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[Illustration:

  WAGGON OF THE VIKING AGE.

  One of two waggons found in the Deibjerg bog, Ringkjobing, West
    Jutland, ornamented all over with bronze; and on each side
    representations of two human heads with heavy moustaches, and with
    the triskele and other mystic signs. Length of sides, 5 feet, 4
    inches; straight pole, about 6 feet, including the bent piece;
    diameter of wheels, 3 feet.
]




                             THE VIKING AGE

    THE EARLY HISTORY, MANNERS, AND CUSTOMS OF THE ANCESTORS OF THE
                        ENGLISH-SPEAKING NATIONS

                            ILLUSTRATED FROM
 _THE ANTIQUITIES DISCOVERED IN MOUNDS, CAIRNS, AND BOGS AS WELL AS FROM
                      THE ANCIENT SAGAS AND EDDAS_


                                   BY

                           PAUL B. DU CHAILLU
  AUTHOR OF “EXPLORATIONS IN EQUATORIAL AFRICA,” “LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT
                               SUN,” ETC.


                    WITH 1366 ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAP


                        IN TWO VOLUMES.—VOL. II


                               NEW YORK:
                        CHARLES SCRIBNER’S SONS.
                                 1889.




                          COPYRIGHT, 1889, BY
                          PAUL B. DU CHAILLU.


                      Press of J. J. Little & Co.,
                         Astor Place, New York.

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          CONTENTS OF VOL. II.

[Illustration]


                               CHAPTER I.

                                                                    PAGE

 MARRIAGE                                                              1


                               CHAPTER II.

 DIVORCE                                                              25


                              CHAPTER III.

 THE BIRTH AND BRINGING-UP OF CHILDREN                                30


                               CHAPTER IV.

 THE ARVEL, OR INHERITANCE FEAST                                      47


                               CHAPTER V.

 FOSTER-BROTHERHOOD                                                   61


                               CHAPTER VI.

 WEAPONS                                                              65


                              CHAPTER VII.

 WAR CUSTOMS                                                         102


                              CHAPTER VIII.

 ROCK-TRACINGS                                                       116


                               CHAPTER IX.

 WAR-SHIPS                                                           136


                               CHAPTER X.

 THE FLEETS OF THE NORTHMEN                                          176


                               CHAPTER XI.

 MODE OF NAVAL WARFARE OF THE NORTHMEN                               181


                              CHAPTER XII.

 SEA BATTLES                                                         188


                              CHAPTER XIII.

 TRADERS AND TRADING-SHIPS                                           209


                              CHAPTER XIV.

 DEBTS AND ROBBERY                                                   235


                               CHAPTER XV.

 HALLS AND BUILDINGS                                                 241


                              CHAPTER XVI.

 FEASTS, ENTERTAINMENTS                                              274


                              CHAPTER XVII.

 DRESS OF MEN                                                        285


                             CHAPTER XVIII.

 DRESS OF WOMEN                                                      301


                              CHAPTER XIX.

 THE BRACTEATES                                                      332


                               CHAPTER XX.

 OCCUPATIONS AND SPORTS OF MEN                                       344


                              CHAPTER XXI.

 OCCUPATIONS OF WOMEN                                                362


                              CHAPTER XXII.

 EXERCISES—IDRÓTTIR                                                  369


                             CHAPTER XXIII.

 IDRÓTTIR.—POETRY OR SCALDSHIP, MUSIC AND MENTAL EXERCISES           389


                              CHAPTER XXIV.

 THE CONDUCT OF LIFE.—THE HÁVAMÁL                                    401


                              CHAPTER XXV.

 SORROW AND MOURNING                                                 414


                              CHAPTER XXVI.

 CHAMPIONS AND BERSERKS                                              423


                             CHAPTER XXVII.

 SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS                         433


                             CHAPTER XXVIII.

 SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS
   (_Continued_)                                                     450


                              CHAPTER XXIX.

 SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS
   (_Continued_)                                                     462


                              CHAPTER XXX.

 SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS
   (_Continued_)                                                     479


                              CHAPTER XXXI.

 SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS
   (_Continued_)                                                     486


                             CHAPTER XXXII.

 SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS
   (_Continued_)                                                     499


                             CHAPTER XXXIII.

 THE DISCOVERY AND SETTLEMENT OF ICELAND, GREENLAND, AND AMERICA     514


                             CHAPTER XXXIV.

 THE ORKNEYS AND HEBRIDES                                            531

 ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

 APPENDIX I.—FRANKISH CHRONICLES                                     536

 APPENDIX II.—FACSIMILES OF SAGAS                                    544

 APPENDIX III.—COINS FOUND IN SCANDINAVIA                            551

 ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

 INDEX                                                               557




                            THE VIKING AGE.




                               CHAPTER I.
                               MARRIAGE.

  High position of women—Married women’s property—Marriage a civil
    compact—The suitor—Qualities looked for in a suitor—The bride’s
    dower—Runaway marriages—The marriage settlement—The givers away of
    the bride—The betrothal—Breaking a betrothal—Length of a
    betrothal—The wedding—The trousseau—Illegality of marriages
    without betrothal—Guardians of unmarried sisters—Marriage against
    the will of the parents—Age of majority—Widows—Marriage on
    insufficient means—Laws relating to marriage—The wedding
    feast—Valuation of property—Laws on kissing—Women’s rights.


It is particularly striking, in reading the Sagas and the ancient laws
which corroborate them, to see the high position women occupied in
earlier and later pagan times.

If we are to judge of the civilisation of a people in their daily life
by the position women held with regard to men, we must conclude that in
this respect the earlier Norse tribes could compare favourably with the
most ancient civilised nations whose history has come down to us.

A maiden was highly respected, and on becoming a wife she was greatly
honoured, and her counsels had great weight; by marrying she became the
companion and not the inferior of her husband. She held property in her
own right, whatever she received by inheritance and by marriage being
her own; though there were restrictions put upon her, as well as upon
her husband, in regard to the use of her property.

In a word, a retrograde movement in regard to the rights and standing of
women took place after the extinction of the Asa creed. The high
position they had occupied before was lost, and it is only latterly that
they have striven, and in some countries with success, to regain the
authority that once belonged to them in regard to property and other
matters.

From the earliest time we see the chivalrous regard that men had for
women, and the punishment that any breach of its laws involved. Young
men went into warlike expeditions to attain great fame, so that their
acts of bravery could be known or extolled, and that they might become
worthy of the maiden they wished to woo. The same spirit afterwards
spread from the North to other countries in Europe, where, however, the
opinion only of women of higher rank was valued. Among the earlier
tribes of the North all were respected.

Marriage was not a religious contract or ceremony. It was simply
regarded as a civil compact, owing to the relations which man and wife
held towards each other in regard to property. It was the means of
joining families together, which was called _tengja saman_,[1] and
therefore the relation was called _tengdir_. Consequently marriage
itself was a bargain and on that account was called _brud-kaup_
(bride-buying).

When a man had selected for himself, or by the advice of his parents, a
woman or maiden whom he wanted to marry, he, accompanied by his father,
or nearest relatives or best friends, and by a retinue, according to his
rank, went to get the consent of the father, or of those who were the
guardians of the woman. It was the exception for the suitor himself not
to go on this journey, which was called _bonordsför_ (suit journey).[2]


“Njal once said to his son Helgi, ‘I have thought of a match for thee,
kinsman, if thou wilt follow my advice.’ ‘Certainly I will,’ he said,
‘for I know both that thou meanest it well and knowest well how to act;
but what is it?’ ‘We will ask in marriage the daughter of Asgrim
Ellidagrimsson, for she is the best match.’ Shortly afterwards they rode
out across the Thjórsá (a river), until they came to Tunga. Asgrim was
at home, and received them well, and they stayed there over night. The
next day they proceeded to talk the matter over. Njal opened the
subject, and asked for the hand of Thorhalla for his son Helgi. Asgrim
received this well, and said that with no men was he more desirous to
bargain than with them. They then talked about the matter, and at last
Asgrim betrothed his daughter to Helgi, and the wedding feast was agreed
upon” (Njala, c. 26, 27).


The suitor, even if present, had a spokesman who spoke on his behalf,
and enumerated his good qualities, deeds of valour, &c., and other
qualifications which might speak well for the suit. If the suit was
favourably received, a talk ensued in regard to the conditions of the
marriage.

Rut, a chief, went with his brother Höskuld to the _Althing_, and was
told by him that he would like him to marry Unn, the daughter of Mörd
Gigja. They went to his booth at the place of the Althing, and after
awhile Höskuld said:—


“‘I should like to make a bargain with thee; Rut wants to buy thy
daughter, and become thy son-in-law, and I shall not spare my property.’
Mörd answered: ‘I know thou art a great chief, but thy brother is
unknown to me.’ Höskuld said: ‘He is a greater chief than I.’ Mörd
added: ‘Thou must furnish him well, for she is the owner of all my
inheritance.’ ‘Thou needest not wait long for what I shall fix upon,’
replied Höskuld; ‘he shall have Kambsnes and Rutstadir and the land as
far as Thrandargil; he also has a trading ship on voyages abroad.’ Rut
then said to Mörd: ‘You may think, bondi, that my brother has spoken so
highly of me because he loves me, but if you will take the matter into
consideration I want you to state your conditions.’ Mörd answered: ‘I
have thought of the conditions. She shall have 60 hundreds, and it shall
be increased with one-third from thy farm, but if you have an heir each
of you shall have the half.’ Rut said: ‘These conditions I accept; and
now let us have witnesses’” (Njala, c. 2).[3]


The qualities which the parents or guardians took most into
consideration were good birth, powerful and prominent relatives.
Families on both sides had to be well matched in rank, wealth, and
personal bravery, the last being highly prized by the one whose hand was
sought.


“The kings (Ingibjörg’s brothers) went to a feast at Framnes[4] with
Fridthjóf, and, as usual, he treated them all better than they were
accustomed to be treated. Ingibjörg was there, and often spoke with
Fridthjóf; she said to him: ‘Thou hast a good gold ring.’ ‘That is
true,’ said Fridthjóf. Then the kings went home, and their envy against
Fridthjóf increased. A little after Fridthjóf became very sad; Björn,
his foster-brother, asked why he was so; he said he had it in mind to
ask Ingibjörg in marriage; ‘though I have lower rank than her brothers,
I am as good a man as they.’ Björn said: ‘Let us do it.’ The kings sat
on their father’s mound, and Fridthjóf saluted them; afterwards he asked
their sister Ingibjörg, Beli’s daughter, in marriage. The kings said:
‘It is very unwise to ask us to give her in marriage to a man of no
rank, and we refuse it.’ Fridthjóf said: ‘Then my errand is ended. I
will never hereafter give you any help though you may need it”
(Fridthjóf’s Saga, c. 2).


“And Björn was king over Firdafylki. His jarl was Hróald, and Thorir was
his son. Atli the Thin was then jarl at Gaular. His children were
Hallstein, Hólmstein, Herstein, and Solveig the fair. One autumn many
people were at Gaular at an autumn sacrifice. Then Ölvir Hnúfa saw
Solveig, and liked her well. He asked her in marriage, but the jarl
thought there was inequality of rank and would not consent to the
marriage. Thereupon Ölvir made many songs of love. He loved Solveig so
much that he left off Viking expeditions” (Egil’s Saga, c. 2).


“Grimkel, a godi, said: ‘I am told for certain, Valbrand, that thou hast
a daughter called Signy, who is very accomplished; I want to ask her in
marriage, if thou wilt marry her to me.’ Valbrand answered: ‘It is known
to us that thou art of good kin and art wealthy, and a great champion; I
will give a favourable answer to this’” (Hörd’s Saga, c. 3).


“I (Harald Fairhair) have thought of a match for thee; it was in my mind
when thou didst endanger thy life for mine. Vigdis, the daughter of
Thorir jarl the Silent, is a most handsome woman, and has much property;
I will marry her to thee. Ingimund thanked him and consented” (Vatnsdæla
Saga, c. 12).


In order that marriage should be regarded as perfectly lawful, the woman
had to be “_mundi keypt_”; that is, bought with _mund_[5] acquired by a
legal agreement between the man on one side, and the parents or
guardians of the intended bride on the other, in regard to the dower or
property agreed on both sides as belonging to the bride.


“The sons of Hildirid went to Thórólf and presented their claim to the
property of their father Björgólf. Thórólf answered: ‘I know of
Brynjolf, and still better of Bárd, that they were men of such
generosity that they would have given you of the inheritance of Björgólf
as much as they knew you had a right to. I was present when you pressed
this same claim against Bárd, and I heard that he thought there were no
proofs for it, for he called you sons of a concubine.’ Harek said they
would get witnesses that their mother was bought with _mund_. ‘But it is
true that we did not first present this claim to our brother Brynjolf.
There was also to be a division between kinsmen, and from Bárd we
expected honourable treatment in every respect, but our dealings with
him were not long. Now this inheritance has come into the hands of
unrelated men, and we cannot be altogether silent with regard to our
loss. It may be that there yet is as before such difference in power
that we may not get our rights from thee, if thou wilt hear none of the
witnesses, whom we can bring forth that we are odal-born men.’ Thórólf
answered harshly: ‘I count you the less legitimate as I am told your
mother was taken away by force and brought home as a captive’” (Egil’s
Saga, c. 9).


_Mund_ was originally the name for all the conditions in regard to the
property of both, especially that of the wife. This agreement was the
most important thing at the _festar_[6] (betrothal, fastening). Children
born without the payment of it were not _inheritance-born_—in a word,
were considered illegitimate.

If the wife was poor and entirely without property the husband had to
give a _mund_ of twelve _aurar_, in order that the marriage should be
regarded as fully legal.


“Next we must know how we shall buy women with _mund_, so that the child
is _inheritance-born_. The man shall give that woman a poor man’s
_mund_, amounting to 12 _aurar_, and have witnesses (at the ceremony).
He shall have bridesmen, and she bridesmaids, and he shall give her a
gift in the morning when they have been together one night, as large as
the one at the betrothal. Then the child born thereafter is
_inheritance-born_” (Gulath., 5).


“All men are not inheritance-born though they are free-born. The man
whose mother is not bought with _mund_, with a mark, or still more
property, or not wedded, or not betrothed, is not inheritance-born. A
woman is bought with _mund_ when a mark consisting of _aurar_, of the
value of 12 feet of _vadmal_,[7] or more property, is paid or stipulated
by _hand-shaking_. A wedding is lawfully made if the lawful man betroths
the woman, and six men at least are present” (Gragas, i. 75).[8]


If a man married a girl without the consent of her parents or guardians,
or made a runaway match, the husband was outlawed.


“Björn, the son of a hersir at Aurland in Sogn, was a great seafaring
man; sometimes he was on Viking expeditions, sometimes on
trade-journeys. One summer he was in Firdafylki at a feast where there
were many people. There he saw a handsome maiden whom he liked much. He
asked of what family she was. He was told that she was the sister of
Thórir hersir, son of Hróald, and was named Thora Hladhönd (lace-hand).
Björn asked her in marriage, but Thorir refused her to him, and so they
parted; but the same autumn Björn got men and went with a full-manned
_skuta_[9] north to Firdafylki, and arrived at Thórir’s when he was not
at home. He took Thora away, and carried her home with him to Aurland.

“In the autumn ships arrived at Iceland from Norway, bringing the report
that Björn had run away with Thora, without the consent of her kinsmen,
and that the king had for that reason outlawed him from Norway” (Egil’s
Saga, c. 32, 34).


The first matter settled was the _heimanfylgja_ (home-following, or
dowry), which follows the bride as given by the parents, or by those who
had the right to give her away; and then what the man had to set against
the dowry of his intended, which was called _tilgjöf_, or counter gift.
This latter stood in a certain proportion to the former, and generally
formed a third of the whole coming to the wife. It was occasionally
decided at the same time what _linfé_[10] (linen fee) the husband should
give to his wife on the morning after their wedding.


“The king (Svein of Denmark) and the jarl agreed that Thyri (Svein’s
sister) should have the possessions in Vindland which Gunnhild (deceased
wife of Svein, daughter of Búrisleif) had owned, and also other large
possessions as dower (_tilgjöf_). Thyri wept sorely, and went, very much
against her will. When they came to Vindland Búrisleif made his
wedding-feast and married Thyri, but she would neither take food nor
drink from the heathens for seven days” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, c. 99).


The dowry included movable property and lands.


“The mother shall take as much property if her daughter dies childless
as she has given her from home, and also the _mund_ without interest.
She and her children shall get this in preference to the father. Every
man who has given anything for the _heimanfylgja_ shall get it back if
the wife dies childless, and also get the mund, if he has declared it at
the betrothal or the wedding” (Gragas, i. 174).


The givers-away of the bride were called _giptingar-men_, and were
either parents, kinsmen, or guardians.

After the preliminaries to the marriage had taken place, and the
agreement had been announced to the witnesses, the _festar_ or betrothal
followed, when the parties became _festarmadr_ or betrothed man, and
_festarkona_ or betrothed woman. This was a legal tie which could not be
broken with impunity. The suitor went over to the father or guardian of
the woman, and the latter betrothed her to him with a “_handsal_”
(hand-shaking); at the same time both parties also named their witnesses
to their betrothal. Gragas gives the formula used at this ceremony,
which is as follows:—


“A woman is betrothed according to law if a man recites the agreement
about the _mund_; then the guardian and the man to whom the woman is
betrothed shall name witnesses to it. The man who is betrothed shall
say: ‘We name witnesses that thou N. N. betrothest thyself to me N. N.
with a lawful betrothal, and givest me the _heimanfylgja_ with
_hand-shaking_, as the fulfilment and performance of the whole agreement
which was a while ago recited between us without fraud and tricks.’ This
is a complete and lawful match. It is lawful when the betrother is the
one who has the right to betroth according to law; and it is complete if
the betrothed is in such health that she would be bought at no less
price if she was a bondmaid, or has no other faults or blemishes which
would make her cost less or which she had when sixteen winters old. But
if these faults are found in the woman, the man who knowing it betrothed
the woman is liable to lesser outlawry for it, and the wedding may be
prevented if the man betrothed wishes it, provided he had before
pronounced the words, ‘a complete and lawful match’—but not otherwise.
Now if the betrothed man wants to demand the _mund_ he shall summon the
guardian, because he has betrothed the woman knowing such faults in her
that she would cost less if she were a bondmaid. He shall summon him to
lesser outlawry, and summon nine of his neighbours to the _Thing_. If
the witnesses are against him he is to be outlawed, and the _mund_
cannot be claimed. If the witnesses say that the guardian knew not the
faults of the woman he can defend himself, but he cannot claim the
_mund_ unless he can get five dwellers at the farm of the woman as
witnesses that she has not these faults; then the _mund_ is to be paid
back” (Gragas, i. 316).[11]


If the betrothed woman was injured or wronged in any way the man had the
same right to gain redress as if she were his wife.


“Every man has full _rétt_ on the behalf of his betrothed as well as his
wife, as long as it is due; but if she sits at home in the house of a
father or brother they have the full rétt on her behalf which her
betrothed would otherwise have had” (Frostath., xi. 12).


“If a man runs away with a betrothed woman he shall pay full _rétt_ to
the betrothed man and also to her father” (Bjarkey law, 125).


The virtue of a betrothed woman was very carefully guarded.


“If the father dies before the wedding within the twelve months, and the
child is begotten, then that child shall take its father’s inheritance
as if its mother were bought with _mund_. But in no other way is a man
inheritance-born unless his mother is bought with _mund_, or he is led
lawfully into the family (adopted). Though a man betroth his concubine
in order that according to this law his children be inheritance-born, or
delays the wedding on account of this, it does not matter, for neither
shall _inheritance-fraud_ be committed, nor the wedding be dishonoured
by this” (Frostath., 13).


The breaking of a betrothal by either party was severely punished, and
the laws on the subject were strict.


“If a man will not take his betrothed he shall be summoned home to take
her, and a day be fixed. Thereupon he shall be summoned to the _Thing_
because he flees from his betrothed. Then the thingmen shall make him an
outlaw, and he is called a runaway (_fudflogi_)” (Gulath., 51).

“If a man wants a better match, the father shall betroth his daughter
himself if she is a maiden, and the brother shall do it if the father is
dead. If the father will not give his daughter to the man to whom she
has been betrothed, he shall be summoned home and a day be fixed on
which he shall have his betrothed. If the betrother will not let him
have her, he shall demand the dowry of his betrothed, and summon him to
the _Thing_ for robbery; then the thingmen have to outlaw him. The
maiden has no power in this matter, if she does not draw back from the
marriage herself. The man who has charge of the betrothed woman may keep
her from the betrothed man for a twelvemonth. A widow may betroth
herself, but shall take the advice of her kinsmen; then she cannot break
her troth. If she has not taken the advice of her kinsmen, she may break
it and pay three marks for the breach of faith to the one who was
betrothed to her. If a man betroths to a man a woman over whom he has no
betrothing power, he shall pay three marks to the one who was betrothed
to her. Two or more brothers shall have power over their sister; if one
of them betroths her to a man, and the others object, then they shall
draw lots who of them shall rule; if the one who betrothed her draws the
lot, the betrothal shall be kept, otherwise not, and then the betrother
shall pay three marks for breach of faith” (Earlier Gulathing’s Law, c.
51).


The length of the betrothal, if no special agreement had been made, was
limited to twelve months, that being the longest time that a woman’s
guardian could defer a marriage against the will of her future husband.
Three years seems to have been the longest delay allowed; during that
time the woman was said to _sit as betrothed_, if the suitor was away
and did not return within that time the agreement was void, and the
woman was free to marry another man.


“Björn now rode to Borg to see his kinsman Skúli. When they met, Björn
told him that he wished above all to get Oddny Thorkel’s daughter before
he left. Skúli asked if he had said anything about it to her. Björn
answered he had certainly done so. Then let us go, said Skúli; and they
went. They came to Hjörsey, and saw Thorkel and his daughter Oddny.
Björn then told him the state of his feelings, and asked Oddny in
marriage. Thorkel took it well, and referred it altogether to his
daughter’s decision. As Björn had been known to her before, and they had
loved each other very fondly, she consented. Then the betrothal was
performed at once, and she was to sit betrothed for three winters. And
even if Björn, while staying in the same country (Iceland), was
prevented from marrying her, she was to wait for him nevertheless during
a fourth winter. If he should not come back from Norway in three
winters, Thorkel was to give her in marriage if he liked. Also Björn was
to send men to Iceland to renew the betrothal if he could not come
himself. Skúli contributed as part of the contract so much property with
Björn that it was as much as all the property which Thorkel added to his
daughter’s _mund_”[12] (Björn Hitdælakappi’s Saga).


The betrothed who without valid reason did not fulfil her engagement,
and the giver-away who kept back the betrothed woman, were outlawed. If
she of her free will took another man than her betrothed, both she and
the giver-away were outlawed.


“If a man betroths a woman he shall have her married within twelve
months if no necessity hinders” (Frostath., iii. 12).

“The giver-away of a woman may keep her from her betrothed man for
twelve months” (Gulathing’s Law, 51).

“If she (the betrothed woman) wants to break the betrothal within twelve
months, and says she has been betrothed against her will, he can use his
witnesses against her words and get her. If he lacks witnesses then she
and also her father and mother, or their nearest kinsmen if they do not
exist, shall assure it is against her will with an oath, and pay the
betrothed man as much as was promised. If this takes place after the
wedding she loses her third” (Frostath., iii. 22).

“If the man to whom a woman is betrothed becomes sick he shall send word
half a month before (the wedding) to the man who has betrothed the woman
that he will not come to the wedding on account of his health, and the
woman need not be brought home to him though it was agreed, and the
reasons must be told. Then the wedding shall not be before the same time
next year, unless the man wants it before, and then word must be sent
half a month or more before, and he shall keep the wedding at his sole
cost. If he does not recover in the next twelvemonth the betrothal is
dissolved, unless both wish otherwise” (Gragas, i. 310).


The wedding generally took place at the home of the bride; very seldom
at the bridegroom’s: on the wedding-night the _mund_ became the wife’s
personal property.

After the marriage the bride and bridegroom were _hjón_, a word which
means man and wife; and then the wife became an _eiginkona_ (own woman,
wife, spouse) and _hùsfreyja_ (housewife), and enjoyed the rights
belonging to that position.


“Illugi lived at Hólm in Akranes. He was tall and strong and wealthy; he
went on a wooing-journey to Ölfusvatn, and asked for Thurid, the
daughter of Grimkel by his first wife. Grimkel answered favourably, for
he knew Illugi; the betrothal was performed there; Hörd (Grimkel’s son
by Signy) was not present at this. In the _tvimanad_ (September) the
wedding-feast was to be at Ölfusvatn, and when the appointed day came
Illugi made ready to go with thirty men” (Hörd’s Saga, ch. ii.).


No rings were exchanged or given either at the betrothal or the wedding.
That the bride had a special dress for the bridal ceremony seems to be
certain, though in no Saga have we a description of a bridal dress; but
from several passages we see that the bride was _hvit-földud_
(white-folded), and _lin-bundin_ (linen-bound, enveloped in linen),
which implies that the bridal dress was white.


“It is told that the first evening of the wedding the brides (King
Svein’s, and that of Sigvaldi, Jarl of the Jomsvikings) had their
head-dress (_fald_) low down so that their faces could not be distinctly
seen; next morning they were very merry and did not wear any
_skuplas_.”[13]


This bridal linen was a long wide head-dress hanging down the back from
the top of the head, or a kind of veil. In _Thrymskvida_ the bride wore
such a head-dress, which was fastened on the head with an ornament. At
the waist a bunch of keys was placed to show her authority as mistress
of the household, and on her breast she had an ornament.

The jötun Thrym had got Thor’s hammer and would not give it back, unless
Freyja were married to him. Thor was disguised as Freyja, and sent as a
bride to Thrym; he got hold of the hammer, and crushed Thrym and the
jötnar.

                       Then said Thor,
                       The mighty Ás,
                       The Asar will me
                       Effeminate call
                       If I let myself
                       Be tied in bridal linen.

                       Then they tied Thor
                       In the bridal linen,
                       And the great
                       Brisinga-necklace;[14]
                       Let keys hang
                       From his belt,
                       And woman’s clothes
                       Hang round his knees,
                       And broad stones[15]
                       Be on his breast,
                       And fastened the cloth[16]
                       On his head with skill.

                                   (Thrymskvida.)

We have nothing to show positively that marriage was celebrated with
religious ceremonies, but certain forms may have taken place. In the
later Edda we have the goddess _Vár_, who hears the vows of men and
women. In Helgi Hjörvardson there are also vows called by her name, and
it seems that she was solemnly invoked at weddings, and the sign of the
hammer of Thor made over the bride.

                      Then said Thrym,
                      The chief of Thursar:
                      Carry in the hammer
                      To consecrate the bride,
                      Lay Mjöllnir
                      In the maiden’s lap.
                      Wed us together
                      With the hand of _Var_.

                      The mind laughed
                      In the breast of Hlórridi[17]
                      As the hard-minded one
                      Saw the hammer;
                      Thrym killed he first,
                      The lord of Thursar,
                      And thrashed
                      The Jötun’s whole kin.

                    (Earlier Edda; Thrymskvida.)[18]

Marriage without betrothal proceedings and dowry was called
_skyndibrúdhlaup_ (hasty wedding), or _lausa-brudhlaup_ (loose wedding).
Such an union was illegal, and the children begotten thereby had no
right of inheritance.


“Björgólf, a landed man in Halogaland, once in his old age was at a
feast with Högni, a rich bondi, and saw his daughter Hildirid, whom he
liked well.

“The same autumn Björgólf the old left on his _skuta_ with thirty men.
He came to Leka (Högni’s farm), and twenty men went up to the farm,
while ten guarded the ship. When they came home Högni received him well,
and invited him to stay there with his men; he accepted, and went into
the _stofa_ (daily room). When they had taken off their outer clothes
Högni had a _skap-ker_ (large vessel) with ale carried in. Hildirid, his
daughter, carried ale to the guests. Björgólf called Högni, and said:
‘My errand hither is that I wish thy daughter to go home with me, and I
will marry her in loose wedding.’ Högni saw he could do nothing but what
Björgólf wished. Björgólf bought her with an _eyrir_ of gold.... They
had two sons, Hárek and Hrœrek, and Björgólf died afterwards. Then
Brynjólf, his son by the first wife, sent her away to her father. They
were called Hildirid-sons, and not by the name of the father. Brynjólf
died, and his son Bard got his death wounds in the battle of Hafrsfjord.
Bard had the king called to him, and said: ‘If I die from these wounds I
ask you to allow me to dispose of my inheritance.’ The king consented.
Bard said: ‘I wish my companion and kinsman Thorólf to take all my
inheritance, lands and loose property; I will also give him my wife and
my son to bring up, for I trust him best of all men.’ Thorólf according
to the wish of his friend married this wife, Sigrid, daughter of Sigurd
in Sandnes” (Egil’s Saga, 7).


The father or the guardian of the girl had the decision over her
marriage. If the father was dead the brothers were the guardians of the
unmarried sister. If she had neither father nor brothers, her mother in
connection with the nearest uncle could give her away; and as the maiden
had no voice in the matter, she could be forced by her father or
guardians into a marriage against her will.


“Thorvald Usvifrsson, a rich man, demanded Hallgerd in marriage from her
father Höskuld, an Icelandic chief. Höskuld told him that she was proud,
but Thorvald said that did not matter. Höskuld did not ask his daughter,
because he intended to give her in marriage and betroth her to Thorvald.
When he told her, she said: ‘Now I have found out what I long suspected,
that thou dost not love me so much as thou always pretendest, as thou
didst not think it worth while to speak to me about this matter; nor do
I think this match as high as you have promised me.’ It could be seen
that she considered herself to be married beneath her rank” (Njala
10).[19]

“The giver away next to a father or brother is a lawfully wedded mother.
If there is no mother, then the man twenty winters old or more who is
the nearest heir after the woman who is married” (Frostath., law ii.
13).


The father did not always exercise his right of deciding about the
marriage; sometimes he left the decision of the suit entirely in the
hands of the daughter, but such cases must be regarded as an exception.

If a girl married against the will of her parents or kinsmen the latter
could disinherit her, and her progeny were illegitimate, and this act of
disobedience would even get her self-chosen husband declared an outlaw
as a woman-robber.

When a poor girl was given in marriage to a rich man, one of the
conditions made was that her clothes and ornaments should be provided,
though if she was an heiress and fifteen years of age she could betroth
herself with the advice of her kinsmen.

The different Sagas and laws place the age of majority of men as well as
of women at fifteen years, and early marriages of women at that age were
not uncommon.


“Thorvald (a wealthy Icelander) asked in marriage Gudrún Úsvifr’s
daughter at the _Althing_ when she was fifteen winters old. The answer
was favourable, but Úsvifr said it would be seen by the conditions that
they were not equally high-born. Thorvald took this well, and said he
asked for the woman and not for property. Then Gudrún was betrothed to
Thorvald, and Úsvifr made the agreement. It was that Gudrún alone should
rule over their property after they had come into one bed, and be owner
of one half of all, whether they lived longer or shorter together. He
was also to buy costly things for her, so that no equally rich wife had
better jewels” (Laxdæla, c. 34).[20]


“The maiden who becomes an heiress may marry herself to whomever she
likes when she is fifteen winters old, with the counsel of those of her
kinsmen who are the wisest and nearest both on her father’s and mother’s
side” (Frostath., xi. 18).


“Glúm, a powerful man, went with his brother (Thorarin) to
Höskuldsstadir with eighteen men to ask in marriage Hallgerd, the
daughter of the chief Höskuld who lived there. When they had stayed
there overnight Glúm’s brother, Thórarin, said: ‘I have come here,
Höskuld, with my brother Glúm to ask thy daughter Hallgerd in marriage
for him. Thou must know that he is high-born.’ ‘I know,’ said Höskuld,
‘that your brothers are of good kin, but I will also tell thee that I
married her once and it became a great misfortune.’ Thórarin answered:
‘We will not let that prevent the bargain, for a single oath is no
evidence for all cases.’”


As Hallgerd had been unfortunately married, Hrut said:—


“This time Hallgerd must not, as before, be kept in ignorance of the
betrothal; she shall know all this bargain and see Glúm, and have her
way about marrying him or not; then she cannot accuse others if it does
not do well; all this shall be without deceit.’ Thórarin said: ‘Now, as
always, it will be best to take thy advice.’”


Hallgerd was sent for; and after coming in with two women—


“She sat down between Hrút and her father. She greeted them all with
fine words, and spoke well, and asked for news. Then she grew silent.
Glúm said: ‘I and my brother Thórarin have spoken about a bargain to thy
father, namely, that I should marry thee, Hallgerd, if it is thy will,
as it is theirs. Thou wilt also tell now, as thou art called a highly
accomplished woman, whether it is somewhat to thy mind; but if the
bargain with us is not to thy wish, we will not speak of it.’ Hallgerd
said: ‘I know that your brothers are men of good kin, and that I will
now be married much better than before; but I want to know what you have
said, and how far the matter has advanced; but as thou lookest to me, I
think I will love thee well if our tempers agree.’ Glúm himself told her
all the conditions, and left nothing out, and asked Höskuld and Hrút
whether they were rightly told. Höskuld said they were. Hallgerd said:
‘You, my father, and Hrút have behaved so well to me in this matter that
I will do this at your advice, and this bargain shall be as you have
made it.’ Hrút said: ‘I think it advisable that I and Höskuld should
name witnesses, and that Hallgerd should betroth herself if the lawman
thinks it right.’ Thórarin answered: ‘It is right.’ Then the property of
Hallgerd was valued, and Glúm was to give as much, and there was to be
joint-partnership between them. Then Glúm betrothed Hallgerd to himself,
and they rode home. Höskuld was to hold the wedding feast” (Njala, c.
13).


When girls were of age they could transact their own business.


“There are maidens called _baugryg_. They shall pay with rings and take
rings when they are only children and inheritance-born, till they sit
down on a bride’s chair. Then they throw this into the lap of their
kinsmen, and shall neither pay nor take rings thereafter” (Frostath.,
vi. 4).


A widow, who had the same rights as a girl of age, could not be forced
into a new marriage by her father or kinsmen, but on the other hand she
could not marry without their consent; and the conditions of the
marriage were generally settled by the spokesmen of the suitor and her
nearest of kin in the usual manner.


“A widow shall betroth herself and take the advice of her kinsmen”
(Gulathing’s Law, 51).


“Thorgerd, Thorstein’s daughter, Höskuld’s mother, was still a young and
very beautiful woman. She did not like to stay in Iceland after the
death of Koll (her husband). She declared to her son Höskuld that she
wished to go abroad with the property she owned. Höskuld said he was
sorry to part with her, but would not oppose her will in this any more
than in other things. Then Höskuld bought the half of a ship in
Dögurdarnes for his mother. Thorgerd went on board with much property,
set sail, and after a good journey landed in Norway. She had in Norway a
large family and many highborn kinsmen; they received her well, and
offered her everything she might wish. Thorgerd accepted this
thankfully, and said she intended to settle down there. She was not long
a widow; Herjólf, a wealthy and highly-honoured lendirmadn, asked her in
marriage. She accepted him, although he was not handsome, and a splendid
wedding was celebrated. A son was born to them, who was called Hrut, and
who quickly grew up and became very strong and large. He was fair of
face like his mother’s family. Herjólf fell sick and died, and men
thought it a great loss. After his death Thorgerd did not like to remain
in Norway, but returned to Iceland to her son Höskuld with much
property, and remained there until her death, after which she was buried
in a mound. After her burial Höskuld took all her property, and offered
half of it to Hrut, who had remained in Norway” (Laxdæla, 7).


The Icelandic chief Thorkel Eyjolfsson wanted to marry the widow Gudrun,
Usvifr’s daughter. The chief Snorri godi asked her in marriage on his
behalf.


“Gudrun answered: ‘My sons Thorleik and Bolli will have most of the
power in this, but thou, Snorri, art the third man to whom I would most
willingly entrust the matters which I think very important, for thou
hast long given me good advice.’ Snorri said it was evident that Thorkel
ought not to be rejected. Thereafter Snorri had the sons of Gudrun
called thither; he told them how much support they could get from
Thorkel on account of his wealth and foresight, and gave good advice
about it. Bolli answered: ‘My mother will be best able to see this; I
shall consent to her will. But surely we think it advisable to take into
account that thou hast supported this matter, Snorri, for thou hast done
many good things for us.’ Gudrun said: ‘We shall carefully heed the
advice of Snorri in this matter, for thy counsels have been good to us.’
Snorri urged her strongly to do it, and it was settled that the marriage
should take place. Snorri offered to make the wedding-feast. Thorkel was
pleased at that, and said: ‘I have got provisions enough to supply as
much as you like.’ Then Gudrun said: ‘It is my will that the feast shall
be here at Helgafell’” (Laxdæla, 68).


People could not marry unless they had means enough to support
themselves in comfort. If they acquired wealth afterwards, then he owned
two-thirds, and she one-third, both of land and movable property, and
the husband could not take his wife’s property out of the country
without her consent. Partnership between husband and wife was said to be
established after a certain time, which according to Frostathing’s Law
was twelve months.

But according to the Gulathing, man and wife could not, without the
consent of the heirs of both, enter into partnership before they had
children; but when they had, they could make whatever partnership they
liked. When they had been married twenty years they were partners
according to law.[21]


“If men marry who have less property than one hundred legal _aurar_,
besides their everyday clothes, and no children, then they are liable to
lesser outlawry unless the woman is barren. No _féránsdóm_[22] shall be
held, and their property is not confiscated, and they shall leave the
land with their children, and not come back unless their property
increases so much that they own a hundred or more, or the woman is
barren” (Gragas, i. 323).


“If man and wife have equal property they shall make partnership if they
wish, which is also valid for their heirs. The contract of betrothal is
valid between man and wife while its witnesses live and no other
contracts are made. But if the witnesses remembering it are dead, then
their property is in common, according to law, if he owned a mark or
more, and the _mund_ was paid, and they have lived together three
winters or more. If they are poor and earn property, their property is
in common according to law. According to law the joint partnership is
always thus, that he owns two parts, and she one-third”[23] (Gragas, i.
334).


“If a wife loses her husband, and they have lived twelve months
together, she owns one-third of the farm and of all loose property, and
her clothes besides” (Frostathing, xi. 6).


“If a man marries a widow or maiden who owns a farm, he owns nothing of
the farm before they have lived together twelve months. Then the laws
lay their property together.

“If two paupers marry according to the laws of the land, and their
property increases, then he owns two-thirds, and she one-third of lands
and loose property” (Frostathing, ix. 8, 9).


“A man shall not take the property of his wife out of the land, except
with her consent. He shall rule over all their property for their use.
Neither of them shall by word or deed forfeit the property of the other.
Every man has the same _rétt_ for his wife as for himself” (Earlier
Gulathing’s Law, 52).[24]


“If a man wants to leave the country with the property of his wife, she
may give full powers to any man she wishes to forbid him going, and
prosecute him and the men who take him away, if needed” (Grágás, i.
331).


“A wife shall not refuse partnership to her husband. If a man marries a
maiden, they cannot enter into partnership unless the men who have right
to their inheritance assent; but if they have inheritance-born children,
they can enter into such partnership as they like.

“If a man marries a widow, and she has children (inheritance-born
children) which are under age, and the man nevertheless wants to enter
into partnership with her, ‘then a meeting shall be summoned of the
children nearest of kin on their father’s side, and a partnership be
made according to the worth of their property; land shall be valued
against land, and loose property against loose property,’ and his
property valued also if it is more than hers. It cannot be broken if
thus made.

“If they enter into partnership in another way, it may be broken,
whether his heirs or hers want it, by going to a _Thing_ before they
have been twenty winters together, and declaring that the partnership is
broken. If this is not done before they have been twenty winters
together, he (the husband) can never change it thereafter.

“Wherever husband and wife enter into partnership, they shall declare it
before many men. Now if they have lived together twenty winters or more,
they are partners according to the laws, if they were not before. Then
she owns a third of the property, and he two-thirds. Though it (the
partnership) be made, if it is not made public during the twenty
winters, it is as if it had not been made” (Gulathing’s Law, 53).


Marriages were forbidden to the fifth degree of relationship.


“It is a new law that marriage is not allowed nearer than the fifth
degree in the same degrees of relationship and kinsmanship. If they are
both kinsmen in the fifth degree they may marry if they like, but pay a
larger tithe of all their property” (Grágás, i. 308).


The wedding feasts, at which the gods were invoked for the happiness of
the marriage, were often very splendid, and guests, to whom presents
were given, came from long distances. The length of the feasts varied
according to the rank and wealth of the family, and were so gorgeous
that they remained long in the memories of the people.

The _brúd-kaup_, or wedding, was the fulfilment of the conditions
stipulated at the betrothal.


“Sigmund[25] rode to Orradal, and visited Thorkel, and was well
received. He now began his wooing, and asked Thurid in marriage. Thorkel
took this well, and thought it a great honour for his daughter and them
all. Sigmund made his wedding-feast at Hladir with Hakon jarl, and the
jarl made it last for seven nights” (Færeyinga Saga, 26).[26]


“Heidrek married Herborg, the daughter of King Hrollaug in Gardariki.
Their wedding-feast was made, and no man had heard of a greater feast in
these lands; it lasted a month; when it ended the chiefs were led away
with gifts. Hrollaug gave his daughter a dower of gold and silver and
costly things; Vindland, which lies next to Reidgotaland, was also to
follow her as dower” (Hervara Saga, c. 14).[27]


The celebration of King Olaf’s wedding is thus related:—


“Olaf had made preparations, with the best of all kinds of drink and
provisions that could be got. He had invited many high-born men from the
districts. When Rögnvald jarl arrived with his men, the king received
him well, and large, good, and well-furnished rooms were given to him;
the servants took care that there should be lack of nothing which might
be proper for a feast. When the feast had lasted some days, the king and
the jarl and the king’s daughter spoke together; it was agreed that
Rögnvald of Western Gautland should betroth Astrid the daughter of Olaf,
King of Sweden, to Olaf, King of Norway, with the dower which they had
before agreed upon that her sister Ingigerd should have. The king also
was to give Astrid as much as he would have given to her sister
Ingigerd. Then the feast was made larger, and the wedding of Olaf and
Astrid was celebrated with great splendour” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 94).


In sparsely-settled countries we find that a bondi was obliged to
shelter the bridal party.


“A bondi shall feed at least five of them (the bridesmen and
bridesmaids). He is an outlaw if he refuses to lodge them. This is if
the bride or bridegroom are with them; otherwise he must feed three men”
(Kristinrett Thorláks og Ketils biskupa, p. 94).


In the hall where the wedding-feast took place there were bridal
benches, which were probably kept in the family for such an occasion;
just as to-day the bridal crowns are kept in Norway.

On one of the long benches the bridegroom was seated with his men; on
the other, which was opposite, the father of the bride and his male
guests. On the cross-bench sat the women, with the bride in the middle;
therefore this bench was called _brudbekk_ (bride-bench).

Sverting Hafr-Bjarnarson was going to marry Húngerd, Thorodd’s daughter,
and invited Hlugi the black, father of Gunnlaug Ormstunga, and his sons
to the wedding-feast.


“The women sat on the cross-bench; Helga fagra (the fair) sat next to
the bride, and her eyes often glanced at Gunnlaug, and there the saying
was proved that ‘the eyes do not hide it if a woman loves a man.’
Gunnlaug was then well dressed, and wore the fine clothes which King
Sigtrygg gave him; he was thought greatly superior to other men, both in
strength, beauty, and stature” (Gunnlaug Ormstunga c. ii.).[28]


We find that during the feast the bride was seated between the bridesmen
and bridesmaids, a custom that has come down to this day; the _linfé_
was then presented to her as she sat under the bridal linen.


“Then he (the bridegroom) shall sit between the bridesmen, and she
between the bridesmaids. He shall walk across the floor and give her
_linfé_. That is lawful whether the gift is small or great” (N. G. L.,
ii. 305, King Magnus’ Laws).


It was the custom to offer to the bride a _bekkjar-gjöf_ (bench-gift)
while she sat on the bridal bench.

Kjartan Olafsson, a famous Icelandic champion, was taking leave of
Ingibjörg, the sister of King Olaf Tryggvason, as he was going to
Iceland.


“At this moment Ingibjörg opened a mead-cask standing at her side, and
took out of it a white and gold woven woman’s head-gear, which she gave
to Kjartan, saying it would be only too good for Gudrún Osvifr’s
daughter to wrap around her head; ‘and thou wilt give it to her as a
bench-gift. I want the Icelandic women to see that she who has been
talking with thee in Norway is not of thrall-kin. It was in a bag of
_gudvef_,[29] and was most costly” (Laxdæla, c. 43).


When Olaf Tryggvason kept his wedding-feast with Thyri of Denmark, he
asked her whether he should choose a bench-gift befitting a maiden or a
woman who has been married. She answered that he should do what seemed
to him most beseeming for himself and her. He was pleased with her
answer, and at once sent her a woman’s cloak with very fine furs and
beautifully ornamented.[30]

We see not only how particular people were in regard to precedence, but
how jealously wives guarded the reputation of their husbands.


“The chief Gudmund Riki (the powerful) was present at the wedding-feast
of his overseer Thorstein; he sat in the high-seat, Thorir Helgason (a
chief) opposite to him, and the women on the cross-bench; bright lights
were burning, and tables were placed in front. The bride sat on the
middle of the cross-bench, with Thorlaug (wife of Gudmund) on the one
side, and Geirlaug (wife of Thorir Helgason) on the other. A woman went
with water to the cross-bench, having a cloth on her shoulder, and first
went to Geirlaug because she had been with her the previous winter.
Geirlaug said: ‘Thou actest with goodwill, but in a thoughtless way;
carry the water first to Thorlaug.’ She did so. Thorlaug beckoned it
away with the back of her hand, saying: ‘Too much trouble is taken,
Geirlaug, for the woman is right; there is no jealousy in my mind at
this; it is not certain that any other woman is of higher rank in the
district than thou.’ Geirlaug answered: ‘The trouble is little,
Thorlaug; but if thou hast the ambition to be most honoured, I have
nothing equal to thee, except my marriage.’ Thorlaug replied: ‘Certainly
I think thee well married, though I do not now know another who is
better married than I.’ Geirlaug added: ‘Thou wouldst be well married,
if thy husband were said by all to be courageous or valiant.’ Thorlaug
replied: ‘This is wickedly spoken, and thou art the first to say it.’
Geirlaug replied: ‘It is true, for many others say it; but Thorkel Hák
said it first, and my husband Thorir and every man who can move his
tongue says it.’ Thorlaug said: ‘Bring the water hither, woman, and let
us end this talk” (Ljosvetninga Saga, c. 13).


