Female Viking Warriors in History: Legendary Valkyries Shield Maidens

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  • čas přidán 14. 07. 2024
  • From the sagas, the most famous type of female Viking warrior was the shield maiden who took up arms and fought side by side in battle with the men. Mirroring them in the spiritual world is the Valkyries (whose name literally means choosers of the slain). The Valkyries were supernatural warrior women that chose half the dead from battlefields and took them to Odin’s afterlife realm of Valhalla, with the goddess Freyja, who presided over another afterlife realm known as Fólkvangr, taking the other half to her great hall.
    Although the common belief is that there were no female Viking warriors, there are many other burials of women from the Viking Age who were accompanied in the afterlife with weapons and other characteristically Viking warrior burial goods. One of the most famous warrior women is the Valkyrie Brynhild who supported the wrong hero in a contest overseen by Odin, and so was made mortal and imprisoned in a castle surrounded by a ring of fire. The most famous shield maiden, not a goddess or Valkyrie, is Lagertha, and not because of her importance in the sagas (she only features in one chapter from Saxo Grammaticus’ Gesta Danorum or History of the Danes), but from the modern TV series Vikings in which she is portrayed by Kathryn Winnick.
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    - CHAPTERS -
    0:00​ Introduction
    0:54 Women in the Viking Age
    4:24 Goddesses and Valkyries: Supernatural Women
    8:48 Shield Maidens and Historical Women
    11:40 Outro
    - WANT TO KNOW MORE? -
    Women in the Viking Age www.worldhistory.org/article/...
    Ten Legendary Female Viking Warriors www.worldhistory.org/article/...
    Lagertha www.worldhistory.org/Lagertha/
    Valkyrie www.worldhistory.org/Valkyrie/
    Norse Mythology www.worldhistory.org/Norse_My...
    Interview: The Real Valkyrie: The Hidden History of Viking Warrior Women by Nancy Marie Brown www.worldhistory.org/article/...
    - WATCH NEXT -
    History of the Vikings: Norse Culture, Religion, Seafaring and Famous Warriors • History of the Vikings...
    Women and Valkyrie in the Viking Age, Interview with Nancy Marie Brown • Women and Valkyrie in ...
    Norse Mythology: an Introduction to the Norse Gods, Goddesses, Myths and Legends • Norse Mythology: an In...
    Bjorn Ironside: the Legendary Viking Warrior From the Historical Sagas • Bjorn Ironside: the Le...
    - ATTRIBUTIONS -
    You can find all attribution and credits for images, animations, graphics and music here - worldhistory.typehut.com/fema...
    The music used in this recording is the intellectual copyright of Michael Levy, a prolific composer for the recreated lyres of antiquity, and used with the creator's permission. Michael Levy's music is available to stream at all the major digital music platforms. Find out more on:
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    open.spotify.com/artist/7Dx2v...
    / @michaellevymusic
    - THUMBNAIL IMAGE -
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    Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein-Stub (1783-1816)
    Public Domain US / faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain
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    Oslo rådhus / Oslo City Hall
    CC BY-NC 2.0 - creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    World History Encyclopedia
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    #femalevikings #valkyries #shieldmaiden

Komentáře • 51

  • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia

    Do you think that Viking women primarily stayed at home? Or do you think that female Viking warriors were more common than we have been led to believe? Let us know what you think!

    • @sallypettet8929
      @sallypettet8929 Před 2 lety

      Of course,there were FEMALE viking warriors!!!....male misconceptions try to blot them out!Thank you for correcting this. p.s. I've read Nancy Marie Brown's book "The Real Valkyries"

    • @shannonericksen1291
      @shannonericksen1291 Před 2 lety

      The females were bad ass! My husband’s ancestor is Leif Erikson. His grandfather being the first to move to America. Even the women who stayed home had to be strong fighters

    • @danlutt3635
      @danlutt3635 Před 2 lety

      Great video! I don’t often comment but I love history, and especially Norse/Celtic history and ancient stuff, a rubbing theme in those instances at least is always a strong female role in society, culture, worship, all kinds of things. Ancient Egyptians had many depictions of the uterus and even female pharaohs, I think people forget that we truly have put women into an unsubstantial position in relation to their ability. It’s a case by case basis, sure, but the same can be said about men or any group of people. I love stories about incredible historical women, and shield maidens by far have to be the coolest account haha

    • @tanaos4825
      @tanaos4825 Před rokem +3

      I don't think there were female norse warriors. We know there were no female soldiers in greek or roman armies and there is no reason to assume it was very different a couple centuries later. Weapons in burials don't necessarily mean the person was actually a real warrior as there are also weapons in children's burials and I don't think we should view those as child soldiers either.

