DNA

DNA Proves Viking Women Were Powerful Warriors

Lagertha, portrayed by Katheryn Winnick, leading a group of Viking warriors in Season 4 of 'Vikings'. (Credit: Jonathan Hession)

An elaborate Viking Age grave in Sweden holds the remains of a decorated female warrior from the 10th century, providing the first archaeological evidence that women held high-status positions in Viking culture.

The remarkable find was revealed in a study by researchers at Stockholm and Uppsala Universities and published in the American Journal of Anthropology. Their DNA analysis of the skeleton confirmed that the individual was a woman older than 30 years old, who stood somewhere around 5 feet 6 inches tall.

Several weapons were buried alongside the body, including a sword, armor-piercing arrows, a battle knife, an axe, a spear and two shields, indicating that the skeleton was likely that of a warrior. Accompanying the wide array of weapons were two horses and a full set of game pieces and a gaming board. The gaming pieces suggest that the person buried was a high-ranking combatant who was knowledgeable of strategies and tactics.

“This is the first formal and genetic confirmation of a female Viking warrior,” said Professor Mattias Jakobsson in a report by Uppsala University.

VIDEO: Viking Women – In Viking society, women enjoyed a surprising degree of autonomy and independence.

 

Legends of ferocious female warriors appear in Scandinavian lore and poetry from the Middle Ages. Stories of similar warriors have been told in the modern era too, for example Lagertha on the HISTORY series Vikings, but the existence of warrior women in Viking culture has consistently been challenged in official histories, with women often relegated to non-combatant roles.

This common assumption was also the reason why this landmark discovery was initially overlooked. The grave was originally uncovered in the late 19th century by Swedish archaeologist Hjalmar Stople, and initially seemed like many others found in the Swedish city of Birka, a trading hub for Vikings.

As Viking warriors were all assumed to be male, the trove of weapons and paraphernalia found with the skeleton seemed to leave little question as to the sex of the fighter. It wasn’t until Stockholm University osteologist Anna Kjellström reviewed the skeleton as part of another project that she noticed the bones’ structure suggested that the unknown Viking may have been a woman.

Kjellström’s theory turned out to be true. A DNA sample was taken from a tooth and an arm of the skeleton, revealing no Y chromosomes were present.

Illustration by Evald Hansen based on the original plan of grave Bj 581 by excavator Hjalmar Stolpe; published in 1889. (Credit: Wiley Online Library/The Authors American Journal of Physical Anthropology Published by Wiley Periodicals Inc./CC BY 4.0)

[“Source-timesofindia”]

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