“The famous champion Gunnar of Hlidarendi was to have his wedding, and
had invited to the feast many people. He placed his guests as follows.
He sat himself in the middle of the bench; and to the right of him was
Thráin Sigfússon, Ulf Aurgodi, Valgard the grey, Mörd, Runólf, the sons
of Sigfús, and innermost Lambi. Next to Gunnar on the other side sat
Njál, then Skarphedin, Helgi, Grim, Höskuld, Hafr the wise, Ingjald from
Keldur, and the sons of Thorir from Holt. Thorir wanted to sit outside
all the men of distinction.... Höskuld was in the middle of the other
bench, and his sons inside to the left of him; Rút sat outside to the
right of Höskuld; it is not said how the others were placed. The bride,
Hallgerd, sat in the middle of the cross-bench with her daughter
Thorgerd on one side, and on the other Thórhalla, daughter of Asgrím
Ellidagrímsson” (Njala, c. 34).[31]


The man, as the guardian of his wife, had to manage their property; but
nevertheless the property of each was quite separate. At the marriage
the property of both was valued, and the _heimanfylgja_, _tilgjöf_,
_linfé_, and also what she had got or would get by inheritance or other
ways, were regarded as the property of the woman.

If the husband died first, his natural heir got his property, while the
wife kept hers; but if the wife died first, the husband took back the
_tilgjöf_, and the other property went to her heirs.

If a man did not value the property of his wife at the marriage, then he
had to pay the value to her heirs if she died before him, and take an
oath that he had not received more. But if he died first, and his
property also had not been valued, and they had been married for twelve
months, then she got one-third of the loose property and land, besides
her clothes.


“A man shall rule over his wife’s property while they are married, and
not separated, except that which is stipulated at their betrothal or
their marriage; that property shall she answer for and rule herself. If
an inheritance falls to a man’s wife, and there are _umagi_[32] in that
inheritance but no property,[33] her husband shall take care of these,
and “fit them out,” but her _heimanfylgja_ shall not diminish when it is
made public in a drinking-hall.[34] But if there is property in that
inheritance, the lands and all loose property shall be valued, and he
shall have the care of them and the increase, but he shall pay as much
back as he got, except the land-rents which he got afterwards” (Earlier
Frostathing’s Law, xi. 5).


“A gift given to a woman shall be her property, in whatever manner she
may be separated. All the property of a maiden shall be valued, loose
property against loose property, but one half of a widow’s property
shall be valued. The valuation shall be lawful in every case except
two—if she dies childless or leaves him without a protector” (Gulath.,
54).


The only certain examples of polygamy[35] occur among the great chiefs,
such as Harald Fairhair. Harald Hardradi had two wives, Elizabeth, the
daughter of the King of Gardaríki, and Thora, the daughter of a
Norwegian chief; both enjoyed the name of queen.

The husband was obliged to protect his wife, and take as much care of
her honour as of his own.


“Now is about the rights of women. Every man has claim on behalf of his
wife. A _Hauld_ owns three marks if she is struck; but a widow shall
have the same _rétt_ as her last husband (had), and the one she wishes
shall prosecute. But if a maiden is struck, her nearest kinsman shall
claim her _rétt_ as if it were his own. But if she is to have it
herself, the right plaintiff shall summon a _Thing_” (Earlier
Frostathing’s Law, x., c. 37).


The following laws show how strict people were in regard to kisses:—


“If a man kisses a woman (belonging to another) secretly, with her will,
he is liable to pay three marks, and the one who would have to prosecute
for seduction has to prosecute. If she gets angry at it, she may
prosecute herself, and the man is then liable to lesser outlawry. If a
man kisses a man’s wife secretly, he is liable to lesser outlawry
whether she allows it or refuses it. Nine neighbours are to be called as
witnesses to this at the _Thing_.... If a man puts on a _fald_ or
_woman’s clothes_ to deceive a woman, he is liable to lesser
outlawry”[36] (Gragas, i. 337).


“If a man makes a _song of love_[37] on a woman, he is to be outlawed.
If the woman is twenty years or older, she shall prosecute the case
herself. But if she is younger, or will not prosecute, her legal
guardian has to do it” (Gragas, vol. ii., p. 150).


Women’s rights appear to have been not altogether unknown even in these
early days; for women who got their own livelihood and whose kinsmen did
not trouble themselves about their support, were their own masters.


“If kinsmen will not take proper care of women, and they (the women) get
their living themselves, then they shall rule over themselves as they
like” (Frostath., xi. 17).


-----

Footnote 1:

  To tie or join together. _Tengdir_ = bonds or ties of affinity;
  _tengda-modir_ = mother-in-law; _tengda-fadir_ = father-in-law.

Footnote 2:

  Powerful chiefs sometimes sent ambassadors to ask for the hand of the
  lady they wanted to wed.

Footnote 3:

  Cf. also c. 13, 98.

Footnote 4:

  Farm of Fridthjóf’s father.

Footnote 5:

  The mund was the property or money which the suitor was to give to the
  bride.

Footnote 6:

  The word _festar_ implied that she was fastened, or, in a modern
  sense, betrothed to the man; and this important ceremony preliminary
  to marriage took place in the presence of six witnesses.

Footnote 7:

  Common woollen cloth.

Footnote 8:

  Cf. also Earlier Gulathing’s Law, 51; Njala, c. 2.

Footnote 9:

  A ship.

Footnote 10:

  The word seems to imply a gift of linen, in which, perhaps, clothing
  was included. Olaf Tryggvason gave a cloak as linfé.

Footnote 11:

  Cf. Gunnlaug Ormstunga, c. 4.

Footnote 12:

  Cf. also Laxdæla.

Footnote 13:

  Skupla = a woman’s hood hiding the face.

Footnote 14:

  This necklace had been made by Dvergar, and belonged to Freyja.

Footnote 15:

  Stones to make a false breast.

Footnote 16:

  Cf. also Rigsmal, 23.

Footnote 17:

  Thor.

Footnote 18:

  For the whole story of Thor and Thrym, as translated from the Earlier
  Edda, see Anderson’s Mythology, pp. 328–335; and especially, in
  connection with this, pp. 331, 332.

Footnote 19:

  Cf. also Hörd, c. 3.

Footnote 20:

  Cf. also Droplaugar sona Saga, 23, 24.

Footnote 21:

  Borgarthing’s Law says thirty years; in Iceland after three years
  (Gragas, 153). But however these laws differed, they all agree that
  the woman owns one-third, the man two-thirds.

Footnote 22:

  A court of execution or confiscation to be held within a fortnight
  after the sentence at the house of a person convicted in one of the
  two degrees of outlawry.

Footnote 23:

  Cf. also Gulathing’s Law, 53.

Footnote 24:

  Cf. also Gragas, i. 331.

Footnote 25:

  This Sigmund is the famous champion of the Faroes.

Footnote 26:

  Cf. also Sturlunga, i., c. 13; Fornmanna Sögur, iv. c. 24–26; Hörd’s
  Saga, c. 11.

Footnote 27:

  Cf. also Vatnsdæla Saga, c. 12; Ljosvetninga Saga, c. 13; Hervarar
  Saga, c. 10.

Footnote 28:

  Cf. also Hænsa Thori’s Saga, c. 12.

Footnote 29:

  Costly woven stuff.

Footnote 30:

  Cf. Fornmanna Sögur, ii. 133; Laxdæla, 69; Gunnlaug Ormstunga, ch. ii.

Footnote 31:

  Cf. Hænsa Thori’s Saga, c. 12.

Footnote 32:

  Umagi, one that cannot support himself.

Footnote 33:

  Negative inheritance.

Footnote 34:

  Before people in a hall.

Footnote 35:

  Concubines were both slaves of high birth who were captured in war and
  women of lower birth, and seem to have often lived in the house. Njal
  had a concubine whose son by him was killed, and Njal’s wife was
  anxious to avenge his death. Their status seems to have depended on
  that of the man with whom they lived.

Footnote 36:

  Another text states that the women also are punished if they do the
  opposite.

Footnote 37:

  This probably means derisive songs.




                              CHAPTER II.
                                DIVORCE.

  Manner of declaring a divorce—Causes for divorce—Divorce easy to
    get—Separation—Division of property in case of separation—Penalty
    for wife-beating—Restrictions on the extravagance of women.


A divorce was declared in the following manner. The wife had to declare
the separation, and the reason of it, three times in three places in the
presence of witnesses—first, in front of them on a bed; secondly, in
front of the men’s door; and, thirdly, at the _Thing_; but separation
did not prevent either party from marrying again afterwards.

Mörd gave advice to his daughter Unn how she should separate herself
from her husband, Rut, when he was not at home.


“When thou art quite ready thou shalt go to thy bed, and with thee the
men who are thy followers; thou shalt name witnesses at the bedside of
thy husband, and declare that thou art separated from him by a lawful
divorce, as fairly as is possible after the rules of the _Althing_ and
the laws of all the people. The same naming of witnesses thou shalt also
have at the men’s door, and then thou shalt ride away” (Njala, c. 7).


The causes for divorce were numerous. A cause of divorce was that of
wearing clothes belonging to the opposite sex, as when a man wore a
shirt so open that you could see his breast; or when women wore
breeches; and we find that sometimes these clothes were cunningly made
on purpose to bring about a separation.

One day Thórd Ingunnarson asked Gudrún what a woman was liable to if she
always wore breeches like men. She answered:


“‘They are to be punished for that just as a man is punished who has
such a large opening in his clothes that his bare chest is displayed.
Both are reasons for divorce....’ Thórd at once rushed to the law court
and named witnesses, he declared himself divorced from Aud, because she
wore closed breeches like men” (Laxdæla, c. 35).


“Gudrun, Usvifr’s daughter, was forced by her father to marry Thorvald
Halldórsson, of Garpsdal. She always asked him to buy her the most
costly things. Once, when she asked him for something, he said that she
knew no moderation, and gave her a cheek-horse (box on the ear). She
answered: ‘Now thou hast given me what we women think of great
importance, and that is a good complexion, and thou hast cured me of
importunate requests.’ The same evening Thórd (Ingunnarson, a good
friend of hers) came in. Gudrun told him of this disgrace, and asked how
she should take revenge for it. Thórd smiled, and replied: ‘I know a
good way; make a shirt for him with an opening of divorce, and declare
thyself separated from him for this reason.’ Gudrun said nothing against
this, and they left off speaking, but that same spring Gudrun declared
herself separated from Thorvald, and went home to her father at Laugar”
(Laxdæla, ch. 34).


Divorce was easy to get,[38] especially for the man, on the ground of
the wife’s infidelity; while the wife could get it on the ground of
repeated ill-treatment from her husband.


“If a man does not sleep in the same bed with his wife for six seasons
on account of dislike, then her kinsmen can claim her property and also
her _rétt_, but she shall herself keep her property” (Gragas, i. 329).


A man could separate from his wife without a lawful reason, but the
separation was looked upon as a disgrace by her kinsmen, and revenge was
sure to follow.


“If a man wants to separate from his wife, he shall declare himself
separated so that each of them may hear the other’s voice, and have
witnesses present” (Gulathing’s Law, 54).[39]


If a husband tried to take his wife out of the country against her will
she could separate herself from him.


“If a man wants to take his wife against her will out of this land she
shall declare herself separated if she likes, wherever they happen to
be, if she can do it with reason; then he is liable to lose her and her
property as if they had owned no property together, and he has no more
right to that woman after they have separated than to any other woman
with whom he has not lived” (Gragas, i. 331).


A wife could not separate without reason,[40] and even if she left her
husband with good reason on her side, he could keep her dower, and could
force her to come back.

In case of a separation, the wife’s parents or kinsmen could claim the
_mund_ and the _heimanfylgja_.

A bondi, Thorkel, having heard that his wife Asgerd loved another man,
was, on his remonstrating, told by his wife to choose one of two
alternatives.


“Thou mayst choose one of two conditions. To stay with me as if nothing
had happened; otherwise I will at once name witnesses, and declare
myself separated from thee, and let my father claim my mund and
heimanfylgja” (Gisli Sursson’s Saga, p. 16).


If a separation took place where neither party could be said to have
been guilty of criminality, then the wife took the same amount of
property as she would have at the death of her husband, or as she would
take in case she left him on account of any unfaithfulness on his part.
If she left him without any valid cause, or he separated from her on
account of her repeated infidelity, then the husband had the right to
retain all her property as long as she lived, and her heir had no claim
to anything of the _tilgjöf_. But if she was unfaithful only once, she
forfeited her _tilgjöf_, and kept the rest of her property. If the man
drove her away against her will for that single offence, she came into
all her rights.


“If a wife commits adultery, or separates from her husband without
reason, she has forfeited her mund and her increase of a third
(_thridjungsauki_). If her husband offers to take her back and she will
not accept it he shall keep all her property while she is alive and then
her next heir shall get her heimanfylgja but no increase of a third. If
they are reconciled and he takes her back, their property shall remain
as if there had been no breach between them. If she repeats the crime he
shall keep her property while he is alive, and if he will not take her
back, then it shall be as has already been said. If she does not and
promises redress, and offers to live with her husband and he will not
take her, then she shall get her heimanfylgja but not the increase of a
third. If the husband wants to rob her of her heimanfylgja and says she
has committed this crime before, and people have not before heard him
accuse her of it, she shall take the _einseidi_ (oath of one) and get
her heimanfylgja, but not her increase of a third if he will not take
her back. If a hindrance separates them according to God’s laws each of
them shall have their respective property” (Frostathing’s Law, xi. 14).


It was a common provision in all the laws that a man was not allowed to
beat his wife, under a penalty of paying the same indemnity as he had a
right to receive if he himself were beaten. If he had beaten her three
times and did it a fourth, then she could leave him, taking with her her
_heimanfylgja_ and _tilgjöf_.


“If a man beats his wife with keys or latches, then he is liable to pay
three marks. Also if he takes another woman and puts her in the house;
she is called _hearth-rival_. Thirdly, if a man beats his wife with a
horn or with the fist on an ale-bench, then he is to pay three marks. If
she three times gets _rétt_ for these reasons, the fourth time she may
separate from him, or not, as she likes” (Borgarthing[41] Laws, ii. 8).


“When Börk had left his farm Helgafell Thordis went forward and named
witnesses that she declared herself separated from her husband Börk, and
pleaded as a reason that he had struck her, and she would not put up
with his blows. Their property was divided, and Snorri (a son of her
former marriage) took charge of it on behalf of his mother, for he was
her heir” (Eyrbyggja, c. 14).


Restrictions were put upon the extravagance of women.[42]


“The wife of a _hauld_ (odal’s bondi) is allowed to buy to the extent of
one eyrir, and not more. If she buys for more the bargain shall not be
kept, except her husband wishes it so” (Earlier Frostathings Law, xi.
22).


“If a wife gives away her husband’s property he can claim it all, and
prosecute the man who received it. If a man sends his wife to the Thing
to pay debts or other expenses of theirs, her hand-shaking is valid,[43]
and also when she goes to a ship to make bargains with his consent, but
no other transactions are valid unless he wishes them to be so. When she
buys what is necessary for their household while he is at the Thing,
that is also valid. The woman shall not sell half her land, a farm or
more, or a _godord_ (dignity of godi), or a seagoing ship, except with
the will of her guardian” (Gragas, i. 333).


-----

Footnote 38:

  In Iceland a high degree of poverty after the marriage was a lawful
  reason for divorce (Gragas, 40).

Footnote 39:

  Frostathing Law, xi., xiv.

Footnote 40:

  According to Borgarthing Law, a wife after waiting three years for the
  return of her husband could marry again.

Footnote 41:

  Cf. also Gulathing’s Law, 54.

Footnote 42:

  There is an example of a man leaving his wife on account of
  extravagance in the household, and for insulting him in the presence
  of people (Landnama, ii. 6; Njala, 34).

Footnote 43:

  A bargain was sealed by hand-shaking, a custom still prevalent in
  Norway, where, when the traveller has paid his fare on the post road
  from one station to another, the driver shakes hands with him.




                              CHAPTER III.
                 THE BIRTH AND BRINGING UP OF CHILDREN.

  Appearance of the Nornir at a child’s birth—Ceremony attending
    birth—Religious rites—Antiquity of the custom of sprinkling water
    over a child—The Asa form and the Christian form of baptism—Naming
    the child—Birth of Sigurd, Ragnar Lodbrok’s son—Helgi’s
    birth—Distinctive names—Belief in predestination—Possession of two
    names considered lucky—Presence of the household and of neighbours
    at childbirth—Gifts of weapons and animals—Cutting the first
    tooth—The _prime sign_—Exposure of children—Reasons for
    exposure—The custom continued after the introduction of
    Christianity—The bringing up of children—Attention paid to
    physical development—Secret adoption not allowed.


The _Nornir_ seem to have appeared during the night that followed a
child’s birth, which among the high-born was attended with a great deal
of ceremony. The newly-born infant was placed on the floor, and remained
there without being touched by any one, until taken up and put in the
folds of his cloak, by his father, or in his absence by the nearest of
kin, who by this ceremony acknowledged the legitimacy of his offspring.
After he had received the child in his arms he looked at it, and from
its appearance judged of its temper, proportions, fortune, luck in war,
&c., and decided if the newly-born infant should live or be exposed and
left to die—a custom similar to that of the Spartans.

Then if the child was to live, a religious or sacred rite called _Ausa
Vatni_,[44] which seems to have consisted either in pouring or
sprinkling water over the child, was performed, a custom so common that
we are not told how the water was poured or sprinkled over, though it
may have been with the hand.

This ceremony was considered a most sacred rite, and was an integral
part of the Asa creed, and consequently of great antiquity, antedating
Christian baptism, and most binding among the ancestors of the
English-speaking peoples: to expose a child after this ceremony was
considered murder. It was once, no doubt, practised by the Franks who
belonged to the Northern tribes; and certain forms of Christian baptism
of the present day may be based upon this earlier form, which was only
changed in name by the earlier Christian missionaries. That the heathen
or Asa baptism was not recognised by the Christians we have ample proofs
in the Sagas. The Asa form was, as we have seen, called _Ausa Vatni_,
and the Christian, _Skirn_.[45]


“It was then the custom to choose the best men to _water-sprinkle_ or
give names to the children of high-born men. When the time came at which
Thora expected to bear her child, she wished to go and find King Harald.
He was then north at Sœheim, while she was at Mostr; she went northward
on Sigurd Jarl’s ship. During the night they lay to near the shore, and
Thora bore a son upon the rock at the end of the bridge. Sigurd Jarl
_water-sprinkled_ the boy, and called him Hákon, after his father, Hakon
Hlada Jarl” (Harald Hárfagr’s Saga, c. 40).


“Harald Fairhair when he began to get old gave to his sons the rule of
Norway. He made Eirik king over all his sons, and when he had ruled for
seventy winters, gave the kingship into his hands. At that time Gunnhild
(Eirik’s wife) bore a son, and Harald _water-sprinkled_ him and gave him
his own name, therewith declaring that he should be king after his
father if he should live”[46] (Egil’s Saga, c. 59).


The child was often named after some renowned kinsmen or friends; and
sometimes the person who performed the rite gave his own name, and it
was believed that the luck of the namesake would follow the child
through life: thus Sigurd, one of the famous sons of Ragnar Lodbrok, was
named after his grandfather Sigurd Hring.[47] The one who gave a name to
the child always made it a present, which was called _nafnfesti_
(name-fastening), and consisted either of rings, weapons, farms, or
lands. Helgi, the son of Borghild, at whose birth the Nornir were
present, was given presents at his _name-fastening_.

The birth of Sigurd, son of Ragnar Lodbrok, is thus described.


“The time arrived when she (Kráka or Aslaug) was confined and bore a
son, whom the servant-maids took and showed to her. She bade them carry
him to Ragnar (Lodbrok), and let him see him; the boy was taken into the
hall and placed in the fold of Ragnar’s cloak. When he saw the boy
Ragnar was asked what he should be named; he sang:

                    Sigurd shall the boy be named,
                    He will fight battles,
                    And be much like his mother,
                    And be called his father’s son;
                    He will of Odin’s family
                    The foremost man be called;
                    That serpent is in his eye[48]
                    Which another slew.

“He drew a gold ring from his hand, and gave it to the boy as
name-fastening” (Ragnar Lodbrok’s Saga, c. 8).


The following stanzas give the account of Helgi’s birth:—

                It was in early ages
                When eagles screamed,
                Holy waters glided
                From the heaven-mountains;
                Then Borghild bore
                The high-minded Helgi
                In Brálund.

                It became night in the house;
                The nornir came
                Who for the hero
                Shaped his life;
                They bade him become
                The most renowned of _Fylkirs_
                And of _Budlungs_—
                Seem the best.

                Powerfully they spun
                The threads of fate,
                When burghs were broken
                In Brálund;
                They unravelled
                The golden threads,
                And fastened them
                Under the middle of the moon’s hall.[49]

                In the east and the west
                They hid the ends;
                There owned the _Lofdung_[50]
                Land between;
                The kinswoman of Neri[51]
                Flung one string[52]
                On northern roads,
                Bid it hold for ever.

                One thing grieved
                The son of the Ylfings,[53]
                And also the maiden
                Who bore the beloved one;
                Raven quoth to raven,
                Sitting in a high tree,
                Wanting food:
                This I know.

                The son of Sigmund
                One day old
                Stands in _brynja_,
                Now the day has dawned;
                Helgi’s eyes flash
                Like those of _Hildings_;
                He is the friend of wolves,[54]
                Let us be merry.

                The host thought him
                A _Dögling_.[55]
                They said good years
                Had come among men;
                The king himself went
                From the war-clash
                To give garlic[56]
                To the young Gram.[57]

                He gave the name of Helgi,[58]
                And Hringstadir,[59]
                Solfjöll,[60] Snœfjöll,[61]
                And Sigarsvellir,[62]
                Hringstod,[63] Hatun,[64]
                And Himinvangar[65]
                An ornamented blood-serpent[66]
                He gave to the brother of Sinfjötli.

                    (Helga Kvida Hundingsbana, 1).

Special or characteristic names were often given to grown-up persons as
name-fastenings for one reason or another, in addition to their proper
name, and almost every important man seems to have had one.


“The king Ingjald of Naumdæla fylki said: ‘What sounded so shrill, An,
when thou didst enter the door the first time here?’ ‘My bow,’ answered
An, ‘because the door of your hall was so small, king, that it was all
bent together when I had it on my shoulders before I came in; it sounded
loud as it straightened again.’ ‘Thou shalt,’ added the king, ‘be named
An Bogsveigir (bow-<DW12>).’ ‘What dost thou give me as name-fastening?’
‘Here is a gold ring as name-fastening and Yule gift, because I heard
what thou didst say a little while ago, and thou, tall as thou art, must
also be a very strong man.’ ‘I suppose I am very strong, but I do not
know it,’ said An” (An Bogsveigi’s Saga, c. 3).


“King Olaf said: ‘Thou art a _Vandrædaskáld_ (troublesome scald), but
thou shalt be my man.’ Hallfred answered: ‘What wilt thou, king, give me
as name-fastening, if I shall be called _Vandrædaskáld_?’ The king then
gave him a sword, but without a scabbard, and said: ‘Now make a stanza
about the sword, with “_sword_” in every line’:-

                     ‘There is one sword of swords
                     Which made me sword-rich;
                     Now the wielder of swords
                     Will have swords enough;
                     I shall not lack swords,
                     I deserve three swords,
                     If there only were
                     A scabbard to this sword.’

Then the king gave him a scabbard and said: ‘“Sword” is not in every
line.’ Hallfred answered: ‘There are three swords in one of them.’ ‘That
is true,’ said the king” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 90; Fornmanna Sögur, ii.
56).[67]


All through the old Saga literature we see how strongly the people
believed in predestination. Luck and good fortune were considered
hereditary in certain families, especially in those of kings who were
supposed to have their individual good luck, which they could
communicate to their champions and friends, not only for the execution
of some one adventurous undertaking, for it followed the person during
his whole life.


“A death-fated man cannot be saved” (Islendinga Sögur, ii. 103; Fms.,
vi. 417).


“All is dangerous for the death-fated” (Fafnismál, 11).


“A man not death-fated cannot be dealt with (fought against)” (Gisli
Súrsson, 148).


“He who is not death-fated escapes in some way” (Fostbrœdra Saga, 171).


“Every one must go when he is death-fated” (Gretti’s Saga, 138).


Two Norwegian brothers, Thórólf and Thorstein, had a fight against the
Viking Ljót and his men, and were victorious. After they had landed and
were walking up from their ships, Thórólf said:


“‘I will now make a stop in my journey; I do not like to walk farther.’
Thorstein asked: ‘Art thou wounded, brother?’ Thórólf answered: ‘I will
not conceal that when Ljót threw his sword he aimed at thee, and I
covered thee with the shield; then I was unprotected, and it hit my
stomach below the ribs, and pierced it; then I wrapped the clothes
around me, and thus I have walked since; my walking will soon be
finished now.’ Thorstein said: ‘It has happened as I supposed, that one
of us would not return; I would give much not to have gone on this
journey.’ Thórólf added: ‘Let us not reproach ourselves with that now,
for no one can get over his day of fate, and I prefer to die in good
repute than live in the shame of not having followed thee; nevertheless
I want to ask of thee a boon, which shows my pride.’ ‘What is that,
kinsman?’ asked Thorstein. Thórólf said: ‘I will tell thee. It seems to
me my name has not existed long enough, and it will disappear as
withered grass, and I shall never be mentioned when thou art dead; but I
see that thou wilt increase our kin, and live a long time; thou wilt be
a man of great luck. If thou shouldst get a son, I want thee to give him
the name of Thórólf, and all the luck which I have had I will give to
him, for thus I believe my name will live while the world is inhabited.’
Thorstein answered: ‘I will grant thee this willingly, for I expect it
to be to our honour, and good luck will follow thy name while it remains
in our family.’ Thórólf added: ‘Now I think I have asked what seems most
important to me,’ and then he died” (Svarfdæla, c. 5).


“Thorstein had a son by his wife, and, when the boy was born, he was
brought to his father. Thorstein looked at him and said: ‘That boy shall
be named Ingimund, after the father of his mother, and I expect him to
be lucky on account of his name” (Vatnsdæla, c. 7).


“Ingimund, son of a famous Viking who had helped King Harald Fairhair in
the battle of Hafrsfjord, had married Vigdis, daughter of Thórir Jarl.
While on her way to Iceland she gave birth to a boy, who was handsome.
Ingimund looked at him and said: ‘He shall be named Thorstein, and I
think my father’s luck will follow him.’ Some time after he had another
son, and said: ‘The boy is large-limbed and has sharp eyes. If he lives
there will not be many to equal him; he will become a great champion, if
I am not much mistaken. I will not forget our kinsman Jökul, as my
father begged of me, and he shall be called Jökul” (Vatnsdæla, c. 13).


It was considered lucky to have two names, and it was thought that by
adding the name of a god to a person’s name he would acquire the special
protection of this deity; hence such names as Thorólf, Thorstein, &c.,
from _Thor_, the most popular prefix. Sometimes the general name of the
god, such as _As_ or _Gud_, or the word _Ve_ (holy), was added or
prefixed.


“Helgi, son of Thorgils, was a tall, strong and hardy man; he was
fine-looking and stout. He did not talk much in his youth, and was even
then overbearing and headstrong; he was ingenious and whimsical. It is
said that one day, when the cattle were at the milking-place, a bull was
there which belonged to the farm, and that another bull came, and they
butted each other. The young Helgi was outside, and saw that their bull
was defeated, so he went away and fetched an iron spike and tied it to
the forehead of the bull, and thus it defeated the other. From this he
was called Brodd-Helgi, and he was more skilled than any other man who
grew up in the district” (Thatt of Thorstein the White, c. 1).


“Thorólf in his old age married Unn, and by her had a son named Stein.
This boy Thórólf dedicated to his friend Thór, and he was therefore
called Thórstein” (Eyrbyggja, c. 7).


“Thorstein was married to Thóra, and by her had a son, who was
water-sprinkled and named Grim; his father gave him to Thor, saying he
would become _hofgodi_ (temple-priest); he was on that account called
Thorgrim” (Eyrbyggja, c. 20).


When a woman gave birth to a child the household and neighbours had to
be present.


“Housemaids and neighbouring women shall be at the _bed-journey_ of
every woman until the child is born, and not leave it before they have
laid it to the breast of the mother.... No woman shall have her child at
the breast longer than three fasts,[68] but shall have it until the
third one. If her husband says that she must take her child from the
breast and his wife has such power that she will not obey his words, she
is liable to pay three marks of her own property. If he does not heed it
any more than she, then they are each to pay three marks of their
property” (Borgarthing Law, 3).


The children of prominent families were said to be born with weapons,
which seem to have been specially made to be given at the time of birth;
and the animals born that day were also given to the child as a
birth-gift.


“Hlöd, the son of King Heidrek, was brought up with King Humli, his
mother’s father, and was the most handsome and bold of men. But it was
an old saying at that time that a man was born with weapons or horses;
this was said about the weapons that were made at the time the man was
born. Also sheep, animals, oxen or horses, if born at the time, were
given to high-born men in their honour, as here is said about Hlödver
Heidreksson:

                    Hlöd was then born
                    In Húnaland,
                    With sax and sword,
                    With a long brynja,
                    With a ring-adorned helmet,
                    With a sharp sword (mækir),
                    With a well-broken horse
                    On the holy field.”[69]

                            (Hervarar Saga, c. 13.)


When a child cut his first tooth it was the custom to give him a
present.

                       The Gods in days of yore
                       Gave to Frey
                       Alfheim as a tooth fee.

                                   (Grimnismal.)


“Ásta, Gudbrand’s daughter, bore a boy who was named Olaf when he was
water-sprinkled by Hrani. It was said by some that Gudbrand would not
let him be raised on account of the hatred he had against his father
(Harald Grænski), until Hrani told him that he had seen light over the
house in which the child was born. Gudbrand himself went to look at it.
Then the boy was taken and brought up with great love. Hrani gave him a
belt and a knife as tooth-fee, and when he grew up he gave him a ring
and a sword” (St. Olaf’s Saga, vol. iv.; Fornmanna Sögur).


In the battle of Svold, Olaf Tryggvason said to Thyri, his queen:-


“Now thou needest not weep, for thou hast got back thy possessions in
Vindland, but I shall to-day claim thy tooth-fee from King Svein, thy
brother, which thou hast often asked me to do.”


The goddesses and gods seem to have been called upon to help women in
the pangs of childbirth.


“Borgný, a king’s daughter, could not be delivered of her child before
Oddrun, the sister of Atli, came to help her; and then Borgný says:

                       Thus may help thee
                       The kind powers
                       Frigg and Freyja
                       And more gods
                       As thou didst take
                       The danger from my hands.”

                                 (Oddrunargrát.)


Traders and warriors who lived abroad among Christians had to receive
what was called the _prime sign_, which enabled them to live among
Christians without becoming baptized and forsaking their ancient faith.
These prime-signed men on their return to their native land brought with
them the first notions of Christianity, and undoubtedly paved the way
for its final acceptance.


“A man by name Toki came to King Olaf Haraldsson. The king asked him if
he was baptized. Toki answered: ‘I am _prime-signed_ and not baptized,
because I have been in turn with the heathens and the Christians, though
I believe in Hvitikrist (the white Christ). My errand to you is also
that I want to be baptized and have the creed which you preach, for I am
not likely to get it from a better man. The king was glad, when he
wanted to be baptized and serve God. Thereupon Toki was baptized by the
king’s hird-bishop and died in the white garments (of baptism)”
(Flateyjarbok, ii. 137).


“In the spring the brothers-in-law Thorgrim and Thorkel made the ship of
the eastmen ready for a voyage abroad, and took it as their property.
These eastmen had been very unruly in Norway and there was no peace
there. They went to sea, and this same summer Gisli and his
brother-in-law Vestein went abroad from Skeljavik in Steingrim’s fjord.
Önund of Medaldal managed the farm of Gisli and Thorkel, and Saka-Stein
that of Thorgrim in Sœból, with the latter’s wife, Thordis. He was a
near kinsman of Thorgrim. At this time Harald Grafeld (gray skin) ruled
over Norway. Thorgrim and Thorkel landed north in Thrandheim and there
met the king, went before him and greeted him, and he received them
well; they became friendly with his men, and it was easy for them to get
property and honour. Gisli and his followers were at sea more than a
hundred days and landed in Hördaland, during the winter-nights (first
three nights of winter), in a heavy snowstorm and violent gale. Their
ship was broken into chips, but they saved their property and lives.
Skegg-Bjalfi had a trading ship, and was going to Denmark. Gisli wanted
to buy half his ship from him, and he said he had heard they were good
men and sold them this half; they at once gave him more than its value
in property. They went south to Denmark, to the trading town called
Vebjörg (Viborg); they stayed there during the winter with Sigrhadd;
they were three together there, Gisli, Vestein, and Bjalfi; they were
good friends and exchanged many gifts. At this time Christianity had
come into Denmark, and Gisli and his companions let themselves be
_prime-signed_; it was a custom at that time much used by the men who
were on trading journeys, for they could then hold free intercourse with
the Christians. Early in the spring Bjalfi made his ship ready for
Iceland. Sigurd, a Norwegian, the companion of Vestein, was then west in
England” (Gisli Sursson’s Saga, pp. 95–97).


The exposure of the child depended so entirely upon the will of the
father, that not even the mother dared to oppose it; if the child was
fatherless at its birth, the right was exercised by the person who ruled
over the household or family, and the child was then carried out by a
thrall. Such children as had not been received by the father, or with
his knowledge or consent, were called _úborin börn_ (unborn or
non-accepted children); the exposure itself is called _utburd_ (=
carrying out, _i.e._, out of the house).

There was a chief in Iceland named Asbjorn Gunnbjarnarson; his wife was
Thorgerd, a fine and accomplished woman. They had a daughter, Thorny,
whom Thorgerd gave in marriage to Skidi without Asbjorn’s consent.


“Some years after Asbjorn rode to the _Thing_ and said to Thorgerd: ‘Now
I ride to the _Thing_ as I am wont, and I know that thou art far gone
with a child; now whatever it is, boy or girl, it shall not be raised,
but exposed.’ She said he should not do that, so wise and powerful a man
as he was; ‘for it would be an unheard-of wickedness even if a poor man
did it, but especially as you do not lack goods.’ Asbjorn replied: ‘I
thought when thou gavest our daughter Thorny to Skidi, the eastman,
without my knowing it, that I should not raise more children for thee to
give away against my will, but if thou dost not do as I tell thee, thou
wilt feel it, as will all who break my orders, or do not do what I
want.’ He rode to the _Thing_. A little after Thorgerd gave birth to a
boy; it was large, fat, and very fine; all who saw it, both men and
women, praised it. Though Thorgerd thought the child was fine and loved
it much, nevertheless she wanted it to be exposed, for she knew the
temper of her husband, Asbjorn, that he must have his will. Then she got
men to expose the child, and prepare him, as was the custom. They took
it out of the house, laid it down between two stones, and put a large
slab over it; they left a piece of pork in the child’s mouth, and went
away. Gest, a bondi, heard the child crying, and took it home to his
wife; she was the foster-mother of Thorgerd, and recognised the boy.
They agreed to raise the child as their own” (Finnbogi Rammi’s Saga).


Among the chief reasons which led to the exposure of a child were
deformity, and discord between man and wife; dissatisfaction of the
wife’s father with the union of which the child was the fruit;
persuasion of the wife if her husband got a child by a concubine;
superstitions as to evil omens at the time of birth, which were thought
to indicate coming misfortunes caused by the child; and, finally, the
utter inability of the parents to raise the child on account of their
poverty.


“Every child which is born into this world shall be raised, baptized,
and carried to the church, except that only which is born so deformed
that the mother cannot give strength to it, whose heels are in the place
of the toes, whose chin is between his shoulders, the neck on his
breast, with the calves on his legs turning forward, his eyes on the
back of his head, and seal’s fins or a dog’s head. It shall be carried
to a beach and buried where neither men nor cattle go; that is the beach
of the evil one. Next is the child which is born with a skin-bag on its
face; it can be seen by every one that it cannot get its food, though it
might grow up; it shall be taken and carried to the church, be
_prime-signed_, laid at the church door; the nearest kinsman shall watch
it till breath is out of it; it shall be buried in the churchyard, and
its soul shall be prayed for as well as is possible”[70] (Earlier
Frostathing’s Law, i. 1).


“Signý bore a girl, both large and handsome; her brother Torfi would not
let it be water-sprinkled until he knew how it would go with her life.
She died, and he became so angry[71] that he wanted to have the child
exposed. He asked his foster-father Sigurd to take the child and go with
it to the Reykjardals river and there drown it. Sigurd said this was
very wicked, but could not refuse; so he took the child, and went with
it. It seemed to him so handsome that he had not the heart to throw it
into the river; he turned up to Signýjarstadir, and laid the child down
at the yard gate, thinking it likely that it would soon be found. Grim
bondi Signýjarson was standing outside at the house gable, and saw this.
He went and took it up and brought it in, and gave out that his wife
Helga was sick and had borne a child.... Torfi became angry at this; he
took the girl, but did not dare to kill her, for it was called murder to
kill children after they were water-sprinkled” (Hord’s Saga, c. 8).


“Thorstein (son of Egil Skallagrimsson) one summer prepared to go to the
_Thing_, and said to his wife Jófrid: ‘Thou art with child; if it is a
girl thou shalt have it exposed, but raise it if it is a boy.’ It was
the custom, while the country was all over heathen, for those who had
little property to have their children exposed, although it was always
considered very wicked. And when Thorstein had said this, Jófrid
answered: ‘This is unworthy of a man like thee, and thou who art so
rich, oughtest not to do this.’ Thorstein added: ‘Thou knowest well my
temper, and that it will not be well with thee if my order is not
obeyed.’ Then he rode to the _Thing_, and Jófrid gave birth to a girl
which was exceedingly handsome. The women wanted to take it, but she
said they needed not, and called her shepherd Thorvard, and said: ‘Take
my horse and lay a saddle on it, and bring this child to Thorgerd,
daughter of Egil (Skallagrimsson) in Hjardarholt, and ask her to raise
it secretly so that Thorstein may not know it; I look on this child with
such eyes of love that I have not the heart to expose it. Here are three
marks of silver as reward; Thorgerd will send thee abroad.’ Thorvard did
as she said. He rode to Hjardarholt with the child and handed it to
Thorgerd; she had it raised with her tenant at Leysingjastadir in
Hvammsfjord.... When Thorstein came home from the _Thing_ Jófrid told
him that the child had been exposed as he had ordered, but her shepherd
had run away and stolen her horse. Thorstein said this was good, and got
another shepherd. For six winters this was not discovered. A few years
after, when Thorstein was on a visit to his brother-in-law, Thorgerd
told him that the beautiful girl before him was his own daughter, and
how she had come thither. Thorstein said: ‘I cannot blame you for this;
most things that are fated take place, and you have remedied my
foolishness. I like this girl so much that it seems to me great luck to
have so fair a child; but what is her name?’ ‘Helga she is called,’
answered Thorgerd. ‘Helga the fair,’ added Thorstein. ‘Now thou shalt
make her ready to go home with me’” (Gunnlaug Ormstunga, c. 3).


No violent hand was ever laid upon children that were to be exposed.
Only one case is mentioned of a child which was to be thrown into the
water. One custom was to put the child in a covered grave; but the most
common was to leave the death or life of the child to fate, by exposing
it in an out-of-the-way place; for instance, between heaped-up stones,
or in a hollow under the root of a tree, but making it tolerably secure
against wild animals. Sometimes nourishment, mostly pork to suck, was
given, in order to prolong its life, in case any one might possibly find
it and take pity on it.


“Thórkatla, Asgrim’s wife, bore a boy, and he ordered it to be exposed.
The thrall who was to dig the grave whetted a hoe, and laid the boy on
the floor. Then they heard the boy sing—

                    Let me get to my mother,
                    It is cold for me on the floor,
                    What is fitter for a boy
                    Than his father’s arms.
                    You need not whet the iron,
                    Nor cut the turf,
                    Leave this hideous work,
                    I shall live yet with men.

                                (Landnáma V. c. 6.)

Thereupon the boy was water-sprinkled, and named Thorstein.”


The custom of exposing children was so deeply rooted in the minds of the
people that Christianity itself could not at first prevent it from
taking place.


“It was then made law, that all men of the country should become
Christians, and such as were not baptized should be so. But in regard to
child exposure and the eating of horseflesh the old law was to stand;
men would be allowed to sacrifice in secret, if they wished to, but
became outlaws if witnesses saw it” (Islendingabók, c. 7).


“Sigvat skáld and other Icelanders were with King Olaf as has been told.
Olaf enquired carefully how Christianity was kept in Iceland. He thought
it was very badly kept when they told him that it was allowed by the
laws to eat horseflesh and expose children as the heathens used to do”
(St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 56).


It was the general custom among the chiefs and other leading men not to
have the children reared at home, but to have them educated with some
distinguished friend for the future duties of life. Those who received
them were bound to treat them as their own children, with love and
kindness; and there are many examples in the Sagas of the great love of
the foster-parents for their foster-children.

The general custom was first to have the child _knee-seated_
(_knésetja_), or put on the knees of him who was to be fosterer; the
child was then called the knee-seated (_knésetningr_) of his
foster-father, who bestowed upon him as much care as if he had been his
own child.


“Harald (Gormsson) took Harald, son of Eirik (Blood-axe), to raise him,
and knee-seated him; he was raised in his hird”[72] (Fornmanna Sögur,
i., ch. 19).


“Höskuld, an Icelandic chief, having died and his sons having held
_arvel_ after him, one of these, Thorleik by name, was jealous of his
stepbrother Olaf, whose mother was Melkorka, an Irish king’s daughter,
who had been bought as a thrall by Höskuld. To conciliate him, Olaf
offered to foster Thorleik’s son, saying: ‘I will foster thy son, for he
is always called a lesser man who fosters the child of another’”[73]
(Laxdæla, c. 27).


To raise another’s child was a proof that the fosterer considered
himself of lower or subordinate position than the father. A very good
example in this respect is that of Harald Fairhair and Athelstan of
England.


“At this time there ruled over England a young king, Adalstein
(Athelstan) the Good, who was one of the most high-born men in Northern
lands. He sent men to Norway to King Harald with a message. The
messenger went before the king and gave him a sword the handle and hilt
of which were ornamented with gold. The whole scabbard was ornamented
with gold and silver, and set with precious stones. The messenger held
out the sword-handle towards the king, and said: ‘Here is a sword which
Adalstein, King of England, sent you as a gift.’ The king took hold of
the handle, and at once the messenger said: ‘Now you have taken hold as
our king wanted, and after this you will be his thegn and sword-taker.’
King Harald felt that this was sent to delude him, thought much over it,
and asked his wise men if the messenger should be killed or the king
disgraced in any other manner, for he would not be the thegn of the
Engla king or any other man in the world. Then King Harald at the
persuasion of his men remembered that it was not king-like to kill the
messengers of another king, who bore the message of their master without
adding to it; but to let plot contend against plot, and word against
word; and he let the men of the Engla king go in peace. The following
summer Harald sent a ship west to England, and gave the command of it to
his best friend, Hauk Hábrók. The king gave into his hands a child which
a bondwoman of the king’s, by name Thora Mostrstöng, had borne. She was
a native of Mostr in Sunnhördaland. This boy was named Hakon, and the
mother said he was the son of King Harald. But Hauk came west to
England, and found King Adalstein in Lundúnir (London), and went before
him when the tables were cleared and greeted him. The king bade him
welcome. Then Hauk said: ‘Lord, Harald, the King of the Northmen, sends
you good greeting, and therewith sends you a white bird well trained,
and asks you to train it better hereafter.’ He took the child from his
cloak and put it on the knee of the king, who looked at him, but Hauk
stood in front of the king, and did not bow to him; he had under the
left side of his cloak a sharp sword, and thus all his men were dressed,
and they were altogether thirty. Then King Adalstein said: ‘Who owns
this child?’ Hauk answered: ‘A bondwoman in Norway, and King Harald said
that thou shouldst raise her child.’ The king answered: ‘This boy has
not the eyes of a thrall!’ Hauk answered: ‘The mother is a bondwoman,
and she says that King Harald is the father, and now the boy is thy
knee-seater, and now thou owest him as much as thy own son.’ The king
answered: ‘Why should I raise the child of King Harald though it were
the child of King Harald’s own wife, much less the child of a
bondwoman?’ and with one hand he grasped a sword lying at his side and
the child with the other. Then Hauk said: ‘Thou hast taken as fosterer
one child of King Harald’s and knee-seated it, and thou mayest murder it
if thou wishest, but thou wilt not therewith kill all the sons of King
Harald, and it will be said hereafter, as has been said before, that he
who fosters the child of another is a lesser man.’ Thereafter Hauk went
away, and took the cloak on his left arm and held his drawn sword in the
other hand; the one of his men who had entered the last went out first.
This done they went down to their ship, and as there was fair wind from
the land out to sea, they made use of it, sailing to Norway. And when
they came to King Harald he thanked Hauk well for his journey. King
Adalstein had Hakon raised at his Court, and he was afterwards called
Athelstan’s foster-son. In these dealings of the kings it was seen that
each of them wanted to be regarded as higher than the other, but there
was no difference made between their rank on this account, and each of
them was king in his realm till his death-day” (Fagrskinna, c. 21–22).


In the raising and education of boys, most attention was paid to their
physical development; both physical and intellectual accomplishments
were named _idrottir_. The most important of these were—the skilful
handling of all kinds of weapons, riding, swimming, snow-shoe running,
rowing, wrestling, working in wood and metal, and harp-playing; to which
should sometimes be added skill in training and managing dogs, falcons
and hawks for the hunt. Of intellectual accomplishments are mentioned
knowledge of runes, laws, the art of poetry, so necessary for
remembrance of the deeds of heroes, eloquence, skill in draughts or
checkers, chess, and the use of foreign tongues.

Kali, the son of Kol, who had settled in the Orkneys, well known as a
kindly and accomplished man, composed the following stanza:—

                   I am ready to play chess,
                   I know nine idrottir,
                   I shall scarcely forget the runes,
                   I am a book-reader and smith;
                   I can slide on snow-shoes,
                   I shoot and row usefully,
                   I know too both
                   Harp-playing and metres.

                       (Orkneyinga Saga, c. 49.)