    • @veronicajensen7690
      @veronicajensen7690 Před 2 měsíci

      it's not about thinking because we know for sure women primarily stayed at home unless the whole family were settling in another country, the question is were they any female warriors at all? there are only 1 source from the Viking age who write about women in modern Sweden were wearing men's clothing and being trained for battle, but no woman who have been in battle have been found at all, the few females buried with weapons have not actually been in a battle, they may just have been buried with weapons to show status, we simply don't know all we know is that the skeletons show no signs of battle or of often using weapons

  • @PatienceWithAnimals-be6uc
    @PatienceWithAnimals-be6uc Před 7 měsíci +6

    I think that everyone back in that time, having to survive in such harsh conditions, and especially the Viking culture, they were tougher in every possible aspect. Also more connected to the natural world. It ticks me off reading the comments that scoff about female Vikings being involved in anything other than producing children and taking care of the home. Lol. It is ridiculous. I cannot even imagine how tough people in general had to be back then in every possible way in order to survive. I really enjoyed your video and am subscribing for more content! Thank you :)

    • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia
      @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia  Před 7 měsíci

      We agree! They were very different times and people had to adapt to their environment. Thanks for watching! 🙂

  • @acokedupmonkey3762
    @acokedupmonkey3762 Před rokem +4

    Glad I found this page. Excellent video!

  • @stevenbrown9275
    @stevenbrown9275 Před 2 lety +4

    Another excellent video. Thanks for posting.

  • @kaushiksheshnagraj7176
    @kaushiksheshnagraj7176 Před 2 lety +4

    Wow I like your content. Editing and narrating make your channel my favorite. Your work should be admired . You are deserve more subscriber I hope you must gain 1 Million subscriber by the end of this year. Please keep continue this type of amazing work. Your admirable hard work and deep research make you the best channel on CZcams. I get much knowledge than school from your videos. The content of your video is fantastic. But can you please make a video on skanderbeg please.

  • @stellank450
    @stellank450 Před rokem

    Thank you for this video. I dedicate some time to famous women, genesis consequences like witchhunt etc. on my site. You gave me more knowledge!

  • @philcrawford7760
    @philcrawford7760 Před rokem +2

    Keep up the good work 🙂

  • @monalisapatra5324
    @monalisapatra5324 Před 2 lety +4

    Again marvellous 👍👍👍

  • @scottish785
    @scottish785 Před 2 lety +2

    Point of error. He had a son Fridleif and 2 daughters with Lagertha From the book The nine books of the Danish history of Saxo Grammaticus page 543 of the English translation dated 1905.

  • @NordicSami
    @NordicSami Před 6 měsíci +1

    Lagertha was of barbarian descent, and I do believe there were a lot more female warriors than believed, simply due to necessity.

  • @BLuddenify
    @BLuddenify Před 5 měsíci +3

    What makes you think that only the woman who went a viking fought, the house and property slaves and children had to be defended while he was off a viking. It's not like raiding in the home land would suddenly stop just because the man was off a viking. With DNA tech they have discovered several viking warriors tombs that hold females, and were misidentified because of social biased, believing Viking women had the same stupid limitations the rest of European women did. Some Anthropologists/ historians think it posable that as much as 10% of their fighting force may have been female. Not a lot but far more than the rest of Europe.

  • @user-kb4od4fg5s
    @user-kb4od4fg5s Před 6 měsíci

    Ofcourse im ambitious!

  • @philcrawford7760
    @philcrawford7760 Před rokem +3

    I believe they were real.

