ragnar’s son Bjorn and many other characters of the series have haircuts closer
to the Norman tradition. But, hey, Ragnar has to have a signature look.
2.
Loki. Hirst sees the mythic Loki as “a
kind of serious mischief-maker.” To embody that spirit, he created the clever
but unstable shipbuilder Floki (Fustaf Skarsgard). The character also
represents Heimdall, a deity with gold teeth. His treasured possession is
Gjallarhorn, which will be blown at the onset of Ragnarok, the battle that ends
the world. Floki is indeed pictured with a horn, even though it is a drinking
horn. We learned at the end of season two how dangerous he can be. Hirst says
more strange dark things are ahead for this character.
3. Visions and Prophecy. Everybody
believes in prophecies in this world. The Seer (actor John Kavanagh) and his
visions are as integral in the show as prophecies were in Viking culture. The Vikings believed their fate was set
initially at birth, and that the Norns who lived under the tree of life would
spin the details of their fates every day.
Ragnar’s
second wife Aslaug tells him she is a volva, a female seer. She proved she was the
daughter of Sigurd, a famous volva who had killed the serpent Farnir by
prophesying her child would be born with the image of that serpent in its eye.
When the child is born with a malformed pupil, it was named Sigurd
snake-in-eye. Next, she predicts that if Ragnar forces himself on her, their second
child will be born cursed and we see that with Ivar the
Boneless, born with malformed legs.
This
type of magic was considered female domain. The woman of the house acted as
priestess, to prophesize, to weave spells in the threads of her family’s
clothes, and to concoct herbal remedies. Most Viking men, even the gods,
consulted a volva rather than trying to divine the future themselves. This is
what Odin does when he resurrects a long-dead volva from her grave in the poem Baldrs draumar. The seer predicts the death
of his own son.
In
Viking society if something terrible or really interesting is going to happen,
people have simultaneous dreams about it. In the first episode in season three,
Aslaug, Siggy and Helga have identical dreams of a stranger arriving in Kattegat
with blood dripping from his hands. When he arrives, he's an extremely
mysterious, slightly Rasputin figure who does wonderful things for Aslaug in
terms of her crippled son Ivar, but the other two women are afraid. Since the name Harbard is another name for
Odin, it will be interesting to see what Vikings has in store for us in Season
three.
I will
delve into Viking lore more next time with the mythology of swords, the
Valkyries, dragons and talking skulls.
Until
then, if you’d like to read Norse history and mythology, here are some suggested
books:
The Norse Myths by Kevin Crossley-Holland - Here are
thirty-two classic myths that bring the Viking world vividly to life.
The D’Aulaires Book of Norse Myths – retellings of the Norse tales and
descriptions of the gods and their world. For children ages 5-10.
Wolfsangel by MD Lachlan - Viking raiders kidnap two infant
brothers from a village. Clever Vali is groomed to be Viking king Authun's
heir, while Feileg is raised ferally as Gullveig's werewolf protector as she
schemes against the god Odin. I particularly like the way
the magic is portrayed in traditional Norse Shamanic tradition.
The Whale Road by Robert Low - Charts
the adventures of a band of Vikings on the chase for the secret hoard of Attila
the Hun.
Odd and the
Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman - In this inventive, short, yet perfectly
formed novel inspired by traditional Norse mythology, Neil Gaiman takes readers
on a wild and magical trip to the land of giants and gods and back.
Last Light
of the Sun by Guy Gavriel Key - Wonderfully imaginative historical fantasy. Seemingly
random deeds connect Viking raiders and English and Welsh princes: If only Bern
Thorkellson hadn't stolen that horse in a desperate act of vengeance against
his sorry fate; if only Dai ab Owyn hadn't stepped outside the safety of
Brynfell right at the moment when the Erlings attacked; if only Ivarr Ragnarson
hadn't been born ill-formed and downright cruel; if only Aeldred hadn't been
king of the Anglcyn; if only Thorkell Einarson had murdered only one man and
not the second; if only Alun ab Owyn hadn't stepped into that pool on a
moonless night and seen the Queen of the Elves in procession.
The Hammer and the Cross by Harry Harrison & John Holm - Born
the bastard son of an English thane, Shef goes on to lead the Viking army
originally belonging to the sons of Ragnar Loðbrokkr, rising in rank from a
thrall (slave) to carl (freeman) and ultimately emerging as a jarl (nobleman).
Sandy moved to Arizona 17 years
ago and fell in love with the southwest desert, including its Native American
influences. After a trip to Sedona, the germ of a novel was born.
“I love to take ordinary
characters and put them in extraordinary situations that change their view of
the world.”
Her first novel, Song of the Ancients, introduces
witchcraft and shamanism seen through the eyes of an ordinary woman. Readers interested in witchcraft—or just a
dark, eerie tale—will enjoy this paranormal suspense, written by a real-life
Wiccan High Priestess.
Winner of the Pacific Northwest (fantasy)
, On the Far Side (paranormal) and
Orange Rose (paranormal romance) contests, Song of the Ancients will be
published in May 2015.
1 comment:
Thank you for sharing! Vikings is one of my favorite shows! It is very intriguing and definitely keeps me guessing. I love the rawness of the people. :)
Thank you for sharing.
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