“It is told that Hjördis gave birth to a boy, and he was carried to King
Hjalprek. He was glad when he saw the flashing eyes in his head, and
said no one would be his equal, and he was water-sprinkled with the name
Sigurd; all people say the same of him, that in vigour and size no man
was his equal. He was brought up by Hjalprek with great affection. When
all the famous men and kings in the old Sagas are named, Sigurd will be
the foremost in strength and accomplishments, energy and valour, which
he had in a higher degree than any other man in the northern half of the
world. Sigurd grew up there with Hjalprek, and every child loved him; he
betrothed Hjördis to King Alf, and fixed her mund. The foster-father of
Sigurd was Regin, son of Hreidmar; he taught him idrottir, chess, and
runes, and to speak many tongues, as then was the custom with kings’
sons, and many other things” (Volsunga Saga, c. 13).


Raising children secretly seems not to have been allowed.


“King Harald Hardradi, during a visit to the Norwegian chief Áslák,
inquired of him if he was not well versed in the laws established by the
late king, Olaf Haraldsson (digri). Áslák saying that he was, the king
asked him if he knew what punishment was given for having a son fostered
in secret. Áslák replied that he did not know, but that a man might have
his child fostered where he pleased. The king answered that he would
lose lands and life. Áslák confessed he could not see why such a severe
punishment should be imposed, but, however, it did not concern him. The
king informed him that it did, as he had been told that he had a son
fostered in secret, at the same time naming the man who told him. Áslák
then acknowledged having had a son named Heming, who at first was very
promising, but after awhile became insane, and therefore had been sent
far away from Torgar (Áslák’s home), and he now did not know whether
this son lived or was dead. The king said he should soon go away, but
would return next season, and then expect to see either Heming or his
bones, if he should be dead” (Flateyjarbók, iii.).


The children seem to have amused themselves in a manner very similar to
that which is customary in the present day.


“The boys Guthorm and Hálfdán, Ásta’s sons (St. Olaf’s half-brothers)
were playing with large bœr and barns, cattle and sheep, which they had
themselves made. Harald (the third son) was a short way off at a muddy
creek of the lake with many chips of wood floating on the water. (St.)
Olaf asked him what they were for. He said they were his war-ships. The
King laughed and said: ‘It may be, kinsman, thou wilt rule ships in time
to come’ (this boy was Harald Hardradi)” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 75).


-----

Footnote 44:

  The words _ausa moldu_ mean ‘to pour mould on’ (to bury). In
  Ynglingatal the expression _ausinn_ (another form of the verb) _haugi_
  is used of a man buried in a mound.

Footnote 45:

  Some form of water rite under one shape or another was practised by
  Egyptians, Greeks, Persians, Hebrews, Romans, Hindus, &c. In the
  Frankish annals, the Northmen when they were baptized were led into
  the rivers, a custom which apparently prevailed among the earlier
  Christians with adult people.

Footnote 46:

  Cf. also Halfdan the Black’s Saga, c. 7; Laxdæla, c. 28; Fornmanna
  Sögur, i., p. 31; Olaf Tryggvason, i., pp. 13–14; Fornmanna Sögur.

Footnote 47:

  Cf. Svarfdæla, c. 5.

Footnote 48:

  This refers to Sigurd’s name ‘Snake Eye.’

Footnote 49:

  Heaven.

Footnote 50:

  King.

Footnote 51:

  This is the only place where Neri is mentioned.

Footnote 52:

  It is probable that this third string northwards was a string of bad
  luck or evil fate; but Bugge says it meant Helgi’s fame in the North,
  which was to be everlasting.

Footnote 53:

  Sigmund, Helgi’s father, is here called son of the Ylfings, though he
  was of the _Völsunga_ family. Even Helgi himself is called Skjöldung
  in the second Helgi lay.

Footnote 54:

  The friend of wolves—a warrior who by his fights gave food to the
  wolves.

Footnote 55:

  Dögling (1) a descendant of Dag, (2) a chief of any family.

Footnote 56:

  The giving of garlic at the ceremony of _name-fastening_, seems to
  have had some symbolic meaning. From St. Olaf’s Saga we see that it
  was used for curing wounds: in Gudrunar Kvida the leek is used as
  opposed to grass, perhaps implying that the child to whom it was given
  would stand as high among men as it did amongst grass.

Footnote 57:

  King.

Footnote 58:

  These estates were given to him with the name-fastening, as was
  customary.

Footnote 59:

  Ring-steads.

Footnote 60:

  Sun mountains.

Footnote 61:

  Snow mountains.

Footnote 62:

  Fields of Sigar.

Footnote 63:

  Ring-harbour.

Footnote 64:

  High town.

Footnote 65:

  Heaven-fields.

Footnote 66:

  Sword.

Footnote 67:

  Cf. also Hrolf Kraki’s Saga, c. 42.

Footnote 68:

  Three fasting-times.

Footnote 69:

  Probably a field belonging to a temple.

Footnote 70:

  Cf. also Earlier Gulathing’s Law, 21.

Footnote 71:

  Torfi had been vexed at Signy’s marriage, because he was away when the
  betrothal took place, and had not been consulted about the match.

Footnote 72:

  Cf. also Harald Fairhair’s Saga, c. 21.

Footnote 73:

  Cf. also Hord’s Saga, c. 9.




                              CHAPTER IV.
                    THE ARVEL, OR INHERITANCE FEAST.

  The inheritance feast—Its duration—Customs of the feast—Right of
    sitting in the high seat—The feast after Heidrek’s death—Division
    of property—Settlement of debts—Support of paupers—The arvel in
    Christian times—Consent of heirs to the disposal of property—Rules
    regulating inheritance—Adoption—Ceremony of adoption—Public
    announcement of adoption—Female degrees of inheritance—Property of
    foreigners.


The _erfi-öl_ (ale or inheritance feast) was a very important ceremony
at which the heir took formal possession of the property of his kinsman.
The seventh day after death seems to have been the earliest on which the
arvel, which usually lasted three nights, could legally be held. If the
deceased was a prominent man, sometimes one or more years passed ere the
arvel was held, and numerous guests were then invited from far and near.


“Thorolf was laid in a mound with some property suitable to his rank.
Then Thorstein made a feast (arvel) and invited the jarl and many other
high-born men. They sat at it for three nights as was customary.
Thorstein sent them away with good gifts” (Svarfdæla Saga).


“If a full-grown man remains quiet for seven days, or till the morning
of the thirtieth day, and does not call for the inheritance, then he
never can get that inheritance. If he remains quiet and is not entitled
to take it (i.e. is not of age) then he shall declare that he is
inheritance-born. Another may declare it on his behalf. He shall claim
this inheritance during the first five years after he is entitled to it.
If he does not he can never claim it afterwards. This is if no necessity
hinders. If he is not in the fylki and not in the land he must claim it
in the first twelve months after he gets into the fylki where the
inheritance is, if no necessity hinders. Necessities shall be taken into
consideration” (Gulath., 122).


The high-seat of the deceased stood empty until the arvel. On the first
evening the heir or heirs sat upon a lower seat, generally the steps of
the high-seat, until the memorial toast of the deceased and of the
mightiest of their departed kinsmen and the gods had been proposed. They
then sat down on the high-seat, and by this act took possession of the
inheritance.

It was the custom for the heir to empty a horn of mead or ale, and make
a vow to perform some great and valorous deed. The feast continued for
several days, with an abundance of drink and eatables as at other
feasts, and presents were given to the guests at their departure, as was
the custom at such entertainments.


“Shortly after the great news was heard from Denmark that Strútharald
jarl, the father of Sigvaldi and Thorkel, was dead; the third brother
Heming was young, and King Svein (Tjuguskegg) thought it was his duty to
arrange the arvel of Strútharald jarl if the elder sons did not come,
for Heming was regarded as too young to manage the feast. The king sent
word to Sigvaldi and Thorkel in Jómsborg, that they should come to the
arvel, and make the feast with him, and so arrange it that as much
honour as possible might be done to such a chief as their father
Strútharald. They sent word that they would come, and that he should
prepare everything needed for the feast, and that they would defray the
expenses, and he should take everything he needed from the property of
Strútharald. Most of their men thought it unadvisable that they should
go there, and suspected that the friendship of King Svein and Sigvaldi
and the Jómsvikings was rather shallow, after what had happened between
them before, though they had then behaved becomingly to each other. The
brothers wanted by all means to go there, as they had promised. The
Jómsvikings would not stay at home, but followed them to the feast.

“They left Jómsborg with a large host; they had a hundred and seventy
ships. They went to Zeeland, where Harald jarl had ruled; Svein was
there, and had prepared the arvel; it was about the time of the
winter-nights. There was a great number of men, and a good feast; the
Jómsvikings drank eagerly the first evening, and the drink intoxicated
them much. After it had gone on for a while, Svein saw that they had
become nearly all dead drunk, as they were very talkative and merry, and
little afraid of saying many things which they else would not have said;
seeing this the king said: ‘Here is great merriment, and many men, and I
propose that you shall find some new and worthy enjoyment to entertain
the people, which will long hereafter be remembered.’ Sigvaldi answered:
‘We think it most becoming, and best for the entertainment that you,
lord (herra), should make the first proposal, for we all have to obey
you, and we all will assent to the entertainment you desire.’ The king
said: ‘I know it has always been customary at great feasts and meetings,
and where select men have met, to make vows to entertain and make
themselves renowned, and I am willing to try that now, for as you,
Jómsvikings, are far more famous than all other men in all the northern
half of the world, it is easy to know that the vows you will make here
will be as much more renowned than others as you are greater than other
men, and it is likely that people will long remember them, and I will
begin. I vow that I will, before the third winter-nights hereafter have
passed, have driven King Ethelred (of England) out of his realm, or else
have slain him, and thus have got his realm. Now is thy turn, Sigvaldi,
and make no less a vow than I” ... (Jomsvikinga Saga, c. 37).


“Ingjald had a great feast prepared at Upsala, and intended to give an
arvel after his father Önund, in a hall no less large or stately than
the hall at Upsala. This he called the hall of the seven kings, for
seven high-seats were in it. He sent men throughout Sweden, and invited
kings and jarls and other high-born men; to this arvel came six kings,
who were seated in the new-made hall. One of the high-seats which
Ingjald had had prepared was empty. All the guests were seated in the
new hall, and Ingjald had placed his hird and all his men in
Upsala-hall. It was customary at that time that, where an arvel was made
after the death of kings or jarls, the one who gave it and was to be led
to the inheritance should sit on the step in front of the high-seat
until the horn, called Bragi’s horn, was brought in, then he had to
rise, take the horn, make a vow, and drain it to the bottom. After this
he was to be led to the high-seat of his father, and then he was the
owner of all his inheritance. Thus was it done here; when the horn of
Bragi came in Ingjald rose, and took the large deer’s horn; he vowed
that he would increase his realm by half in every quarter, or else die;
then he drank it off. In the evening when the men were drunk, Ingjald
said to Folkvid and Hulvid, the sons of Svipdag, that they and their men
should arm themselves as was agreed upon. They went out to the new hall
and set it on fire; six kings with all their men were burnt there, and
those who tried to escape were soon slain. Thereupon Ingjald took
possession of all the realms owned by these kings, and took taxes from
them” (Ynglinga Saga, c. 40).[74]


It appears that the right of sitting in the high-seat, conveyed with it
the right to rule over household and land.


“When King Harald (Fairhair) was eighty winters old he became heavy in
his movements, so that he thought he could not journey about the country
or conduct the affairs of the realm. He then led his son Eirik into his
high-seat, and gave him power over the whole country.

“When his other sons heard of this, Halfdan the black placed himself in
a king’s high-seat and took the rule over the whole of Thrandheim, and
all the Thrands supported him in this. But when the men of Vikin heard
of it, they took Olaf as king over the whole of Vikin, which Eirik did
not like” (Olaf Tryggvason, vol. i.; Fornmanna Sögur).


“It is said that one day when the people went to _lögberg_ (the place of
the court at the _Althing_), Olaf (son of Höskuld, a chief who had died
shortly before) rose and asked for silence, and told the people first of
the decease of his father: ‘Here are now many of his kinsmen and
friends; it is the wish of my brothers that I invite to the arvel after
the death of our father, Höskuld, all temple-priests, for most of his
relatives are likely to be prominent men; I declare that none of the
more highborn men shall go away without gifts; we also want to invite
the bœndr and every one who will accept, rich and poor; ten weeks before
the beginning of winter you will come to a feast lasting half a month at
Höskuldstadir.’ When Olaf ended his speech he was cheered, and his
speech was thought very fine. When Olaf returned to his booth he told
his brothers the plan; they did not like it, and thought too much had
been offered. After the _Althing_ the brothers rode home. The summer
passed, and the brothers made ready for the feast; Olaf contributed the
third part lavishly, and it was prepared in the best manner. Great
preparations were made, for it was believed that many would come. At the
appointed time most men of rank who had promised came; they were so
many, that people say there were not less than nine hundred (1080). This
feast had the greatest number of guests in Iceland, next to that which
the sons of Hjalti made after their father, where twelve hundred were
present (1440). In all respects it was very fine, and the brothers got
much honour, but Olaf, who gave as much as both his brothers, the most;
gifts were given to all men of prominence” (Laxdæla, c. 27).


“Every man shall himself rule his property, so long as he can sit in his
high-seat, man as well as woman. If a man gets so much out of wits that
it seems to his kinsmen on male and female side that he know not how to
manage his property, the next heir shall take care of it. It must not be
sold away from the owner, and he shall get his living from it as is
befitting for both” (Frostath., ix. 20).


After the death of Heidrek we read an account of the arvel, and see one
of the brothers coming to claim his share of the division, which seems
to have been made by mutual arrangement, but not in this case.


“Thereupon Angantýr made a great feast in Danparstadir, at a bœr called
Arheimar, as an arvel alter his father’s death.

                    It was said that of yore
                    Humli ruled the host,
                    Gizur the Gautar,
                    Angantýr the Gotar,
                    Valdar the Danir (Danes),
                    Kjár the Valir,
                    Alfrek the renowned
                    The Ensk-thjód (English nation).

“Hlöd heard of the death of his father, and that his brother Angantýr
had been made king over the whole realm. King Humli wanted Hlöd to go
and demand his inheritance from his brother Angantýr....

                       Hlöd rode from the east,
                       The heir of Heidrek;
                       He came to the hall
                       Where Gotar live,
                       To Árheimar
                       To demand the inheritance;
                       There Angantýr drank
                       The arvel of King Heidrek.
                       He found a man
                       Outside the high hall
                       Who was late out
                       And greeted him:
                       ‘Warrior, go into
                       The high hall,
                       Ask Angantýr
                       To give me answer.’

“The man went in before the king’s table and said:—

                         Here has Hlöd come,
                         The heir of Heidrek;
                         Thy brother,
                         The battle-minded one;
                         He is very high
                         On horseback;
                         The chief wants
                         To speak with thee.

“When the king heard this he threw his knife on the table and rose and
put on a coat-of-mail, and took a white shield in one hand, and the
sword _Tyrfing_ in the other. Then there arose a great uproar in the
hall, as here is said:—

              Uproar was in the hall;
              They (warriors) rose with the high-born one;
              Every one wished to hear
              What Hlöd said
              And the answer
              That Angantýr gave.

“Angantýr said: ‘Welcome! hail to thee! go in and drink with us, and let
us first drink mead after our father to the honour of us all.’ Hlöd
replied: ‘We came hither for another purpose than filling our stomach.’

            I will have the half
            Of what Heidrek owned;
            Of tools and weapons,
            Also of tribute,
            Of cows and of calves,
            Of the sounding mills.

            Of bond-women and thralls
            And their children,
            Of the large forest,
            Called Myrkvid,
            The holy grave[75]
            Which is with the Goth-thjód.

            That beautiful stone[76]
            In Danparstadir,
            The half of the host-burghs
            Which Heidrek owned,
            Of lands and people
            And bright rings.[77]

            _Angantýr._

            Brother, the pale-white
            Shield will burst,
            And the cold spear
            Touch other spears,
            And many a warrior
            In the grass sink
            Before I _Tyrfing_
            In two parts divide,
            Or to the Humlung
            Half of the inheritance give.

            A fine drink I will offer thee,
            Property and many gifts
            For which thou yearnest most.
            I give thee twelve hundred men,
            I give thee twelve hundred horses,
            I give thee twelve hundred servants
            Who carry shields.

            I give every man
            Many things to accept;
            A maiden I give
            To every man;
            I clasp a necklace
            Around the neck of every maiden.

            With silver
            I will measure thee sitting;
            And over thee walking
            Pour gold,
            So that the rings[77]
            Roll in every direction;
            Over a third part of the Goth-thjód[78] (people)
            Thou shalt rule.

“Gizur Grýtingalidi, the foster-father of Heidrek, was then with
Angantýr; he was very old; when he heard the offer of Angantýr he
thought he offered too much, and said:—

                     This is acceptable
                     To a bond-woman’s child,
                     Though he is born to the king;
                     The bastard
                     Sat on a mound
                     When the king
                     Divided the inheritance.

“Now Hlöd became very angry at being called a bondwoman’s child and a
bastard if he accepted his brother’s offer; he went away with all his
men to Húnaland to Humli, his mother’s father, and told him that his
brother Angantýr had offered him a third of the realm, Humli heard all
they had spoken, and was very angry that his daughter’s son Hlöd should
be called the son of a bondwoman. He said:—

                    “We shall sit this winter
                    And live happily,
                    Drain and talk over
                    The costly drink,
                    Teach the Húnar
                    To make their weapons ready
                    Which we boldly
                    Shall bear forth.
                    Well shall we, Hlöd,
                    Dress the warriors
                    And strongly
                    Press the shields;
                    Twelve-winters-old men,
                    And two-winters-old horses,
                    Thus shall the host
                    Of the Húnar be gathered.”

                        (Hervarar Saga, c. 16, 17.)


Property was divided also by mutual arrangement.


“Now that season passed and the moving days came. Thorkel told Gisli
that he wanted to have all the property divided between them, and begin
joint housekeeping with Thorgrim, his brother-in-law. Gisli said: ‘It is
best to see the property of brothers together, brother; and I should be
thankful if we did not divide.’ Thorkel answered: ‘I saw long ago that
we are unequally kept, as thou toilest night and day for our household,
while I am good for nothing.’ Gisli replied: ‘I am well content, and
would willingly let it be thus.’ But Thorkel would listen to nothing but
division, and said: ‘Thou shalt get the homestead in the division, and
our father’s estate, because I ask for the division, but I will take the
loose property.’ Gisli said: ‘We have tried both to agree and to
disagree, kinsman, and both of us have succeeded better when we agreed;
let us not change this, brother, when we agree well.’ ‘It is of no use
talking of it,’ said Thorkel; ‘the property must be divided.’ ‘Then do
whichever thou likest,’ said Gisli; ‘divide or choose; for I do not care
which I do.’ ‘Then I want thee to divide,’ said Thorkel; and it was
done. Thorkel chose the loose property, which was more than the land
which Gisli got. There were two children to be supported by it, a boy
Geirmund and a girl Gudrid; the children of their kinsman Ingjald.
Gudrid went with Gisli, and Geirmund with Thorkel. Thorkel went to his
brother-in-law Thorgrim and lived with him; Gisli remained at Hól, and
did not find that the household was worse than before”[79] (Gisli
Sursson’s Saga, p. 100).


At the arvel the debts of the dead were settled, and divisions made if
the heirs were several. If the property left was not sufficient to pay
the debts, then the creditors had to share the loss in proportion to
their claims. If the heirs were sons or daughters of the deceased they
had to pay the debts out of their own property.


“When a man is dead his heir shall sit in the high-seat and summon all
the creditors to come there on the seventh day and take away each their
due, as much as witnesses proved. If the property is not enough all
shall share the loss. The one to whom more was due shall lose more. If a
pauper’s and a woman’s share are in the inheritance it holds good if
there is money enough for both; if there is not she shall lose her
_gagngjald_ (_tilgjöf_).... If there are sons or daughters they shall
pay the debts if they have property, but no other man shall do so unless
he inherits property” (Gulathing’s Law, 115).


After the debts were paid, then the paupers were distributed between the
heirs (or if only one pauper existed, each heir supported him in turn in
the same proportion as the inheritance), for the community never
intervened in the support of paupers.


“If people divide paupers without property between them the division
shall be kept up, however they may divide. They (paupers) shall follow
the heirs”[80] (Gulath., 127).


Only children by a lawful union were legitimate _skirborinn_
(holy-born), and consequently _arfborinn_ (inheritance-born).


“The child whose mother is bought with mund is inheritance-born when it
comes into daylight living and receives food” (Gragas, i. 223).[81]


“The man who has been carried between the _skaut_ (cloak-skirts) of
father and mother shall have the same rights as his father had” (Earlier
Frostathing’s Law, ix. 15).


“If a man lives with his concubine twenty winters or more, and they
never separate during that time, and no hindrances come forward during
the time, then their children are inheritance-born and they are partners
by law” (Gulath., 125).


In Christian times the arvel changed its name into that of soul-ale.


“Wherever men die and the heir wants to have an arvel, whether it is in
seven days or on the thirtieth morning or later, it is called _erfiöl_.
If they make ale and call it _sálu-öl_ (soul-ale) they shall invite to
it the priest, of whom they buy service, with two other men at least.
The priest shall go to arvels or soul-ales if not hindered by necessity.
If he will not go he shall lose his tithe” (Gulath., 23).


No one who had lawful heirs was allowed to dispose of his property
before his death without the assent of these heirs.


“No man shall divide a property or inheritance before the owner allows
it, until men see that he spoils it. As long as a man has his wits and
can manage his farm and bargains, and is able to ride on horseback and
drink ale, he shall rule his property, and no man is allowed to divide
it; if it is divided it shall not be kept” (Gulath., 126).[82]


“When two daughters inherit from their father, and one has a daughter
and the other a son, the son can redeem (the land) from his kinswomen
according to law. But if this son has only daughters, while the daughter
of his mother’s sister has a son, he can redeem the land from them for
the same sum as was paid to his mother. Then the land shall remain where
it is, for it has come three times under spindle” (Gulath., 275).


The nearest of kin inherited the property, and the rules regulating the
inheritance are these:—


“A son shall take inheritance after his father if it goes as it ought,
and an adopted son like one family-born; and if things go badly (if the
son dies) the father inherits from his son if the latter has no heir.

“The second inheritance is the one which a daughter and son’s son take,
if he and also his father are lawfully born.

“If two lawfully born son’s sons are inheritance-born, and the one’s
father is lawfully born and the other’s not, then the first shall take
the inheritance.

“Brothers who have the same father inherit from each other. When a
brother dies, the sister born of the same father gets the inheritance.

“A father’s father, and father’s brother, and brother’s son each inherit
a third.

“The sixth inheritance is taken by a brother of the same mother
(half-brother), and by a brother’s sons.

“A lawfully born mother is the heir of her child, and then a lawfully
born father’s sister.

“A _prisung_[83] and a thrall-born son, and a _hornung_,[84] if freedom
is given to them, take the same inheritance, and each of them inherits
from the other.

“A mother’s father and daughter’s son both take the same inheritance,
and each inherits from the other.

“A mother’s brother and sister’s son both take the same inheritance, and
inherit from each other.

“Men who are sons of sister and brother both take the same inheritance,
and inherit from each other.

“Sons of two sisters take the same inheritance, and inherit from each
other.

“It is decided and decreed in the laws of men that if a man slays a man
in order to inherit from him, he has forfeited his inheritance, and it
shall be given according to law as if the man did not exist who slays
another for the sake of inheritance” (Frostath. viii. 1–14).


By the so-called _ættleiding_, or leading into the family, i.e.
adoption, a person could give the illegitimately born the right of
inheritance, or at least a right to a certain part of the inheritance,
together with the legal heirs, the consent of the latter being always
necessary. The ceremony appears from different laws to have been the
same all over the country, and its primitive form seems to indicate
great antiquity; a shoe was placed alongside the _skapker_, the large
vat into which the beer was poured in the banqueting hall, and from
which the smaller vats and horns were filled and carried round among the
guests. The ceremony which followed is thus described:—


“It is a full adoption, when a father leads into his family his son, and
those men assent who are the next heirs of the one who adopts his son.
Ale from three measures of grain shall be made, and a bull three winters
old be killed, and the skin be flayed off its right hind-leg above the
hough, and therefrom a shoe be made. The father shall let the one to be
adopted step into it, and have in his arms those of his sons who are not
of age, but those of his sons who are full-grown shall step into that
shoe. If he has no inheritance-born sons those who are his nearest heirs
shall step into the shoe. The adopted man shall be led into the embrace
of the man and the wife. Women shall be witnesses as well as a man to a
full adoption, as well as to the shoe if it is kept. The thrall-born son
to whom liberty is given shall be adopted if either father or brother,
or whoever is nearest heir, whether he is young or old, gives him his
liberty, and those being the nearest heirs of the man who wants to adopt
him assent. The son of a freed woman shall be adopted like that of a
thrall-woman” (Earlier Frostathing’s Law, ix.).


“No man is allowed to give away an inheritance; a fraudulent bargain
shall be reckoned as no bargain. The father who adopts his own son shall
step into the shoe, and then his full-grown son. That is a full
adoption. If there is no son the one who consents to the adoption shall
step into the shoe. Then he who consents to his ódal rights shall step
into the shoe. He shall say this: ‘I lead this man to the property which
I give him, to payment and gift, to seat and settle, to indemnities and
rings, and to all _rétt_ as if his mother had been bought with mund”
(Earlier Gulathings Law, c. 58).


The father[85] had then to declare that he led the adopted son into the
share of the inheritance which he gave him, and with the same rights as
if his mother had been law fully wed. Those present had to bear witness
to this leading into the family, as also to the use of the shoe, by
means of which it had been done.

The Gulathings Law required the adopted to publicly announce his
adoption at the _Thing_ every twenty years, until he stepped into his
inheritance.


“A man shall announce publicly his adoption every twenty winters until
he gets his inheritance, which shall thereafter be his witness”
(Gulath., 58).


“A woman could adopt as well as a man, but she could not adopt her
illegitimate son, nor a man his illegitimate daughter.

“A man must never lead a woman into his family (adopt her), nor a woman
a man” (Frostathings Law, ix. 21).


To an illegitimate son a father could not give more than a certain
amount without the consent of his heir.


“Höskuld Dala-Kollsson fell sick in his old age. He sent for his sons,
and other friends and kinsmen; when they came he said to the brothers
Bard and Thorleik: ‘I am now ill, but I have been a man not apt to be
taken ill. My third son is not legitimately born, and I ask you, his
brothers, to let Olaf inherit a third of my property, and you the two
other thirds.’ Bard answered first, and said he would do as his father
wanted. ‘I believe Olaf will do us credit in every respect, and the more
so the richer he is.’ Thorleik answered: ‘I do not want Olaf to be made
legitimate heir; he has already more than enough property; thou, father,
hast given him many things, and for a long time hast shared very
unequally between us brothers; I am not willing to give up the honour to
which I am born.’ Höskuld replied: ‘You will not object if I give my son
three mörk[86] (of gold), since he is so high-born on his mother’s
side.’ To this Thorleik consented. Then Höskuld took the gold ring that
Hakon jarl had given him, which weighed two mörk, and the sword which
was the gift of the king, on which was a mörk of gold” (Laxdæla, ch.
26).


The Gulathings Law expressly mentions those female degrees to which the
_ódal_ descended. These were: daughter, sister, aunt, father’s sister,
daughter of brothers, and son’s daughters. It adds that if two sisters
inherited an _ódal_, and one had a son and the other a daughter, the
former had a right to purchase the shares of his kinswomen in the
_ódal_.

The right of inheritance does not seem to have extended further than the
third cousin on the father’s side, or second cousin on the mother’s.

Where sons existed they always inherited to the exclusion of their
sisters.[87]

If an _ódal_ by inheritance came to one not entitled to _ódals-right_,
the right of redemption was open to the nearest of kin, who had such
right.

If one of joint heirs had the right of _ódal_ and the other not, the
former got his share of the inheritance in _ódals land_, the other in
personal property. In case a son’s son and daughter inherited together,
the former had the right of purchasing the latter’s share in the _ódal_.

Daughters always inherited certain things, such as article of clothing,
household goods, bedding, ornaments, &c.


“This shall a daughter take in inheritance after her mother, if her
brother is alive: all clothes except cloaks (_skikkja_) of _gudvef_
(costly stuff), and all uncut clothes; these her brother owns. And of
clothes the brother shall take gold-lace, if he wants it; but woven
cloaks and all bed-hangings, and lace-clothes (i.e. edged with lace),
brocades and feather-clothes and down-clothes, the daughter shall have.
If a web is in the loom, the son owns that which is woven, and the
daughter that which is not woven. The son owns all mats and
bench-clothes, fur-hoods and house-furniture; the daughter owns the
bed-covers if her mother owned them, and the son if the father owned
them. The daughter owns five sheep, and all linen and yarn, and five
sheepskins with the wool on, and the geese, and the son owns all the
rest. The daughter owns all cloth-chests, if her mother owned them. The
daughter shall have a cross or a brooch, whichever she may want; or the
best breast-ornament, if it is not of gold but of silver; and all
brooches if they weigh one eyrir or less, and are of silver and precious
stones. All vessels out of which women drink to each other across the
floor at home belong to the daughter, though they are ornamented with
silver. The son shall own the silver vessels. The daughter shall have
one washing-basin, unless there be a chain between two, then she shall
have both” (Earlier Frostathings Law, ix. 9).


If, during his lifetime, a father gave more property to one of his sons
than to another, such a gift was taken into consideration at the
division of the inheritance on the father’s death.


“If a man gives more to one of his sons than to the other then the
latter shall take as much from the undivided property as was given to
the one that got more; then they shall divide equally all that is left”
(Gulath., 129).


The property of a foreigner who died in the country went to the country
in which the man died unless the heir came to claim it.


“If English (Enskir) men die here or those whose language or tongue is
not known here, then the law does not require that their inheritance be
sent out of the country, unless a father or son or brother of the
deceased has been in this country and claims it. The inheritance of
foreigners received here by law need not be given up except to the heir”
(Gragas, i. 224).


“King Svein held this feast in Ringstadir, and took great pains that
nothing should be wanting to render it more splendid than any before it.
The Jomsvikings came on the first day, and King Svein welcomed with
great kindness Sigvaldi jarl and all his men. According to old custom
the arvel had to be held during the year in which the person died for
whom the arvel was made, but the man who gave it could not occupy the
high-seat of him from whom he inherited until the arvel was drunk. On
the first evening of the arvel many horns were to be filled, as is now
done with memorial cups, and there they drank in honour of their
mightiest kinsmen, or of Thor and other gods in the heathen times. The
horn of Bragi was to be filled last then he who gave the arvel was to
make a vow at it, and also all who were at the feast, after which the
heir could sit down in the seat of the man for whom the arvel was made,
and thereafter enjoy his inheritance and honour” (Fagrskinna, ch. 55).


-----

Footnote 74:

  Cf. also Landnama, iii. c. 10.

Footnote 75:

  The grave probably of the Gothic kings.

Footnote 76:

  A stone for kings to step on at their election.

Footnote 77:

  In this passage we see clearly that only rings were used as money.

Footnote 78:

  God-thjód, Goth-thjód, Got-thjód in different texts, as if connected
  with _gods_.

Footnote 79:

  Cf. also Hervarar Saga, c. 16.

Footnote 80:

  When paupers have been divided like property, they go from heir to
  heir, &c.

Footnote 81:

  The son of a man who is a freed man and has a wife before his
  freedom-ale has been made, and has a son by that woman, shall not take
  the inheritance of any man though he is carried between _skauts_
  (cloak-skirts, laps). (Earlier Frostathing Law, ix. 15).

Footnote 82:

  When a man was unable to manage his property and spoiled it, then it
  could be divided without his leave by the heirs. Cf. also Frostathing,
  ix. 20.

Footnote 83:

  Son of a free woman begotten secretly.

Footnote 84:

  Son of a free woman who has had no _mund_ paid.

Footnote 85:

  Kinsmen on the father’s side are preferred to kinsmen on the mother’s
  side.

Footnote 86:

  A mörk was probably four ounces.

Footnote 87:

  The Frostathing Laws give a general rule for the degrees in which
  inheritances descended. Kinsmen on the father’s side were preferred to
  those on the mother’s side.




                               CHAPTER V.
                          FOSTER-BROTHERHOOD.

  Sacred character of foster-brotherhood—Ceremony of becoming
    foster-brothers—The oath—Joint ownership of property—Dissolution
    of the tie rare—Love between foster-children and
    foster-parents—Obligations.


Perhaps the most beautiful, touching, and unselfish trait in the
character of man of which we have any record is the ancient custom of
foster-brotherhood, which prevailed among the earlier Norse tribes. This
relation between two men was of a most sacred and binding character, and
was not even severed by the death of one.

Foster-brothers were those who in their youth had been brought up
together—the sons of the fosterer and he who was fostered by him—or men
who had fought against each other. Many examples are given of valiant
men who fought against each other admiring each other’s bravery and
becoming foster-brothers, pledging themselves by an oath, attended with
the ceremony of letting their blood flow together on the earth.

After this impressive ceremony the men considered themselves bound to
each other for life—to be unselfish and true to share the same danger,
and avenge each other’s death; in fact their motto was, “One and the
same fate may come over us.”


“In old times it had been the custom of valiant men, who made the
agreement between themselves, that the one who lived the longest should
avenge the other; that they should walk under three _jardarmen_,[88] and
that was their oath (equivalent to an oath). It was done thus: Three
long slices of turf were to be cut up; their ends were to be fastened in
the ground, and the loops raised so high that a man could go under them.
This Thorgeir (Hávarsson) and Thormód (Bersason) did” (Fostbrædra Saga,
1).[89]


Gisli was at a Thing with his brother-in-law Vestein. There were also a
Godi named Thorgrim, and Gisli’s brother Thorkel. Gisli said:


“‘I think it right that we should bind our friendship still closer than
before, and we four swear one another foster-brotherhood.’ To this they
consented, and went on Eyrarhvolsoddi (point or tongue of land), and
there cut from the ground a loop of turf, both ends being attached to
the ground, and under this placed a spear inlaid with ornaments, so long
that a man could reach with his hand to the spear-nail (_i.e._, the nail
fastening the spear-point to the handle). Under this were to go the
four, Thorgrim, Gisli, Thorkel, and Véstein. They then drew blood from
themselves, and let it run together into the mould, which had been cut
under the loop of turf, and mixed together the earth and the blood;
thereupon they all fell on their knees and swore an oath that each
should avenge the other like a brother, and called all the gods as
witnesses. They all shook hands” (Gisli Súrsson’s Saga, p. 11).[90]


When Angantýr and Beli were fighting, the latter became exhausted, and
would have been killed by the former but for Thorstein, who came
forward, and said:


“‘I think it right, Angantýr, that you should stop fighting, for I see
that Beli is exhausted, and I will not be so mean as to help him against
thee, but if thou becomest his slayer I will challenge thee to a
hólmganga, and I think we are not less unequal than thou and Beli; I
would kill thee in that hólmganga, and it would be a great loss if both
of you were to die. Now will I offer thee this condition, if thou givest
Beli his life, that we swear each other foster-brotherhood.’ Angantýr
said: ‘It seems to me a fair offer, that I become the foster-brother of
Beli, but it is a great boon for me to become thy foster-brother.’ This
was then agreed upon. They let blood flow from the hollow of their
hands, and went under a sod, and swore oaths that each one should avenge
the other, if any one of them was slain with weapons” (Thorstein
Vikingsson, c. 21).


It was usual to swear an oath that whoever survived his foster-brother
should avenge him by weapons if he died, not sparing even his own
relatives.

Orm Storólfsson, an Icelander, went to Norway, and there met Ásbjörn
Prudi, from Vendilskagi in Jutland.


“They soon became friends, and tried many idróttir; they swore each
other _föstbrœdralag_ (foster-brotherhood) according to ancient custom,
that the one who lived the longest should avenge the other, if he was
slain in battle” (Thatt of Orm Storólfsson, Fornmanna Sögur 111).


In order that there should not be anything that might awaken the
temptation of ill-feeling or jealousy, foster-brothers owned jointly and
equally all their property, or any which might come into their
possession during their Viking expeditions, so that all either of them
owned or acquired was considered as belonging in equal shares to the
other.


“The two kings Högni and Hédin vied with one another in all idróttir;
they tried swimming and shooting, tournaments and skill with weapons,
and were equal in all.

“After this they swore themselves into foster-brotherhood, and to own
everything by halves” (Sörla Thátt, c. 6).


In very rare instances we see that foster-brotherhood could be
dissolved.


“Thorgeir and Thormod, after having performed many a deed of valour, one
day had a talk, and the former said to the latter: ‘Knowest thou
anywhere two foster-brothers who are our equals in courage and
manliness?’ Thormod replied: ‘They might perhaps be found, if we were to
look for them far and wide.’ ‘Nowhere in Iceland, I think; but which of
us two, dost thou think, would be the winner, if we were to try each
other?’ Thorgeir inquired. ‘That I do not know,’ Thormod answered; ‘but
this I know, that thy question puts an end to our fellowship and
foster-brotherhood’”[91] (Fostbrædra Saga).


This shows the proud spirit of the men of that period. Thormod felt
deeply wounded that such a thought should have entered the heart of one
with whom he had shared so many dangers.

The love which existed between foster-children and foster-parents is
seen in many instances. When Olaf, son of Höskuld and Melkorka, daughter
of king Mýrkjartan, came to Ireland—


“The foster-mother of Melkorka, who was bedridden from sickness and old
age, was most moved by this news; she walked without a stick to see
Olaf. The king (Mýrkjartan) said to Olaf: ‘Here is the foster-mother of
Melkorka, who would like to hear from thee about her condition.’ Olaf
took the old woman in his arms and seated her on his knee, and told her
that her foster-daughter was well-off in Iceland. He handed to her the
knife and the belt, and she recognized them and wept with joy. She said
the son of Melkorka was imposing in appearance, as was likely, he being
her son. The old woman was in good health all that winter” (Laxdæla, c.
21).


To carry a foster-brother’s last request and greetings to his relatives
or friends, to bury him in a suitable manner, and to bring to the
funeral pile or to the mound his property with all the love that could
be shown, were considered obligatory by the surviving one.


“Asmund being one day in the forest met a man, who called himself Aran,
and after a while proposed that they should try each other in some
idróttir. Asmund saying he was ready, they proceeded with such idróttir
as were customary among young men in those times, and no one could have
determined who was the better man. They then began to wrestle hard, and
neither could excel the other, and after it both were tired. Aran said
to Asmund: ‘We will not try our skill with weapons, for that would be to
the injury of us both. I should like to swear to each other
foster-brotherhood, that each shall avenge the other, and possess in
common property gotten and ungotten.’ They also took oaths that whoever
lived the longest should have a mound thrown up over the other, and
place therein as much property as seemed to him befitting, and the
survivor had to sit with the dead one in the mound for three nights, and
then depart, if he liked. Then both drew their blood and let it flow
together; this was then regarded as an oath” (Egil and Asmund’s Saga, c.
6).


-----

Footnote 88:

  Jardar = of earth, men = necklace. The name of jardarmen (a neck ring,
  necklace of earth (turf)) probably meant a loop, the turf being cut in
  a semi-circular shape, for any other form of strip could not well have
  been raised from the ground without breaking.

Footnote 89:

  The Saga is called Fostbrædra Saga (Foster-brothers’ Saga) after them.

Footnote 90:

  Cf. also Sturlaug Starfsami, c. 13, and Hord’s Saga, c. 12.

Footnote 91:

  Another text adds: “Thorgeir said, ‘This was not seriously meant that
  we should try each other.’ Thormod answered: ‘It came across thy mind
  while thou saidst it, and we will part.’”




                              CHAPTER VI.
                                WEAPONS.

  Arms of offence—Defensive weapons—Swords: Their rich
    ornamentation—Scabbards—Belts—Figurative names of
    swords—Supernatural qualities attributed to weapons—Weapons as
    heirlooms—Spears: Their figurative names—Axes: Their figurative
    names—Bows and arrows: Their figurative names—Mythical
    arrows—Slings—Shields: Their figurative names—Coats of mail: Their
    figurative names—Helmets: Their figurative names.


The finds, as well as the Sagas, fully corroborate the fact that from
the earliest times the Northmen were a very warlike people.

[Illustration:

  ⅖ real size.

  Fig. 782.—Sword-hilt of iron. The pommel and hilt inlaid with
    bronze.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 783.—Hilt of iron inlaid with silver.—Hedemarken, Norway.
]

Their arms of offence were the sword, the axe, the spear, the bow and
arrow, the sling, &c., &c. Those of defence were the coat of mail, the
shield, and the helmet. The weapons are often described as being
ornamented and inlaid with gold and silver.

[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 784.—Double-edged sword of iron inlaid with silver; found with
    balance in a tumulus with charcoal, burnt bones, iron pincers, and
    remains of twine of lamp-threads.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 785.—Double-edged sword-hilt, inlaid with silver and bronze, with
    broken blade. In a tumulus with an axe, a spear-head cut and bent,
    three shield-bosses, two horses’ bits, two stirrups, a hammer, the
    end of a chain, a piece of a two-edged sword, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 786.—Double-edged sword-hilt. In a round tumulus with fragments
    of bronze kettle, two sharpening stones, a pin with a mobile ring of
    bronze, amber bead, glass beads, remains of textile stuff with
    thread of gold weaved into it, two bronze fibulæ. About 2 feet
    higher were found an anvil, several hammers, pincers, two gimlets, a
    spear-head, a quantity of rivets; clinch nails and charcoal were
    scattered all over in the tumulus.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 787.—Double-edged sword with hilt inlaid with silver; in a
    tumulus with a hook of iron, a spear-head cut on purpose on one
    side; an axe, a shield-boss damaged with blows of an axe, a horse’s
    bit, a scythe blade, fragments of an iron kettle. These antiquities
    lay in a kind of sepulchral chamber. A big chain of iron, &c., was
    also found.—Norway.
]

The hilts of the swords were of iron, bronze, or wood, often inlaid and
ornamented with precious metals, garnets, ivory, &c., &c.; when made of
wood they were sometimes adorned with silver-headed nails. The handles
of some of those swords belonging to the period of the earlier iron age
are nearly identical in form with those of the bronze age.

[Illustration:


  Fig. 788.—Hilt of a double-edged sword, ⅓ real size, inlaid with
    silver, placed over an urn containing burnt bones.—Bohuslan.
]

[Illustration:


  Fig. 789.—Hilt of a double-edged iron sword, ⅖ real size, inlaid with
    silver, found with a spear-point of iron.—Södermanland, Sweden.
]

The scabbards were of wood, covered with skins, often richly ornamented
with gold and silver. The men carried them in a belt across the
shoulder, which by means of a double button could be lengthened or
shortened. The luxury of the ornamentation on their weapons corresponds
with that of the countries whence the forefathers of the race claimed to
come.[92]


“Eyvind Urarhorn was in the winter at the Yule-feast with King Olaf, and
received rich gifts from him, Brynjolf Ulfaldi was also there, and got
as Yule-gift from the king a gold ornamented sword, and also a farm
called Vettaland, which is a very large farm” (St. Olaf’s Saga, ch. 60).


“There were in the house not a few gold ornamented swords. Sigvat made a
stanza, in which he said he would accept a sword if it were given to him
by the king. The king took one and gave it him; the hilt was bound with
gold, and the guards were gold ornamented; it was a very costly weapon”
(St. Olaf’s Saga, 172).


[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 790.—Hilt of a double-edged sword inlaid with silver; in a
    tumulus with an axe.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  ⅓ real size.

  Fig. 791.—Hilt of a sword. Hilt of iron ornamented with carved and
    raised notches, the first of bronze, the latter of silver, partly
    destroyed.—Norway.
]

The swords were carefully tested before use.


“Thórólf took his own sword and gave to Thorstein; it was a fine and
well-made sword. Thorstein took it, drew it, and catching its point,
bent the blade between his hands so that the point touched the guard; he
let it spring back, and it did not straighten again. He gave it back to
Thórólf, and asked for a stronger weapon....” (Svarfdæla, ch. 2).


[Illustration:


  Fig. 792.—Hilt of sword ornamented with silver and gold. ½ real
    size.—Scania, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 793.—Double-edged sword handle. ½ real size.—Götland.
]

From the following we see how careful the people were in polishing their
swords, so that they might be very bright:—


“Thorir was the herdman of King Olaf, and was greatly honoured. As a
token of it the king gave him the sword which his kinsmen had owned for
a long time and been very fond of. It was called Thegn; it was both long
and broad, sharper than any other, and three times polished” (An
Bogsveigi’s, Saga, ch. 1).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 794.—⅛ real size. Found in a tumulus with an axe, the teeth of an
    iron comb for weaving linen, &c., and a glass bead.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 795.—⅛ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 796.—⅛ real size. Found with a file in a round mound, a fragment
    of a shield-boss, three arrow-heads, a horse’s bit,
  a gimlet, the end of a chain, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 797.—⅖ real size. Single-edged sword of iron, found with a
    spear-head of iron, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 798.—⅙ real size. Sword with runic letters on the blade.—Norway.
]

  Iron Swords.

Whetstones were used from very early times to sharpen their weapons or
tools of iron, for these are quite common in the finds.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 799.—Sharpening stone, found with 108 Roman coins
    (Vitellius-Commodus), with small bits of bones, under a stone which
    was part of a double circle of stone.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 800.—Sharpening stone encased with bronze. ⅔ real size.—Upland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 801.—Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Real size.