  • @omarmaxwell2319
    @omarmaxwell2319 Před 2 lety +2

    I think they were fighters

  • @veronicajensen7690
    @veronicajensen7690 Před 2 měsíci

    the women found in Viking graves with weapons don't have any signs of ever have been in a fight or even used weapons, such thing is shown in the bones because as muscles are being build the bones change we don't know if the Shield Maidens are a myth as the Sagas are written hundreds of years after the Viking age by Christians, there are another source from the Viking age describing women in Sweden being trained in battle but as mentioned no remains of a woman who actually have been in battle was found, in general women made clothes and other things to use, wear or sell and they were keeping the farm, they did however come along on the ships when they were going to settle in other countries, until we find a female skeleton who have been in battle we really don't know for sure, I personally think it female warriors were a thing we would have more sources from the time as English Monks and Islamic sources certainly would have written about it, because they were quite critical of Vikings and women warriors would be something they would be critical of, and with the many hundreds of graves and very fem females none with signs of battle there really is no proof

  • @Nattens767
    @Nattens767 Před 2 lety +12

    I am Norwegian (born and bred), well vested in my people's history and mythology, am personally acquainted with archeologists, some of whom live here in Bergen, and to this very day, there hasn't been ANY archeological evidence whatsoever to confirm that female warriors of us Norse folk existed. Yes, it IS highly likely that many capable women were taught/learned to fight because they were the primary caretakers of the farmlands and children, and being it was an age of barbarism, there was a constant daily potential or real threat from neighbouring tribes and villagers all caught in a time where the climate wasn't exactly favourable for crops. That's actually one of the reasons why the men went "a Viking", to find habitable lands where they could grow crops and have livestock in better suited climates. This also explains why there have been graves found with female skeletons buried with weapons.
    Shield maidens? They were simply just that, women who were there on standby to give men training in combat extra shields if one was destroyed. Women in Norse culture were highly valued for reproduction, you know, to keep the bloodline and population efficient and present. It's true they were equal to men in terms of traditions and laws in Norse culture, and had as much as say in the way their village was operated. However, when it came to boarding ships to sail beyond their lands, it was strictly forbidden for women to be included for reasons already explained. That and the fact that most of them wouldn't have been able to fight as well as the men did, and that there isn't some chauvinistic view, but rather a fact of biology and natural law. I am aware that due to the success of the TV series "Vikings", a lot of assumptions have been made, especially by modern feminists, but it's all wishful thinking, nothing more.

    • @tazzahmed511
      @tazzahmed511 Před 2 lety +4

      Hatts off to you!! Absolutely nailed it!🙏👏 How much more REAL can "they" ask for?! When we've got living proof as your self. Who's well versed in your ancestral land of history!! It's as if these "modern feminists" trying to change the laws of physics, and core fundamental principles of the universe. Like you said: Wishful thinking!! 🤪👈

    • @Nattens767
      @Nattens767 Před 2 lety +3

      @@tazzahmed511 Thanks and it's quite easy to put it in perspective. You simply consider the battles these people got into back then, big men with axes, shields, swords and knives, the average warrior being around 160 to well over 200 lbs. plus the weight from their armour, there is NO way a woman of any size back then could have held her own against just ONE of them. They'd have been slaughtered. It sounds sexist to some, but we're talking biology here, and most men for all intents and purposes are far stronger and more adept for fighting than women. This has actually been proven time and again with re enactments, and even in martial arts. I'm a fit 46 year old Norwegian man who's 6'4" and 231 lbs. with 41 years martial arts training (jeet kune do, Muay Thai, and Arnis), and most women I know including my longtime girlfriend ain't gonna be putting me on my ass anytime soon. That's not machismo; that's fact.
      And so you think of how most Norsemen back then were either my size or a bit shorter but still well trained in combat, even the small guys would outmatch most women. It's a law of nature that most species besides our own where the males are the ones who are the fighters. Hunter gatherers, and this obviously applies to several cultures besides my own. Hell, I train my country's military in hand to hand combat three times a year, and while it is true there's women in our military who are quite good in self defense, so far, none of them have been able to best our male soldiers in up close personal combat. I have seen it firsthand, and so I can confirm. And we both know where this lunacy is coming from: modern feminism which has indoctrinated a lot of women into believing they can do anything a man can do when this is absolutely false.
      Just like there's things women are more adept to than most men, and the problem with said indoctrination is it has them acting on emotion instead of thought. It's got them believing in things which are untrue, easily refuted, and outright absurd. And people who point these things out, male of female, they get called sexist by some people all because they can't handle facts. The laws of nature do not adhere to feminist thought or not even misogynistic thought. Each of us is equipped differently, and both genders need each other in terms of survival. I obviously do not hate women at all, but I'm more than willing to call out things which are clearly unfounded and even laughable for BOTH genders. In this case, this fanciful notion that there were women standing side by side with Viking men on the battlefield. It looks good and works well in fantasy, but it's not a possibility in reality - then or now.