  Fig. 802.—Buckle for belt, plated with silver and gilt, ornamented
    with  glass, found by the side of a skeleton, with fragments
    of a sword and spear-heads.—Upland.
]

  Silver Ornaments for Sword Scabbards.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 803.—Bronze button to sword-hilt, ⅔ real size; enamelled in blue,
    white, and red, with the centre originally enamelled: found in a
    round tumulus with several ornaments of swords of bronze, a
    shield-boss of bronze, plaqué with silver, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 804.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 805.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 806.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 807.
]

  Ornaments of silver for scabbard of sword, partly gilt and niellé;
    found in a tumulus, with sepulchral chamber of wood, with the
    following objects:—Among the principal objects were, a spiral gold
    bar used as money, two gold rings, four clay urns, four or five
    wooden buckets with bronze fixtures, bronze fixtures for a
    drinking horn, bronze fibula inlaid with silver, pieces of a
    leather belt with bronze traps, a large mosaic glass bead,
    fragments of a two-edged sword, three shield-bosses, fragments of
    garments and furs, fragments of a balance, sharpening stone, &c.
    Real size.—Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 808.—Ornament for scabbard. Real size.—Upland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 809.—Ornament of gold for mouth of scabbard; real size.—Vestre
    Slidre, Norway. Weight, nearly 2½ oz.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 810.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 811.
]

  Gold ornaments in filigree for sword-handle, found with the
    neck-ring. Real size.—Thureholm, Södermanland, Sweden.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 812.—Norway, real size. Silver mounting to a scabbard.—Horseus.
    It lay under a large clayurm filled with bones, together with a
    damaged double-edged sword, spear-point, arrow-point, shield-boss,
    all of iron, fragments of iron shears, and mountings to a drinking
    horn of bronze.
]

Swords seem to have been prized above all other weapons; occasionally
their genealogy was carefully kept. Some swords caused death every time
they inflicted a wound, from which we must infer that their blades had
been poisoned, either during or after the forging.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 813.—Double-edged sword, with handle hilt of silver and bronze
    gilt; found by the side of the remains of a skeleton, with a
    spear-head, several arrow-heads, and a knife—all of iron; a glass
    cup, a gilt bronze fibula, and bones of a dog, &c. ⅙ real
    size.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 814.—Pommel of the sword. Real size.—Götland?
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 815.—Ornament of bronze gilt, with round garnets. Real size.
    Endregårda, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 816.—Buckle of gilt bronze with garnets _enchassés_. Real
    size.—Endregårda, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 817.—Pommel of sword, in gilt bronze and silver.—Falköping,
    Vestergötland. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 818.—Part of a massive gold pommel of sword found in a field in
    Leijeby, Halland. Real size.
]

The _mækir_, the _sverd_, and the _sax_ seem to have been the three
kinds of swords used by the people.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 819.—Silver ornament for scabbard, real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 820.—Pommel of sword of massive gold, ornamented with garnets
    _enchassés_. Real size. Earlier iron age.—Bohuslan.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 821.—Reverse view of Fig. 822.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 822.—Silver ornament (both sides shown) found in the sand. Real
    size.—Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 823.—Silver thong aiguillette. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 824.—Gold ornament of sword belt. Real size.—Thureholm,
    Södermanland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 825.—Bronze mounting to a belt, found, when ploughing, with a
    short single-edged sword, four arrow-heads, a shield-boss, iron bit,
    a round fibula of bronze, and thirty glass beads, &c. Real
    size.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 826.—Ornament of gilt bronze, with border in silver, found in a
    mound. Real size.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 827.—Mounting of thong, ⅔ real size, with leather still attached
    to it, in gilt bronze with red enamel. With it were an iron sword
    with gilt bronze handle, two bits, two stirrups, more than 100
    clinch nails of the size of those in the Ultuna mound, a clay urn
    with burnt bones, and the unburnt jaw of a dog, &c.—Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 828.—Ornament of gilt bronze, real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 829.—Ornament of gilt bronze, ⅔ real size; found in a tumulus,
    with fibula, horse’s bit, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 830.—Ornament of solid gold for the mouth of a scabbard.—Malby,
    Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 831.—Reverse view of Fig. 830.

  In all ornamentation one side is not similar to the other.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 832.—Massive ring of gold (probably fixed at the mouth of a
    scabbard); weight, 5 oz. Real size.—Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 833.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 834.—Reverse of Fig. 833.
]

  Ornaments for the mouthpiece of a scabbard seen from both sides. The
    two sides are always unlike. Real size.—Thureholm.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 835.—Double-edged sword-hilt and mounting of scabbard of gilt
    bronze and of silver. ½ real size.—Ultuna, Upland.
]

The sax had only one sharp edge in contrast to the sverd, which had two.

Upon the swords more than upon all other weapons the poets lavished
their most figurative and poetical names; they are called:—

                      Odin’s flame:
                      The gleam of the battle;
                      The ice of battle;
                      The serpent of the wound;
                      The wolf of the wound;
                      The dog of the helmet;
                      The battle snake;
                      The glow of the war;
                      The injurer of the shields;
                      The fire of the shields;
                      The fire of the battle;
                      The viper of the host;
                      The torch of the blood;
                      The snake of the brynja;
                      The fire of the sea-kings;
                      The thorn of the shields;
                      The fear of the brynja;
                      The tongue of the scabbard.

Among the most celebrated swords were _Tyrfing_, the sword of Sigurlami,
son of Odin, which had come down to Angantyr and his descendants. It
shone like a ray of sunshine, and slew a man every time it was drawn. It
was always to be sheathed with man’s blood upon it; it never failed, and
always carried victory with it.


“In the battle Heidrek was in the foremost array, and he carried Tyrfing
in his right hand, and cut down the host of the jarl like saplings, and
neither helmet nor armour could resist; he went through the host; he
slew all who were near him” (Hervarar Saga, c. 10).


Some weapons had special names given to them, and the great fame they
had acquired was doubtless due to the personal bravery of the warriors
who had owned them, to the great skill with which they were handled, and
to their superior workmanship. People believed in their supernatural
qualities; some were even thought by them to have been forged by the
_Dvergar_, others were supposed to have been given by Odin himself;
while some had become infallible by _akvœdi_, that is, by charms and
incantations used over them while they were being made, or else by
_mal_, _i.e._, mystic signs engraved or inlaid upon them.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 836.—Sword, found in a tumulus with two spear-heads, shield-boss,
    and a garniture of a shield handle.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 837.—Found amongst some burnt bones and objects of iron; ⅕ real
    size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 838.—Sax found in a small tumulus with a human cranium; two
    spear-points; ¼ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 839.—Sword-hilt with an outer sheet of thin silver, very much
    injured by fire; nearly ⅓ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 840.—Sword-hilt with wood and bronze bands; nearly ⅓ real
    size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 841.—Sax or single-edged sword found with an umbo shield boss of
    iron in a cairn. ⅕ real size.—Långlöt, Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 842.—Sax or single-edged iron sword, found in a stone cist of
    over nine feet in height, with a skeleton, spear-point, clay urn,
    &c. ¼ real size.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 843.—Double-edged sword, with bronze mounting for scabbard; found
    by the side of a skeleton in a tumulus at Hammenhöj, Scania,
    together with an iron shield boss, a clay urn, two bone dice, forty
    bone checkers and other things. ⅕ of real size.
]


“Hraungvid said: ‘I have ravaged for thirty-three years, summer and
winter, and I have fought in sixty battles, generally gaining victory;
the name of my sword is _Brynthvari_, and it has never been dulled”
(Hrómundar Saga Greipssonar, ch. 1).


Grettir asked for a weapon, and Asmund, his father, answered:


“‘Thou hast not been obedient to me, and as I do not know what thou wilt
do with weapons, so I will not give thee any.’ Grettir replied: ‘Then
there is nothing to repay, where nothing has been given.’ Father and son
parted with little affection. Many wished Grettir farewell, but few safe
return. His mother followed him on the way, and before they parted she
said: ‘Thou art not fitted out from home, my kinsman, as I would like,
able as thou art; it seems to me the greatest want, that thou hast no
weapon fit for use, and my mind tells me that thou wilt need one.’ She
took an ornamented sword from under her cloak; it was very costly, and
said: ‘This sword my grandfather Jökul owned, and the old Vatnsdælir, it
used to give them victory. I will give thee the sword; use it well.’
Grettir thanked her much for the gift, saying he liked it better than
greater valuables” (Gretti’s Saga, ch. 17).


The jarl Viking said to his son Thorstein:


“The only thing that gladdens me is that no man will stand over thy
scalp (have thy head at his feet), although thou wilt have a narrow
escape. Here is a sword, kinsman Thorstein, which I want to give thee;
its name is _Angrvadil_, and victory has always followed it; my father
took it from the slain Björn Blue-tooth; I have no other remarkable
weapons, excepting an old spear which I took from Harek Jarnhaus, and I
know it is not manageable by any man” (Thorstein Vikingsson’s Saga, ch.
10).


“When Viking drew it (‘Angrvadil’) it was as if lightning flashed from
it. Harek seeing this, said: ‘I should never have fought against thee,
if I had known thou hadst Angrvadil; it is most likely it will be as my
father said, that we brothers and sisters would be short-lived, except
that one only who was named after him; it was the greatest misfortune,
when Angrvadil went out of our family;’ and at that moment Viking struck
down on the head of Harek, and cleft him in two from head to feet, so
that the sword entered the ground up to the hilt” (Thorstein Vikingsson,
ch. 14).[93]


“King Athelstan gave him a sword, with hilt and guards of gold, but the
blade was still better; with it Hakon cut a millstone through to the
centre hole,[94] and therefore the sword was afterwards called
_kvernbit_ (mill-biter). It was the best sword that ever came to Norway”
(Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga; Fornmanna Sögur).


Many were considered valuable heirlooms in families, and their
possession was so much coveted that even burial mounds were broken open
in order to get them.

Grettir had broken into the mound of the Norwegian chief Kár, with whose
son, Thorfinn, he was residing, and had taken therefrom a great deal of
property.


“Late at night he returned to his house, and placed on the table before
Thorfinn the property he had taken from the mound. Among the treasures
was a sax, such a good weapon that Grettir said he had never seen a
better. He wanted to have this very much, but produced it last of all
(the treasures). Thorfinn’s face brightened when he saw the sax, for it
was a great treasure, and had never gone out of his family; he asked how
he (Grettir) got it, and Grettir told him.... Thorfinn said: ‘Thou must
accomplish something that I think famous, before I will let thee have
the sax, for my father never allowed me to use it’” (Gretti’s Saga, ch.
18).


“Arinbjörn gave to Egil a sword called _Dragvandil_, which Thórólf
Skallagrimsson had given to him; Skallagrim had got it from his brother
Thórólf, and Grim Lodinkinni (shaggy-cheek) had given it to Thórólf.
Ketil Hœng, Grim’s father, had owned it, and carried it in
single-fights; it was sharper than any other sword” (Egil’s Saga, c.
64).


“He (King Magnus) was girt with a sword called _Leggbit_ (the
leg-biter); its guards were of walrus-tusk, and its hilt was covered
with gold; it was one of the best of weapons” (Magnus Barefoot’s Saga,
ch. 26).[95]


In time of peace warriors wrapped round their swords what was called
_Fridbönd_ (peace-band). This was a strap wound round the sheath, and
fastened to the hilt, but unfastened in case of war.

Thorkel, Gisli’s brother, was well dressed at the Thorskafjardar-thing.


“He wore a hat from Gardariki and a grey cloak and a gold fibula on his
shoulder, and he carried a sword in his hand.”


Two boys came walking up to him.


“The older boy said: ‘Who is the noble-looking man sitting here? Saw
never I a better-looking or more dignified man.’ Thorkel answered: ‘Thou
speakest well; I am called Thorkel.’ The boy said: ‘The sword in thy
hand must be very precious; wilt thou allow me to look at it?’ Thorkel
answered: ‘This is strange, but I will allow thee to look,’ and handed
the sword to him. The boy took the sword, turned a little aside,
unloosed the peace bands and drew the sword. When Thorkel saw this, he
said: ‘I did not allow thee to draw the sword.’ ‘I asked no leave from
thee,’ said the boy; and he brandished the sword and struck at the neck
of Thorkel, taking off his head” (Gisli Sursson’s Saga, ch. 55).[96]


A Valkyria says to Helgi:

                    I know swords lying
                    In Sigarsholm
                    Four less
                    Than fifty;
                    One is
                    The best of them all.
                    The harmer of war-knittings[97]
                    Covered with gold.
                    For him who gets it
                    A ring is in the guard,
                    Courage in the middle,
                    Terror in the point,
                    A blood-dyed serpent
                    Lies along the edge,
                    The serpent throws its tail
                    On the valbost.[98]

                          (Helgi Hjörvardsson.)

_Spears._—Different kinds of spears are mentioned, such as _kesja_;
_höggspjót_ (hewing-spear); _gaflak_ (javelin); _snœris-spjót_
(string-spear); which last was thrown with the aid of a string fastened
to the spear; _pál-staf_ (pole-staff), a pole provided with an iron
spike; _skepti-fletta_ (cord-shaft), a shaft with a cord attached to it;
_atgeir_, a kind of halberd.

The sockets were often richly ornamented with gold or silver inlaid in
beautiful patterns, sometimes with fine notches of silver, or were
covered over with sheets of silver, upon which were engraved the
serpentine ornamentation peculiar to the North.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 844.—⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 845.—Spear-head. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 846.—Damascene spear-head, found with a fragment of a
    single-edged sword with hilt, a key, a scythe, iron blade, &c. ⅓
    real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 847.—Spear-head. In a tumulus. The upper line in the handle has
    been filled with silver. ⅓ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 848.—Spear-point, with lower part plated with silver and gold. ⅓
    real size.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 849.—Spear-head, found with two swords, iron knife, and three
    bronze buckles. ¼ real size.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 850.—Spear-point, ⅓ real size, found in Kragehul bog.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 851.—Spear-head. ½ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 852.—Spear-point. ⅓ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 853.—Spear-point. ⅓ real size. In a tumulus with two bent
    double-edged swords, another similar spear-head, &c., &c., and the
    bones of two horses.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 854.—Spear-head of iron. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 855.—Spear-point. ½ real size. In a round tumulus with a gold
    ring, pieces of a glass cup or vase, fragments of silver repoussé
    and gilt, and part of a bracelet.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 856.—Spear-head of iron, found with two other larger spear-heads,
    a single-edged sword, and the bottom of a Roman vase in bronze, &c.
    ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 857.—Spear-point. ½ real size. Found in a round tumulus with a
    two-edged sword, &c.—Norway.
]

From the more numerous finds of spears, of which great numbers have been
discovered together, we gather that the spear was a more common weapon
than the sword. We also learn that spear-shafts were generally made of
ash, and that they were sometimes more than eleven feet long, while
their thickness rarely exceeded an inch; on some spears the centre of
gravity was marked by nails or strings, in order that the thrower might
quickly give the spear the right position in his hand.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 858.—Triangular arrow-point. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 859.—Iron spear-point. ¼ real size.—Karleby, Upland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 860.—Iron spear-point, found with a skeleton, double-edged sword,
    knife, two spear-points, and shield-boss, in a cairn at Folkeslunda,
    Öland. ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 861.—Iron arrow-head. ½ real size, found with 11 others of the
    same shape.—Vestana, Upland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 862.—Spear-point. ¼ real size.—Hade in Gestrikland, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 863.—Ornamentation of a spear-handle, ½ real size, from
    Thorsbjerg bog.
]

Spears, like swords, had numerous poetical names. Odin’s spear was
called _Gungnir_. Some other names were—

                    The pole of Darrad (Odin).
                    The sounding fish of the armour.
                    The snake of the corpse.
                    The flying dragon of the wounds.
                    The snake of the attack.
                    The venom-thong of the fight.
                    The thorn of the wound.
                    The serpent of blood.
                    The serpent of battle.
                    The serpent of wound.
                    The serpent of shield.
                    The shooting-serpent.

These are of many shapes, and it is impossible to tell those which were
used for war, or for household, or for felling trees.


“It was seen from the Thing that a body of men rode down along Gljúfrá
(a river), and that shields glittered there. When these arrived a man in
a blue cloak rode foremost; he had a gilt helmet on his head and a
gold-ornamented shield at his side; in his hand a hooked spear; the
socket of its head was inlaid with gold; he was girt with a sword. This
was Egil Skallagrimsson” (Egil’s Saga, ch. 85).


_The axe._—The axe is frequently mentioned in the Sagas, and must often
have been a formidable weapon. Some were artistically and splendidly
made, and inlaid with precious metal, each side being made of different
patterns.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 864.—Axe inlaid with metal, of silver mixed with gold. ½ real
    size.—Bjerringhoï mound at Mammen, near Viborg.
]

One of the earliest forms of this weapon is probably the one here
represented (Fig. 865), for it was found with a bronze sword, and shows
the transition that was taking place, when iron was to supersede bronze
in the making of weapons.

They also had peculiar figurative names—

                       The fiend of the shield.
                       The witch of the battle.
                       The witch of the armour.
                       The witch of the helmet.
                       The witch of the shield.
                       The wolf of the wound, &c.

The most celebrated axe in later times was that of Skarphédin, called
Rimmugýg (the war-witch).

[Illustration:

  Fig. 865.—Iron axe, ⅓ real size, probably of early iron age, found in
    a small stone cist with a short bronze sword and burnt
    bones.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 866.—A little less than ¼ real size. Iron axe, with a celt, a
    two-edged sword with hilt, a spear-head, an axe, two blades of
    knives, a horse-bit, a scythe-blade, &c., all of iron.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 867.—A little less than ¼ real size. Iron axe, in a half-ruined
    tumulus, with two other axes, a horse-bit, and a little
    bell.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 868.—Axe head, ⅔ real size.—Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 869.—A little less than ¼ real size. Iron axe, in a tumulus with
    charcoal, a spear-head, a knife-blade, a fire-steel, a single-edged
    sword, and end of an iron chain.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 870.—⅓ real size. Iron axe, found with checkers in a round
    tumulus with a stone vessel, which contained burnt bones and a
    purposely-broken and bent sword, with hilt inlaid with silver, a
    spear-head bent, two shield-bosses, a horse-bit, a pair of stirrups
    defaced by blows of a hammer, two buckles, and an iron ornament for
    a belt, fragments of bone comb, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 871.—¼ real size. Iron axe.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 872.—¼ real size. Iron axe.—Norway.
]


“The jarl (Hakon) asked (Hallfred) who he was? He said: ‘I am an
Icelander; but my errand is, lord, that I have composed a song about
you, and wish you to listen to it.’ The jarl replied: ‘Thou lookest to
be a man who would be bold in the presence of chiefs, and thou shalt
have a hearing.’ Hallfred recited the poem; it was a _drápa_ (laudatory
poem); he delivered it with skill. The jarl thanked him, gave him a
large silver ornamented axe, and good clothes, and invited him to remain
with him over winter; and this Hallfred accepted” (Hallfred’s Saga, ch.
5).


“As they parted, the jarl (Hakon) gave him (Olaf Höskuldsson) a most
costly gold ornamented axe” (Laxdæla, ch. 29).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 873.—Iron axe. ¼ real size. Found in a field with another axe,
    &c.—Karleby, Upland, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 874.—Small axe. ½ real size. Found with double-edged sword, 10
    arrow-points, &c.—Forneby, Vestmanlan.
]

The bow (_bogi_) and the arrow (_ör_) were among the most important
weapons for war. The bows discovered are generally about six feet long.

Arrows were called by the poets—

         The bird of the string.
         The swift-flyer.
         The hail of the battle.
         The hail of the wound.
         The herrings of the corpse.
         The ice of the bow.
         The rain of the string.
         The twigs of the corpse.
         The clutching one (one of three arrows of Orvar Odd).
         The glad flyer.
         The weapon of the Finns.
         The work of Gusi (king of the Finns).
         The followers of Gusi.
         The flowing streams of the bow.
         The rain of the bow.
         The quick one of the shaft.
         The fire of the bow, &c.

The quivers from the earlier iron age were occasionally of wood,
sometimes with bronze mountings, and were made to hold a score of
arrows. Some arrows were ornamented with gold, were long, and often
barbed with iron or bone. The arrow-shafts, of wood, were two or three
feet long, with four rows of feathers, fastened into pitched thread;
they, as well as the spears, often bore the marks of ownership; while
some were engraved with runes.

Svein (England’s conqueror), King Harald’s son, Pálnatóki’s foster-son,
went on warfare in his father’s realm and fought a battle at sea against
him near Bornholm. He was defeated and shut up in a bay, Harald’s ships
lying across it, each stem being fastened to the other.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 875.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 876.
]

  Arrow-heads. ⅔ real size.—Norway.


“The same evening Pálnatóki came to the island with twenty-four ships.
He laid his ships on the other side of the cape, and there tented over
his host (on board). Thereupon he went ashore alone with his bow and
arrows, and his sword at his belt. Now it must be told of King Harald
that he went ashore with eleven men. They walked into the wood, made a
fire there, and warmed themselves at it. They sat on a felled tree, and
it had become dark as the night fell on. Pálnatóki went into the wood
opposite where the king sat, and stood there. The king warmed himself at
the fire, and came with his back close to it. Clothes were laid under
him. He was on his knees, and stooped forward so low while warming his
back and shoulders that the hind part of his thighs stood out. Pálnatóki
heard the king’s voice, and recognised that of his father’s brother,
Fjölnir. He laid an arrow on his (bow) string and shot at the king, and,
it is told, that the arrow hit the king straight between his thighs and
came out of his mouth. The king fell dead, as was to be expected. When
his followers saw what had happened, Fjölnir said: ‘A great mishap has
occurred to the man who has done this deed, or caused it to be done. A
strange wonder is the way in which this deed has been committed.’ He
asked what should be done. They left to him to decide that, for he was
the wisest of them. It is told that he took the arrow out of the king’s
mouth, and put it by as it was. It was easy to know, for it was bound
with gold. Fjölnir said to the men: ‘I think it advisable that we all
tell the same tale about this event, and it seems to me we cannot do
better than say he was shot in the battle to-day. That is more likely
than the wonder which has occurred here.’ They all bound themselves
firmly to tell the same story” (Jomsvikinga Saga).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 877.—½ real size. Arrow-head. In a round tumulus, with fragments
    of two stone vases, pincers of iron for blacksmith, a two-edged
    sword with hilt inlaid with silver, the blade bent and the inlaid
    silver half melted; a bent spear-head, one axe, one shield-boss,
    fifteen arrow-heads, a horse-bit, two stirrups, two spears, four
    buckles for belts, and many ornaments for harness; two hammers, an
    anvil, fragments of a stone mould, remains of a bronze balance, two
    files, two blades of knives, and two celts of iron, a gimlet, two
    sharpening stones, a piece of flint, an iron key, fragments of
    checkers of bones, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 878.—½ real size. Arrow-head of iron.—Norway.
]

The most celebrated mythical arrows[99] of the Sagas were the Gusi
arrows, which had come into the possession of Ketil Hœng, and were owned
afterwards by his grandson, Orvar Odd.

There are several accounts of these wonderful arrows in the Sagas.


“Grím (father of Orvar-Odd) followed them (Odd, Gudmund, Sigurd) to the
ships and said: ‘Here are the costly things which I want to give thee,
Odd, my kinsman; they are three arrows which have a name and are called
Gusi’s nautar (Gusi’s followers).’ He gave the arrows to Odd, who looked
at them and said: ‘They are very costly.’ The feathers were gilded, and
the arrows flew off and on the string by themselves, and one never needs
to search for them. These arrows Ketil Hœng took from Gusi, the king of
the Finnar; they bite everything they are aimed at, for they are forged
by _Dvergar_. Odd said: ‘No gifts have I which I think equally fine.’ He
thanked his father, and they parted with friendship” (Orvar Odd’s Saga,
c. 4).[100]


_Slings and stones thrown._—Stone-throwing was an important means of
attack. Stones were sometimes thrown by hand, but oftener with slings,
particularly in sea-fights, and the art was brought to great perfection.
Slings were also used on land by bodies of men who had no other
weapons.[101] The stone-throwers are mentioned as occupying the flanks
in King Hedin’s army; and the slingers stood in the last ranks of King
Hring’s order of battle on Brávalla heath.

As heavy stones could not be thrown any great distance by mere muscular
strength, machines were employed, called _Valslöngva_.

The chief Sturla Sighvatsson was attacking his enemies, who defended
themselves inside a high wall.


“Sturla walked about outside, and took a stone; he threw stones better
than any man, and usually hit the mark. He said: ‘It seems to me if I
wished to throw a stone, that I, rather than you, would choose where it
should hit; but I will not try it now,’ and he then threw down the
stone” (Sturlunga, v., ch. 17).


“Búi (the son of Andrid, in Brautarholt) would never carry any weapon
but a sling, which he always wore tied round him. Búi was outlawed
because he did not want to sacrifice. Once when he was on a journey,
Thorstein, a son of the chief Thorgrim, attacked him with eleven men.
Búi had come to a hill called Kleberg, where he saw them pursuing him;
he stopped and gathered some stones. Thorstein and his men went fast,
and when they had passed a brook which was there, they heard the sling
of Búi whistle and a stone flew; it struck the breast of one of
Thorstein’s men and killed him. Búi sent more stones, and hit a man with
each one. By this time Thorstein had almost come up to him; Búi
retreated down the hill on the other side” (Kjalnesinga Saga, ch. 3).


_Defensive weapons._—The shield, the form of which, as we see from the
finds, was always round, and somewhat convex. Almost all shields were
probably covered with leather. They were of wood, the boards surrounded
on the rim by a ring of metal, sometimes of gold, and they were braced
and furnished with a boss and handle of iron or bronze. Many were
painted in different colours, or richly ornamented, and sometimes
covered with gold.

Many figurative names were given to them:—

                The sun of the battle.
                The moon of the battle.
                The sun of Odin.
                The moon of Odin.
                The cloud of the battle.
                The wall of the battle.
                The board of victory.
                The net of the spears.
                The wheel of Hild (a Valkyria).
                Hild’s wall.
                The sun of the sea kings.
                The leaf of the Vikings.
                The land of the arrows.
                The path of the spears.
                The fence of the bardi (ironclad ship).
                The hall-roof of Odin.
                The one that shelters.
                The battle-shelterer.
                The glittering sun.
                The fire-shelterer.
                The burgh of the swords.

Thjódolf of Hvin, one of Harald Fairhair’s scalds, got as a gift from
the Norwegian chief Thorleif[102] a shield. The shield was painted with
subjects from Norse mythology. On these Thjódolf wrote the poem
_Haustlöng_ (autumn-long), which is preserved in the later Edda in two
parts. The first part tells about the journey of Odin, Loki, and Hœnir;
how on their way they met the Jötun Thjassi; and it also describes the
rape of Idun, and Thjassi’s death. This part of the poem winds up thus:—

                     This is painted
                     On my shield;
                     I received the  shield
                     From Thorleif.

The second part of the poem tells the fight of Thor with the Jötun
Hrungnir, and Thjódolf ends it with these words:—

                      I see distinctly
                      These events on the shield;
                      I got the  shield
                      From Thorleif.

                                    (Later Edda.)


“When the jarl heard the poem, he gave Einar a most costly shield. It
was painted with old Sagas, and all the spaces between the paintings
were covered with plates of gold and set with stones.

“When he was ready he went to the seat of Egil, and hung the costly
shield there, telling the servants that he gave it to Egil, and then
rode away.

“It is said that Egil took the shield on a bridal journey to Vidimyri,
where it was spoiled by being thrown into a tub of sour milk; he had the
ornaments taken off, and there were twelve aurar of gold in the plates”
(Egil’s Saga, ch. 82).[103]


[Illustration:

  Fig. 879.—Shield-boss of bronze, with handle of iron covered with
    bronze. ½ real size.—Ultuna.
]


“Sigurd rode away, his shield had many layers, and was covered with red
gold, and on it was painted a dragon. It was dark brown on the upper
part, and light red on the lower, and in the same way were  his
helmet, saddle, and armour. He had a gold coat-of-mail (gullbrynja), and
all his weapons were ornamented with gold and marked with a dragon, so
that every one who saw the dragon might know who the man was, if he had
heard that Sigurd slew the large dragon which the Vœrings call Fafnir”
(Volsunga Saga, ch. 22).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 880.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 881.
]

  Shield boss with handle of bronze, found with the iron spear-point.
    ½ real size.—Folkeslunda, Öland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 882.—Shield boss of iron. ½ real size.—Hammenhoj, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 883.—Button of shield boss of bronze, plated with silver gilt;
    the heads of the nails or notches are not gilt. ¾ real size—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 884.—Shield boss. ⅓ real size. Found in round tumulus with a
    spear-head, &c.—Norway.
]

The shield of Bragi Boddason, presented to him as a gift by the famous
Ragnar Lodbrók, seems to have been divided into four sections, each
containing a separate subject:—Sörli and Hamdir killing Jórmunrek and
avenging Svanhild;[104] Gefjon ploughing Selund out of Sweden;[105] Thór
fishing the serpent (Midgardsorm); the everlasting fight between Högni
and Hédin, which last is as follows:—


“King Hédin, son of Hjarrandi, took Hild, daughter of King Högni, away
while he was absent from home. When Högni heard this he pursued him, and
found him on Háey (Hoy, High Island), one of the Orkneys. Hédin offered
him much gold as indemnity, but Högni said: ‘Thou offerest peace too
late, for now I have drawn the sword _Dáinsleif_, which was made by the
Dvergar, which causes a man’s death every time it is unsheathed; the
wounds cut by it are never healed.’ Hédin said: ‘Thou boasteth of thy
sword, and not of victory; I call every sword good which is faithful to
its master’ (owner). Then they began the battle called Hjadninga-fight,
and they fought all that day, and at night went to their ships. During
the night Hild went to the field of the slain, and with witchcraft
called all the dead to life again. The next day the kings went to the
battle-field, and all those who had been killed the day before fought
with them. Day after day the battle went on, and all the slain and all
the weapons in the battle-field and the armour changed into stones. But
at daybreak all the dead men rose and fought, and all their weapons
could be used. It is told in songs that the Hjadnings shall remain thus
till _ragnarök_ (the last fight of the gods)” (Later Edda,
Skaldskaparmál, ch. 50).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 885.—Shield, Gokstad ship; about 3 feet in diameter.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 886.—Front view of shield handle of bronze, found by the side of
    a skeleton.—Skogsby, Öland. ½ real size.
]

From some passages in the Sagas it seems that some of the shields were
so large that men could be laid on them, and that some were oblong, as
represented in wood-carvings and on the Bayeux tapestry.


“Then the king made ready and went along the valley; he selected a
resting-place for the night where all his men came together and lie in
the open air under their shields” (St. Olaf’s Saga, ch. 219).


“When Olaf was in the Syllingar (Scilly Islands) a hermit prophesied to
him ‘that he would get severely wounded in a fight, and be carried on a
shield on board his ship; that he would be cured in seven nights, and
then be baptized;’ and this proved to be true” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga
(Heimskringla), ch. 32).


_Brynja_, or ring coats-of-mail, are often alluded to, and the benches
in Odin’s hall were covered with them. We have seen from the finds that
_Brynjas_ were used at a very early period, probably even before the
Christian era. They were made long and short—some, in fact, were so
short as not to cover the stomach. Only in two instances is the
_spanga-brynja_, or plate coat-of-mail, mentioned. Occasionally brynjas
are described as being made of gold. We read that the loss of the famous
battle of Stamford Bridge by Harald Hardradi was attributed to his men
having left their coats-of-mail on board their ship. Many coats-of-mail
are described as being impervious to weapons, owing, no doubt, to their
wonderful workmanship and the hardness of the rings.

Some of the poetical names given to brynjas are:—

                         The woof of spears.
                         War-woof.
                         Ring-shirt.
                         Tent of Hlokk.
                         Shirt of Gunnar.
                         Shirt of Odin.
                         Grey clothes of Odin.
                         Cloak of kings.
                         Blue shirt.
                         Battle-cloak.

From the following account we see that some of these coats-of-mail were
made thicker than others:—


“Hjálmar said: ‘I want to fight Angantyr, for I have a brynja in which I
have never been wounded; it is set with fourfold rings’” (Orvar Odd’s
Saga, ch. 14).


In the sea-fight between Olaf and Svein jarl—


“The latter had more men, but the king had picked men on his ship, and
they were so well equipped that every one had a brynja; and on this
occasion they did not get wounded” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 47).[106]


[Illustration:

  Fig. 887.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 888.
]

  Bronze plates, with raised figures, found in Öland. ¾ real size.
    Frey’s boar. The horned helmet similar to one in the British
    Museum.

Helgi Hardbeinsson, was told by his herdsman that he had seen many armed
men, who had come to kill him, and he thus described the war-dress of
one of them, as they sat in a circle taking their morning meal
(day-meal):—


“He had on a coat of plate-mail[107] and a steel cap, the brim of which
was as wide as a hand’s breadth, and a shining axe on his shoulder, the
edge of which seemed to be two feet long. He had black eyes, and was
very viking-like in appearance” (Laxdœla Saga, c. 63).


Helmets (_hjálm_) are often mentioned; they were generally gilt, or of
gold. On the front of them was a _herkumbl_ (war-mark). From several
bronze plates we see that they were sometimes made in the shape of
animals. The Saga says of King Adils that he had a helmet called
_Hildigölt_ (war-boar). In the finds they are extremely rare; one of
silver has been found, and a fragment of another inlaid with gold, and
one or two of iron.


The viking Framar is thus described: “He wore a helmet on his head, and
was girt with a sword; had a gold-enamelled gull-smeltr shield, and a
spear in his hand” (Sturlaug Starfsamis Saga, ch. 11).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 889.—Helmet of iron, ¼ real size, found in the decayed remains of
    a small ship buried in the Ultuna mound not far from Upsala.
]

Olaf Haraldsson, when he was about to fight the battle at Ness against
Svein jarl:


“Had on his ship one hundred men, and they had on ring coats-of-mail and
Welsh (foreign) helmets. Most of his men had white shields, and on them
was the holy cross in gold, but some were painted with red or blue; he
had painted crosses in white on the front of all helmets. He had a white
standard which was a serpent” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 47).[108]


-----

Footnote 92:

  In the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg there is a short,
  double-edged sword, dug up in Southern Russia, the scabbard of which
  is entirely of gold.

Footnote 93:

  Cfr. also Thorstein Vikingsson’s Saga, ch. 15, 20.

Footnote 94:

  Hole in middle of millstone.

Footnote 95:

  Cfr. also An’s Saga Bogsveigis, ch. 1.

Footnote 96:

  Cfr. Sturlunga, 111.

Footnote 97:

  Harmer of brynjas = sword.

Footnote 98:

  Valböst, an unknown part of the sword.

Footnote 99:

  It was only in later times that cross-bows (_lás bogi)_ were used,
  with a trigger or spring. They are mentioned about the year 1200.

Footnote 100:

  Cf. also Ketil Hœng’s Saga, c. 3.

Footnote 101:

  See Magnus the Good’s Saga, c. 31; also Sturlunga, v. c. 17; Færeyinga
  Saga, c. 18.

Footnote 102:

  Thorleif is mentioned in Hakon Adalsteinsfóstri’s Saga, ch. 11, as
  “Thorleif the Wise,” who helped the king to establish the
  Gulathing-laws.

Footnote 103:

  Cf. Eyrbyggja Saga, c. 13.

Footnote 104:

  Völsunga and Snorra Edda.

Footnote 105:

  Ynglinga Saga.

Footnote 106:

  Cf. also Færeyinga Saga, c. 24

Footnote 107:

  _Spanga-brynja._

Footnote 108:

  Cf. Olaf’s Saga, 216; Fornmanna Sögur, viii.




                              CHAPTER VII.
                              WAR CUSTOMS.

  Marking and choosing the battle-field—The war arrow—Peace and war
    shields—Age when called to arms—The guest expected to fight for
    his host—War horses—Formation of an army—Standards—War
    booty—Chivalry in war.


To such warlike people, well-regulated laws or customs in regard to war
were necessary. It seems to have been the right, from very ancient
times, of the chief whose land was invaded to choose the
battle-field[109] where the conflict was to take place. The battle-field
was marked with poles, and no plundering was allowed before the end of
the decisive battle. The messengers who brought the summons for the
conflict, and those who afterwards came to announce that the combatants
were ready, were protected.


“King Hakon sent word to the sons of Eirik (Blood-axe), and asked them
to go ashore, as he had enhazeled a field for them at Rastarkalf; there
are level and large plains, on the top of which is a long but low
hillside. Then Eirik’s men left their ships” (Hakon the Good’s Saga, c.
24; Heimskringla).


After the declaration of war the war-arrow was sent, to summon the
warriors, when all who were able to carry arms had to turn out, whether
thralls or free men. The sending of the war-arrow seems to imply that
the message should be carried swiftly.


“When a man carries war-news he shall raise an iron arrow at the end of
the land. That arrow shall go with the lendirmen, and be carried on a
manned ship both by night and by day (i.e., never stop) along the high
road (on the sea). Those who drop that arrow are to be outlaws. A wooden
arrow shall go into the fjords from the high road, and be carried with
witnesses, and each man shall carry it on to the other. The one who
drops it must pay a fine of three marks. When it comes where a woman
lives alone, she must procure ships and food and men if she can. But if
she cannot, the arrow shall be carried onwards. Every man in whose house
the arrow comes is summoned within five days on board a ship. If any one
sits quiet he is outlawed, for both thegn and thrall shall go”[110]
(Earlier Gulathing Law, c. 312).


“When news came to Einar Thambarskeltir about King Olaf’s journey, he at
once took a war-arrow and sent it in four directions, summoning thegn
and thrall with full war-dress to come and defend the country against
the king. The arrow summons went to Orkadal, and then to Ganlardal, and
all the host gathered together”[111] (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 37).


Every warrior went to battle combed and washed, and after having eaten
well.

There were peace and war shields, the former white and the latter red;
when the first was hoisted on a ship it was a sign for a cessation of
the conflict, while the appearance of the later on the masthead, or in
the midst of a body of men, was a sign of hostility. Another sign was
the throwing of a spear or shooting of an arrow over the host. The
battles always began by the blowing of the horns. The horn seems to have
been the earliest instrument known. No horns belonging to the iron age
have been found, though so often mentioned in the Sagas, from which we
must suppose that, unlike those of the bronze age, they were of wood.

When the Volsungs approached to attack the sons of Hunding with their
fleet, and neared the shores, and were asked what they came for,

                     Sinfjötli replied—
                     Hoisted up to the yard
                     A red shield;
                     The rim was of gold.

                   (Helgakvida Hundingsbana, i. 33.)

Their standards stood by the leaders, and were protected by a shield
burgh, that is, surrounded by a circle of men armed, besides their
offensive weapons, with shields.


“King Magnus Barefoot went from Vikin with some of his lendirmen to
procure the submission of Sveinki, a powerful bondi, who resided near
the Gauta river. When they came ashore they saw Sveinki coming from his
bu with a host of well-equipped men. The lendirmen raised a white
shield, and when Steinki noticed this he stopped his band, and they met”
(Magnus Barefoot, c. 8).[112]


“As the host of Snorri passed below by the mountain-side, Steinthor
threw a spear over the host of Snorri, according to ancient custom, for
the sake of good luck” (Eyrbyggja, c. 44).


It seems that the age at which the youth of the country were called to
bear arms was fifteen years, when they became of age. If the country was
in great peril they could be called out at the age of twelve; but from
eighteen upwards seems to have been the age when young men were most
appreciated.

                         A short time the king
                         Waited for a fight
                         When he was
                         Fifteen winters old
                         He slew
                         The hard Hunding,
                         Who long ruled over
                         Lands and men.

The guest, like the hostage, was expected to fight and help his host.


“Next spring Half was twelve winters old, and no man was as tall or as
strong as he. Then he made ready to go on warfare, and had a new and
well-outfitted ship. In Hördaland there was a Jarl named Alf the old. He
was married to Gunnlöd, daughter of the Berserk Hromund, sister of the
hersir Hámund the valiant. They had two sons, both named Stein. The
elder was then eighteen winters old. He was at that time the
advice-giver of King Half. No one could go on expeditions who was
younger or more youthful than he. A large stone lay in the yard, and no
one was allowed to go who could not lift it from the ground; nor could
any one go who was not so hardy that he never was afraid, or who spoke
words of fear, or drew back his lips (changed countenance) on account of
wounds.”

“Stein the younger, Gunnlöd’s son, was not able to go on account of his
age, for he was only twelve winters old” (Half, and Half’s Champions’
Saga, c. 10).


Horses used for war could not be less than three years old, except in
cases of great danger, when they could be taken at the age of two years.

One of the formations of an army was that of “_Svinfylking_”
(swine-array), or a triangle. This array was adopted in the Bravalla
battle,[113] where it is said to have been introduced by Odin himself,
thus showing its great antiquity.

Sigmund Brestisson, the famous champion of the Faroes, in the time of
Hakon Jarl made a raid into Sweden. One of the chiefs of the King of
Sweden, by name Björn, gathered a numerous host and cut Sigmund off from
his ships. One day when they saw the host of the land, the men of
Sigmund talked of what they should resolve to do. Sigmund said:


“‘There are yet many good chances, and very often the more numerous host
does not gain the victory, if there are fearless men against them. Now
we will make a resolve to arrange our host in swine-array. We kinsmen, I
and Thorir, will be foremost, and then three and five white shielded men
shall stand on the flanks; and I think it our best plan to rush at their
array, and see if we can thus get through it, and the Swedes will not
stand firmly on the field.’ This they did, rushed at the array of the
Swedes, and broke through it” (Flateyjarbok, i., p. 140).


It seems the shieldburg was at the apex of the triangle.


“If thou art in a battle on shore, and hast to fight on foot, and art at
the point of the _svin-fylking_, then it is very important in the
earlier part of the battle that good care is taken that the locked
shieldburgh be not broken or opened” (Konung’s Skuggsja, p. 85).


They had their army formations like trained soldiers.

The hosts, when in order of battle, were divided into _sveitir_
(detachments), and a number of these formed a _fylking_; the strength of
each probably varied according to the number of men who took part in the
war.


“King Olaf made the following speech to his host before the battle of
Stiklastadir:—‘We have a large and fine host. Now I will tell you how I
want to array my men. I want to let my standard move forward in the
middle of the host, and my hird and gestir shall follow it, together
with those who joined me from Upplönd and Thrándheim. To the right of my
standard Dag Hringsson shall stand, and the men with whom he joined us.
He shall have another standard. To the left of my fylking shall stand
the men from the King of Sweden and all those who joined us in
Sviaveldi. They shall have the third standard. I want my men to form
detachments, and friends and kinsmen shall stand together, for then each
will defend the other best, and they will know each other.

“‘We shall mark all our men by making a war-sign on our helmets and
shields, namely, paint on them the holy cross in white.

“‘When we come forward into battle we shall all have the same watchword:
“Forward, forward, Christ-men, cross-men, king’s men.” We must have thin
arrays if we have fewer men, for I do not want them to surround us.

“‘Now form sveitir. Then the sveitir shall be put together to form
fylkings, and each man must then know his place and mind in what
direction he stands from the standard to which he belongs. We will keep
our fylking and be fully armed day and night till we know where we meet
the bœndr.’ When he had spoken they arrayed themselves, and arranged as
the king had told them” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 216).


“The chief Kalf Arnason raised his banner, and placed his _huskarls_ and
Harek of Thjotta and his men round it. Thorir Hund with his host was in
front of the host, and in front of the standards” (St. Olaf’s Saga, ch.
233).


_Standards_, often very elaborately worked, were used both on sea and
land; some of these had great reputations, and picked warriors were
always chosen to carry them, each fylking having one. The poets or
scalds seem to have stood close to them in the shieldburg.


“He, Egil Ullserk, was an old bondi who had been a great warrior, and
for a long time carried the banner of Harald the Fairhaired. He said: ‘I
feared for some time, while this great peace lasted, that I should die
from old age on my bench, and I wished rather to fall in battle with my
chief; now it may happen so’” (Heimskringla, Hakon the Good, c. 23).


“One summer the Scotch Jarl Finnleik staked out with hazels a
battle-field for Sigurd at Skidamyri on an appointed day. Sigurd went to
consult his mother, who knew many things. He told her that there would
be against him not less than seven to one. She replied: ‘I would have
raised thee in my wool chest if I had been certain that thou wouldst
live for ever. Better is it to die with honour, than to live in shame.
Take this _merki_ (standard), which I have made with my best skill, and
which I believe will be victorious for those before whom it is carried,
but deadly to him who carries it.’ The standard was made with great
hard-work and renowned skill. It was in the shape of a raven, and when
the wind blew on it it seemed as if the raven spread his wings. Sigurd
Jarl became very angry at his mother’s words, and gave the Orkney
islanders their odals to help him; he went against Finnleik Jarl at
Skidamyri, and both arrayed their men. When the fight began, the Scots
slew the standard-bearer of Sigurd Jarl; he appointed another to carry
it, but after a while he fell; three standard-bearers were slain, but
the Jarl was victorious” (Flateyjarbók, vol. i.).


_War booty._—The regulations about the spoils, which were very strict,
were divided into shares by lot or choice. It was the custom after the
battle, before the division took place, to carry the plunder to a pole
fixed in the ground, where it was counted and valued.


“Then the king (Sverrir) lay at Höfudey; he had the booty carried up on
a plain in the south of the island, and divided into four parts. Then a
Husthing (house thing) was summoned by blowing horns, and he spoke to
his men. Thereupon he made them go under a pole (stöng); it was scored
(i.e., an incision was made for every twenty men) to show how many men
he had; they were more than 40 hundred (4,000)” (King Sverri’s Saga, c.
136).


“In the spring the foster-brothers made ready to leave home with fifteen
ships; Beli steered the dragon which Slisa-Úti had owned; it was costly;
its beaks were carved and much gilded. King Beli got the dragon, for it
was the best thing of the booty they got from Úti, and it was their
custom that Beli always got the best of what they took as booty”
(Thorstein Vikingsson’s Saga, c. 21).


While reading the Sagas which speak of the most ancient events, we find
a great and chivalrous spirit animating the warriors, champion fought
against champion when others were looking on, man was against man. It
was not manly to attack a champion that was fighting with another. We
have several examples of men challenging to fight with an equal number
of ships.

It is only in the later part of the pagan era that this high-minded
spirit disappears.


“Thorstein asked the Viking: ‘Who is talking to us?’ ‘His name is Ljót,’
he replied. Thorstein said, ‘For a long time I have been looking for
thee.’ Ljót answered: ‘What dost thou want from me? I have never seen
thee, though I have heard of thy renown.’ Thorstein added: ‘Short is my
errand to thee; I want to make a division of property with thee, on the
condition that thou shalt go ashore with thy weapons and clothes, but
thy men only in shirts and linen breeches.’ Ljót said: ‘An unequal
condition does that seem; but is there any other?’ ‘The other,’
Thorstein added, ‘is that we shall fight.’ Ljót asked where were his
warriors that he made such a challenge. ‘My equipment,’ Thorstein
replied, ‘is ten ships.’ Ljót arose and said: ‘Too unequal does this
seem to me, and I will rather fight thee than thus shamefully leave my
property.’ ‘Then put forward all your ships,’ Thorstein replied,
‘against mine.’ Ljót said: ‘I will not agree to that condition, to have
more ships in the battle than thou, for that I have never done; but I
have had fewer ships and yet always been victorious.’ Thorstein replied:
‘Thou needest not spare me thus.’ Ljót said: ‘I will not put forward
more; but if thou clearest one vessel, I will put another instead.’ ‘So
be it,’ Thorstein said” (Svarfdæla Saga, c. 5).


Among the laws of the Vikings, and one that was most honourably
observed, was the compact made not to plunder a country or attack a man
where there was _fridland_[114] (peaceland), or a kind of asylum where
men could come at all times on their way from one country to another, or
going and coming from an expedition, or for some other reason.


“Gunnlaug was once with Sigurd jarl of Western Gautland, and messengers
came there with gifts from Eirik jarl, Hakon’s son, of Norway. When
questioned who of the two jarls was the more famous, Gunnlaug in a
stanza decided for Eirik. The messengers told Eirik this when they came
back to Norway. The jarl thought that Gunnlaug had shown courage and
friendship towards him, and said that he should have peace-land in his
realm” (Gunnlaug Ormstunga’s Saga, c. 8).


“It is said that King Gorm and his son Harald disagreed when Harald was
of age. Gorm therefore resolved to give him some ships, and thus get rid
of him. Every summer he went far on Viking expeditions, but every winter
he was in Denmark and had peace-land there” (Flateyjarbók, vol. i., p.
104).


The Viking customs point to a high code of honour, though there seem to
have been general laws acknowledged by all. Special regulations were
enacted by particular bodies of men or by different chiefs.


_The Jomsviking Laws._—“After this (the building of Jómsborg),
Pálnatóki, with the advice of wise men, made laws in Jómsborg, in order
that their strength might increase. No man older than fifty and younger
than eighteen winters could be received in the following of Pálnatóki;
they were all to be between these two ages. No man could be received
there who would run (in fighting) from one equally able and equipped.
Every man who entered their following had to make a strong vow that each
would avenge the other like a food-companion or brother. Not a man was
to kindle slander among them. Also, though news was heard there, no man
was to be so rash as to tell it, for Pálnatóki first had to tell all
tidings. Any one who committed what has now been forbidden and broke
these laws was to be cast out and driven from their community. Also if
one had been received who had slain a brother or father or very near
kinsman of a man who was there before him, and it was found out after
his reception, then Pálnatóki should judge this. No one should have a
woman within the burgh, or be absent from it more than three nights
(days) unless with the permission of Pálnatóki. Everything that they got
in war they were to carry to the poles, larger and lesser things and all
kinds of property. If it was proved that any one had not done this he
had to leave the burgh, whether it was much or little which he had kept
back. No man there should utter a word of fear or apprehension, however
hopeless matters looked. Nothing could occur within the burgh over which
Pálnatóki should not have full power to rule as he liked. If men who
were not in the community wished to enter, ties of friendship or kinship
should have no influence. Even though the men of the commonwealth asked
that others might enter, it would not help. They now sat in the burgh in
good peace and kept their laws well. Every summer they went out and made
war in different countries, got high renown, and were looked on as the
greatest warriors; hardly any others were thought their equals at this
time, and they were always, after this, called Jomsvikings” (Jomsvikinga
Saga, c. 23, 24).


_Fridthjof’s Laws._—Fridthjof, after being outlawed from Norway, for
causing the burning of Baldr’s temple, went on Viking expeditions.


“He obtained much property and honour wherever he went; he killed
criminals and Vikings, but bœndr and traders he left in peace. He was
then again called Fridthjof the bold” (Fridthjof’s Saga, c. 11).


“It has been the custom (shortly before the time of Harald Fairhair, 800
A.D.) for powerful men, kings, or jarls, or equals, to be in warfare,
and acquire property and honour; and that property must not be
inherited, nor son get it after his father, but be placed in their mound
with themselves. Though their sons got the lands (powerful men, kings,
or jarls), they could not uphold their position, even if they got
dignity with them (the lands), except they placed themselves and their
men in danger and warfare, thus earning property and honour one after
another, and thus stepping into the footprints of their kinsmen. I
suppose that the laws of warriors are unknown to thee, and I could teach
thee them; as thou now art come to such an age that it is time for thee
to try what luck will grant thee” (Vatnsdœla Saga, c. 2).


_Hjalmar’s and Orvar Odd’s Laws._—“Hjalmar said: ‘I will have no other
Viking laws but those I have had hitherto.’ Odd replied: ‘When I hear
them I will know how I like them.’ Hjalmar said: ‘First I will never eat
raw food, nor shall any of my men, for it is the custom of many men to
squeeze meat under their clothes and then call it cooked; that is acting
more like wolves than men. I will never rob traders or bœndr except when
I must make a raid upon land for my men when in need, and then I will
pay full value. Never will I rob women, though we find them on land with
much property, nor shall women be brought on board against their will;
if a woman can show that it has been done against her will, the man
shall lose his life for it, whether he is powerful or not’” (Orvar Odd’s
Saga, c. 9).

_King Half’s Laws._—so named after this mighty king. Of him it is said:

                   The valiant land-defender
                   Did not enjoy his life
                   In deeds of renown
                   As he ought to have;
                   The king went on warfare
                   When twelve winters old;
                   He was thirty when he died.

                   We had all
                   A host of hawk-men[115]
                   Wherever the wise-minded one
                   Tried his fame;
                   With grey helmets
                   We went through
                   Nine folk-lands
                   All full large.

                   I saw Half hewing
                   With both hands;
                   The chief had not
                   A sheltering shield before him;
                   No man will find,
                   Though he journey widely,
                   A nobler heart,
                   Or a bolder one.

                   Men say,
                   Who do not know,
                   That Half’s renown
                   Was the result of folly;
                   The one who attributed
                   Strength of folly
                   To the Halogaland king
                   Knows him not.

                   He bade the warriors
                   Not to fear death,
                   Nor to utter
                   Words of fright;
                   No one should
                   Follow the king
                   Unless he followed
                   The fate of the king.

                   The friends of the king
                   Must not groan
                   Though they get
                   Large wounds in battle;
                   Nor should they let
                   Their wounds be dressed
                   Before the next day
                   At the same time.

                   He bade in the host
                   Not to grieve men with fetters,
                   Nor do any harm
                   To a man’s wife;
                   He bade that every maid
                   Should be bought with mund,
                   With fine gold,
                   And the consent of her father.

                                       (Half’s Saga).


“Many things were forbidden in their laws (Half’s champions) so that
they might become the greater champions. One law was, that no one of
them should have a sword longer than two feet, so close was the fight to
be; they had saxes made, so that their blows might be heavier. No one of
them had less strength than twelve average men together. They never
captured women or children. No one of them should dress his wounds until
one day had passed (from the time he got it). No man of less strength or
bravery than has been stated was accepted. They made warfare widely
about the country, and were always victorious. King Half was eighteen
summers on warfare, and always gained the victory. It was their custom
always to lie before the capes; another of their customs was never to
put up tents on board, and never to reef the sail in a storm. They were
called Half’s Rekkar (champions), and he never had more than sixty on
board his ship” (Half’s Saga, c. 11).


Houses were frequently burnt as revenge with the enemy inside, but it
was the general custom to let women, servants, and also individuals of
the family, against whom no grudge was harboured, or from whom no
revenge was feared, get out of the house before it was fired.

Flosi, an Icelandic chief, who had surrounded the house of Njál, and was
going to set fire to it, said to Njál:


‘I will not be reconciled to thy sons; and now it shall be fought out
with us, and I will not go away before they are all dead, but I will
allow women and children and húskarls (servants) to go out.’ Njál went
in and said to his people: ‘Now all who are allowed shall go out. Go
out, Thórhalla, Asgrim’s daughter, and all who are allowed with thee.’
Thórhalla said: ‘Now Helgi and I part otherwise than I thought for a
while, but nevertheless I will urge my father and brothers to avenge the
men slain here.’ Njál said: ‘Thou wilt act well, for thou art a good
wife.’ Then she went out, with many others....

“Flosi said: ‘I will offer thee to go out, Njál bóndi, for thou
deservest not to be burnt.’ Njál said: ‘I will not go out, for I am an
old man, and little able to avenge my sons, but I will not live with
shame.’ Flosi said to Bergthóra: ‘Go out, housewife, for I will by no
means burn thee.’ Bergthóra answered: ‘I was young when I married Njál,
and I have promised him to let the same overtake us both.’ Then they
both went in. Bergthóra said: ‘What shall we now do?’ ‘We will go to our
bed,’ said Njál, ‘and lie down. I have long been fond of rest.’ She then
said to the boy Thord Karason: ‘Thou shalt go out and not be burnt with
us.’ The boy answered: ‘Thou hast promised me, grandmother, that we
should never part while I wished to remain with thee, and I like it much
better to die with thee and Njál than to live after you.’ She then
carried the boy to the bed. Njál said to his bryti (steward): ‘Now look
where we lie down, and how I make our bed, for I intend not to move from
here, whether smoke or flame pains me, then thou canst guess where our
bones are to be found’” (Njala, c. 129).


Here we have an account of the death of Thorólf, one of the greatest
blots on the character of Harald Fairhair.


“They (King Harald and his men) came to Sandnes (estate of Thorólf
Kveldulfsson) after sunset, and saw a tent-covered longship afloat in
front of the bæ, and knew that it belonged to Thorólf. He was about to
leave the country, and had let his parting-ale be warmed.[116]

“The watchmen of Thorólf sat inside drinking, and nobody was on the
watch. The king (Harald Fairhair) surrounded the hall with a circle of
men; then they raised a war-cry, and a blast was blown on the king’s
horn. When Thorólf and his men heard this, they rushed for their
weapons, for all the weapons of every man hung above his seat. The king
had proclaimed at the door of the hall that women, young men, old men,
thralls and bondmen should go out. Sigrid, wife of Thorólf, the women
who were inside, and the men who were allowed, went out. Sigrid asked if
the sons of Berdlukari were there; they both stepped forward and asked
what she wanted. ‘Follow me to the king,’ she said. They did so; and as
she came to him she asked: ‘Is it of any use, lord, to try to reconcile
you with Thorólf?’ The king answered: ‘If Thorólf will surrender
unconditionally he shall be spared, but his men shall be punished
according to their guilt.’ After that Ölvir Hnufa entered the hall, and
told Thorólf the terms of the king. Thorólf replied quickly that he
would accept no hard conditions nor reconciliation from the king. ‘Ask
him to give us leave to go out, and let it then go as fate decides.’
Ölvir told the king the answer of Thorólf. The king said: ‘You must set
the hall on fire; I will not lose my men in fighting against him
outside, for I think he will cause us a great loss of men if he gets
out, though he has fewer men than we.’ Then fire was set to the hall,
and it burned quickly, for the timber was dry and the walls tarred, and
the roof was thatched with birch-bark. Thorólf bade his men break off
the wainscoting, get at the gable-beams, and then break the
weather-boards. When they got hold of the beams, one of these was taken
by as many men as could get hold of it, and pushed out at the corner so
strongly that the clamps fell off outside, and the walls broke, leaving
a large opening. Thorólf went out first, then Thorgils gjallandi
(loud-speaking), and all, one after the other. A most severe fight
began, and for a while it was impossible to see who would win, because
the house protected their backs. Many of the king’s men were killed
before the house began to burn; then the fire attacked Thorólf’s men,
and many of them fell. Thorólf ran forward and dealt blows on both
sides, and there was little need to dress the wounds of those whom he
wounded. He pushed forward to where the king’s standard was, and at that
moment Thorgils gjallandi fell. When Thorólf came to the shieldburgh he
thrust his sword through the standard-bearer and said: ‘Now I stepped
three feet too short (I should have stepped three feet longer forward).’
Swords and spears struck him, and the king himself dealt him a fatal
wound, and Thorólf fell down at his feet. The king ordered that they
should leave off killing the men, which was done. He then made his men
go down to the ships, telling Ölvir Hnufa and his brother: ‘Take
Thorólf, your kinsman, and give his body a becoming preparation, and
bury the others who have fallen, and let the wounds of such as are
likely to live be dressed. Let nothing be taken hence, for it is all my
property.’ He went down to his ships, and with him most of his men, and
they began to dress their wounds, and the king walked about the ship and
looked at them. He saw where a man was dressing a slight wound, and
remarked that Thorólf had not given that, for his weapons bit quite
another way. ‘I think that few can dress the wounds he gave, and the
death of such men is a great loss’” (Egil’s Saga, c. 22).


“Odd went to his father Grim and said: ‘Now tell me of the viking whom
thou knowest to be the greatest one.’ Grim said: ‘You are strong men and
you seem to think that nothing can withstand you; now I will tell you of
two vikings of whom I know that they are the greatest and best skilled
in everything; one is called Hjalmar Hugumstóri (the high-minded), and
the other, Thórd Stafnglama.’ ‘Where are they,’ said Odd, ‘and how many
ships have they?’ ‘They have fifteen ships,’ said Grim, ‘and one hundred
men on each.’ ‘Where have they peace-land?’ said Odd. ‘In Sweden there
is a king called Hlödver; they are with him during winter and lie on
their war-ships during summer.’ When they were ready they walked down to
their ships; Grim followed them down and bade his son farewell with
great love” (Orvar Odd’s Saga, c. 8).


“It is told that Odd sailed from Hrafnista when he got a fair wind, and
nothing is said of their journey before they came to Sweden, where a
cape ran out from the mainland into the sea; they put up tents on their
ships there. Odd went ashore for news; he saw that fifteen ships lay on
the other side of the cape and that war-tents were ashore. He saw plays
going on near the tents. Hjalmar and Thord steered these ships. Odd went
back to his ships and told this news. Gudmund (his foster-brother) asked
what they should do. Odd said: ‘We will divide our men in two halves;
you shall go with your ships past the ness and raise a battle-cry
against those who are ashore; I will land with the other half and go
along the forest and there raise another battle-cry; then it may be that
they get somewhat startled; I think they will flee away into the forest
and that no more is needed.’ It is told of Hjalmar and his men that they
were not in the least startled when they heard the battle-cry of
Gudmund. When they heard another battle-cry upon land they stopped the
play while it lasted and then continued as before. Now Odd and Gudmund
went to the other side of the ness and met. Odd said: ‘I know not for
certain whether these men are so full of fear whom we have found here.’
‘What wilt thou now do?’ said Gudmund. ‘That is soon told,’ said Odd;
‘we will not steal at these men; we will stay this night at the ness
(cape) till morning.’ Next morning they went ashore with all their men
towards Hjalmar, who had his men war-dressed when he saw them go up on
land and went to meet them. Hjalmar asked when they met who was the
leader. Odd answered: ‘There are more chiefs than one here.’ ‘What is
thy name?’ said Hjalmar. ‘My name is Odd, son of Grim Lodinkinni (hairy
cheek) from Hranfista.’ ‘Art thou the Odd who went to Bjarmaland shortly
ago, and what is thy errand hither?’ Odd said: ‘I wish to know which of
us is the greater man.’ ‘How many ships hast thou?’ asked Hjalmar. ‘I
have five ships,’ said Odd, ‘and how many have you?’ ‘We have fifteen
ships,’ answered Hjalmar. ‘That is great odds,’ said Odd. ‘Ten
ship-crews shall not take part in the battle,’ said Hjalmar, ‘and man
fight against man.’ Both made themselves ready for battle, arrayed their
men and fought all day. At night the peace-shield was raised, and
Hjalmar asked Odd how he liked the fight of that day; Odd answered:
‘Well.’ ‘Wilt thou play this game oftener?’ said Hjalmar. ‘No other
intention have I,’ answered Odd, ‘for I never found better or hardier
champions; we will begin the battle again in full daylight.’ This was
done; the men went to their war-booths and dressed their wounds. Next
morning both arrayed their men for battle and fought all that day; when
it began to grow dark a peace-shield was raised. Odd asked how Hjalmar
liked the fighting of that day; he said: ‘Well.’ ‘Wilt thou,’ said
Hjalmar, ‘try this game the third day?’ Odd replied: ‘Then we shall
fight it out.’ Thord said: ‘Can we expect much property on your ships?’
‘Far from that,’ said Odd, ‘we have got no property this summer.’ ‘I
think,’ said Thord, ‘I have nowhere met more foolish men than here, for
we only fight out of pride and rivalry.’ ‘What wilt thou then?’ said
Odd.” (Orvar Odd Saga, c. 9).


-----

Footnote 109:

  Cf. a similar practice in duelling. This custom of staking and
  choosing the field of battle is also seen to have been practised by
  the Massagetæ. Tomyris sent word to Cyrus, who came to subjugate her
  country, and was building a bridge: “Toil no longer in making a bridge
  over the river, but cross over to our side while we retire three days’
  march from the river; or, if you had rather receive us on your side,
  do you the like.”

Footnote 110:

  Cf. also Flateyjarbok, ii., p. 188.

Footnote 111:

  Cf. also Olaf Tryggvason, i., p. 207; (Fms.); St. Olaf (Heimskringla),
  c. 118.

Footnote 112:

  Cf. also An Bogsveigi’s Saga; Orvar Odd’s Saga; Fridthjof’s Saga, c.
  6.

Footnote 113:

  In the account of this battle the word hamalt is used synonymously
  with svinfylking.

Footnote 114:

  The word for the general state of peace was _Frid_. _Grid_ appears in
  its early meaning to have denoted a peculiar state of peace, quarter,
  protection, or temporary or local cessation of hostilities.

Footnote 115:

  Bold as hawks.

Footnote 116:

  On leaving a place it was customary to have a feast with one’s
  friends. It was such a feast that is here referred to.




                             CHAPTER VIII.
                          ROCK-TRACINGS.[117]

  Great antiquity of the rock-tracings—A silent history of the
    people—Their abundance on the Cattegat—Ships or boats, fights,
    warriors, horses, cattle, camels, turtles, mystic signs, etc.,
    representing warriors with horned helmets—Similar helmets
    found—The bas-relief of the temple of Medinet Habou—Large size of
    rock-tracings—The peculiar rock-tracings of Järrestad and
    Simris—Peculiar bowl-shaped hollows.


Among the interesting mementoes of the past which help us to get an
insight into the life of the earlier inhabitants of the peninsula of
Scandinavia are the “rock-tracings,”[118] which are of great antiquity,
long before the Roman period, large pictures engraved on the rocks,
which, like the pyramids and sphinxes of Egypt, bear witness to the
unwritten history of the people.

These illustrations are of different kinds and sizes: the most numerous
being the drawings of ships or boats, canoe-shaped, and alike at both
ends (with figures of men and animals), and of fleets fighting against
each other, or making an attack upon the shore. The hero of the fight or
the champion is generally depicted as much larger than the other
combatants, who probably were of one people, though of different tribes,
for their arms are similar, and all seem without clothing, though in
some cases they are represented as wearing a helmet or a shield, in
order to protect them against the blows of their adversaries.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 890.—Rock-tracing, Tanum parish, Bohuslän; large figure probably
    a champion; numerous small holes, and footprints between the
    champion and attacking force. Height, 20 feet; width, 15 feet.
]

On some rocks are representations of cattle, horses, reindeer, turtles,
ostriches, and camels, the latter showing that in earlier times these
people were acquainted with more southern climes; the greatest number,
and the largest and most complicated in detail of the tracings, occur,
especially in the present Sweden, on the shores of the Cattegat, in
Bohuslän, “the ancient Viken of the Sagas,” on the coast of the
peninsula washed by the Cattegat. They are also found in Norway,
especially in Smaalenene, a province contiguous to that of Bohuslän, but
more scarce in the north, though found on the Trondhjem fjord.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 891.—Rock-tracing—turtle, cuttle-fish, dromedary, and another
    animal (possibly a lion), ships, and a footprint. Height, 10½ feet;
    width, 15 feet.—Ryxö, Brastad parish, Bohuslän.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 892.—Rock-tracing representing reindeer, and probably a horse in
    a boat. Height, 5 feet; width, 12½ feet.—Massleberg, Skee parish,
    Bohuslän.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 893.—Hill showing rock-tracings.
]

In Bohuslän the tracings are cut in the quartz, which is the geological
formation of the coast: they are mostly upon slightly inclined rocks,
which are generally two or three hundred feet or more above the present
level of the sea, and which have been polished by the action of the ice.
The width of the lines in the same representation varies from one to two
inches, and even more; and their depth is often only a third or fourth
of an inch, and at times so shallow as to be barely perceptible. Those
tracings, which have for hundreds, perhaps for thousands, of years been
laid bare to the ravages of the northern climate, are now most difficult
to decipher, while those which have been protected by earth are as fresh
as if they had been cut to-day; many seem to have been cut near the
middle or base of the hills, which were covered with vegetation, and
were in the course of time concealed by the detritus from above.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 894.—Part of rock-tracing, Brastad parish, Bohuslän, with
    numerous figures, nearly one hundred in number, varying in size from
    two inches to several feet, and mystic or symbolical footprints.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 895.—Rock-tracing—men fighting with spears; a man apparently
    lying dead in front of a boat, and a large number of domestic
    animals.—Tanum parish, Bohuslän.
]

The largest and most interesting rock-tracings are near Tanum church in
Bohuslän, and are found on the <DW72>s of the rocky hills overlooking the
valleys which in these earlier times may have been partly arms of the
sea. How many hours have I spent before these in deep contemplation,
trying, but in vain, to unravel the mystery which surrounds them! Some
of the pictures contain over one hundred figures, varying from a small
object to one several feet in length or height; except in a few
instances, the absence of masts in representations of ships is
noticeable.

Among the many interesting rock-tracings are those where warriors have a
peculiar horned head-dress, representing most probably a helmet.

In the British Museum there are two helmets of bronze, which reminded me
of the representation given on the rock-tracings, which I give below,
one of which was found in the Thames, the other at Apulia.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 896.—Found in the Thames, near Waterloo Bridge.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 897.—Apulia (Magna Græcia).
]

An engraving, illustrating part of a bas-relief of the Egyptian temple
of Medinet Habou, has been brought to my notice by Dr. Warre,
head-master of Eton College, from a remarkable French work.[119] There
is a similarity in this illustration with the rock-tracings of the
North.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 898.—From a bas-relief from the Temple of Medinet-Habou, Egypt.
]

This bas-relief of the temple contains a record of the military success
and historical events of Rameses III. Among the different episodes the
sea-fight shown on p. 123 is recorded. I think we can recognize the
horned men of the rock-tracings. There is also a perfect similarity
between the boats of the Egyptians and that of Hazeby, in Sweden. The
boats of the Egyptians are symmetrical at both ends, and are ornamented
with carved heads. They have a single mast, and their sails are furled.
At the top of the mast there is a castellated structure which will be
seen in the chapter on the ships of the Northmen; but this is not found
on the rock-tracings. If these early inhabitants of the North went to
the Mediterranean and Egypt we can account for the camel, turtle,
octopus-like animal, leopards, and ostriches engraved on the rocks of
the North.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 899.—Horsemen represented on a rock cutting at Tegneby, in Tanum
    parish, Bohuslän. 1/24 its real size.
]

A remarkable rock-tracing, which I reproduce from ‘The Land of the
Midnight Sun,’ shows horsemen with quadrangular shields; these shields
are seen on some Egyptian bas-reliefs, and two somewhat similar ones
have been found in England. Either the people represent themselves on
this engraving, or some foreign men which the carver of this memento had
seen.

The question naturally arises, did the people of the large Scandinavian
peninsula learn the art of rock-tracing from the Egyptians, if we take
for granted that they went there? There is a roughness of design which I
think seems to preclude that these engravings on stones could have been
made by Egyptians coming North. The very great number seems to imply
that they were made by the inhabitants, that the art flourished for
quite a long time, and that on the return of their warlike expeditions,
either from the north or south, they and some of the people illustrated
the deeds of their heroes.

One of the finest tracings, which is about 66 feet in length and 20 feet
in height, is near a small stream by the bridge at Hvitlycke. Among the
prominent figures, of which there are over one hundred, is a large man,
probably a champion, with a shield and spear, attacking another; in
another part, two men fighting with axes; in another a large snake
attacks a man much smaller in size than the snake. There are also 22
ships, varying in size from 2 to 3 feet in length, but one is about 10
feet long. The earth which covered the lower part of the tracings had
just been removed some days before my arrival at the spot, and they were
as distinct and fresh as if they had been just cut.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 900.—Rock-tracing at Såtorp, Tanum parish, Bohuslän. A champion
    defending his ship against two smaller ones. Height, 4¼ feet; width,
    6½ feet.
]

The large size of some of the tracings shows that a long time must have
been required to complete them, and indicates that the people must have
been settlers in the country. With whatever instruments some of them
were cut, the work, on account of the great number of figures, must have
been in many cases slow. The question naturally arises: Did the early
tribes, who, according to the story, came to the North with Odin, find a
different people, who themselves or whose ancestors had made these
illustrations of their history, or a people belonging to the same race
and tribes of which we have spoken before, who gradually advanced in
civilisation? These are queries which it is to be feared no one will
ever be able to answer with satisfaction.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 901.—Rock-tracing, probably representing the death of a warrior
    who has boarded a ship. Height, 12½ feet; width, 9 feet.—Sätorp,
    Tanum parish, Bohuslän.
]

It is a most remarkable fact that in the Eddas, Sagas, or songs of the
people, no mention is ever made of rock-tracings. In the Sagas we are
often told that drawings on shields, embroidery, cloth, &c., were made
to preserve the memory of heroic deeds and important events. From these
facts we must come to the conclusion that the rock-tracings are of great
antiquity.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 902.—Rock-tracing—two men fighting for a wheel, man ploughing,
    man with bow, and fleet of boats or ships. Tanum parish, Bohuslän.
    Height, 23½ feet; width, 17½ feet.
]

The beautiful antiquities of bronze found in the North seem to show a
civilisation higher than that existing at the time of the rock-tracings.
The conscientious inquirer will naturally ask himself. To what epoch do
these earlier rock-tracings belong—to the so-called _stone_, _bronze_,
or _iron_ age? Unfortunately, nothing can positively settle the
question. Scholars who have made them their special study do not agree;
and we know that graves of the stone age have been found with tracings,
but not of human figures.[120]

But many of the tracings show that even at that remote period cattle
were known to the inhabitants, and the existence of the plough
conclusively shows that the people cultivated the soil.

The frequent appearance of swords on the rock-tracings shows that they
could not have been made during the stone age, in which swords were
unknown; but there are several indications that the tracings were made
before the iron age, and that they probably belong to the bronze
age.[121]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 903.—Ship on a rock-tracing at Lökeberg in Foss parish, Bohuslän.
    ⅒ real size.
]

This art of tracing seems to have been earlier than that of writing
runes, for not one of these peculiar representations, numbering several
hundreds of different sizes, have runic characters upon them.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 904.—Rock-tracing of reindeer, &c.; possibly representing a
    journey to the far North by the man wearing snow-shoes. Height, 6½
    feet; width, 15 feet.—Backa, Brastad parish, Bohuslän.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 905.—Rock-tracing, apparently representing men returning from
    some expedition in which the women have been made prisoners;
    numerous bowl-shaped hollows, varying in size from one to two inches
    in depth and diameter, have been made in the rock. Height, 10¾ feet;
    width, 8¼ feet.
]

They are very primitive, and in several cases plainly show that modesty
was not one of the characteristic traits of the people.[122] The first
impression gathered on seeing them is that they belonged to a people of
low civilisation, who must have been engaged in perpetual warfare, and
who by this means commemorated the deeds of their warriors, and it is
quite clear that the people who made them were not only warlike but
seafaring.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 906.—Human figure 1 foot 6 inches in height, holding an axe with
    a handle 1 foot 8 inches long, and a head nearly 1 foot 2
    inches.—Simrislund, Scania.
]

A very interesting district, rich in rock-tracing, exists on the
south-eastern coast of Sweden, in the neighbourhood of the little town
of Cimbrishamn, where the rocky coast falls very gently towards the sea,
losing itself in a somewhat sandy beach covered with boulders. The most
curious tracings are to be found on the farms of Järrestad and Simris.
The ships represented present the same characteristics as those of
Bohuslän; in some places they are 26 or 27 inches long, and generally
have 14 ribs. There are also wheels with crosses inside, with a diameter
of 5 to 6 inches, and in many instances only axes are seen on the
illustrations, which apparently is not the case with any of the Bohuslän
tracings.

At Järrestad there exists on a rock slanting towards the sea a tracing
54 feet in length and 40 feet in height, which contains, besides the
characteristic figures of the rock-tracings of Bohuslän, a ship with a
mast. Another superb tracing is found on a large rock at Simrislund, in
which the figures are placed in several groups, and consist of 10
vessels, 33 war axes, two men with weapons, one horse, four circles
without crosses, a mass of round excavations or cups, some of which are
quite large and deep; and finally a couple of figures impossible to
determine. One of the circles encloses a ship, and passes along the
belly of a horse, which is placed upside down in relation to the ship.
One tracing represents wheel-tracings and several ships, one of which is
26 inches long, almost on a line with fifteen or sixteen small hollows.
Quite close to these web tracings is a low mound, in which were found an
urn with burnt bones and a bronze button. The graves in the
neighbourhood though robbed of their contents, present the same
characteristics as those of the bronze age, to which all the cairns
found in the neighbourhood belong.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 907.—Rock-tracing with wheel enclosing a cross, and
    ships.—Herrestrup, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 908.—Stone with tracings, Ingelstrup, Zealand. Height, 2 feet 8
    inches; width, 2 feet 10 inches; thickness, 13 inches.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 909.—Height, 29 feet; width, 17 feet; with large birds and
    footprints, &c.—Tanum Parish, Bohuslän.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 910.—Rock-tracing, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 911.—Rock-tracing, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 912.—Rock-tracing—chariots with horses, ships, and
    hollows.—Jerested, Scania.
]

What the bowl-shaped hollows, which vary in size from 1 to 2 inches in
diameter and are generally about 1 inch deep, and which are shown on the
illustrations by small black dots, represent will probably always remain
an enigma. The reader will also notice peculiar figures, such as
circular rings, divided by crosses or double crosses, footprints, &c.
Only two rock-tracings thus far have been discovered, where waggons are
seen with wheels and horses attached to them.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 913.—Stone with round hollows.
]

In Denmark, tracings have thus far only been discovered on the slabs of
passages in graves, such as those of Herrestrup in Zealand, and Ullerup
in Northern Jutland, and their absence is to be accounted for by the
want of rocky formation.

-----

Footnote 117:

  This subject would naturally be included in the earlier part of the
  work, but the tracings contain so many figures of ancient ships that I
  have thought it appropriate to introduce the chapters at this stage.

Footnote 118:

  Two valuable works on rock-tracings are those of A. E. Holmberg and L.
  Baltzer.

Footnote 119:

  “Etudes sur l’antiquité historique d’après les sources Egyptiennes et
  sur les monuments réputés préhistoriques,” par F. Chabas.

Footnote 120:

  The finest example of those without figures is to be seen in the
  Museum of St. Germain near Paris.

Footnote 121:

  See ‘Land of the Midnight Sun,’ vol. i., p. 355.

Footnote 122:

  Several representations, on account of their coarseness, are not as
  correct in the illustrations as they should be.




                              CHAPTER IX.
                               WAR-SHIPS.

  The Northmen pre-eminently a seafaring people—Figurative names
    given to ships—Classification and names of ships of
    war—Ironclads—Swift cruisers—Transport vessels—Foreign
    ships—Different parts of a war-ship—Oars—Ship’s boats—Tents—Ship’s
    moorings—Sheds—Launching—Ornamentations—Beautiful sails—Colour
    of war-ships—Standards—Ornamentation of ship’s sides
    with shields—The port of Jomsburgh—Size of ships—The
    Tuneship—Shipbuilding—Crews—Description of a storm.


One of the most important features in the life of the Viking Age was the
ships in which the hardy Norsemen were able to rove over the seas of
Europe, and conquer and plunder the lands around them. In the Eddas and
Sagas these ships are often minutely described, so that we are able to
form a fair idea of the shipbuilding art of those days.

The ships were called by figurative and most poetical names, and from
many of these we see that speed was valued very highly:—

                    Deer of the surf.
                    Reindeer of breezes.
                    Sea-king’s deer.
                    Reindeer of the shield wall.
                    Elk of the fjords.
                    Sea-king’s sledge.
                    Horse of the home of ice.
                    Soot- horse of the sea.
                    Horse of the gull’s track.
                    Mare of the surf.
                    Horse of the breeze.
                    Raven of the wind.
                    Gull of the fjord.
                    Carriage of the sea.
                    The sea-wader.
                    Ægir’s steed.
                    Sea steed.
                    Lion of the waves.
                    Hawk of the sea-gull’s track.
                    Raven of the sea.
                    Snake of the sea.

The general name for all ships was _skip_, but these were classified
under different appellations. The war-ships were also classified under
several names, viz: _Dreki_ (dragon), _Skeid_, _Snekkja_, _Skúta_,
_Buza_, _Karfi_. The _herskip_ (host or war-ship), also called the
_langskip_ (long ship), was their most powerful ship of war. The
_Dragon_ was the finest and largest vessel of the North, and derived its
name from the prow and stern being ornamented respectively with the head
and tail of one or more dragons.

The most celebrated for its beautiful proportions was the _Ormrinn
Langi_ (the long serpent), which, long afterwards, even during the time
of Harald Hardradi and Sigurd Jórsalafari, served as a model (11th and
12th centuries).

The _skeid_ (swift sailer) was another kind of long ship, which held
from twenty to thirty or more rowers’ benches, and was occasionally as
large as a dragon-ship. The largest _skeid_ mentioned is that of Erling
Skjalgsson, which had thirty-two rowers’ benches, and carried two
hundred and forty or more men. He used it on viking expeditions, or when
he was summoned to participate in war.


“Erling Skjálgsson, the king’s brother-in-law, had his large _skeid_; it
had thirty rooms, and was well manned” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 105).


“It was then told to the king that Erling Skjálgsson had many men
gathered in Jadar. His skeid lay fully equipped near the shore, and many
other ships owned by the bœndr, such as _skutas_, _lagnarskip_ (fishing
ships) and large _rodrar-ferjas_ (rowing ferries)” (St. Olaf, c. 184).


The _snekkja_ was a somewhat smaller long-ship, of which frequent
mention is made; but sometimes it must have been as large as a
dragon-ship.


“Erling had prepared a twenty-seated _snekkja_, a fifteen-seated
_skuta_, and a _vistabyrding_ (store-ship)” (Magnus Erlingsson’s Saga,
c. 25.)[123]


The _Skuta_[124] was a small vessel, much used and often mentioned,
containing probably fifteen seats. In it the upper part of the gunwale
was so built that the crew could easily step on it, and more easily
board the enemy.


“In the spring Eirik obtained men, and Thorleif (Eirik’s foster-father)
gave him a _skuta_, with fifteen rowers’ seats and complete equipment,
tents, and provisions” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 20).


This vessel was manned in time of peace by about thirty men.


“Egil had his ship afloat and the cargo on board before he departed for
the Thing. When they left Arinbjörn they went to Steinsund to their
ship, which was floating in the harbour with the tents up. The skuta was
floating with its rudder on between the shore and the ship, with the
oars in their rowlocks. In the morning, near dawn, the watchmen saw that
some ships were rowing towards them. Egil saw that these were enemies,
and bade his men leap into the skuta. They all quickly seized their
weapons, and Egil took the chests of silver which King Adalstein gave
him. They rowed between the land and the snekkja nearest to it, which
was that of King Eirik, but in the hurry, and as it was rather dark, the
ships passed each other. When the lyptings[125] were near, Egil flung a
spear, which hit Ketil Höd in the waist, who was sitting at the helm,
and killed him instantly. King Eirik called to his men to row after him,
but as they passed the trading ship the King’s men leapt upon it. Those
of Egil’s men who had not gone into the skuta, and were caught, were all
killed; but some jumped ashore. Ten of his men were killed there. Some
of the ships rowed after Egil, while others plundered the trading ship;
all the goods on board were taken, and the ship burnt. Those who pursued
Egil and his men rowed violently, two taking one oar and rowing in
turns. They had many men on board, but Egil had few: they were eighteen
in the skuta. The space between them grew less, but inside the island
there was a somewhat shallow fording-sound between it and another
island, and the tide was ebbing. Egil sailed with the skuta into the
shallow sound; but the snekkjas could not float there, and there they
parted”[126] (Egil’s Saga, c. 58).


The _Buza_ and the _Dreki_ must have been somewhat similar in size, for
a _buza-ship_, built on the model of the long snake is mentioned in the
Sagas.


“When Thorir’s messengers returned, he had made ready a long-ship, a
large buza which he owned; he manned it with his huskarls, nearly eighty
men” (St. Olaf, c. 143).


“King Harald (Hardradi) had a buza-ship built at Eyrar during the
winter. It was made as large as the long serpent, and as good as could
be in every way. It had a dragon’s head on its prow and a tail in its
stern, and the beaks (svini) were ornamented with gold all over. It had
thirty-five rooms, was large in proportion thereto, and very fine. The
King was very careful about its outfit, sails, rigging, anchors, and
ropes” (Harald Hardradi, c. 61).


The _Karfi_ seems to have been a vessel of the size of a skuta.


“To Ketil of Hringunes, King Olaf gave a fifteen-seated _karfi_” (St.
Olaf, c. 50).


“Thorfinn, who dwelt at Hamarsey, was the son of Kar the old, who had
long resided there; he was a great chief. When it got light the men were
seen on the islet, and Thorfinn was told of it. He quickly got ready and
pushed out a karfi which he owned; twenty men rowed it on each side”
(Gretti’s Saga, c. 20).


“Björn and Thorolf had a karfi, the crew of which consisted of nearly
thirty men, twelve or thirteen rowing on each side. They had acquired
that ship in the summer on a Viking expedition. It was painted nearly
everywhere above the water-line, and was very handsome. When they came
to Thorir they were well received, and stayed there for a while; the
ship floated, tented over in front of the farm. One day Thorolf and
Björn went down and saw that Eirik, the king’s son, was there; he
sometimes went out on the ship and was sometimes ashore. As he stood
looking at it, Bjorn said to Thorolf: ‘The King’s son admires the ship
very much, and thou must offer it to him, for I think it will be a great
help for us with the King if Eirik pleads with him. I have heard that he
is angry with thee on account of thy father’s deeds.’ Thorolf thought
this good advice; they went down to the ship, and Thorolf said: ‘Thou
lookest closely at the ship, King’s son; how dost thou like it?’ ‘Well,’
he answered, ‘the ship is very fine.’ ‘Then I will give it to thee, if
thou wilt accept it,’ added Thorolf. ‘I will,’ replied Eirik; ‘but thou
wilt think the return is small, for I can only promise thee my
friendship’” (Egil’s Saga, c. 36).


Strange as it may seem, ironclad vessels which were used as battering
rams were known and used by the Vikings. At the famous battle between
Hakon Jarl and the Jomsvikings, Eirik Jarl, his son, had a Jarnbardi
(one of the most formidable vessels at the battle of Svold was probably
the same ship): the upper part of the vessel, which seems to have been a
ramming ship, was provided with a _skegg_ (beard),[127] which apparently
consisted of iron spikes.

The brothers Thorstein and Thorolf were going on an expedition.


“Thorstein asked his father to tell him of a Viking with whom he might
fight, and either fall or gain some fame. His father answered: ‘Ljot,
the pale, is east in the Svía-skerries (Swedish islets); he has fifteen
ships, and a dragon covered with iron above the sea; it sails through
every ship; he calls it _Jarnbardi_’” (Svarfdæla, c. 4).


“Thorstein (father of Fridthjof) had a ship called Ellidi; fifteen men
rowed on each side of it. It had a carved prow and stern, and it was
strong like a seagoing ship, and its sides were sheathed with iron”
(Fridthjof’s Saga, c. 1).


The smaller and most easily managed ships of the Northmen were called
_Askar_.


“Arngrim’s sons drew their swords and bit in the shield-brims (borders);
then they turned to the ships, and six men went up on each Ask”[128]
(Hervarar Saga, c. 5).


Some ships were specially built for speed. Among them we find long
ships—_skeid_ and _skuta_. The fast-sailing _skutas_ were called
_lettiskuta_ (light skuta), and _hleypiskuta_ (running ships), a kind of
yacht.


“Eyvind went quickly with a few men on a _lettiskuta_” (Olaf Tryggvason,
c. 83).


“Geirmund went with a _hleypiskuta_ and some men with him” (Olaf
Tryggvason, c. 41).[129]


The _Knerrir_ (sing. _Knorr_) or merchant vessels must sometimes have
been large, and were occasionally used as war or transport vessels. We
infer from the Sagas that they could stand heavy seas better than the
long ships.


“King Olaf left behind in England the _longships_, and went thence with
two _Knerrir_, on which he had 220 picked men, fully armed” (St. Olaf’s
Saga, c. 27).


“Sigmund told Hakon Jarl that he wanted to leave off warfare and go to
the Faroes; he said he no longer wished to hear that he had not avenged
his father and be upbraided for it; he asked the Jarl to aid him, and
advise him how to manage it. Hakon answered that the sea to the islands
was hard to cross, and the breakers strong; ‘you cannot go on longships
thither, but I will have two knerrir made for you, and get a crew to man
them’” (Fœreyinga Saga, c. 23).


Among vessels of other nationalities mentioned are _Galeid_ (galley) and
_Drómund_ (war-ship), both as sailing in the Mediterranean.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 914.—Ship on a stone-wall of the Church of Skröbelef, Langeland,
    Denmark.
]


“Harald went to the _galeids_ of the Væringjar and took two on which
they rowed into Sjavidarsund. When they came to where iron chains were
stretched across the Sound, Harald told his men to sit down at the oars
on both _galeids_, and those who did not row to go aft with their
hammocks (used for holding baggage and for beds) in their arms. The
_galeids_ were thus run up on the chains; but, as soon as they got fast
and slackened speed, Harald ordered all the men to run towards the prow.
The _galeid_ on which Harald was then turned down and slid off the
chains, but the other burst asunder as she rode on the chain. Many were
there drowned, but some swam and were picked up” (Harald Hardradi’s
Saga, c. 15).


“Rögnvald Jarl and Erling met a _drómund_ on the sea and attacked it
with their nine ships” (Ingi’s Saga, c. 17).


From the Sagas we infer that ships had but one mast.

Sometimes they had a _Hún-Kas’ali_ (knob castle), or crow’s-nest, at the
masthead, large enough to hold several warriors, who from such a height
could throw missiles at their enemies.

King Hakon Herdibreid was going to battle against King Ingi.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 915.—On a stone. Alsnö parish in Upland, Sweden. Ship with crow’s
    nest.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 916.—Bautastone. Harestad, Upland, Sweden. Ship with
  crow’s nest.
]


“He (Hakon) had two east-journey _Knerrir_, which lay outside his ships.
On them, and also in the prows of both, were _húnkastalis_” (c. 5, Hakon
Herdibreid).


“They (Hakon’s men) prepare themselves for pouring down stones and shots
from the hunkastalis on board the trading-ships” (c. 9, Hakon
Herdibreid).


The different parts of a ship were the _lypting_[130] an elevated place,
where the commander stood and steered, and from which he could survey
the whole scene of battle; _stafn_ (prow); _rausn_ (forecastle);
_fyrir-rum_ (foreroom), so called, probably, on account of its being
before the mast; and _krapparum_, the third room from the stern.

The place in which the weapons were kept was called the _hasœtis-kista_,
or high-seat chest.


“The King went down into the foreroom, opened the _hasœtis-kista_, and
took out many sharp swords, which he gave to the men” (Olaf Tryggvason,
c. 117).


“In the foreroom were also sleeping-places. The men in this and the
_stafnbuar_ were called _fyrir-rumsmenn_. Those before the mast were all
called _frambyggjar_ (bow-sitters)” (Harald Fairhair, c. 11).


The ship was highest forward and aft, and was pointed at both ends.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 917.—Ship propelled by oars. Slab. Haggeley, Uppland, Sweden.
    Similar to the Egyptian bas-relief on the Temple of Medinet-Hakou
    (see p. 123).
]

As the largest ships were lofty, they required a deck (_thiljur_), but
decks are very seldom mentioned.

Thorir sailed westward to England, to Knut the Great, with his valuable
skins.


“Thorir Hund went on board of his ship; Finn with many men followed him
thither, and went along the ship. He had taken up the deck, and under
the planks near the mast they saw two barrels, so large that they
wondered at them. In the barrels there was an inner bottom close to the
outer one, between which was the drink; but the barrel itself was filled
with grey skins, beaver and sable” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 149).


_Oars._—In calm weather ships were generally propelled with oars, which
were fastened with a strap attached to the tholes, or openings made as
in the Gokstad ship and Nydam boat. The oars had to be strong, and each
was generally manned by two, three, or four men, heavy or large ships
being with difficulty propelled by oars.

Sometimes men were so strong that they could, on the smaller vessels,
ply an oar alone, but this was an exception.


“King Hakon (Herdibreid) lay in the harbour with fourteen ships. He
himself and his men were at some games upon the island, while his lendir
men sat on a mound. They saw a boat rowing towards the south of the
island; two men were in it, and they pulled the oars so hard that they
bent themselves to the bottom of the boat” (Magnus Erlingsson’s Saga, c.
6 (Heimskringla)).


Only in one instance is the length of the oars given—those of the
_Ellidi_—which are said to have been 26 feet long. The largest ship must
have had oars still longer than those of the _Ellidi_, which was not a
large vessel.

They were called by the figurative names of The long arms; The feet of
the horse of the sea; The wave sweeper; The feet of the ship, &c.

Among the numerous fragments of oars of the Gokstad ship, four were
found in tolerable preservation, and only one well-preserved, measuring
nearly sixteen feet. The oar tholes were protected inside by round oaken
shutters to prevent the water from running in. The large ones found show
that no single man could row with one for a long time together; and the
oars which propelled the large dragon-ship must have been very heavy.

Every large ship had its boats, sometimes two or more.


“Sigurd took two _barkis_[131] and dragged them up on the rock above the
door of the cave, and fastened thick ropes around the ribs of the ship
under the stem and stern” (Sigurd Jorsalafari,[132] c. 6).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 918.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 919.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 920.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 921.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 922.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 923.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 924.—Specimens of Rowlocks from Gokstad ship. Boats (see Nydam
    boat, Vol. I.).
]

Fragments of three small boats made of oak were found on board the
Gokstad ship, which apparently had been destroyed intentionally. They
were clinker built, and had rowlocks, not two of which were alike,
fastened to the gunwale instead of holes for the oars. These boats were
so broken that no part could be put together again, except their keels,
the longest of which measured over twenty-one feet, and the shortest
twelve feet. Two had carried masts.


“They drifted north off Ireland, and the ship was broken into fragments
on an unsettled island; while they were there Thorodd the Icelander met
them as he sailed from Dublin. The men of the jarl called on the traders
to help them. Thorodd had a boat put out and went in it himself”
(Eyrbyggja Saga, c. 29).