    • @tazzahmed511
      @tazzahmed511 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Nattens767 Amen brother!!!🙏

    • @candicefrost4561
      @candicefrost4561 Před 2 lety +6

      Many women were actually far more physically strong back then than what we expect as the default today. Were half of all women warriors? Certainly not; the evidence found was only from one small group. But just because it was less common does not mean it never happened- just like how people who were transgender, gay, etc existed even if it’s not as common. If it was celebrated in the culture and there were warriors’ burials given to literal females…is it really crazy to think this might have been a few of them? Really? Is it that hard for you to believe or do you just hate “modern feminism” because it messes with your little Viking masculine power fantasy 😂
      Also, women were not just “valued for reproduction”, but for their invaluable creative labor in textiles (which is especially important when you need to stay warm), doing math and household planning (funny how there are “smart guys” who say math is inherently something the “logical” male is good at), and keeping the family together.

    • @Nattens767
      @Nattens767 Před 2 lety

      @@candicefrost4561 It took only reading the first sentence before deciding to not go any further given it's obvious you're another fantasy chaser looking for what never happened. You lot just can't let it sink in that what you wish was or is wasn't or isn't - and vise versa. I didn't bother with whatever it is you had to say, so take your wishful thinking elsewhere.

  • @tazzahmed511
    @tazzahmed511 Před 2 lety +5

    Don't misinterpret fairy tales into actual history! 🤣🤣🤪👈

  • @orbitalgordo1568
    @orbitalgordo1568 Před měsícem

    Absolutely ridiculous,
    Stop spreading a false
    Narrative

  • @parmesanzero7678
    @parmesanzero7678 Před 7 měsíci +1

    > shook the world in 2017
    No. We already knew about the women who were Norse warriors.

  • @michaelcohn2585
    @michaelcohn2585 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I thought their existence was up for debate. There are no historical accounts only myths. Most of the other warriors have real versions of the fictional person. Shield maiden are similar to the gods of that age. A wish but not a reality

    • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia
      @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia  Před 9 měsíci +1

      There will always be some debate, but archaeological evidence does prove that they did exist. How many there were or how widespread they were is another question. Thanks for watching!

  • @warlockshenandoah3658
    @warlockshenandoah3658 Před rokem +5

    There were no shield maidens for the same reason women and men don’t compete in sports. No amount of revisionist history will change this.

    • @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia
      @WorldHistoryEncyclopedia  Před rokem +6

      It's not revisionist history. Evidence has shown that women were buried wearing warrior clothing and with weapons.

    • @thebelfastvikingmartinbrow3603
      @thebelfastvikingmartinbrow3603 Před 9 měsíci +2

      So one or two women got weapons there's more men without so does that mean men was not warriors. But it really just means that for the 1000s of male warriors you get maybe 1 female who might have carried a weapon. But boys from a young age learned to use weapons girls didn't. So yes a few But not really a thing if the home or village was attacked without doubt they would have had to fight in defence of the family.

    • @Regurgitator85
      @Regurgitator85 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@WorldHistoryEncyclopediacoulda have a been a slave forced to earn her freedom. They were no units of female fighters lol. Stop being delusional.

    • @heathercronemiller406
      @heathercronemiller406 Před 3 měsíci

      You backtracked quickly 😂

    • @warlockshenandoah3658
      @warlockshenandoah3658 Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@WorldHistoryEncyclopedia Maybe they were queens like Elizabeth I or a Joan of Arc type but no army of women is going to take on men any more than they would be successful as an NFL team. Common sense goes a long ways here. Otherwise the Roman Empire would have trembled in fear at the approach of some feminist legion. The car that you are driving, the road that you are driving on, the bridge you are driving across, the cityscape you see, the police, firefighters, armed forces are the hated patriarchy. Or just reality. It has always been. It’s not payriarchy it’s just reality. Are cities going to be built by women? Civilization itself was by men. Writing was by men. Permanent structures, government, military, economies. Did women build your house? Come visit with reality. We need both men and women. But men and women cannot compete in war, sports or many things. They would never win in sports or watr or building anything. About 96% of all inventions and discoveries are by men. Think about it. Don’t go into a yoga pose and astro-travel but deal with reality and turn off that air conditioner and get outside and build something or try to compete with men. This is why you won’t have the Olympics going to eliminate men’s and women’s sports. And that’s why the shield maidens were a myth built around the Vikings hearing vaguely about Amazons that are more myth than reality like the centaurs. A Viking would break a woman like celery.