The _rudder_, called _styri_, was on the right side, _stjórnbordi_
(starboard); the opposite side being called _bakbordi_ (larboard).

The helmsman, who held the tiller, was generally commander of the ship,
and his position at the helm seems sometimes to have been below the
rudder head, with a view to being protected from the continual shower of
missiles to which he was subjected; the great purpose of the enemy being
to disable the ship’s commander.

When Magnus Barefoot made warfare in Scotland and Ireland:


“Then men went between him and Melkolm (Malcolm) Skota-king, and they
made an agreement (treaty) between themselves. Magnus was to become
owner of all the islands west of Scotland, between which and the
mainland a ship with its rudder on could go. When King Magnus came from
the south to Satiri (Cantire), he had a skuta dragged across the isthmus
(Mull of Oantire) with its rudder placed in position. The king himself
sat on the lypting and had hold of the tiller, and thus got the land
lying on the larboard. Satiri is large and better than the best of the
Hebrides except Mön. A narrow neck of land joins it with the mainland,
and longships are often dragged across there” (Magnus Barefoot’s Saga,
c. 11).[133]


_Tents._—When the ship was lying still, especially for the night, tents
were stretched over it. Sometimes they were put up on the shore, and in
the latter case were taken on board the ship when they sailed away.


“When they came up on the islets, they saw a dragon-head, which looked
like gold. They saw that twelve ships were there with the dragon, with
black tents over them; light was under the tents; men sat there
drinking” (Svarfdæla, c. 4).


“As soon as Karli came on board, he took down the tents, threw off the
fastenings, hoisted the sail, and the ship went quickly out to sea” (St.
Olaf, c. 143).[134]


The men on board seem to have slept in leather bags, _húdfat_, and to
have taken them ashore when they camped out in tents.


“They carried their leather bags from the ship and made booths. Then
they resolved to live there that winter, and built there large houses,
&c.” (Flateyjarbok, i.).


When in harbour the ships were tied with fastenings communicating with
the shore by means of bridges or gangways.


“They rowed in search of the ship, and, when they found it, turned
towards the shore. Hallvard and his men had tented it over and then laid
themselves down to sleep. When Kveldulf and Skallagrim came upon them
the watchmen at the end of the gangway jumped up and shouted to the
ship, telling the men to rise, saying that an enemy was at hand,
Hallvard and his men rushed for their weapons. Kveldulf reached the end
of the gangway and got on board by the stern gangway, while Skallagrim
went to the fore-gangway” (Egil’s Saga, 27).


The chiefs seem to have been very particular as to the berths of their
ships when in harbour, so that the tents should be pitched ashore,
places being allotted to the ships according to the rank of their
owners. If there were several of equal rank, lots were drawn to decide
who should have the best place.


“One summer, when Hakon Jarl had a levy out, Thorleif the Wise steered
one of his ships. Eirik, who was ten or eleven winters old, was also
with him on the journey. When they went at night into harbour, Eirik was
not pleased unless his ship was next to that of the Jarl. On arriving
southward at Mæri, his brother-in-law Skopti came to him with a
well-manned longship. When he rowed to the fleet, he called out to
Thorleif to make room for him and change his position, but Eirik at once
told Skopti to take another position himself.

“As soon as Hakon Jarl heard that his son Eirik thought himself so great
a man that he would not yield to Skopti, he at once bade him take
another place, or otherwise it would be worse for them, as they might be
thrashed. Thorleif then ordered his men to take the ship from the
fastenings, which was done. Then Skopti occupied the position he was
wont to have, nearest to the Jarl’s ship” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 20).


“Once Harald (Hardradi) with the Varangians had pitched their tents on a
well-situated place. Gyrgir, the chief of the Greek host, wanted to
pitch tents on the same spot, and they quarrelled over it. The wisest
man intervened, and they consulted together. At this meeting they all
agreed to throw lots into the skirts of a cloak, and thus decide which
should go into harbour or choose ground for their tents first; both were
to abide by the decision of the lot when the lots were made and marked”
(Harald Hardradi’s Saga (Heimskringla), c. 4).


When not being used, the ships were kept in sheds; and while they were
there everything loose was taken out, even the planks of the deck and
the dragon-heads.


“King Eystein also had ship-sheds made in Nidaros, so large that they
were famous, and built with the best materials and with great skill”
(Sigurd Jorsalafari, c. 27).


“They rowed hard towards the ship-shed of Thorfinn. When the ship
touched the bottom, the men jumped overboard. Grettir counted twelve of
them. They did not seem to him to be on an errand of peace. They lifted
up their ship and dragged it out of the water. They ran to the shed,
where the large karfi of Thorfinn stood, which he never launched with
less than thirty men, but they at once dragged it down on the beach.
Afterwards they lifted up their own ship and carried it into the shed”
(Gretti’s Saga, c. 19).


“After Yule Thorfinn made ready to go home, and sent his guests away
with many good gifts. Then he went with his men till he came near his
ship-shed. They saw that a ship lay on the sand, and soon knew that it
was his large karfi. Thorfinn had not then heard of the Vikings. He
asked them to make haste to get ashore, ‘for I expect,’ said he, ‘that
friends have not done this.’ Thorfinn was first ashore, and went at once
to the ship-shed. He saw a ship standing there, and knew that it was the
ship of the Berserks” (Gretti’s Saga, c. 20).


When the ships were ready to go to sea, or when being built, they had
rollers under them, over which they were pushed up to the shore or into
the sea.

Eirek and Agnar, Ragnar’s sons, were going on an expedition to Sweden:—


“They gathered many men, and made their ships ready; they thought it
important that the launching of ships should be successful. Now when
Agnar’s ship ran down from the rollers a man was struck by it and died,
and they called it _hlunnrod_ (roller-reddening). This they did not
think a good beginning, but would not let it stop their voyage” (Ragnar
Lodbrok’s Saga, c. 9).


Harald Hardradi had a large ship launched into the river Nid, and then
had the dragon heads put on. Then sang Thjódólf the scald:

                 Fair maiden, a skeid I saw
                 Forward pushed into the river;
                 See where lies near the shore
                 The long side of the proud dragon.
                 The hair of the shining serpent
                 Glows o’er the crew,
                 Since it was pushed from the rollers;
                 The ornamented beaks carried gold.

                   (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 62.)

[Illustration:

  Fig. 925.—Bronze kettle, ⅒ real size, found with Gokstad ship; wooden
    plates and wooden carved drinking-cups were also found.
]

When the Norsemen came to a harbour, or to a coast without one, they
often dragged their ships on to the shore, when rollers, which no doubt
belonged to the equipment, had to be used.


“Hakon Jarl, after a battle with King Ragnfred, drew his ships ashore so
that his foes could not take them” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 17).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 926.—Iron chain, found with Gokstad ship. ⅒ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 927.—Bronze ornament.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 928.—Bronze handles of kettle. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 929.—Iron chain, with crook to hold bronze kettle; found with
    Gokstad ship. ⅒ real size.
]

After the ship had been launched into the sea the equipment was put on
board.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 930.—On a stone-wall of the Church of Bödstrup, Island of
    Langeland, Denmark.
]


“After Easter King Olaf had his ships launched and equipment and oars
carried to them, and decks placed in them, and tents put over them, and
then let them float at the bridges” (St. Olaf, c. 115).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 931.—Iron kettle. ¼ real size—Ultuna ship find.
]


“Asbjörn owned a longship which was a twenty-seated _snekkja_, which
stood in a large _naust_ (ship-shed). After Candlemas he had it pushed
forward, the equipments carried on board, and everything made ready. He
then summoned his friends, and had nearly ninety men, all well armed”
(St. Olaf, c. 24).


It was not always the custom to have cooks on board ship, it being the
habit of traders to dispense with their services, and to draw lots among
the crew every day to decide who should prepare the food.


“He (Thorleif) took passage in the summer with the traders, who prepared
to go from Straumfjord, and was with the steersmen. It was then the
custom of traders not to have cooks, but the messmates drew lots to see
which of them should do the cooking day by day. All shipmates also had
to drink together, and a tub with a lid over it stood near the mast for
this purpose, but some drank from the casks which supplied the tub”
(Eyrbyggja Saga, c. 39).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 932.—Dragon.—Length, 10 to 12 feet; width between the wings, 3
    feet.
]

The people, and especially the chiefs, took great pride in the
appearance of their ships, both in regard to ornamentation and sails,
and kept them well painted. We may form an idea of the labour bestowed
on their embellishment, from the carved pieces of wood found on board of
the Gokstad ship;[135] what, then, must it have been on such ships as
the long serpent and others mentioned in the Sagas?

Insignificant objects are adorned with exquisite and tasteful designs.
Some of them seem to have been designed without the aid of mechanical
appliances, and others before being engraved must have had their
drawings traced with compasses, &c.

The dragons were gilt, both on the stem and stern, or covered with thin
sheets of gold, thus presenting a magnificent appearance as they sailed
with the sun shining upon them. These and other ornaments which were
placed on a ship were not fixed on till it had left the rollers and was
in the water.


“Olaf had a ship made in the winter, called Visund (the bison-ox), which
was larger than any other. On its prow there was the head of a bison,
gilt” (St. Olaf, c. 154).


“King Olaf had a ship called Karlhöfdi (man’s head); on its prow was a
king’s head, which he himself had carved. That head was for a long time
afterwards used in Norway on ships steered by chiefs” (St. Olaf, c. 45).


“Rand had a large dragon, with a gold-ornamented head, which had thirty
large rooms” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, c. 85).[136]


On the top of the belfry (clock-tower) in Ghent is found the figure of a
dragon, of which a woodcut is here given (p. 152). It consists of gilded
copper-plates, nailed on a kind of iron skeleton. The back between the
wings is open.[137]

                  *       *       *       *       *

As King Sigurd was ready to go home, we read—


“Thereupon King Sigurd made ready for his journey homeward. He gave the
Emperor all his ships, and there were gold ornamented heads on the ship
which the king had steered; they were put on Peter’s church. There they
may be yet (_i.e._ 1220–1240‘)”’ (Sigurd Jorsalafari’s Saga, c. iii.,
Heimskringla’s text).


The date here given is that of Norri Sturluson.

                  *       *       *       *       *

Beautiful sails were highly prized; these were generally made of
_vadmal_, or coarse woollen stuff. The Sagas often mention that they
were striped, of different colours, red, blue and green,[138] being
sometimes embroidered and beautifully lined with fur; but some were as
white as the newly-fallen snow. They were square, and consequently good
speed could only be attained with fair wind.

The following poetical names were given to sails:—The cloak of the wind;
the tapestry of the masthead; the sheet spun by women; the cloth of the
wind; the beard of the yard; the fine shirt of the tree (mast).

[Illustration:

  Fig. 933.—Runic stone, Hallingbo, Götland, 3 feet 9 inches above
    ground.
]


“When the King on his return from Jerusalem wished to sail to Mikligard
(Constantinople), he lay still for half a month with his entire fleet,
although every day it blew a good stern-wind; but he waited for a
side-wind, so that the sails could be set lengthways on the ships. The
sails were mostly covered with _pell_ (a sort of velvet) on both sides,
as those in stem and stern wanted to see an equally handsome side. When
he came into Mikligard, he sailed close to the shore, from which could
be seen the whole width of the sails, which were so slightly separated
that they resembled a continuous wall. All the people were out to see
how Sigurd sailed” (Sigurd Jorsalafari, ch. 11).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 934.—Vessel with sails. Reverse side of runic stone, Hallingbo,
    Götland. Limestone.
]


“One autumn, as King Magnus the Good was on board his fleet off Scania,
they saw one day a ship, sailing eastward off the land. It was
ornamented all over with gold above the water, and fine dragon-heads
were on it, but the sail was of twofold _pell_ most splendidly woven.
All wondered at this strange sight. This ship was painted with red,
purple, and gold. All the weathervanes looked as if they were of gold,
as well as the beaks of the dragon-heads; inside these were valiant men
dressed in costly garments and _pell_. King Magnus instantly sent a ship
from the port to meet them, and wanted to know where they were going; as
the messengers met them, they turned towards the shore and lowered the
sail. They rowed towards the King’s fleet, and came up with that fine
beautiful ship to the King. It was then found to be the ship of Harald
Sigurdsson (Harald Hardradi), the King’s uncle” (Flateyjarbok, iii.).


Sails were given as valuable gifts to powerful chieftains.

When Harald Hardradi and Eystein were sailing together, Harald said:—


“‘Where didst thou, Eystein, get so fine a sail?’ Eystein answered:
‘This is the sail, lord, which you would not receive from Thorvard.’ The
king said: ‘I never saw a finer sail, and I have refused a costly
thing.’ Eystein replied: ‘... take whichever of the two sails thou
likest best; it is good that thou knowest what thou didst refuse.’ The
king thanked him and took the sail of Thorvard, and it was thought
precious, though it would scarcely fit the king’s large ship in
sailing-matches” (Harald Hardradi, Fornmanna Sögur, vi. c. 100).


Ships of war were apparently always painted; dark blue ships are
mentioned, but the colours were often more variegated. The ships of Knut
and Hakon Jarl were painted above the water-line. Asbjörn Selsbani’s
ship was painted above the water-line, in red and white colours.


“When Knut the Great left the country he had a great host and exceeding
large ships. He himself had a dragon so large that it had sixty rooms;
on it were heads ornamented with gold. Hakon Jarl[139] had another with
forty rooms, which also had gilt heads, and the sails of both were
striped with blue, red, and green. Both were painted above the water.
They had many other ships, large and well equipped” (Flateyjarbok, ii.).


Standards and weathervanes, not only on land, but at sea, are frequently
mentioned.


“Odd gave to Gudmund and Sigurd the dragon of Sóti. He had the dragon of
Hálfdán painted all over, and both the dragon-heads and the vane[140] he
had ornamented with gold” (Orvar Odd’s Saga, c. 8).


The standard-bearer stood by the prow of the ship, and the pennant seems
to have been carried at the masthead.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 935.—Bayeux tapestry.
]


“The pennant, spun by women, played at the masthead of the reindeer of
the rollers” (Knutsdrapa).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 936.—Baptismal font, Church of Lödurup, Scania, Sweden.
]


“When Eirik blódöx (blood-axe) got the kingship, he had feasts in
Hordaland and Firda Fylki. He took hirdmen with him. One spring he made
ready to go to Bjarmaland, and selected men for the journey. Thorolf
went with him, and was placed in the prow of his ship, and carried his
standard. Thorolf was then taller and stronger than other men, and
therein like his father” (Egil’s Saga, c. 37).


When Helgi came with his ships to make war at Frekastein he had a golden
standard.

                    _Gudmund._

                    Who is the Skjoldung
                    That steers the ship,
                    And a golden battle-standard
                    Hoists on the bow?
                    Those in the van
                    Seem not peace-like;
                    The redness of war
                    Is thrown on the Vikings.

                    _Sinfjötli._

                    Here can Hödbrodd
                    Know Helgi,
                    The hater of flight,
                    In the midst of the fleet;
                    He holds the birth land
                    Of thy kin,
                    The Fjorsungs’ heritage,
                    Taken by himself.

                          (Helgi Hundingsbani, ii.)

The ships as they came into harbour were often lined with shields,
showing by this that they were ships of war. These shields added not a
little to the appearance of the ships under sail, as the sun shone on
them. When the warriors were numerous, they must have been very
cumbersome, and on that account were often stationed all round the
bulwark or gunwales.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 937.—Silver coin found in Blekinge.
]

In the Gokstad ship the shields were hung along the outer sides of the
ship, and all seem to have been of the same size. They were placed
somewhat ahead of the first oar, and a little behind the last one. They
overlapped each other, the outer edge of each touching the boss of the
other. They were painted either yellow or black, so that the contrast
must have been picturesque.


“Then he, Olaf Tryggvason, made his ships and men ready and sailed east
from Gardar out into Eystrasalt (the Baltic). The ships were lined with
shields on both sides, they were swift-sailing, and went well before the
wind” (Fornmanna Sögur, vol. i. p. 100).


“Hella Björn, the son of Herfinn and Halla, was a great viking, he was
generally the enemy of King Harald; he went to Iceland, and entered
Bjarnarfjord with a ship covered all over with shields” (Landnama, xi.
31).


“On Yule-eve the weather was bright and calm. Gretti was that day out of
doors most of the time, looking at the ships that went south and north
along the shore; for everybody was going to the Yule-feast. As the day
declined Gretti saw that a ship rowed towards the island. It was not
large, but the gunwales were covered with shields from prow to stern,
and it was painted above water” (Gretti’s Saga, c. 19).


“They saw no fewer than ten ships coming southwards off a cape. They
were rowed fast and steered towards them; they were completely covered
with shields, and at the mast of the foremost one there stood a man who
had on a silk jacket and a gilt helmet” (Njala, c. 84).


Some of the scattered pieces of poetry give a good idea of the
appearance of these ships.

             The sea howls, and the wave
             Dashes the bright foam against the red wood,
             While the roller-bison (ship) gapes
             With the gold-ornamented mouth.

             Fair woman, I saw a skeid
             Launched into Nid (the river) out to sea;
             Look where the long hull
             Of the proud dragon rides near the shore;
             The bright manes of the serpent glitter,
             For it has been launched off the rollers;
             The ornamented necks
             Carried burnt gold.

             The warriors’ Baldr (Harald) takes down
             His long tent on _laugardag_,[141]
             When beautiful women look out
             From the town on the serpent’s hull;
             The young all-wielder (king) is just steering
             His new skeid out of Nid westward,
             While the oars of warriors
             Fall into the sea.

             The host of the king can rightly
             Tear the oars out of the water;
             Woman stands wondering at
             The marvellous oar’s stroke.

             The Northmen row on the nailed serpent,
             Along the hail-stricken stream;
             It seems to the woman she sees
             An eagle-wing of iron.

                       (Harald Hardradi, c. 62.)

As a rule, merchant ships were not kept in as good order as the
war-ships. The Northern chief Harek saved his life, after the battle of
the river Helga, by the following subterfuge. King Olaf went by land to
Norway, while the fleet of Knut the Great remained in the Sound.


“Harek did as he had said, waited for fair wind and then sailed westward
past Skáni, till he came off the Hólar in the evening, during a strong
gale. He had the sail lowered, and the mast and weather-vane taken down,
and the vessel above water wrapped with grey cloth. He had a few rowers
in rooms fore and aft, while most of his men sat very low in the ship.
King Knut’s watchmen saw the ship, and talked among themselves about
what kind of ship it might be. They thought it was loaded with salt or
herrings, for they saw that the men were few and rowing badly, and the
ship looked grey, and not tarred and dried in the sun. They also saw it
was deep in the water. But when Harek got well forward in the Sound past
the host, he raised the mast, hoisted the sail, and set up the gilt
weather-vane. The sail was white as new-fallen snow, and striped with
blue and red” (St. Olaf, c. 168).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 938.—From Bayeux tapestry. Ship with dragon’s head, striped
    sails, and carrying horses.
]

Some of the harbours built by the Northmen must have been very spacious.

Pálnatóki, jarl of Fjón, who also had a jarldom in Bretland (Wales),
made one summer warfare in Vindland. The king, Búrislaf, sent a message
that he desired friendship and peace with him, and invited him to come
and see him.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 939.—Ship lined with shields, striped sails, and men pulling with
    oars.
]


“Further, with this invitation he offered to give him a _fylki_ or
_riki_ in his land, called Jóm, in order that he should settle there,
and he would give it him on condition that he should be bound to defend
the land with him. This Pálnatóki and his men accepted. He quickly had a
large and strong sea-burgh made, since called Jómsburgh. He also had a
harbour made within the burgh, in which 300 longships could lie at the
same time, all being locked in the burgh. The entrance to the harbour
was constructed with great skill. It was like a gate with a large stone
arch above, and shut with iron doors locked from inside the harbour.
Upon the arch was built a strong tower (kastali) in which were catapults
(valslöngva). Part of the burgh stood out in the sea (water), and the
burghs built thus are called sea-burghs, and thus the harbour came to be
within it” (Jomsvikinga Saga, ch. 24).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 940.—⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 941.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 942.—Shield. ⅙ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 943.—Shield. ⅙ real size.
]

  Carved pieces of wood and shield from the Gokstad ship.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 944.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 945.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 946.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 947.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 948.—Scoop for baling water. ⅙ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 949.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 950.
]

  Scoop for baling water. ¼ real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 951.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 952.
]

  Part of wooden chair, probably high-seat of a chief.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 953.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 954.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 955.
]

  ½ real size.

  From Gokstad Ship.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 956.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 957.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 958.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 959.—1/20 real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 960.
]

  Heads of animals carved at the end of thick planks, the use of which
    cannot be ascertained; the lines are painted in various colours. ⅒
    real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 961.—1/20 real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 962.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 963.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 964.—1/20 real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 965.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 966.—¼ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 967.—¼ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 968.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 969.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 970.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 971.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 972.

  ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 973.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 974.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 975.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 976.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 977.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 978.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 979.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 980.—¼ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 981.—⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 982.—⅙ real size
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 983.—⅙ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 984.—1/40 real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 985.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 986.—⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 987.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 988.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 989.
]

  ⅓ real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 990.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 991.
]

  ⅛ real size.

The size of a ship was recognised by the number of its benches, or of
oars by which it was propelled; so a vessel is often described as a
fifteen, twenty, thirty-seater, or more, without having its proper
appellation given to it, and the length can only be approximately given.

In no Saga are we told the length of a ship, and only in one instance,
that of the _Long Serpent_ of Olaf Tryggvason, is it partially given.
Fortunately, from the _Nydam_, _Gokstad_, and _Tune_ boats we can
approximate the distance between each rower’s seat, but the space varied
according to the size of the ship; and the larger the ship, the wider
the space, as the oars became longer and required more room to ply them.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 992.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 993.—⅕ real size.
]

  Fragments of wood from Gokstad ship.

The _Nydam_ vessel is a fourteen-seater and about 76 feet in length: of
this about 46 feet are taken up by the rowers’ seats, the remaining 30
feet being the spaces fore and aft. The space between each oar thole is
3 feet 2 inches.

The length of the twenty-seater must have been about 110 feet; that of
the twenty-five seater, about 130 feet; of the thirty-seater, about 155
feet; and of the thirty-four seater, the _Long Serpent_ of Olaf
Tryggvason, about 180 feet. Taking the rise from the keel to stem and to
stern, this cannot, in a vessel of that size, have been less than 15
feet at each end, and thus we arrive at the same result, or 180 feet.

The largest ship of which we have any record is that of Knut the Great.

His dragon had sixty pairs of oars, and therefore, according to the same
calculation, must have had a length of about 300 feet. The above
measurements are given without making allowance for larger spaces
between the benches than those of the Nydam and Gokstad ships, which
were necessary in order to give more space for the plying of the longer
oars.

The width of the ship is still more difficult to determine; but, taking
for example the _Serpent_, where it is said that each half-room held
eight men, or sixteen in the whole width of the vessel, its breadth
between the gunwales could not have been less than 32 feet, probably
more, if we judge by the proportions of the other vessels, the Nydam
boat’s width being ⅕ of its length, and that of the Gokstad boat being
nearly ⅕ of its length.

The depth of the ships is nowhere mentioned, but, as we find a
deck-planking (_thiljur_) mentioned, it must have been at least, in
cases of seagoing ships, 10 feet or more.

Looking at the Gokstad ship and its beautiful shape, we can form an idea
how advanced the art of shipbuilding was in the North. The vessel had no
deck, the bottom boards resting over the frames were loose, and were
made fast to the frames by notches cut in them. The fragments which
remain of the tent or tents show the material to have been red and white
striped wool, and the numerous pieces of rope were made of bast.

The Tune vessel probably had ten to twelve pairs of oars, to judge from
the number of ribs and rowing benches; but as the gunwale is destroyed,
the oar tholes are missing. The vessel was iron, clinch built, with the
wood work almost entirely of oak; only the ribs and the wooden nails
were of fir. The planks were fastened to the frame by such clamps as
those described in the _Nydam_ boat and _Gokstad_ ship.

The ponderous beam shows that the mast, which was set in an opening made
in a large oak block, could be lowered at will, a fact sometimes
mentioned in the Sagas.

  The Tune Ship.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 994.
]

  Tune ship (viewed from above), with heavy oak-log or block, with
    square hole for making fast the mast, more than 2 feet in
    diameter—a stump of the mast still remained in its place;
    discovered in a mound, the lower part of which consisted of heavy
    blue clay, the upper of sand and earth. The length of keel is
    about 45 feet (from stem to stern it must, however, have been over
    70 feet), the width amidships about 13 feet, and depth about 4½
    feet. Stem and stern are alike, and pointed. The sponts were
    attached to the planks by bast ropes. They were not fastened to
    the keel plank, which has only been attached by the few nails
    which held it together with the bottom planks. The planks, of
    which there have been ten to twelve on each side, are from 18 to
    30 inches in width. Tune parish, where the remains of the boat and
    the stone with old Northern runes have been found, is especially
    rich in mementoes from the past. All over the parish many mounds
    and _bautarstones_ of large size are seen.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 995.
]

Though several centuries had probably elapsed between the construction
of the _Nydam_ and that of the _Tune_ and _Gokstad_ boats, we find the
same principle of construction and of joining the planks by rivets used
in each case.

The clinch nails here represented were discovered not far from Upsala,
in the decayed remains of a small ship buried in the Ultuna mound. They
were from 1½ to 2 inches in length, and still remained in their places,
holding the planks together. The exact size of the vessel could not be
ascertained, as the mound had been disturbed before the systematic
researches by competent authorities had been undertaken. There were
besides a double-edged sword with hilt of gilt bronze, with fragments of
its wooden scabbard, a bundle of 19 arrow-points, 3 dice, 36 checkers,
parts of two horses, skeleton on the prow of the ship, and a gridiron,
etc., etc.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 996.—½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 997.—⅔ real size.
]

  Rivets or clinch nails for ships.

The following passages are the only ones in the whole literature of the
North which describe the building of a ship:—


“Next winter, after King Olaf came from Hálogaland, he had a large ship
built at Hladhamrar; it was far larger than the other ships in the
country, and the stocks on which it was built may still be seen (in
Snorri’s time). It was 148 feet long, touching the grass (_i.e._, at the
keel). Thorberg Skafhögg (blow-scraper) was stem-smith (made stem and
stern) for the ship; many others were engaged in the work, some to fell
trees, others to shape wood, others to nail, others to carry wood.
Everything used was most carefully selected. The ship was long and
broad, with high gunwales and large timbers. While the bulwarks were
rising, Thorberg was obliged to go home to his farm, and was away a long
time, and when he came back the bulwarks were completed. The same
evening the king, together with Thorberg, went to see how the ship
looked, and every man said he had never seen an equally large or fine
longship. The king returned to the town. Early next morning the king and
Thorberg went down to the ship; all the smiths had arrived, and stood
there doing no work. The king asked why they did this. They said the
ship was spoiled, and that a man had walked from the stem to the
_lypting_ and made cuts into the gunwale, the one after the other. The
king looked at it and saw it was true. He swore that if he knew who had
spoiled the ship from envy, that man should die, but the one who could
tell him should get great reward from him. Thorberg said, ‘I can tell
you, king, who did this.’ The king answered, ‘Thou wast the likeliest
man to be so lucky as to ascertain this and tell me.’ ‘I will tell the
king who has done it,’ he said: ‘I have done it.’ The king answered,
‘Thou shalt repair it so that it is as good as it was before, or else
lose thy life.’ Thorberg shaped the gunwale so that all the cuts
disappeared. The king and every one said that the ship was much better
on the side which Thorberg had shaped. The king asked him to do the same
on the other side, and thanked him well for it. Thereafter Thorberg was
the chief smith of the ship till it was finished. It was a dragon made
in the shape of the serpent which he brought from Hálogaland, and
belonged to Raud, but much larger and in every respect more carefully
built. He called it the _Long Serpent_, while the other was the _Short
Serpent_. The _Long Serpent_ had 34 _rooms_. Its beaks and the
dragon-tail were all ornamented with gold; its gunwales were as high as
those on seagoing ships. No better or costlier ship has been built in
Norway” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 95).


“The same autumn King Olaf had a large longship built on the shore of
the river Nid. It was a _snekkja_; he employed many smiths on it. In the
beginning of winter it was finished; it had thirty rooms, high stems,
but was not large. The king called it the _Trani_ (crane)” (Olaf
Tryggvason, c. 79).


_Crews._—The crew of the ships no doubt varied in number considerably,
according to the power of the chiefs who manned them; crews of one
hundred and twenty men are often mentioned; sometimes the crew consisted
of seven hundred men.[142]


“When spring came, and snow and ice thawed, Thorolf had a large longship
which he owned launched, and made ready and manned with more than 100
(120) of huskarls; they were very fine and well-armed warriors. When a
fair wind came he sailed southward along the coast.... No one knew about
Thorolf’s journey. He had fair winds southward to Denmark, and then to
Austrveg (East of Baltic); he ravaged there that summer, but got little
property. In the autumn he went back to Denmark when the Eyrarfloti (the
trading-fleet of Eyrarsund) was leaving. That summer many ships from
Norway had been there as usual” (Egil’s Saga, c. 19).[143]


The division between each rower’s bench was called room (_rum_), and
this was subdivided into half-rooms, in which many of the combatants
were stationed: hence the fighting strength of a ship, as well as its
size, was known by the number of its rooms or benches.

On expeditions, when the men were landed to fight, we generally find
that one-third of the crew remained on board to guard the ship. This is
corroborated by the Frankish chronicles, which mention that the Northmen
arrived before Paris with seven hundred large ships, besides smaller
ones, and landed forty thousand men. The _Long Serpent_ had thirty-four
rooms; eight men were in each half room, or sixteen in each room, making
five hundred and forty-four. Then thirty men were in the foreroom, thus
making five hundred and seventy-four. We have also the warriors in the
prows, forecastle, and other parts of the ship, making in all probably
seven hundred men.

From the laws we find that people could refuse to sail on unseaworthy
ships.


“The ship which has to be baled three times in two days is reckoned,
according to the right Bjarkey-rett, to be unseaworthy, unless the crew
like to run the risk” (Bjarkey Law, 170).


The following is the only detailed description of a storm at sea in the
Sagas; it was encountered by Fridthjof on his way to the Orkneys. There
are many references to ships being lost at sea, and their crews drowned.


“When Fridthjof got out of Sogn (fjord) a strong gale and a heavy storm
came upon them, and the waves were very great. The ship sailed very
fast, for it was swift and one of the best for the sea.

                  *       *       *       *       *

“They were driven (by the storm) northward into the sounds near to the
islands called Solundir; the wind was then at its hardest. Fridthjof
sang:

                     The sea begins to swell much,
                     The clouds are now struck,
                     Old witchcraft causes
                     That the sea moves;
                     I will not fight Ægir
                     In the gale;
                     Let the Solundir
                     Shelter the men.

“They laid the ship under the Solundir in order to wait there. At once
the wind fell. They then sailed out from the island in good hope, for
they had a fair wind for awhile. Then the wind grew stronger. When they
(Fridthjof and his foster-brother Björn) were a long way out at sea, the
sea began to move fearfully again, and such a snowstorm arose that the
men in the stern and the stem could not see the other, and the ship was
so filled with water that they had to bale it all the time. Fridthjof
sang:

                 We, the renowned warriors of chiefs,
                 Have come out on the deep;
                 We cannot see the waves
                 On account of the witch-storm.
                 The Solundir (isles) are out of sight,
                 And all the eighteen men
                 That defend Ellidi
                 Stand baling.

“Björn said: ‘The one who travels widely must meet good and evil.’ ‘That
is certain, foster-brother,’ said Fridthjof.

“Fridthjof said this was the time to try good men, though it was easier
to sit in Baldrshagi. They made themselves ready with boldness, for
valiant men were in the ship, and it was the best ship which has been in
the northern lands. Fridthjof sang:

                   The waves cannot be seen;
                   We have come westward in the sea;
                   All the sea looks
                   As if one saw embers;[144]
                   The breakers tumble down,
                   The swan-tops make mounds;[145]
                   Now Ellidi is overrun
                   By a high billow.

“Then great waves dashed over the ship so that they stood all baling.

                    The soft-mouthed maiden
                    East on the swan-<DW72>
                    Where the clothes lay bleaching
                    Will drink if I sink.

“Björn said: ‘Thinkest thou the maidens of Sogn will weep much over
thee?’ Fridthjof said: ‘Surely, that is in my mind.’ Then the waves rose
at the stem so that they rushed into the ship; but the ship was good,
and hardy men were in it. Björn sang:

                     It is not like when a maiden
                     Wants to drink to thee,
                     A bright ring-wearing one
                     That asks thee to come nearer;
                     Salt is in my eyes;
                     They are bathed;
                     My strong arms fail;
                     My eyelids are smarting.

“Ásmund said: ‘It matters not though you try your arms (baling, rowing),
for you did not excuse us when we rose so early in Baldrshagi (sacred
grove of Baldr), and we rubbed our eyes.’ ‘Why doest thou not sing,
Ásmund?’ asked Fridthjof. ‘I will,’ said Ásmund.

                 Here was it rough round the mast
                 When the sea fell on the ship;
                 I with eight men
                 Had to work on board;
                 Easier was it to carry
                 A meal to women in their room (dyngja)
                 Than to bale Ellidi
                 On the high wave.

“Fridthjof said with laughter: ‘Thou callest not thy help less than it
is, though thy thrall-kin did appear now as thou didst wish to carry
food.’ Then the wind grew stronger again, so that the white
sea-drifts[146] which burst on the ship from all sides were more like
mountains and mountain-peaks than waves.

“Björn: ‘Now thou art afraid, foster-brother, and there is fear in thy
words; it is bad of a good warrior like thee.’ Fridthjof answered: ‘It
is neither fear nor fright, though our journeys of merriment are sung,
but it may be they are mentioned oftener than is needed; most men would
think death likelier than life if they were situated as we are now.’

                  *       *       *       *       *

“Björn: ‘We must take this, foster-brother, as it is.’ Then came a wave
dashing so strongly that it carried away the gunwales and part of the
bows, and flung four men overboard who were all lost. Fridthjof sang:

                    Both the bows were smashed
                    In the great wave of the sea;
                    Four warriors sank
                    Down into the deep”

                          (Fridthjof’s Saga, c. 6).


-----

Footnote 123:

  Cf. also Olaf Tryggvason, c. 102; St. Olaf, c. 60, 150.

Footnote 124:

  The Nydam and Gokstad boats seem to have been a fifteen-seated _skuta_
  or _karfi_. Some skutas seem to have carried a crew of about thirty
  men.

Footnote 125:

  See p. 142.

Footnote 126:

  Cf. also St. Olaf, c. 132, 149; Magnus Blind’s Saga, c. 5, 16; Magnus
  Erlingson, c. 30.

Footnote 127:

  See Battle of Svold.

Footnote 128:

  This may explain the name _Askmanni_ given to the Vikings by Adam of
  Bremen (c. 212).

Footnote 129:

  Cf. also Ingi’s Saga, c. 1.

Footnote 130:

  In the lypting seems to have been the sleeping-room, for in Harald
  Hardradi’s Saga, c. 22, it is said of Harald, on his journey from
  Constantinople, that “in the evening (he) went to sleep in the
  _lypting_ of his ship.”

Footnote 131:

  Ship boat, also a small vessel.

Footnote 132:

  Cf. also Eyrbyggja, c. 29.

Footnote 133:

  Cf. Orvar Odd, Hervara Saga, Harald Hardradi, 32; Olaf Tryggvason, c.
  87.

Footnote 134:

  Cf. also St. Olaf, c. 39.

Footnote 135:

  In the Vold ship also there are some specimens of carving, but they
  are rare.

Footnote 136:

  Cf. also Magnus the Good’s Saga, c. 20.

Footnote 137:

  When the Crusaders took Constantinople in 1204, the Belgians sent many
  relics home (these are reckoned up in D’Outremann, ‘Constantinopolis
  Belgica’); among them this dragon was sent to Bruges. In 1382, Bruges
  was taken and plundered by the men of Ghent, and the dragon as a
  trophy was put on the top of the belfry in Ghent, where it still is.

  In Sigurd Jorsalafari’s Saga (Heimskringla), ch. 14, and Fornmanna
  Sögur, vii. 98, we read that Sigurd put the gilded dragon-heads of his
  ship on Peter’s Church (a part of Sophia Church, in Constantinople)
  (‘Recueil des chroniques de Flandre 1837–41,’ vol. i.; Schiern, ‘Nyere
  historiske Studier,’ i. 1875).

Footnote 138:

  The Bayeux tapestry corroborates the truthfulness of this, and shows
  that designs were either painted or embroidered upon them.

Footnote 139:

  Grandson of the great Hakon.

Footnote 140:

  An ornament used on the prow of ships and main doors of houses—a sort
  of weathercock, which was often adorned with gold.

Footnote 141:

  Saturday.

Footnote 142:

  See battle of Svold, p. 188.

Footnote 143:

  Cf. also Egil’s Saga, c. 55, 72; St. Olaf, 148; Fagrskinna, 42.

Footnote 144:

  Phosphorescent, looking like fire at night.

Footnote 145:

  That is, swells as high as a mound.

Footnote 146:

  The sea is compared to snow lying in heaps or drifts.




                               CHAPTER X.
                      THE FLEETS OF THE NORTHMEN.

  Maritime power of the North—Their huge fleets—Good
    harbours—Strategical skill—Size of some of their fleets—Fleets
    accompanied by provision ships.


Nothing can give us a greater insight into the maritime power of the
North than the accounts we read, here and there in the Sagas, of the
fleets gathered together for the purpose of war and invasion. The number
of the vessels is quite remarkable, but seeing that the finds
corroborate so much that is told us in the Sagas, there is no reason to
doubt the truthfulness of their statements as regards the magnitude of
the fleets, and the vessels were far from being as small as have been
imagined.

From the Sagas we learn that the aim of every chief was to be powerful
at sea; every bondi was owner of one or more craft. They were born
seamen, but were also trained to fight on land. They surrounded
themselves with warlike retainers, and with these made distant
expeditions to win honour and booty. These men were also soldiers, and
good horsemen. As we see that in every great land battle the warriors
came from all parts of the Northern lands, it must be concluded that the
same took place in regard to their invasions of foreign countries. Only
in a very few instances have we accounts of the Norsemen being defeated
at sea by the fleets of the countries they attacked; even in these rare
instances their combats took place with a very small number of vessels
compared with the powerful fleets of their enemies, who were either
Frisians or their own people who had settled in England.

Fortunately, Frankish and old English chronicles, which are quite
independent of those of the North, help to corroborate the general
truthfulness of the Eddas and Sagas, and from them we have several
accounts of the number of vessels which sailed up the Seine, the Rhine,
the Elbe, and the Weser, or went to England.

The largest fleet that ever met in the North was that which assembled
for the battle of Bravöll; though the number of vessels is not
mentioned, we read that the Sound was covered with vessels. This fleet
reached from Kjöge to Skanör, so that, if the account is trustworthy,
people could walk as on a bridge from Zeeland over the Sound, a distance
of some twenty miles. Sigurd Hring had 2,500 (3,000) ships to oppose
him.[147]

The maritime expeditions of the Northmen to distant lands were
undertaken with a great deal of care and foresight; the men were under
strict discipline, and were attired with the greatest splendour. It
would be a mistaken idea to think that the Northmen started on these
voyages without any previous knowledge of the country they were to
invade, or of the shores where they were going to land, or that they
sailed with no definite object. Their previous knowledge of these
far-off lands was no doubt gained in trading, and it was only after
being thoroughly well acquainted with the geography of the part to be
attacked that they ventured on their invasion.

Many of the places in foreign countries mentioned in the Sagas where the
Norse fleets were safely moored and sheltered against storm, are to this
day good harbours, and if others are no longer so it is because the
shores of those coasts have been subjected to changes which are still
taking place. The geographical positions of the rivers they ascended
were well chosen; they knew what size of vessel to take there, and
though their operations seemed to be detached, we find that their fleets
were in communication with each other, and that their armies could
assist one another in case of need, crush the enemy between the rivers
they had ascended, or between them and the sea. In a word, their tactics
showed considerable boldness and strategical skill, which generally left
them a way of retreat, if necessary, to their vessels or to some island.
Though the Sagas give us a good and vivid idea of the Norse mode of
warfare at sea, they are very incomplete in regard to the description
and details of the land expeditions, and we have to go to the Frankish
chronicles in order to see the manner in which they attacked or besieged
a city. From these we learn that the ships ascended the rivers as far as
possible; if anything stopped the navigation, a canal was made or the
vessels were drawn along the shore, and the obstacle thus passed. The
Norsemen took possession of all the large islands, fortified them, and
wintered there; and there they kept their spoils of war or plunder. They
also brought cavalry in their ships, a fact proved by the Bayeux
tapestry.

It is said that Harald Blátönn (blue tooth) went to Norway with a fleet
of 700 (840) ships.


“Then King Harald summoned a host from his entire kingdom. Hákon jarl
was with him, and Harald Grænski, son of Gudraud Björnsson, and many
other powerful men, who had fled from their estates in Norway on account
of Gunnhild’s sons.

“The King of Denmark sailed from the south into Vikin with 700
ships,[148] and there all the inhabitants came under his rule; and when
he reached Túnsberg, large numbers gathered to him.

“King Harald gave to Hákon jarl all the men who had come to him in
Norway; and made him ruler over the seven fylkis of Rogaland, Hördaland,
Sogn, Firdafylki, Sunnmœri, Raumsdal, Nordmœri”[149] (Olaf Tryggvason,
c. 24, 2 Fms. I.).


Knut the Great had gathered a fleet of 1,200 vessels[150] for an attack
on Norway.


“King Knut called to mind many things with which he charged King Olaf,
as follows: That he captured his nephew Hakon, and let him take oath to
him, and then seized the kingdom and drove him from the land; that he
also took possession of the land which for a long time had been
tributary to the Danish kings; that he had ravaged in the country of
King Knut. So he went east from England with a great host to Denmark,
reached the Limafjord, and thence sailed to Norway with 1,440 ships, for
he had raised a general levy both in Denmark and England. Arriving at
Agdir, he proceeded northward along the coast, and held meetings with
the bœndr; he was acknowledged as king wherever he went, and he did not
stop until he came to Nidaros”[151] (Fagrskinna, c. 104).[152]


When fleets went on distant expeditions, special vessels called
_vistabyrding_ (provision ships) followed them. Butter, the hard bread
still used, dry, smoked, or salted meat, formed the stock of eatables,
and there are many instances where ale and beer are mentioned.

From the Eddas and Sagas we gain an insight into their mode of warfare
at sea. The accounts given of some of their combats are so vivid and
precise, that we could almost imagine ourselves to be eye-witnesses of
those terrific and bloody conflicts which, even to this day, stand
unparalleled in the annals of maritime warfare for the length of their
duration, the fierceness and obstinacy of the attack or defence, the
number of ships or men engaged, and the carnage that took place.

For centuries these people remained undisputed masters of the sea. In
their case, as in that of the ruling nations of to-day, it was their
navy that enabled them to conquer, settle, and colonize other lands. If
we call these men pirates, we must also apply the name to the English,
French, Spaniards, Dutch, &c., because they have taken possession of
countries against the will of the inhabitants, just as in the United
States the land of the Indians has been gradually taken away from them.
Civilisation was aggressive in ancient times, as it is to-day.

-----

Footnote 147:

  See p. 437.

Footnote 148:

  Heimskringla says 600 ships.

Footnote 149:

  The English chronicles mention numerous instances of large fleets
  descending on various parts of the coast, of which the following are a
  few:—

  In the year 860, in the time of Ethelred a large fleet came to the
  land, and the crews stormed Winchester.

  In the year 893 the Danish army came, from the east westward to
  Boulogne, and their war ships. They landed at the mouth of the Limne
  with 250 ships (this is in the eastern part of Kent).

  In the year 894 the Danes among the Northumbrians and East Anglians
  gathered 100 ships and went south to besiege Exeter.

  In the year 927 King Anlaf entered the Humber with a vast fleet of 615
  sails.

  In the year 993 Olave, with 93 ships, came to Staines.

  In the year 994 Olave and Sveyn (Olaf of Norway and Svein of Denmark)
  came to London with 94 ships.

  In the year 1006 a great fleet came to Sandwich and ravaged wherever
  it went. It returned in winter to the Isle of Wight; the distress and
  fear in the land were extreme. £36,000 and provisions was paid as
  tribute to the invaders.

  In the year 1009, Thurkills came with his fleet to England, and after
  him another innumerable fleet of Danes, the chiefs of which were
  Hemming and Ailaf.

  In the year 1069 the sons of Svein came from Denmark with 240 ships
  into the Humber.

  In the year 1075 200 ships came from Denmark under Knut, son of Sweyne
  and Hecco, but did not dare to risk a battle with King William. After
  plundering in York they went to Flanders.

  The Frankish chronicles give an account also of various fleets:—


                                EGINHARD.

  In the year 810 the emperor (Charlemagne), then at Aix-la-Chapelle,
  planned an expedition against King Godfrey. He suddenly received the
  news that a fleet of 200 ships coming from the country of the North
  had landed in Frisia, and ravaged all the islands adjacent to their
  shores.

  In the year 845 Eurick, king of the Northmen, advanced against Louis
  in Germany with 600 vessels along the river Elbe.

  In the year 850 Rorik, the nephew of Harold, who had recently left the
  service of Lothair, taking with him an army of Northmen, comes by the
  Rhine and the Watal with a multitude of ships, devastating Frisia, the
  island of Batavia, and other neighbourhood places.

  In the year 852 the Northmen arrived in Frisia with 252 ships; after
  having received much silver they go elsewhere.

  In the year 852 Godfrey, son of Harold the Dane, formerly baptized at
  Mayence, under the reign of the Emperor Louis, left Lothair and went
  to find his people. Afterwards having assembled a powerful force, he
  attacks Frisia with a multitude of vessels, and then enters the
  territory bordering on the river Scheldt.

  In the year 857 the Danish pirates invaded the city of Paris and set
  fire to it. Here there must have been an enormous fleet.

  In the year 861 the Danes, who had lately burned the town of
  Terouanne, came back under their chief Weland from the country of the
  Angles with more than 200 ships.

  In the year 865, from Attigny Charles marched an army against the
  Northmen, who had entered the Seine with 500 ships. (We find at the
  same time Northmen on the Loire.)

Footnote 150:

  This means actually 1,440, as every hundred was equal to 120.

Footnote 151:

  Unfortunately some of the facts which we would like to know are
  missing in the Northern records in regard to the size of the fleet
  which came to England, with the son of Ragnar Lodbrok; but from what
  old English chronicles tell us, and from the depredations committed by
  them, we may assume that their number must have been very great. The
  same may also be said about the fleets of Svein and Knut.

Footnote 152:

  Cf. also Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, i. 89; Fornmanna Sögur.




                              CHAPTER XI.
                 MODE OF NAVAL WARFARE OF THE NORTHMEN.

  Sea fights—Standard and shield burgh—Method of fighting—Use of
    grappling irons—Choice of the crew—Boarding of ships—Battle at the
    river Helga—Custom of strengthening ships’ sides before a
    combat—Rowers protected by shields—Use of stones as
    weapons—Harbours protected by cables—The war levy.


From the numerous sea-fights described in the Sagas, we see that the
most important and decisive part of the struggle took place near the
prow and stem of the ship. Here the strongest and most valiant men were
always stationed,[153] among them the standard-bearer of the chief or
king, round whom they were ranged in battle order, and formed the
_skjald-borg_ (shieldburg).


“During the winter King Harald had a large dragon made and fitted out
very splendidly. He placed on it his hird and Berserks. The stem
defenders were the most carefully selected, for they had the king’s
standard. That part aft of the prow near the pumping-room (_austr-rum_)
was called rausn (forecastle). It was manned with Berserks. Only those
who surpassed others in strength and bravery and all kinds of skill got
into the hird of King Harald. Only with such men was his ship manned,
and he had then a large choice of hirdmen out of every Fylki” (Harald
Fairhair’s Saga, c. 9).


In a sea-fight between Hakon Herdibreid and King Ingi:


“Hakon went on board the east voyage[154] Knörr, and a shieldburgh was
put round him there, but his standard remained on board the longship
where he had been.”[155]


Before the fight it was the custom to sound the horns and hoist the
standards, and to tie the stems of the ships together, so that each line
formed an unbroken whole; sometimes several anchors seem to have been
employed for this purpose, as it is said that they were used to hold the
ships together during the battle. When they came to the attack, the men
sought to drag the ships of the enemy closer by means of grappling-hooks
(_stafnlé_) and anchors. Eirik Jarl decided the battle of Svold by
attacking the outermost ships of Olaf Tryggvason. As soon as one ship
was cleared of men, he loosened its fastenings.


“It was then customary when men fought on board ships to tie them
together and fight in the prows” (Harald Fairhair’s Saga, ch. 11).


In the celebrated battle of Svold most violent and fatal was the defence
on the Long Serpent among the forerooms-men and the stem-defenders (see
pp 192–3).

After leaving Norway Olaf steered the Long Serpent himself, and the crew
was so carefully chosen that no man who was older than sixty or younger
than twenty was to be on board, and they were picked also with regard to
valour and strength. The king’s hirdmen were first chosen, composed of
the strongest and bravest men from the country and foreign lands.


“Ulf the red carried King Olaf’s standard, and was placed in the front
(prow) of the Serpent together with Kolbjörn Stallari, Thorstein Oxfoot,
Vikar of Tiundaland the brother of Arnljót Gellini. The following men
were on the forecastle (rausn) in the bows:—Vakr Raumason Elfski, Bersi
the Strong, An the archer of Jamtaland, Thránd the Hardy of Thelamörk,
and Úthyrmir (Unsparing), his brother. From Hálogaland were:—Thránd the
Squinting, Ögmund Sandi, Hlödvir (Louis) the Long of Saltvik, Harek the
Keen. From the inner part of Thrandheim were:—Ketil the Tall, Thorfinn
the Dashing, Hávar of Orkadal and his brothers. The following were in
the foreroom:—Björn of Studla, Börk of Firdir, Thorgrim Thjódólfsson of
Hvin, Asbjörn and Orm, Thórd of Njardarlög, Thorstein the white of
Oprustadir, Arnor of Mœri, Hallstein and Hauk of Firdir, Eyvind Snake,
Bergthor Bestil, Hallkel of Fjalir, Olaf Dreng (good warrior), Arnfinn
of Sogn, Sigurd Axe, Einar of Hördaland, Finn, Ketil of Rogaland,
Grjótgard the nimble. The following were in the Krapparum[156]:—Einar
Thambarskelfir (he was not up to the standard being only eighteen
winters old), Thorstein Hlifarson, Thórólf, Ivar the Starter, Orm
Hood-nose, and many other very famous men were on the Serpent, though we
cannot name them. Eight men were in every _half-room_ (sixteen in one
room), selected one by one. Thirty men were in the foreroom. People said
that the picked men on board surpassed other men as far in fineness and
strength and bravery as the Long Serpent surpassed other ships. Thorkel
Nefja, the king’s brother, steered the Short Serpent, Thorkel the
Wheedler and Jostein, the king’s uncles, the Trana; both these ships
were very well manned. Eleven large ships left Thrandheim with Olaf,
also twenty-seaters and smaller ships and store-ships (_vistabyrding_)”
(Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga (Heimskringla), c. 102).


When the crew felt that they were unequal to the contest by being
boarded, they then cut the ropes that tied them to other ships, and
tried to avoid the coming danger.


“The king’s men attacked the jarl’s ship and almost got up on it. When
the jarl saw his danger he called to the men in the forepart of the ship
to cut the ropes (by which the ships were fastened together) and let
them loose; they did so. The king’s men threw their grappling hooks on
the club-formed beaks of the prow, and thus held them fast. Then the
jarl bade the men in the prow cut off the beaks, which they did. Einar
Thambarskelfir had laid his ship on the other side of the jarl’s, and
cast an anchor into the prow of the jarl’s ship, and thus they got out
on the fjord” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 48).


“At this time there was a great war in Norway; Harald Lúfa, the son of
Halfdan Svarti (black), was subduing the country.... When he came to
Hördaland a mass of warriors met to fight him.... Both sides had many
men. This was one of the greatest battles in Norway; most Sagas mention
it, for there came men from the whole country, and many from other
countries, with a great number of Vikings. Önund laid his ship at the
side of that of Thorir Chinlong, which was nearly in the middle of the
fleet. King Harald with his ship attacked that of Thorir Chinlong, who
was known as the greatest berserk and very valiant. There ensued the
severest fights on both sides. The king urged his berserks to attack;
they were called Ulfhednar (the wolf-skin coats), and no weapons wounded
them; and when they rushed forward nothing withstood them. Thorir
defended himself very manfully and fell on his ship with great valour;
it was cleared of men from stem to stern, and as the ropes were cut it
drifted backward between the others. The king’s men then attacked the
ship of Önund; he was in the fore part of the ship, and fought bravely.
The king’s men said: ‘That man fights hard in the stem; let us give him
some mark in memory of his having been in the battle.’ Önund was
standing with one of his feet on the side of the ship, and as he dealt a
man a blow a spear was thrust at him; as he parried the blow he bent
backwards, when one of the king’s stem-defenders cut off his leg below
the knee, after which he could fight no more. The greater part of the
men on his ship fell. Önund was carried on board the ship of Thrand, the
son of Björn and brother of Eyvind Eastman; he was against King Harald,
and lay on one side of Önund’s ship. After this the main fleet broke
into flight. Thrand, and the other Vikings who were able to, got away
and sailed westward. Önund, as well as Balki and Hallvard Súgandi (gush
of wind), went with him. When he was healed he afterwards walked with a
wooden leg; from this he was called Önund tree-foot while he lived”
(Gretti’s Saga, c. 2).


We see that at that period expeditions to and from the west were common.

The battle at the river Helga (Sweden) is thus described:—


“One evening the spies of Önund saw Knut sailing not far off. Önund let
a war blast be blown. His men took down their tents, armed themselves,
and rowed out of the harbour (at the mouth of the river) and eastwards
along the coast; they laid their ships side by side and tied them
together, and made ready for battle. Önund sent spies ashore to tell
Olaf, who had the dam broken and let the river into its bed. He then
went down to his ships in the night. When Knut came off the harbour, he
saw the host of the kings ready for battle. It seemed to him it would be
too late in the day to begin a battle, as the whole of his host was not
ready. His fleet needed much space for sailing, and there was a long way
between his foremost and hindmost ship, and the outermost and the one
next to the land. There was little wind. When he saw the Swedes and
Northmen had left the harbour, he went in with such ships as could get
room there, but the greater part of his host lay out on the sea (outside
the harbour). Next morning, when it was almost day, many of their men
were on land, some talking, others at their games. They suspected
nothing until the water rushed down upon them like a torrent; large
timbers followed, and were driven against their ships; these were
damaged, and the water flowed all over the fields; the men on land, and
also many of those on the ships, lost their lives. All who could, cut
their anchor-ropes, and the ships drifted in great disorder. The large
dragon, on which the king was, floated out with the current; it was not
easy to move it with oars, and it drifted out to the fleet of the kings.
When they recognized it, they at once surrounded it. As the ship had
sides as high as the walls of a burgh, and many chosen and well-armed
men were on board, it was not easy to capture it. After a short time Ulf
jarl came up with his ships, and the battle began. Thereupon the host of
Knut gathered from all sides. Then Olaf and Önund saw that they had
gained as much advantage as was then possible; they pulled back and got
loose from the host of Knut, and separated the fleets. Because this
attack had not been as Knut had ordered, he did not row after them; they
began to array the ships and make themselves ready. When they had
separated, and each fleet was mustered, the kings counted their men, and
found that they had not lost many; they saw also that the odds would be
so great if they waited till Knut had made ready all his great host, and
attacked them, that there was little hope of victory. They decided to
row with all their ships eastward along the coast” (St. Olaf, c.
106).[157]


Before the conflict the sides of the ships were strengthened by
_viggyrdil_ (war-girdle) or _vigfleki_ (war-hurdle).


“King Sverri was at Bergen (Björgyn) with his host, and all his ships
lay ready and war-girdled at the gangways” (Sverri’s Saga, c. 52).


When King Svein of Denmark was pursuing King Harald with an overwhelming
force,


“He (Harald) bid the men lighten his (ship) by throwing overboard malt,
wheat, and pork, and to cut holes in the ale-barrels: this helped
awhile. Then he had _viggyrdils_, vats, and empty barrels, as well as
the prisoners of war, thrown into the sea” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c.
35).


“We will carry out on the boards (i.e. the sides of the ship)
_vigfleki_, and defend ourselves as best we can, but not attack them”
(Flateyjarbok).


A man with his shields protected the rowers from the missiles of the
enemy; but in spite of this, many were often killed. Three men were
generally stationed in each _half-room_, one for rowing, one for
protecting the rower, and one for fighting.


Erling Skakki said to King Ingi: “If we now attack them and row against
the current, and have three men in every _half-room_, then one must row,
the other protect him, and we shall then have not more than one-third of
our host in the fight” (Hakon Herdibreid’s Saga, c. 6).


“When the men on board the jarl’s ships began to fall and get wounded,
and the line of men on their gunwales got thin, King Olaf’s men went on
board. Their standard was carried on board the ship next to the jarl’s,
and followed by the king himself” (St. Olaf’s Saga, ch. 48).


Stones were extensively used in sea fights.

Svein Ulfsson,[158] King of Denmark, fought a battle outside Árós
(Aarhus) against King Magnus of Norway, of which it is said,


“Svein’s men armed themselves and tied together their ships. There at
once ensued a hard battle.... They fought in the stems. Only those who
stood there could reach to use their swords; those who stood in the
foreroom used _kesjas_ (a kind of lance), and those still farther aft
shorter javelins or large arrows; some threw stones with slings, while
those who were aft of the mast used bows” (Magnus the Good, c. 31).


“A battle was fought at the mouth of the Gauta river between the kings
Ingi and Hakon; there were thrown down on them _kesjas_ (spears), and
stones so large, that they were forced to retreat” (Hakon Herdibreid’s
Saga, c. 2).


Cables were stretched across the mouths of rivers or harbours, in order
to prevent the ships of the enemy from entering.


“Olaf went to Saudungssund and lay there; he stationed one ship on each
side of the Sound, and had a thick cable stretched between them. Hakon
jarl (son of Eirik who was son of the famous Hakon jarl) rowed shortly
after into the Sound with a manned skeid. He thought that two trading
vessels were in the Sound, so rowed into it between them. Olaf’s men
drew the cable under the middle of the keel of the skeid, and hauled it
with windlasses; as soon as it touched the skeid its stern was lifted,
and the prow plunged forwards so that the sea came in; the ship was
filled and upset” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 28).


The country was divided into _skipreida_, or ship levy districts, in
Norway, and no doubt there were similar divisions in the other countries
of the Northmen. Every skipreida had to build, equip, and man a certain
number of ships, some more than others.

_Leidangr_ was the term applied to a levy of men, ships, and money. A
levy when necessary was effected in the following manner.


“When a ship has been loosened from its fastenings and a man has not
come in to his half-room then his oar shall be raised (= stand with its
blade into the air), and witnesses called that he is liable to pay a
fine of three marks (merkur). If a man goes on board another ship than
the one he should go to he shall row in the expedition of the levy and
(besides) pay the fine” (Gulath, 301).


“Olaf summoned a Thing in the town (Nidarós). He made it known to all
people that he wanted to have a levy that summer from the country; he
wanted a certain number of men and ships from each Fylki; he stated how
many ships he wished to have from the fjord (Trondhjemsfjord). Then he
sent word southwards and northwards along the coast and inland, and
summoned men for war. He had the Long Serpent launched, and all his
other ships, small and large” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, c. 107,
Heimskringla).


“Hakon Jarl had also equipped his men, intending to do warfare, and had
twelve large ships. After Gull Harald had departed, Hakon Jarl went to
the king and said: ‘Now we may go on the expedition, and nevertheless
have to pay the fine for default in the levy (leidviti). Now Gull Harald
will slay Harald Gráfeld, and then take the kingship in Norway’” (Olaf
Tryggvason’s Saga, vol. i., Fornmanna Sögur).


Leidviti was the tax which was paid instead of the leidangr, when the
latter was not needed, being originally the fine for neglecting to
participate in leidangr. It was also paid by the one who took part in
the warfare, but on the wrong ship. It seems to be the latter which the
jarl refers to—a warfare with loss, in consequence of lack of
forethought.

-----

Footnote 153:

  They were called _Stafnbúar_, stem or prow men.

Footnote 154:

  East voyage = voyage in the East Baltic (Russia, &c.).

Footnote 155:

  Cf. also Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, c. 115.

Footnote 156:

  The narrow room, the third room or space from the stern.

Footnote 157:

  Cf. also St. Olaf, 185, 186; Njala, c. 30.

Footnote 158:

  _Svein Ulfsson_ was the son of Ulf jarl and Astrid, the sister of Knut
  the Great. He carried on long war against King Magnus the Good, and at
  last was acknowledged as King of Denmark. This was about the middle of
  the 11th century.




                              CHAPTER XII.
                              SEA BATTLES.

  The battle of Svold—The battle of the Jomsvikings.


The two most famous sea-fights which are related in the Sagas are those
of _Svold_ and _Jomsvikings_; the former of which took place between
Olaf Tryggvason against King Svein of Denmark, Olaf of Sweden, and Eirik
jarl of Norway. When Olaf Tryggvason had left _Vindland_ (the land of
the Wends), and was returning to Norway, his enemies were waiting in
ambush in order to attack him, and thus was fought the battle of Svold.


“Svein King of Denmark, Olaf King of Sweden, and Eirik jarl lay under
the island with all their host. The weather was fine and the sunshine
was bright. All the chiefs went up on the island, and many of the host
with them. When they saw that very many of the ships of the Northmen
sailed out to sea they were very glad, for their host grumbled at lying
there so long, and some had lost all hope of the King of Norway’s
coming. Now they saw a large and splendid ship sailing, and both the
kings said: ‘This is a large and exceedingly fine ship; it must be the
Long Serpent.’ Eirik jarl answered: ‘This is not the Long Serpent, which
must look larger and grander, though this is a large and fine ship.’ It
was as the jarl said. Styrkár of Gimsar owned the ship. Shortly after
they saw another much larger ship, which had a head on its prow. King
Svein said: ‘This must be the Long Serpent; let us now go to our ships
and not be too slow in attack.’ Eirik jarl replied: ‘This cannot be the
Long Serpent, though it is finely fitted out.’ It was as he said, for it
belonged to Thorkel Nefja, King Olaf’s brother; but he was not on board
himself. And now they saw another large and fine ship. King Svein said:
‘There you can see the king’s ship.’ The jarl replied: ‘Certainly this
is a large and splendid ship, but the Serpent must be much grander.’
Close upon it came a fourth large ship. The two last were owned by two
men of Vikin, Thorgeir and Hyrning, the king’s brothers-in-law; but they
did not steer the ships, for they were on the Long Serpent with King
Olaf. A little while after appeared a fifth, much larger than any of the
preceding. King Svein said, laughing: ‘Now is Olaf Tryggvason afraid,
for he dares not sail with the head on his dragon.’[159] Eirik jarl
replied: ‘This is not the king’s ship; this one I know well, as well as
the sail which is striped; it belongs to Erling Skjalgsson of Jadar; let
them sail on, for I tell you truly that there are warriors on board,
whom, if we go into battle with Olaf Tryggvason, it is better not to
have, but to miss in his fleet, than to have it manned as it is, for I
think Erling himself steers it.’ It was not long after these five large
ships and all the small ones of the fleet had sailed past them that they
recognised Sigvaldi jarl’s ships, which turned in towards the island.
They saw there three ships, and one of these was a large headship (i.e.
a ship having a head on the stem); then said King Svein: ‘Let us now go
to the ships, for here comes the Long Serpent.’ Eirik jarl answered:
‘Many other large and splendid ships have they besides the Long Serpent,
but few have yet sailed past; let us still wait.’ Then many said: ‘Now
we may see that Eirik will not fight against Olaf Tryggvason, and dares
not avenge his father; and this is such a great shame that it will
spread over all lands, if we lie here with such a large host, and
Norway’s king sails with his handful of men past us and out to sea.’
Eirik jarl became very angry at their words, and asked all to go to the
ships, saying: ‘I expect, though the Danes and Swedes now question my
courage much, that both of them will be less at their ease before the
sun goes down into the sea to-night than I and my men.’ When they went
down they saw four large ships sailing, one of which was a dragon-ship
much ornamented with gold. Many men said that the jarl had spoken the
truth. Here now sails the Long Serpent, and it is a very large and fine
ship; no long ship is similar to it in beauty and size in the northern
lands. It is not strange that the king is widely renowned, and is so
great as to have such grand things made. King Svein arose and said:
‘High shall the Serpent carry me to-night. Him will I steer.’ Eirik jarl
added: ‘Even if King Olaf Tryggvason had no larger ship than the one we
just now saw; King Svein would never win it from him with the Dana host
alone.’ But these large head ships they thought to be the Long Serpent,
the first was the Tranan (the crane), and the second the Ormrinn Skammi
(the short serpent). The men crowded to the ships, and pulled down the
tents, and the chiefs arranged the host for attack, and it is said that
they threw lots who should first attack Olaf’s own ship, the Long
Serpent. Svein King of Denmark drew the lot to attack first, and Olaf
King of Sweden and Eirik jarl last, if they needed it; and it was agreed
between the chiefs, King Svein, King Olaf, and Eirik jarl, that each
should become owner of one-third of Norway if they slew King Olaf; while
he who first got up on the Serpent should own all the booty there was on
board, and each should own the ships which he himself captured and
cleared of men. Eirik jarl had a very large Bardi which he used to have
on Viking expeditions; there were beaks on the top of both stem and
stern, and below these was a thick iron plate which covered the whole of
the stem and stern all the way down to the water.”

“When the chiefs had talked thus between themselves they saw three very
large ships, and following them a fourth. They all saw a large dragon’s
head on the stem, ornamented so that it seemed made of pure gold, and it
gleamed far and wide over the sea as the sun shone on it. As they looked
at the ship they wondered greatly at its length, for the stern did not
appear till long after they had seen the prow[160]; then all knew and no
one gainsaid that this was the Long Serpent. At this sight many a man
grew silent, and fear and terror crept into the breast of the host. This
was not strange, for the great ship carried death for many men. Then
said Eirik jarl: ‘This famous ship is befitting such a king as Olaf
Tryggvason; for it is true of him that he excels other kings as much as
the Long Serpent does other ships.’

“When Sigvaldi jarl had let down the sails on his ships and rowed up to
the island, Thorkel Dydril on the Tranan and other ship-steerers who
went with him saw that he turned his ships towards the island; they
lowered their sails and followed him. Thorkel shouted to Sigvaldi,
asking why he did not sail. The jarl replied he would wait there for
King Olaf. They let their ships float until Thorkel Nefja arrived with
the Short Serpent and the four ships which followed him; they also
lowered their sails, and let their ships float, waiting for the king.

“The fleet of the kings lay inside the harbour, so that they could not
see how large a host they had; but when King Olaf sailed towards the
island and saw that his men had lowered their sails and waited for him,
he steered towards them and asked why they did not go on. They told him
that a host of foes was before them, and requested him to flee. The king
stood on the lypting while he heard these tidings, and said to his men:
‘Let down the sail as quickly as possible, and some of you put out the
oars to take the speed off the ship. I will rather fight than flee, for
never yet have I fled from battle; my life is in God’s power, but never
will I take to flight, for he is not a true king who in fear flies from
his foes.’ It was done as the king said, and the Serpent ran in front of
the ships, and the men of the other ships brought them ahead by pulling
with their oars. Then the entire host of the kings rowed out from under
the island; and the chiefs were very glad when they found that King Olaf
had fallen into their ambush.

“When King Olaf Tryggvason and his men saw that the sea was covered far
and wide with the war-ships of their foes, a wise and valiant man,
Thorkel Dydril, his uncle, said: ‘Lord, here is an overwhelming force to
fight against; let us hoist our sails and follow our men out to sea. We
can still do so while our foes prepare themselves for battle, for it is
not looked upon as cowardice by any one for a man to use forethought for
himself or his men.’ King Olaf replied loudly: ‘Tie together the ships,
and let the men prepare for battle and draw their swords, for my men
shall not think of flight.’ The chiefs arranged the host for attack, and
it is said that they threw lots, who should first attack Olaf’s ship,
the Long Serpent. Svein drew the lot to attack first, then Olaf and
Eirik jarl last if it was needed.

“King Olaf signalled by horn to lay the eleven ships together which he
had there. The Long Serpent was in the middle, with the Short Serpent on
one side and the Crane on the other, and four other ships on each side
of them. But this ship-host, though he had large ships, was only a small
detachment compared to the overwhelming host which his enemies had. He
now missed his host, as it was likely.

“King Olaf’s men now tied together the ships as bid; but when he saw
that they began to tie together the stems of the Long Serpent and the
Short Serpent, he called out loudly: ‘Bring forward the large ship; I
will not be the hindmost of all my men in this host when the battle
begins.’

“Then Ulf the red, the king’s standard bearer and his stem defender,
said: ‘If the Serpent shall be put as much forward as it is larger and
longer than the other ships, the men in the bows will have a hard time
of it.’ The king answered: ‘I had the Serpent made longer than other
ships, so that it should be put forward more boldly in battle, and be
well known in fighting and sailing, but I did not know that I had a stem
defender who was both red and faint-headed.’ Ulf replied: ‘Turn thou,
king, no more than back forward in defending the lypting than I will in
defending the stem.’ The king had a bow in his hand, and laid an arrow
on the string and aimed at Ulf. Then Ulf said: ‘Do not shoot me, lord,
but rather where it is more needed, that is at our foes, for what I win
I win for thee. May be you will think your men not over many, before the
evening comes.’ The king took off the arrow and did not shoot.

“King Ólaf stood on the lypting of the Serpent, and rose high up; he had
a gilt shield and a gilt helmet, and was very easily recognised. He wore
a short red silk kirtle over his coat of mail. When he saw that the
hosts of his foes began to separate, and that the standards were raised
in front of the chiefs, he asked: ‘Who is chief of that standard which
is opposite us?’ He was told that it was King Svein with the Danish
host. The king said: ‘We are not afraid of those cowards, for no more
courage is there in the Danes than in wood-goats; never were Danes
victorious over Northmen, and they will not conquer us to-day. But what
chief follows the standards which are to the right?’ He was told that it
was Olaf the Swede, with the Svia host. The king added: ‘Easier and
pleasanter will the Swedes think it to sit at home and lick their
sacrifice bowls[161] than to board the Long Serpent to-day under your
weapons, and I think we need not fear the horse-eating Swedes; but who
owns those large ships to the left of the Danes?’ ‘It is,’ they said,
‘Eirik jarl Hakonsson.’ King Olaf replied: ‘This host is full of
high-born men whom they have ranged against us; Eirik jarl thinks he has
just cause for fighting us, it is likely we shall have a hard struggle
with him and his men, for they are Northmen like ourselves.’ Then the
kings and the jarl rowed at King Olaf.... The horns were blown, and both
sides shouted a war-cry, and a hard battle commenced. Sigvaldi let his
ships row to and fro, and did not take part in the battle.

“The battle raged fiercely, at first with arrows from cross-bows and
hand-bows, and then with spears and javelins, and all say that King Olaf
fought most manfully....

“King Svein’s men turned their stems as thickly as they could towards
both sides of the Long Serpent, as it stood much further forward than
the other ships of King Olaf; the Danes also attacked the Short Serpent
and the Crane, and the fight was of the sharpest, and the carnage great.
All the stem-defenders on the Serpent who could fought hand-to-hand, but
King Olaf himself and those aft shot with bows and used short swords
(handsax), and repeatedly killed and wounded the Danir.

“Though King Svein made the hardest onset on the Northmen with sixty
ships, the Danish and Swedish hosts nevertheless were incessantly within
shooting distance; King Olaf made the bravest defence with his men, but
still they fell. King Olaf fought most boldly, he shot chiefly with bows
and spears, but when the chief attack was made on the Serpent he went
forward in hand-to-hand fight, and cleft many a man’s skull with his
sword.

“The attack proved difficult for the Danes, for the stem-defenders of
the Long Serpent and on the Short Serpent and the Crane hooked anchors
and grappling-hooks on to King Svein’s ships, and as they could strike
down (upon the enemy) with their weapons, for they had much larger and
higher-boarded ships, they cleared of men all the Danish ships which
they had laid hold of. King Svein and all who could get away fled on
board other ships, and thereupon they withdrew, tired and wounded, out
of shooting distance. It happened as Olaf Tryggvason guessed, that the
Danes did not gain a victory over the Northmen.

“It happened to the Swedes as to the Danes, that the Northmen held fast
their ships with grappling-hooks and anchors, and cleared those they
could reach. Their swords dealt one fate to all Swedes whom they reached
with their blows. The Swedes became tired of keeping up the fight where
Olaf with his picked champions went at them most fiercely.... Men say
that the sharpest and bloodiest fight was that of the two namesakes
before Olaf and the Swedes retreated. The Swedes had a heavy loss of
men, and also lost their largest ships. Most of the warriors of Olaf the
Swedish king were wounded, and he had won no fame by this, but was fain
to escape alive. Now Olaf Tryggvason had made both the Danes and Swedes
take to flight. It all went as he had said.

“Now must be told what Eirik Jarl did while the kings fought against
Norway’s king. The Jarl first came alongside the farthest ship of King
Olaf on one wing with the Járnbardi (iron-board), cleared it, and cut it
from the fastenings; he then boarded the next one, and fought there
until it was cleared. The men then began to jump from the smaller ships
on to the larger ones, but the Jarl cut away each ship from the
fastenings as it was cleared.

“The Danes and Swedes then drew up within shooting distance on all sides
of King Olaf’s ships, but Eirik Jarl lay continually side by side with
one of them in hand-to-hand fight; and as the men fell on his ship,
other Danes and Swedes took their places. Then the battle was both hard
and sharp and many of King Olaf’s men fell.

“At last all Olaf’s ships had been cleared except the Long Serpent,
which carried all the men who were able to fight. Eirik Jarl then
attacked the Serpent with five large ships. He laid the Járnbardi
alongside the Serpent, and then ensued the fiercest fight and the most
terrible hand-to-hand struggle that could be....

“Eirik Jarl was in the foreroom of his ship, where a shieldburgh was
drawn up. There was both hand-to-hand fight and spear-throwing and every
kind of weapon was thrown, and whatever could be seized by the hand.
Some shot with bows or with their hands, and such a shower of weapons
was poured upon the Serpent that the men could hardly protect themselves
against it. Then spears and arrows flew thickly, for on all sides of the
Serpent lay warships. King Olaf’s men now became so furious that they
jumped upon the gunwales in order to reach their foes with their swords
and kill them, but many did not lay their ships so close to the Serpent
as to get into the hand-to-hand fight, most of them thought it hard to
deal with Olaf’s champions.

“The Northmen thought of nothing but continually going forward to slay
their foes, and many went straight overboard; for out of eagerness and
daring they forgot that they were not fighting on dry ground, and many
sank down with their weapons between the ships....

“King Olaf Tryggvason stood on the lypting of the Serpent, and chiefly
used during the day his bow and javelins; and always two javelins at a
time. It was agreed by all, both friends and foes, who were present, and
those who have heard these tidings told with the greatest truth, that
they have known no man fight more valiantly than King Olaf Tryggvason.
King Olaf surpassed most other kings, in that he made himself so easily
known in the battle that men knew no example of any king having shown
himself so openly to his foes, especially as he had to fight against
such an overwhelming force. The king showed the bravery of his mind, and
the pride of his heart, so that all men might see that he shunned no
danger. The better he was seen and the greater lack of fear he showed in
the battle, the greater fear and terror he inspired.

“King Olaf saw that his men on the fore part of the ship frequently
raised their swords to strike, and that the swords cut badly. He cried
out: ‘Why do you raise your swords so slowly? I see they do not bite?’ A
man replied: ‘Our swords are both dull and broken, lord.’ The king then
went down from the lypting into the foreroom and unlocked the high-seat
chest, and took therefrom many bright and sharp swords, which he gave to
his men. As he put down his right hand they saw that blood flowed out of
the sleeve of the coat-of-mail, but no one knew where he was wounded.

“Hard and bloody was the defence of the foreroom men and the
stem-defenders, for in both those places the gunwale was highest and the
men picked. When the fall of men began on the Serpent, it was first
amidships, mostly from wounds and exhaustion, and men say that if these
brave men could have kept up their defence the Serpent would never have
been won.

“When only a few were left on the Serpent around the mast amidships,
Eirik Jarl boarded it with fourteen men. Then came against him the
king’s brother-in-law, Hyrning, with his followers, and between them
ensued a hard struggle, for Hyrning fought very boldly. It thus ended
that Eirik Jarl retreated on to the Bardi; but of those who had followed
him, some fell, and some were wounded; and Hyrning (Thor image) and
Eirik Jarl became much renowned from this fight....

“Eirik Jarl took off the Bardi the dead and wounded, and in their stead
brought fresh and rested men, whom he selected from among Swedes and
Danes. It is also said by some that the Jarl had promised to let himself
be baptized if he won the Serpent; and it is a proof of their statement
that he threw away Thor and put up in his place a crucifix in the stem
of the Bardi. When he had prepared his men, he said to a wise and
powerful chief who was present, Thorkel the high, brother of Sigvaldi
Jarl: ‘Often have I been in battles, and never have I before found men
equally brave and so skilled in fighting as those on the Serpent, nor
have I seen a ship so hard to win. Now as thou art one of the wisest of
men, give me the best advice thou knowest how the Serpent may be won.’
Thorkel replied: ‘I cannot give thee sure advice thereon, but I can say
what seems to me best to do. Thou must take large timbers, and let them
fall from thy ship upon the gunwale of the Serpent, so that it will lean
over; you will then find it easier to board the Serpent, if its gunwale
is no higher than those of the other ships. I can give thee no other
advice, if this will not do.’ The Jarl carried out what Thorkel had told
him....

“When Eirik Jarl was ready he attacked the Serpent a second time, and
all the Danish and Swedish host again made an onset on King Olaf
Tryggvason; the Swedes placed their prows close to the Serpent, but the
greatest part of the host was within shooting distance of the Northmen,
and shot at them incessantly. The Jarl again laid the Bardi side by side
with the Serpent, and made a very sharp onslaught with fresh men;
neither did he spare himself in the battle, nor those of his men who
were left.

“King Olaf and his men defended themselves with the utmost bravery and
manliness, so that there was little increase in the fall of men on the
Serpent while they were fresh; they slew many of their foes, both on the
Járnbardi and on other ships which lay near the Serpent. As the fight
still went against Eirik Jarl, he hoisted large timbers on the Bardi,
which fell on the Serpent. It is believed that the Serpent would not
have been won but for this, which had been advised by Thorkel the high.

“The Serpent began to lean over very much when the large timbers were
dropped on one gunwale, and thereupon many fell on both sides. When the
defenders of the Serpent began to thin, Eirik boarded it and met with a
warm reception.

“When King Olaf’s stem-defenders saw that the Jarl had got up on the
Serpent, they went aft and turned against him, and made a very hard
resistance; but then so many began to fall on the Serpent, that the
gunwales were in many places deserted, and the Jarl’s men boarded them;
and all the men who were standing up for defence withdrew aft to where
the king was. Haldór (a poet) says that the jarl urged on his men.

It is said that Thorstein Uxafót was in the foreroom aft by the
lypting,[162] and said to the king, when the Jarl’s men came thickest on
board the Serpent: ‘Lord, each man must now do what he can?’ ‘Why not?’
answered the king. Thorstein struck with his fist one of the Jarl’s men,
who jumped up on the gunwale near him; he hit his cheek so hard that he
dropped out into the sea, and at once perished. After this Thorstein
became so enraged, that he took up the sailyard and fought with it. When
the king saw this, he said to Thorstein: ‘Take thy weapons, man, and
defend thyself with them; for weapons, and not hands alone or timber,
are meant for men to fight with in battle.’ Thorstein then took his
sword, and fought valiantly. There was still a most fierce fight in the
foreroom, and King Olaf shot from the lypting javelins or spears, both
hard and often. When he saw that Eirik Jarl had come into the foreroom
of the Serpent, he shot at him with three short-handled _kesjas_ (a kind
of spear), but they did not go as usual (for he never missed his aim
when shooting), and none of these _kesjas_ hit the Jarl. The first flew
past his right side, the second his left, and the third flew on to the
forepart of the ship above the Jarl’s head. Then the king said: ‘Never
before did I thus miss a man; great is the Jarl’s hamingia (luck); it
must be God’s will that he now shall rule in Norway; and that is not
strange, for I think he has changed the _stem-dweller_ on the Bardi. I
said to-day that he would not gain victory over us, if he had Thor in
the stem.’

“As many of the Jarl’s men had got up on board the Serpent as could be
there, and his ships lay on all sides of it, and but few remained for
defence against such a host. In a short time many of King Olaf’s
champions fell, though they were both strong and valiant. There fell
both the king’s brothers-in-law, Hyrning and Thorgeir, Vikar of
Tiundaland, Úlf the red, and many other brave men, who left a famous
name behind.

“Kolbjörn Stallari (Marshal) had defended the stem during the day with
the other stem-defenders; he had weapons and clothing very much like
King Olaf, and he had dressed so because he thought that, if necessary,
as it now was, he might save the life of the king. When the most valiant
of the king’s men in the foreroom began to fall, Kolbjörn went up on the
lypting to the king. It was not easy to tell them apart, for Kolbjörn
was a very large and handsome man. There was then such a thick shower of
weapons in the lypting, that the shields of King Olaf and Kolbjörn were
covered all over with arrows. But when the Jarl’s men came up to the
lypting, it seemed to them that so much light came over the king that
they could not see through it, yet when the light vanished they saw King
Olaf nowhere.” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, Fornmanna Sögur, ii., 299–332).


The Battle of the Jomsvikings arose out of a vow made by Sigvaldi, at
the _arvel_ given by King Svein Tjuguskegg (forked beard) for Strut
Harald Jarl, that he would rule Norway.


“The Jomsvikings went northward along the coast, plundering and ravaging
wherever they landed. They made great coast raids, slew many men, and
often burned towns; all, who heard of them and could flee, fled. When
they were at Úlfasund, off Stad, it is said that they and Hakon jarl
heard of each other. They sailed twenty sea-miles northward from Stad,
and entered the harbour at Hereyjar, and laid all their fleet therein.
Then they were in want of food again, and Vagn Ákason went on his skeid
to the island Höd, not knowing that the jarl lay in the bay, near the
island. Vagn landed. They went up, wishing to make a shore raid if they
could. They happened to meet a man driving three cows and twelve goats.
Vagn asked for his name. He said it was Úlf. Vagn said to his men: ‘Take
the cows and the goats and slaughter them, and any other cattle you may
find here, for our ship.’ Úlf asked: ‘Who commands the men on board this
ship?’ ‘Vagn Ákason,’ was the answer. Úlf said: ‘I think there are, not
very far from you, bigger cattle for slaughter than my cows or goats.’
Vagn said: ‘If thou knowest anything about the journey of Hakon jarl
tell us, and, if thou canst tell us with truth where he is, thy, cows
and goats are safe; what knowest thou about him?’ Úlf answered: ‘He lay
with one ship late yesterday night inside of the island Höd, in
Hjörungavag, and you can slay him when you like, for he is waiting for
his men.’ Vagn said: ‘Then all thy cattle are safe; come on board our
ship, and show us the way to the jarl.’ Úlf said: ‘That is not right for
me, and I will not fight against the jarl, but if you wish I will show
you the way into the bay; and, if I go on board, you must promise to let
me go when you see your way into the bay.’ Úlf went on board early in
the day, and Vagn, as quickly as he could, went back to Hereyjar, and
told Sigvaldi and the Jomsvikings the news that Úlf told.

“The Jomsvikings made themselves ready as if they were to go into a most
fierce battle, though Úlf said it was not needed. When they were quite
ready they rowed towards the bay. It is said that Úlf thought they would
see more ships there than he had told of. When the ships came into
sight, Úlf jumped overboard and wanted to swim to the shore and not wait
for his reward. When Vagn saw this he wished to give him what he
deserved, snatched a spear and threw it after him; it hit him in the
middle and killed him. All the Jomsvikings rowed into the bay, and saw
that it was covered all over with warships. There were more than three
hundred ships, snekkjas and skeids and trading-ships. The Jomsvikings at
once arrayed their ships. Hakon and his sons saw the Jomsvikings come,
and at once unfastened their ships and said which were to fight against
which. It is told that the upper end of Hjörungavag is to the east, and
its mouth to the west; three rocks, one larger than the two others,
stand in the bay; they are called Hjörungs, and the bay is named from
them. There is a reef in the middle of the bay at the same distance from
the shore in three directions. An island called Primsigd is north of the
bay, and Harund is south of it, off Harundarfjord.

“The Jomsvikings arrayed their ships thus: Sigvaldi laid his ship in the
middle, Thorkel the high, his brother, laid his next thereto; Búi the
stout and Sigurd Kápa, his brother, had theirs in the one wing of the
array, and Vagn Ákason and Björn the British in the other. Hakon jarl
determined who should fight against these champions, and in most places
three were placed against one. As to their array, Svein, son of Hakon,
was placed against Sigvaldi; three chiefs were arrayed against Thorkel
the high, Yrjaskeggi, Sigurd Steikling, Thórir Hjört (stag); two were
with Svein Hakonarson against Sigvaldi, Gudbrand of Dalir, and Styrkár
of Gimsar. Against Búi were Hallstein Kerlingabani, and Thorkel Leira
and Thorkel Midlang (iendirmen). Against Sigurd Kápa were Ármód of
Önundarfjord and his son Árni. Against Vagn Ákason were Eirík jarl
Hakonarson, Erling of Skuggi, and Ögmund the white, whose hand Vagn cut
off. Against Björn the British were Einar the little, Hávard Uppsjá, and
Hallvard of Flydrunes, Hávard’s brother; Hakon himself was not arrayed
against any one, but had to support the whole line and command it.

“The fleets closed, and Hakon jarl was with his son Svein to support him
against Sigvaldi. A most fierce fight began, and one could find no fault
with the onset or attack of either; it is told that it went equally with
Sigvaldi and Hakon and Svein, so that neither moved backwards. Then
Hakon jarl saw that Búi had forced back a long way some of the northern
wing of their array, and those who fought against him drew back with
their ships, and thought it better to retreat; he followed up,
nevertheless, and dealt heavy blows; they were ill-treated by him, and
he was dangerous to men in the battle. The Jarl saw that the fight was
equal with Eirík and Vagn in the southern wing. Eirík went thence with
his own ship, and his brother Svein with another, up to Búi and fought
against him, and put the wing in line again, but could do no more. Hakon
meanwhile fought against Sigvaldi, and when Eirík came back to the
southern wing Vagn had forced back many of Eirík’s ships, which had
retreated and had been separated, so that Vagn went through the line and
attacked them fiercely. Eirík became very angry when he saw this, and
boarded the skeid which Vagn steered valiantly with his Járnbardi. They
came alongside of each other and fought again, and never had the fight
been harder than then. Vagn and Áslák Hólmskalli jumped on board Eirík’s
Járnbardi from their skeid, and each went along the side of the ship,
and Áslák dealt blows on both sides, so to speak, as also did Vagn, and
they cleared their way so that all fell back. Eirík saw that these men
were so fierce and mad that this would not last long, and that the
Jarl’s help must be got as quick as possible. Áslák was bald and had no
helmet on his head, and exposed his bare skull; the weather was bright,
clear, and warm, and many took off their clothes on account of the heat,
and wore only their armour. Now Eirík goaded his men on, and they made
an attack on Áslák, and struck his head with swords and axes, thinking
it would be most dangerous to him as his head was bare. Nevertheless it
is said that the weapons rebounded from his skull, whether they were
swords or axes, and did not cut, and sparks flew from the skull at the
blows. Whatever they did, he went forward fiercely, and cleared his way
by many hard and heavy blows, slaying many a man. Vigfús, son of
Vígaglúm, caught up a large beaked anvil which lay on the deck of the
Járnbardi, on which he had previously rivetted the guards of his sword
as they had been unfastened; he struck at Áslák so that its beak sank
into his head; Áslák could not withstand that, and at once fell dead.
Vagn went along the other side, and cleared his way, dealing blows on
both sides and wounding many; then Thorleif Skúma ran to meet Vagn,
struck at him with his club, and hit his helmet; the blow was so strong
that the skin under the helmet was grazed, and Vagn leant over and
staggered towards Thorleif, and at the same time thrust his sword at
Thorleif; then he leapt from the Járnbardi, and came down standing on
his skeid, and none made a harder onset than he and all his men.
Nevertheless he and Áslák had killed so many on the Járnbardi, that
Eirík put men from other ships on it till it was fully manned, as he
thought it needful; and a very fierce fight followed. Then Eirík saw
that Hakon with his array had landed, and there was some pause in the
battle....[163] The sky began to darken in the north, and a dark and
black cloud glided up from the sea, spreading quickly; it was about
noon, and the cloud soon spread all over the sky, and a shower of hail
followed at once, and the Jomsvikings had all to fight with their faces
against the hail, which seemed to be followed by lightning and
thunder-claps. This hail-shower was so terrible, that some of the men
could do no more than stand against it, as they had previously taken off
their clothes on account of the heat. They began to shiver, though they
fought boldly enough. It is said that Hávard Höggvandi, Búi’s follower,
was the first who saw Hördabrúd in the host of Hakon jarl, and many with
second sight,[164] and even those who had no second sight, saw. When the
hail-shower abated a little, they also saw that an arrow flew from each
finger of the Troll, ‘M’tch’ as it seemed to them, and always hit and
killed a man. They told Sigvaldi and others; and Hakon and his men made
the hardest onset they could when the shower burst and while it lasted.
Then Sigvaldi said: ‘It seems to me that it is not men whom we have to
fight to-day, but the worst Troll (fiends), and it requires some
manliness to go boldly against them, though it is clear that men must
take heart as they can.’ It is told of Hakon, that when he saw the
shower abate and it was not as violent as it had been, he once more
invoked Thorgerd and her sister Irpa, saying that he had made himself
deserving by sacrificing his son for victory. Then the hail-shower burst
on them again, and when it began Hávard Höggvandi saw that two women
were in Hakon jarl’s ship, and that they did the same as he had seen the
one do before. Sigvaldi said: ‘Now I will flee, and all my men shall do
so, for it is worse than when I spoke of it before, as there was but one
Trollwoman then, but now there are two, and I will not stand it any
longer; our excuse is that we do not flee from men, though we draw back;
but we did not vow to fight against fiends.’ He (Sigvaldi) turned away
his ship, and shouted to Vagn and Búi to flee as quickly as they could.
When he unfastened his ship and shouted, Thorkel Midlang jumped from his
ship on board Búi’s, and at once struck at Búi. In the twinkling of an
eye he cut off his lower lip and the whole of his chin downward, so that
it fell on the ship, and Búi’s teeth flew off at the blow. Búi said when
he got the wound: ‘The Danish woman in Borgundarhólm will not be as fond
of kissing me, even though I get home now.’ Búi struck at Thorkel; the
deck was slippery from blood, so that Thorkel fell at the shield-row
when he tried to escape the blow, which hit him in the middle, and cut
him in two at the gunwale. Immediately after this Búi took one of his
gold-chests in each hand, and jumped overboard with them; neither he nor
the chests came up or were seen thereafter. Some say that when Búi
stepped on the gunwale to jump overboard he spoke these words:
‘Overboard, all Búi’s men.’ Sigvaldi left the fleet, and did not know
that Búi was gone overboard, and shouted to Vagn and Búi’s to flee, as
he was about to do.... Sigvaldi was cold from the shower, and began
rowing to warm himself, while another man sat at the rudder. When Vagn
saw Sigvaldi he flung a spear at him, thinking it was he who sat at the
rudder, but Sigvaldi was rowing, and the man at the rudder was hit. As
Vagn flung the spear from his hand he said to Sigvaldi that he should
die as the meanest of men. Thorkel the high, Sigvaldi’s brother, went
away with six ships as soon as Sigvaldi was dead, and so did Sigurd
Kápa, for his brother Búi was gone overboard, and he could wait for him
no longer. They both thought they had fulfilled their vows, and went
home to Denmark with twenty-four ships. All who could leave the
remaining ships jumped on board Vagn’s skeid, and there they defended
themselves very valiantly till it was dark; then the battle ended, and
very many were still on their feet in Vagn’s skeid. Hakon jarl was
overtaken by night and could not make a search as to how many were alive
or likely to live in the ships, so he had a watch set during the night
that no man should escape from them, and they took all the rigging down.
Then Hakon rowed to the land, and pitched tents; they thought they had
reason to boast of the victory. Then they weighed the hailstones in
order to prove the power of Thorgerd and Irpa; it was well proved, for
it is told that each hailstone weighed one eyrir, and they were weighed
in scales. Thereafter the wounds of the men were dressed, and Hakon jarl
and Gudbrand of Dalir watched during the night” (Jomsvikinga Saga, c.
41–44).


From the following account we see that these men of old knew how to die,
and how the spirit of chivalry seemed to have departed from the land,
though Eirik, the son of Hakon, at last stopped the bloodshed which had
taken place. After the defeat of the Jómsvikings by Hakon jarl, eighty
of the men who had not been captured landed on a skerry, and suffered
great privations from the cold.


“Now it is to be told that Vagn and Björn the British talked of what
they should do: Vagn said. ‘There are two choices: to stay here in the
ship till daybreak, and then be captured and that is not pleasant, or go
ashore, and do them what harm we can, and then try to escape.’ They all
made up their minds, took the mast and the sailyard, left the ship and
floated on them, eighty men together, in the dark. They wanted to get on
land, and came to a skerry, and thought they were ashore. Many were very
exhausted, and ten wounded men died there in the night, and the other
seventy lived though many were much tired, and they could get no
farther; they stayed there during the night. It is said that when
Sigvaldi had fled the shower ceased, and all lightning and thunder, and
the weather was cold and quiet during the night while Vagn was on the
skerry till it was daylight.

“Shortly before day Hákon’s men were dressing their wounds, and had been
at it the whole night, beginning as soon as they landed, because so many
were wounded. They had almost finished it, when they heard the twang of
a bowstring in a ship, and an arrow flew from Búi’s ship, and hit the
side of Gudbrand, Hákon’s kinsman; it was enough, and he died at once.
The jarl and all thought this a great loss, and began preparing his body
as well as they could, having no means to do it with. It is said that a
man stood at the door of the tent. When Eirik went into it he asked:
‘Why dost thou stand here, or why dost thou look as if thou wert dying;
or art thou wounded?’ It was Thorleif Skúma. Eirik said: ‘I see thou art
near to death.’ Thorleif answered: ‘I am not sure that the sword-point
of Vagn Ákason did not hit me a little yesterday, when I struck him with
the club.’ The jarl said: ‘Badly has thy father kept his stock in
Iceland if thou must die now.’ Einar Skálaglamm heard what the jarl
said, and made a stanza.... Thereupon Thorleif fell down dead.

“When it was light the jarl at once went to search the ships, and came
on board Búi’s ship, and wanted first of all to know who had shot in the
night, thinking that that man deserved to be ill-treated. When they got
on board they found one man, little more than breathing; it was Hávard
Höggvandi (the slashing), Búi’s follower, sorely wounded, as both his
feet were cut off below the knees. Svein Hákonarson and Thorkel Leira
went to him; when they came, Hávard asked: ‘How is it, boys; was
anything sent from the ship this night ashore to you or not?’ They
answered: ‘Certainly there came something; didst thou send it?’ He said:
‘I will not deny that I sent it to you; did the arrow hurt any man when
it stopped?’ They answered: ‘It killed the man whom it hit.’ He said:
‘That is good; and whom did it hit?’ ‘Gudbrand the white,’ they
answered. He said: ‘I did not succeed, then, in what I wished; I meant
it for the jarl; nevertheless I am glad that a man was hit whose death
is a loss to you.’ Thorkel Leira said: ‘Let us not look at this dog, but
kill him as soon as we can.’ He struck at him, and others ran thereto
and cut him with weapons, and beat him till he was dead. Before that
they had asked his name, and he told them.

“They went ashore after that, and told the jarl whom they had killed;
that the man had been more than a common monster, and they had seen by
his words that his character did not make him a better man. Then they
saw that very many men were on the skerry; the jarl told them to go out
to them and bring them all to him, as he wanted to have their lives in
his power. The jarl’s men went on board a ship, and rowed out to the
skerry; few men there were able to fight, on account of wounds and cold,
nor is it told that any one defended himself; they were all taken by the
jarl’s men ashore to him; they were seventy. Then the jarl had Vagn and
his men led up on land, and their hands were tied behind their backs,
and they were bound with one rope, one at the other’s side, not loosely.
The jarl and his men took their food, and sat down to eat; he wanted to
have them all beheaded leisurely and in no hurry that day.

“Before they sat down to eat, the ships and the property of the
Jómsvikings were taken ashore, and carried to the poles. Hákon and his
men divided among themselves all the property, and the weapons; they
thought they had won a great victory as they had got all the property
captured from the Jómsvikings, and they boasted very much. When they had
eaten enough, they walked out of the war-booths to the captives, and it
is said that Thorkel Leira was appointed to behead them all. First they
talked to the Jómsvikings, and asked whether they were as hardy men as
was said; but it is not told that the Jómsvikings gave them any answer.

“It is next stated that some sorely wounded men were untied from the
rope; Skopti Kark and other thralls had hold of it, and guarded them.
When they were untied the thralls twisted sticks[165] in their hair;
first three wounded men were led forward in that way, and Thorkel went
to them and cut off each head; then he asked his own companions if they
had seen him shudder at this work, ‘for it is told,’ said he, ‘that any
man shudders if he beheads three men one after the other.’ Hákon
answered: ‘We do not see that thou hast shuddered at this, though it
seemed so to me before thou didst it.’

The fourth man was led out of the rope, and a stick twisted in his hair,
and he was led to where Thorkel beheaded them; he was much wounded. When
he came Thorkel asked, before he struck, how he thought of his death. He
answered: ‘Well think I of my death; it will be with me as with my
father; I shall die.’ Thereupon Thorkel cut off that man’s head, and
thus his life ended. The fifth was untied from the rope and led thither;
when he came, Thorkel said: ‘How likest thou to die?’ He said: ‘I
remember not the laws of the Jómsvikings, if I am afraid of my death or
speak a word of fear; once must every man die.’ Thorkel struck him. They
wanted to ask every man before he was slain, and try whether they were
as fearless as was told, and if no man spoke a word of fear they thought
it proved. The sixth was led forward, and a stick twisted in his hair.
Thorkel asked the same as before; the man said he liked well to die with
a good fame, ‘while thou, Thorkel, wilt live with shame.’ He struck the
blow. Then the seventh was led thither, and Thorkel asked the same. The
man said: ‘I like very much to die, but strike me quickly; I have a
belt-knife in my hand. We Jómsvikings have often talked of whether a man
knew anything (had some consciousness) after his head had been cut off
very quickly; it shall be a sign that I will stretch forth the knife if
I know anything, else it will fall down.’ Thorkel struck; the head flew
off, but the knife fell down. The eighth was taken, and Thorkel asked
the same. He said he liked it well, and when the death-blow was coming
he said, ‘Ram!’ Thorkel stopped the blow, and asked why he said this. He
answered: ‘There will not be too many rams for the ewes which you, the
jarl’s men, named yesterday when you got wounded.’ ‘Thou art the
greatest wretch,’ said Thorkel, and dealt him the blow. The ninth was
untied; Thorkel asked the same. He said: ‘I like well my death, as do
all my companions; but I do not want to be beheaded like a sheep, and I
will sit for the blow; strike me face to face, and look carefully
whether I wince in any way, for we have often talked of that.’ This was
done; he sat with his face to Thorkel, who walked to him and smote in
his face; he did not wince, except that his eyelids sank down when death
came over him. The tenth was led forward. Thorkel asked him the same. He
said: ‘I should like thee to wait while I arrange my breeches.’ ‘I grant
thee that,’ said Thorkel. When he had done, he said, ‘Many things do not
go as one hoped; I thought I should get into the bed of Thora, Skagi’s
daughter, the jarl’s wife.’ Hákon jarl said: ‘Behead that man as quickly
as thou canst; he has long had bad intentions.’ Thorkel cut him....

“Then a young man was led forward; he had much hair, yellow as silk.
Thorkel asked the same. He said: ‘I have lived the finest part of my
life, and such men have now lost their life a little while ago that I do
not care to live; I do not want thralls to lead me to the death-blow,
but one who is no less a man than thou; it is easy to get that man, and
he shall take hold of my hair, and pull away my head so that my hair
does not become bloody.’ A hirdman came, took the hair, and wound round
his hand; Thorkel raised his sword, and intended to strike him as hard
and quick as he could. He struck; but when the young man heard the sword
whistling in the air, he pulled away his head strongly, and so it
happened that the blow hit the man who had hold of his hair, and Thorkel
cut off both his arms at the elbows. The young man jumped up, and said
as a joke: ‘What fellow is owner of the hands in my hair?’ Hákon jarl
said: ‘The men who are still in the rope will do us great mischief; slay
him as soon as you can; he has brought a great mishap on us, and it is
clear that all of them who are living ought to be slain as soon as
possible, for they are too hard for us to deal with, and their bravery
and hardihood have not been exaggerated.’ Eirík said to his father: ‘We
want to know, father, who they are before they are all slain; what is
thy name, young man?’ ‘Svein,’ answered he. ‘Whose son art thou,’ asked
Eirík, ‘and what is thy kin?’ He said: ‘My father was called Búi, the
stout, son of Veseti, on Borgundarhólm. I am of Danish kin.’ ‘How old
art thou?’ said Eirík. ‘If I live this winter I am eighteen winters
old,’ said he. Eirík said: ‘Thou shalt live this winter, if I have my
will, and not be slain.’ He took him into peace, and into the company of
himself and his men. When Hákon saw this, he said: ‘I do not know what
thou art thinking of, as thou savest a man who has caused us so much
shame and disgrace as this young man; he has done us most harm, but
nevertheless I like not to take him out of thy hands, and thou shalt
have thy will this time.’ Thus Eirík had his will. Hákon said to
Thorkel: ‘Behead the men quickly.’ Eirík answered: ‘They shall not be
beheaded before I have first spoken with them, and I want to know who
each of them is.’

                  *       *       *       *       *

“A man was untied from the rope when he said this; the rope got a little
entangled round his feet, so that he was not quite loose. This man was
of large and handsome shape, young, and bold-looking. Thorkel asked him
how he liked to die. ‘Well,’ said he, ‘if I might first fulfil my vow.’
Eirik jarl asked: ‘What is thy name? And what is thy vow, which thou
desirest specially to fulfil before thou diest?’ He answered: ‘My name
is Vagn; I am son of Áki, son of Palnatoki, of Fyen; so I have been
told.’ Eirik said: ‘What vow didst thou make, as thou sayest thou
wouldst like to die if thou hadst fulfilled it according to thy will?’
‘I made the vow,’ said Vagn, ‘to get into the bed of Ingibjorg, the
daughter of Thorkel Leira against his will, and that of all her kinsmen,
and slay Thorkel if I came to Norway, and much do I lack if I cannot
perform this before I die.’ ‘I will prevent thy doing this before thou
diest,’ said Thorkel. He rushed toward him and struck at him, holding
his sword with both hands. Björn the British, Vagn’s foster-father,
kicked him with his foot away from the blow quickly. Thorkel missed
Vagn, and hit the rope with which Vagn was tied and cut it asunder. Now
Vagn was loose, and not wounded. Thorkel stumbled when he missed the
man, and fell; the sword dropped out of his hands. Bjorn had kicked Vagn
so strongly that he fell, but he lay not a long time, and soon jumped
up. He seized Thorkel’s sword and gave him a deadly blow. ‘Now I have
fulfilled one of my two vows,’ said Vagn, ‘and I feel a great deal
better than before.’ Hákon said: ‘Do not leave him loose long; slay him
first, for he has done us much harm.’ Eirik said: ‘You shall not slay
him, if I have my will, before you slay me; I take him away.’ Hákon
said: ‘Now I need not meddle with this; thou wilt have thy way alone,
kinsman.’ Eirik said: ‘Vagn is a good man-bargain (= acquisition),
father, and I think it a good bargain to let him take Thorkel’s place
and honour; Thorkel might expect what happened to him, for now it is
proved which often is said that “a wise man’s guess is a prophecy”; thou
sawest already to-day that he was death-fated.’ Eirik took Vagn into his
power, and then he was in no danger; Vagn said: ‘I will accept life from
thee, Eirik, only on condition that all my comrades who are living are
given their lives; otherwise we will all go the same way, we comrades.’
Eirik said: ‘I will speak to thy comrades, but I do not refuse what thou
askest.’ Eirik went to Björn the British, and asked who he was, or what
was his name. He answered ‘Björn.’ ‘Art thou the Björn who fetched the
man in King Svein’s hall so boldly?’[166] ‘I know not,’ said Björn,
‘that I fetched him boldly, but nevertheless I took the man away.’ ‘What
didst thou seek,’ said Eirik, ‘in coming hither, old man, or what
induced thee, bald and white haired, to come on this journey? It is true
that all straws want to sting us, the Noregs-men, since even the men who
are off their feet on account of old age came hither to fight us. Wilt
thou receive thy life from me, for I think a man as old as thou ought
not to be slain.’ Björn answered: ‘I will receive my life from thee on
condition that the lives of my foster-son Vagn, and of all our men who
are living are spared.’ ‘That shall be granted to all of you,’ said
Eirik, ‘if I have my will, which I shall have.’ He went to his father,
and entreated him to spare the lives of all the living Jómsvikings,
which the jarl granted him; and they were all untied, plighted faith was
given to them, and they were taken into peace. It was arranged by Hákon
and Eirik so that Björn the British went to the bu of Hallstein
Kellingarbani. Five landed men were slain, beside Hallstein. Vagn Ákason
went to the Vik with Eirik’s consent, and before they parted Eirik said
to him that, regarding his wedding with Ingibjörg, Thorkel’s daughter,
he might do what he liked. When Vagn came to Vik, he went to Ingibjörg,
and stayed there during the winter. The next spring he left, and kept
faithfully all he had promised Eirik. He went home to his farms in Fyen,
and for a long time afterwards managed them; he was thought to be a man
of great deeds, and many famous men have sprung from him. It is told
that he took Ingibjörg home with him.

“Björn the British went to Bretland, and ruled it as long as he lived,
and was looked upon as a most brave man” (Jomsvikinga Saga, ch. 45, 47).


-----

Footnote 159:

  This refers to a general superstition.

Footnote 160:

  The Serpent glided past the point of the island slowly.

Footnote 161:

  Sacrifice lasted longer in Sweden than in Norway or Denmark.

Footnote 162:

  As a rule the foreroom (_fyrirrúm_) seems to have been before the
  mast, but on the Long Serpent this was not the case, as we can see
  from the above sentence, for there it was immediately in front of the
  _lypting_ (poop).

Footnote 163:

  Part is here omitted, referring to the sacrifice of Hakon’s son. See
  Vol. 1., page 367, “Sacrifices.”

Footnote 164:

  A man who can see supernatural beings.

Footnote 165:

  This practice was probably due to their not using a block; so that the
  head was held for the blow as described in the Saga.

Footnote 166:

  Allusion to an incident when Björn after a fight in King Svein’s hall
  went in alone again to fetch one of his men who had been left inside.




                             CHAPTER XIII.
                       TRADERS AND TRADING-SHIPS.

  Wide extent of trading expeditions—Commercial activity of the
    people—Fairs—Immunity of trading ships from capture—Classification
    and name of merchant vessels—Trade a high calling—Kings as
    traders—Laws regulating trade—The earliest medium of
    exchange—Method of reckoning—Weights and measures—Arabic and other
    coins and objects—Insurance.


The people of the North were, from very early times, great traders, and
as such undertook long voyages, as is seen from the finds of the earlier
iron age, and from many accounts in the Sagas; this ancient trait in
their character is still seen in their descendants.

Their trading expeditions extended far south through the present Russia,
to the Black Sea, the Tigris and Euphrates, and as far east as
Samarcand; while with their ships they traded to the seas of Western
Europe and into the Mediterranean.


“Thórólf had a large seagoing ship; in every way it was most carefully
built, and painted nearly all over above the water-line; it had a sail
with blue and red stripes, and all the rigging was very elaborate. This
he made ready, and ordered his men-servants to go with it; he had put on
board dried fish, skins, tallow, gray fur and other furs, which he had
from the mountains; all this was of much value. He sent it westward to
England to buy cloth (woollen) and other goods he needed. They went
southward along the coast, and then out to sea; when they arrived in
England they found a good market, loaded the ship with wheat and honey,
wine and cloth, and returned in the autumn with fair winds” (Egil’s
Saga).


“From England (London) Gunnlaug sailed with some traders to Dublin. King
Sigtrygg Silk-beard, son of Olaf Kvaran and Queen Kormlöd then ruled in
Ireland”[167] (Gunnlaug Ormstunga, c. 8).


“In the spring, after the Jómsviking battle, the Jarl summoned before
him many chiefs east in the country. Thither also came at the Jarl’s
summons the brothers Jóstein and Karlshöfud, sons of Eirik of Ofrustad.
There was also a man, by name of Thórir Klakka, a great friend of the
Jarl. He was accustomed to go on Viking expeditions in the summer, but
sometimes he went on trading journeys, and therefore he knew many
countries” (Olaf Tryggvason, c. 51 (Heimskringla)).


“Some time after King Sverrir held a Thing in Björgyn (Bergen) and
spoke: ‘We thank all English men who bring hither wheat and honey, flour
or cloth, for coming; we thank also all men who bring hither linen, wax
or kettles. We will also name those who have come from the Orkneys,
Hjaltland, Faroes, Iceland, and all who bring into this country things
useful for it’” (Fornmanna Sögur, vii.).


He goes on to say that the Germans coming there bring wine and teach men
to be drunkards.


“King Ólaf had proclaimed the Christian law in Vikin, in the same manner
as in the northern part of the country; and it progressed rapidly, for
the people of Vikin were much better acquainted with Christian customs
than the men in the north, for both in winter and summer there were many
Danish and Saxon traders. The men of Vikin also went much on trading
journeys to England and Saxland, or Flæmingjaland (Flamland, Flandres)
or Denmark; but some went on Viking expeditions, and stayed during
winter in Christian lands” (St. Olaf, c. 62).


There were regular places where fairs were held for the barter of wares
without fear of molestation, at which the same peace reigned as at the
Thing or temple, their inviolability apparently being acknowledged by
all. Booths were built in these places, to which native and foreign
merchants came, and goods—furs, skins, costly cloths, garments, grain,
slaves, &c., &c.—were sold or exchanged.


“Melkorka’s son Olaf sailed to Ireland, and, as he was about to land,
his headman, Örn, said: ‘I do not think we shall meet with a good
reception here, for this is far off from harbours and those
trading-places where foreigners have peace’” (Laxdæla, c. 21).

“Next summer Thránd went with trading men south to Denmark, and reached
Haleyri in the summer. There were very many people gathered, and it is
said that thither come more people than to any other place in Nordrlönd
(the northern lands) while the fair lasts. At that time King Harald
Gormsson, called Blátönn (blue tooth), ruled Denmark. King Harald was at
Haleyri in the summer, and many men with him. Two of the king’s hirdmen
who were there with him are mentioned; one was called Sigurd, the other
Hárek. These brothers always went round the town, and wanted to buy the
best and largest gold ring they could get. They entered a booth which
was very finely arranged; a man sitting there received them well, and
asked what they wished to buy. They said they wanted to buy a large and
good gold ring. He answered there was a good choice of them. They asked
for his name, and he called himself Hólmgeir Audgi (the wealthy). He set
forth his costly things, and showed them a heavy gold ring which was
very costly, and valued at so high a price that they did not know
whether they could get so much silver at once as he wanted, and asked
him to delay it till next morning, to which he assented.

“The king and others perceived that silver had been stolen from them, so
the king issued a proclamation that no ships were to sail as long as
matters stood thus. This seemed to many a great disadvantage, as it was,
to stay there longer than the fair lasted. Then the Norwegians had a
meeting among themselves to take counsel. Thránd was at the meeting, and
said: ‘The men here are very helpless.’ They asked: ‘Dost thou know a
plan?’ ‘Certainly I do,’ he said. ‘Then give us thy advice,’ they said.
‘I will not do that gratuitously.’ They asked what he demanded, and he
answered: ‘Every one of you shall give me one eyrir of silver.’ They
said that was a great deal, but it was agreed that every man there
should give him half an eyrir at once, and the other half if he was
successful. The next day the king had a Thing, and said that the men
should never go thence until this theft was discovered. Then a young man
with long red hair, freckly and rather ugly of face, began to speak, and
said: ‘The people here are rather helpless.’ The advice-givers of the
king asked what advice he had to give. He answered: ‘It is my advice
that every man here present give as much silver as the king demands, and
when that is put into one place, then pay the loss of him who has
suffered, and let the king have the rest as a gift of honour. I know
that he will use well what he gets; let not people stay here
weatherbound, such a multitude as here is assembled, to such a great
disadvantage.’ The assembled quickly accepted this, and said they would
willingly give silver to honour the king rather than stay there to their
disadvantage. This plan was adopted, and the silver collected”
(Færeyinga Saga, c. 3).


The trading ships, with very few exceptions, were free from the attacks
of the Vikings, as plundering a merchant vessel at sea seems to have
been considered unmanly. They were unlike the war vessels which we have
described, and the general name given to these Kaup-skip (trading ships)
shows that the distinction was easily recognised. They were neither
ornamented with dragons nor with shields, and the war pennant was
missing.

We find them mentioned under their different names—viz., Knörr, Kugg,
Byrding (ship of burden), Vistabyrding (provision ships), and Haf-skip
(deep-sea ship); there were also smaller or less important ones, among
them even ferry-boats. Byrdings (ships of burden), the real
cargo-carrying vessels, are frequently mentioned.


“One day when Ásmund was rowing through a Sound, a byrding sailed
towards them; it was easily recognised, for it was painted on the bows
with white and red; the sail was striped” (St. Olaf, 132).


Trade was considered a high calling. Even the sons of kings did not
despise it; Harald Fairhair’s son Björn was a great Farman (seafarer)
and Kaupman (trader, merchant).


“King Harald’s son, Björn, ruled over Vestfold, and resided chiefly in
Túnsberg, but seldom engaged in warfare. To Túnsberg came many traders,
both from around Vikin and from the country to the north, from the south
from Denmark and Saxland. King Björn also had trading-ships sailing to
various countries, and thus procured himself precious things, and other
goods which he needed. His brothers called him trading-man, or
faring-man. Björn was wise and quiet, and was thought likewise to be a
good chief” (Fornmanna Sögur, vol. i.).


Even kings sometimes entered into partnership with traders.

Ingimund, who had fought on the side of Harald Fairhair, but who had
settled in Iceland, came to Norway.


“Gudleik Gerski (of Gardariki) was a native of Agdir; he was a great and
rich trader and seafarer, who went on trading journeys to various
countries; he often went to Gardariki, and therefore was called Gudleik
Gerski. One spring he prepared his ship, as he wanted to go to Gardariki
in the summer. King Olaf sent him word that he wished to see him. When
Gudleik came, the king said he wished to enter into partnership with
him, and asked him to buy for him costly things that were rare in
Norway. Gudleik promised to do as he wished.... In the summer Gudleik
went to Hólmgard, and there bought excellent _pell_ (costly cloth),
which he intended for clothes of rank (tignarklœdi) for the king, and
costly skins, and an exceedingly fine table-service (bord-búnad)” (St.
Olaf, 64).[168]


“Ingimund then said: ‘Here I will show you, my lord, two bear-cubs,
which I captured in Iceland, and I wish that thou wouldst accept them
from me.’ The king thanked him, and promised that he would grant him
permission to take timber. During the winter they exchanged many
presents, and in the spring his ship was loaded with the cargo which he
chose, and the best timber that could be got. The king then said: ‘I
see, Ingimund, that hereafter thou wilt not any more come to Norway.
Thou wilt need more timber than one ship can carry; here some ships are
lying; choose which of them thou likest.’ ‘Choose for me, lord, that one
which will bring most luck.’ Ingimund replied. ‘I will, as I know best,’
said the king. ‘Here is one called _Stigandi_,[169] which bites the wind
better than any ship (sails better), and is more prosperous, too, and
that I will select for thee; it is not large, but fine.’ Ingimund
thanked him for the gift, and departed for Iceland, where he soon
arrived, and was received with joy by all.” (Vatnsdæla Saga, c.
16).[170]


“Eyvind (an Icelander) became a trader, and went to Norway, and thence
to other countries, and stopped in Mikligard (Constantinople), where he
obtained great honours from the Greek king, and remained some time”
(Hrafnkel’s Saga).


“This summer a ship came from Norway to the Faroes; the steersman was
called Rafn; his kin was in Vik, and he owned a house in Túnsberg. He
constantly sailed to Hólmgard, and was called Hólmgardsfari. The ship
came to Thórshöfn; when the traders were ready to go it is said that
Thránd of Gata came there one morning in a skúta and spoke to Rafn
privately, saying he had two young thralls to sell him. Rafn said he
would not buy them before he saw them. Thránd led forward the two boys
with the hair shaved off, in white garments; they were fine looking, but
swollen in the face from grief. When he saw the boys Rafn asked: ‘Are
not these the sons of Brestir and Beinir, whom you killed a short while
ago?’ ‘Certainly, I think so,’ said Thránd. ‘They will not come into my
hands,’ said Rafn, ‘for property.’ ‘Then let us both yield,’ said
Thránd; ‘take here two marks of silver which I will give thee if thou
takest them away with thee, so that they henceforth will never come to
the Færoes.’ He poured the silver into the lap of the steersman, counted
it, and showed it to him. Rafn liked the silver well, and it was agreed
that he should receive the boys. He sailed when he got a fair wind, and
landed where he wished in Norway east at Túnsberg; he stayed there
during the winter, and the boys with him, and they were well treated”
(Færeyinga Saga, c. 8).


In hard years the exportation of grain was forbidden.


“At Ömd, in Thrándarnes, lived a chief named Ásbjörn. He had three
feasts every winter, as was the custom of his father. Then the crops
began to fail and bad years came, and his mother wanted him to omit some
or all of the feasts; but he would not, and bought corn or had it given
to him as a gift. One summer he could get no more corn. It was said from
the south of the country that King Ólaf forbade to carry corn, malt and
meal from the south northwards. Then Ásbjörn went on his ship with
twenty men, and sailed southward till they came to Ögvaldsnes. Ásbjörn
asked the king’s steward, who lived there, if he would sell corn. He
told them that the king had forbidden the selling of corn from the south
to the north. Then Ásbjörn got corn from the thralls of the chief Erling
Skjálgsson, who was the brother of Ásbjörn’s mother. The king’s steward
went with sixty men out on Ásbjörn’s ship, and took the corn and his
sail besides, and gave him another bad sail. Ásbjörn slew the steward
some time after, when Ólaf was at a feast in the steward’s house” (St.
Olaf’s Saga, c. 123).


Weights and balances were known to the Norse from very early times, as
the finds prove; and their standard of measurement was the ell.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 998.—⅓ real size.

  Spiral rings of gold, used as money; found at the bottom of the
    Vammelo, Södermanland. Weight, about 1⅒ lbs.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 999.—Real size.

  Spiral rings; weight about 2½ oz. Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1000.—Spiral ring found with three other smaller spiral rings,
    and two fragments; weight, nearly 3 oz.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1001.—Silver spiral ring; weight, nearly 6 oz.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1002.—Spiral ring, found with fourteen bracteates of gold, of
    four different patterns, &c. Weight, 3½ oz.—Norway.
]

The earliest medium of value used as coin was the Baug (ring), which is
mentioned in Rigsmál, and in the earlier laws. We find that the
reckonings were by marks and aurar. One mark was 8 aurar (1 oz.); one
eyrir was divided into eight ortugar, and one ortug into ten or sixty
penningar; this latter is sometimes mentioned as being of gold; it was
customary to weigh the medium of exchange.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1003.—Iron weight, real size, inlaid with bronze, weighing 4¾
    oz.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1004.—Iron weight, real size, inlaid with bronze, weighing
    slightly over ½ oz.—Rosenbys, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1005.—Bronze weight, size, found in the real black earth, Björkö.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1006.—One of ten weights found with balance. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1007.—Bronze scales, ⅓ real size—Vaxala, Upland. Later iron age.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1008.—The tongue of the balance.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1009.

  Bronze balance, with remains of bronze chain attached to it, found in
    a round mound, with a pincette of bronze, a bronze ornament for a
    drinking-horn, four or five clay urns, &c. ½ real size.—Norway.
    Earlier iron age.
]

A man named Karl of Mœri was sent by King Olaf the saint to the Faroes
to collect taxes due to him. Leif, son of Össur, took the tax (Silver)
which Thránd had collected, “and poured it out on his shield” to Karl.
They looked at the silver. Leif said:

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1010.—Spiral silver ring, used probably as money, ⅔ real size,
    found with a little cup, 1,923 Arabian coins, &c.—Vamblingö,
    Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1011.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1012.
]

  Box, with top open, 3/7 real size, in which there was a scale, ten
    beads, and two ornaments of silver.—Petes, Götland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1013.—Hook of iron. ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1014.—Weight of iron. ⅓ real size.
]

  With these were found two moulds of bronze, five unfinished fibulæ,
    ornament for a drinking cup, part of a bridle, a chain all in
    bronze, an iron key, the handle of which is of bronze, a
    blacksmith’s pince (nipper), and another weight of iron,
    &c.—Smiss, Götland.


“‘We need not look long at this silver; here is every penning better
than the other, and we want to have this silver; get thou, Thránd, a man
to look on while it is weighed.’ Thránd answered that he thought it best
that Leif should look at it on his behalf. Leif and the others then went
out, and a short way from the booth they sat down and weighed the
silver. Karl took the helmet from his head, and poured the silver which
was weighed into it” (Færeyinga Saga, c. 46).[171]


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1015.       Fig. 1016.

  Arabic coin called Kufic, coined in 903 in Samarcand.—Götland. Real
    size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1017.       Fig. 1018.

  Kufic coin of silver, date 742–743. Real size. Found in the cemetery
    of Fredrikshald, Sweden, where another Kufic coin and two silver
    bracelets had previously been found.
]

As in the Greek, Roman, and earlier Byzantine periods, so in the Viking
age, the island of Gotland stands foremost as the commercial centre of
the North, as is proved by the number of coins discovered, showing that
she kept the supremacy of trade for some ten or twelve centuries. The
numerous English coins found there and in Sweden, show that the Swedes,
and the people inhabiting the islands of the Baltic, were a seafaring
people, and were constantly engaged in trading and warlike expeditions
to England; in a word, they must have formed a great part of the host
that made warfare in Western Europe. The runic stones which have been
raised to the memory of those who have died in foreign lands are found
almost if not entirely in Sweden.

Norway has produced fewer coins than the other Scandinavian countries,
but this may be owing to their having been melted, as jewels of silver
are far more common there than elsewhere.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1019.—Silver cup.—Götland. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1020.—Silver vase.—Götland. ⅔ real size.
]

After the Roman and Byzantine era the Arabic period begins. Trade still
followed the ancient channel through the present Russia. Thousands of
Arabic coins of silver, besides probably, silver ornaments, to which the
name of Kufic[172] has been given, struck in the countries ruled by the
Arabians, found their way north from Bokhara, Samarcand, Bagdad, Kufa,
&c., &c., the earliest dating from 698, the latest 1010 after the
Christian era. Coins of gold are exceedingly rare; the greater number of
these belong to the ninth and the first half of the tenth century, that
is to say, between 880 and 955. From that time a great number of silver
ornaments appear in the North.

Norway has not as yet proved rich in Arabic coins. Of Kufic only about
seventy have been found, ranging in time from the year 742 to 952. These
coins are the more interesting in that not only the names of the rulers,
but of the cities, which then existed, where they were coined, are
given; many are of the Samanid dynasty. More than twenty thousand have
been found in Sweden and Götland; some of these, perhaps, came from
Spain. They were probably brought by the ships which made voyages to the
Mediterranean.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1021.—Ornaments round pedestal.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1022.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1023.
]

  Ornaments fastened to the bottom of a vase, representing two
    four-footed animals, one of which is eating the fruit growing upon
    a tree.—Götland. ⅔ real size.

The two vases on p. 219 were found with Arabic coins and seven other
silver vessels, and are probably of Arabic origin.

Frankish coins (800 to 850) have been found in Sweden of the time of
Pepin, Charlemagne, and Louis le Debonnaire. In Norway of Charlemagne,
Louis le Debonnaire, Pepin, son of Louis le Debonnaire, of Lothair,
Louis’ son.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1024.       Fig. 1025.

  Frankish coin. Real size. Struck at Poictiers for Pepin, King of
    Aquitaine, either Pepin I. (817–838), or Pepin II. (845–864). Found
    with eight other Frankish coins. At the same place were found seven
    other Frankish coins, some Arabic coins, fragments of silver
    objects, &c.—Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1026.       Fig. 1027.

  Frankish coin—ninth century—of silver. Real size. Louis (Ludovic) le
    Debonnaire. Found in the upper part of a round tumulus, with burned
    bones, a pair of oval fibulæ of bronze, a bronze key, a silver pin,
    beads, &c., and other silver coins, four of which were of Louis le
    Debonnaire type, one of Charlemagne, the other of Coenwulf, of
    Mercia (796–818). The coins are pierced, and seemed to have been
    surrounded, in part, at least, with a bronze ring, and must have
    been worn as hanging ornaments.—Norway.
]

More than twenty thousand English coins[173] have been found in Sweden
and the island of Götland, fifteen thousand belonging to Ethelred’s time
(998–1016); this number is not surpassed in Britain itself, and the
harvest still continues in the North. A number came no doubt through the
channel of trade, and others probably from the Danegeld, Ethelred having
thus paid more than 167,000 lbs. of silver; part of this war-booty fell
to the lot of the Swedes and Danes.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1028.       Fig. 1029.

  Old English silver coin, eleventh century, beginning of King Knut’s
    reign. Real size. Found under a large stone, by a landslip, with
    about 1600 silver coins, mostly English, many German, some Swedish,
    Danish, Bohemian, and Kufic.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1030.

  Silver coin of Knut the Great, used as a hanging ornament. Real
    size.—Blekinge, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1031.       Fig. 1032.

  Silver coin of Ethelred. Real size. Found near Stockholm, with 737
    Arabic, German, and old English coins, and one coin of the Swedish
    king, Olaf Skautkonung, some fragments of silver bracelets,
    &c.—Upland, Sweden.
]

Coins of the ninth and the earlier part of the tenth century, are
extremely rare, though England was much ravaged by the northern
countries. I think no coins have been found thus far in Sweden before
Alfred’s date, and only three date before 950, but new discoveries may
in time bring others to light. In Denmark only a few hundred English
coins have been found; of the time of Ethelred and his successors about
three thousand in Norway.

The earliest English and Frankish coins, strange as it may appear, have
only been found in Sweden and Norway, but even these do not amount to
more than fifty or sixty; none have been discovered in Denmark, and
previously to the years 780 to 800, no specimen of Merovingian or
English coins have been found in the North.

The number of German is very great, and more than fifty thousand have
been found in Sweden and the island of Götland; they date chiefly from
the middle of the tenth to the middle of the eleventh century, and are
sometimes found to the number of one or two thousand together.[174]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1033.       Fig. 1034.

  German silver coin of Henry of Bavaria, end of tenth century.—Gotland.
    Real size.
]

The intercourse with the Byzantine empire which had taken place in the
earlier centuries continued for a long time, and a great number of
Northmen entered the service of the Byzantine or Greek emperors, as seen
in the Sagas.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1035.       Fig. 1036.

  Byzantine coins (948–949). Real size. Struck by the emperors
    Constantine X. and Romanus III. Found with a necklace, 15 bracelets,
    2 buckles, 2 spiral bracelets, 3 perfect and 360 imperfect Arabic
    coins, all of silver, and all of which were under an iron
    dish.—Björko, Upland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1037.—Border enlarged.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1038.—Bog find.—Fibula of gold inlaid, ⅔ real size, found in a
    bog, with coins.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1039.—Silver wire bracelet, real size, found with four rings and
    seventeen beads, nine of which are of different pattern, three
    Arabic coins, three rings of silver, one of gold of twisted wires,
    &c., &c., at Hejsland, Halfhem parish, Götland.
]

A bog find in Norway proved very rich in gold objects, Arabic,
Byzantine, Frankish, and there were also found English coins and other
objects.[175]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1040.—Gold fibula, real size, inlaid with  glass, in a
    copper box in the ground, with over 4,000 coins, German, English,
    &c., two Swedish coins, Anund Jakob (son of Olaf Skautkonung), five
    necklaces, nine bracelets, two finger rings, &c., &c.—Blekinge,
    Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1041.—Ring, real size, with charms representing a sword, a spear
    head, &c., and some Arabic coins.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1042.—Box of bronze found in a mound, Nordrup, Zealand, with a
    silver fibula, glass, &c.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1043.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1044.

  Bottom of vessel.
]

  Silver vessel, with inside, bottom, and border gilt, found with
    three bracelets, thirty-one fragments of ingots, rings, 500 German
    and English coins, &c.—Lilla Valla, Götland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1045.—Bronze box, ¼ real size, containing fragments of ornaments,
    coins, two coins of Olaf Skotkonung and several hundreds English and
    German coins, &c.—Findarfve, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1046.—Bracelet of silver, ½ real size, with small rings, four of
    which have Arabian coins wrapped round them.—Kullaberg, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1047.—Fibula of silver, ⅔ real size, figures in relief,
    embellished with Niello, found with Arabic coins.—Herestad, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1048.—Chain of bronze, ⅒ real size, with comb attached.—Lake
    Mälar.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1049.—The comb. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1050.—Real size of chain.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1051.—Spiral silver bracelet, ⅔ original size, found with three
    similar bracelets, Arabian coins, &c.—Sandby, Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1052.—Bracelet of silver, ¾ real size, found with coins, &c.,
    near Eskilstuna, Södermanland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1053.—Massive silver bracelet, ¾ real size, found under an old
    stable, with two other bracelets, Arabic, German, and old English
    coins, &c.—Undrom, Angermanland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1054.—Bracelet of silver, ¾ real size.—Eskilstuna, Södermanland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1055.—Neck-ring of twisted silver wire, found with the massive
    silver bracelet.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1056.—Bracelet of solid silver, real size, found with four other
    silver bracelets
  and forty-six Arabic coins of silver, &c.—Thalings, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1057.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1058.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1059.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1060.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1061.

]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1062.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1063.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1064.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1065.
]

  Beads of silver found with bracelet, p. 224.—Hemse, Götland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1066.—Bead of green glass, real size.—Hemse.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1067.—Bead of glass mosaic, real size.—Hemse.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1068.—Fibula of bronze inlaid with silver and gilt. Found in a
    mound in Hemse, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1069.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1070.

  Pins found in a cairn.—Hemse, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1071.—Key with chain.—Hemse,
  Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1072.—Iron axe, with a round hole in the blade.—Hemse. Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1073.—Bronze buckle or fibula, found in a small cairn at Hemse,
    Götland.
]

  Hemse find, Götland. At this place are found several small coins
    with unburnt bodies. Among the objects found besides those
    represented above, were several basins of bronze, number of bronze
    fibulæ, a great number of amber, crystal, and glass beads, several
    keys, bone combs, several clay urns, buckle of bronze, a fragment
    of a stone with runic character, several charms, iron axes,
    knives, pins, &c. The only coins found were one Arabic coin, and
    two German coins of the 10th and 11th centuries.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1074.—Semi-circular ornament of silver with small rings at both
    ends.—Fölhagen, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1075.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1076.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1077.
]

  Three of twelve snake-shaped necklace ornaments, real
    size.—Fölhagen, Götland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1078.—Bracteate.—Fölhagen, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1079.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1080.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1081.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1082.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1083.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1084.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1085.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1086.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1087.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1088.
]

  Silver beads, real size, together with coins, &c., in a box in the
    earth, by a working man while digging a ditch, at Fölhagen,
    Götland, near the Monastery de Roma, from a lot of 49 beads of
    thirteen different patterns.

  Fölhagen ground find, Götland. The objects were in a copper box,
    which however could not be taken whole, and contained, besides
    some of the objects represented above, an ingot of chemically pure
    gold, 8 bracelets of silver, 835 Kufic coins (971), 400 German
    coins, the latest from Otto III. before 1002; 4 English coins of
    Æthelred, and many other jewels.


Insurance companies were known from early times.


“Damages are to be paid if a disease comes among a man’s cattle so that
one-fourth or more of his cattle dies; then the men of the Hrepp shall
pay the loss. The man shall call five of his neighbours to him during
the next half month after the disease has ceased, in order to value his
loss. He shall tell them his loss and show them the flesh and the skin
of the dead cattle. Thereupon he shall take an oath before them that his
loss is as great as they estimated it, or more. Then at a meeting he
shall tell how great they valued his loss to be and the bœndr shall pay
him one-half of the loss” (Gragas, i. 458.)


“There are also three rooms in the house of every man which are to be
paid for if they are burnt. The first is stofa (sitting-room), second is
hall (eldhus), the third is the pantry where women prepare food. If one
owns both eldhus and skali he shall at a meeting in the spring say
whether he wants people rather to be answerable for the eldhus or the
skali” (Gragas, i. 459).

“Only the value of the clothes or things which a man owned and used
every day shall be paid. If food is burned it shall be paid. The value
of costly things or wares shall not be paid. A man’s losses shall not be
made good to him more than three times” (i. 460).


We have in the following passage an early reference to the great fair of
Novgorod:—


“One summer Harald (Fairhair) called to him his dearest favourite, Hauk
hábrök (= high-breech), and said: ‘Now I am free from all warfare and
hostility in the land, and will lead a life of ease and pleasure. I will
send you into Eastern lands this summer to buy for me some things that
are costly and rare here.’ Hauk said he should be obeyed in this as in
other things, and the king allowed his men to go to various countries.
Hauk departed with one ship and a good body of followers, and arrived
east to Hólmgard (= Novgorod) in the autumn as the fair began, and went
into winter quarters. Thither had come many people from various lands,
among them were the champions of King Eirek from Uppsalir, Björn
blueside and Salgard serk (= shirt), overbearing and wronging everybody.
One day Hauk walked through the town with his men to buy some costly
things for his lord Harald, when he came to where a man of Gardariki was
sitting; he saw a costly cloak all over adorned with gold. This he
bought, left and went for the money. Before this, the same day, Björn
had wanted to buy this cloak for the King of the Swedes, and its value
was given. After Hauk had gone, the servant of Björn came and told the
trader that Björn must, of course, get the cloak, but he said the matter
was settled. The servant told Björn. Then Hauk came with the money for
the cloak, paid all, and took it away” (Flateyjarbok, i. 577).


-----

Footnote 167:

  Cf. also Ólaf Tryggvason, Fornmanna Sögur, i.

Footnote 168:

  Cf. St. Olaf, c. 143.

Footnote 169:

  Stigandi = the stepping one.

Footnote 170:

  Cf. Hróa Thátt; Flateyjarbók, ii.; Landnamabók, iii.

Footnote 171:

  Cf. Gretti’s Saga, c. 98.

Footnote 172:

  Kufa, as we know, was situated on one of the branches of the
  Euphrates, south of Bagdad, and was for a while the seat of the
  Caliphs.

Footnote 173:

  Among the English coins found in Sweden, and now in the royal
  collection in Stockholm, are of—

                    Edward I.
                    Ethelstan.
                    Sihtric, of Northumberland.
                    Coin with the name of St. Peter.
                    Edgar.
                    Edward II.
                    Ethelred II.
                    Knut.
                    Harold I.
                    Harthacnut.
                    Edward Confessor.
                    Harold II.
                    King Sihtric, of Dublin, 989–1020.

  English coins found in Norway of—

               Coenwulf, of Mercia (796–819).
               Ceolwulf, his son (819–821).
               Northumbrian (Styca).
               Eawred (808–840).
               Archbishop Wulfred, of Canterbury (803–829).
               Ethelred.
               Canute the Great.
               Edgar.
               Edward the Martyr.
               From the beginning of the eleventh century.
               King Sigtrygg Silkiskegg.

Footnote 174:

  Among the great finds of coins are those of Findarfoe, in Götland,
  which had more than 3,000 German coins, besides English and others.
  Another in Johanneshus, in Blekinge, Sweden, which, besides a mass of
  ornaments and jewels of silver, contained over 3,400 German coins of
  the tenth and eleventh century. The German coins had been struck for
  German emperors, kings, princes, archbishops, bishops, &c., &c., and
  belong to Bohemia, Bavaria, Swabia, Lorraine, Franconia, the modern
  Saxony, Frisia, the Netherlands, &c. There are also coins of cities,
  those of Cologne being the most numerous, and even coins for Northern
  Italy. Most of these coins are derived from places along the rivers of
  Germany, especially the Rhine. The most common are those of Otto III.
  and his grandmother Adelheid, who reigned during the minority of her
  grandson (991–995).

Footnote 175:

  Among the coins were nine Kufic, eight of which were of gold, and one
  of silver, all of Abbasides Caliphs, from 760 to 840; four Byzantine
  coins of gold, of Valens, Mauricius, Constantine, Copronymus, and
  Michael III.; a gold coin of Louis le Debonnaire; two coins of
  silver-gilt of his sons Lothair and Pepin, a silver-gilt coin of
  Archbishop Wulfred, of Canterbury, 803–829. With these was a large
  treasure of gold and jewels, among which were two neck-rings, three
  bracelets, rings, charms, and an object, probably a _reliquary_,
  having a Christian inscription in Greek, numerous charms and
  ornaments, one of which was ornamented with an antique gem, and others
  with garnet beads, &c., &c., all of gold; some objects were
  silver-gilt; gold chains, &c., &c.




                              CHAPTER XIV.
                           DEBTS AND ROBBERY.

  Stringency of laws on debt—An insolvent debtor the property of the
    creditor—Redemption of debtor—Robbery and burglary—Robbery with
    violence—Robbery without violence—Punishments—Irreclaimable
    thieves—Laws on theft.


Nothing could show more plainly that, apart from the profession of
_Vikingry_, the people carried on their commercial transactions in a
very honourable way, than the fact that the laws on debt were very
stringent, and that robbery, arson, adulteration of food, &c., were
punished most severely, and in some cases put the offender outside the
pale of the law.

In regard to debts and the right of the creditor, some customs which had
become law seem to be of high antiquity.

When a debtor could not pay, he had to come to the Thing and offer his
person to his kinsmen, if they would pay the debt; first to the nearest
kinsman; then, if he would not, he could offer himself to any of the
others. If none of the kinsmen would have him, he belonged to his
creditor till he had paid the debt by work or otherwise.

A woman who was a debtor could not offer herself without the consent of
her kinsmen.

The owner of the debtor could use him as his thrall as long as the debt
was not paid, but the debtor had the rétt to which he was born in regard
to all other men. His master could beat him, but was not allowed to sell
him unless he paid a fine of forty marks, or unless he ran away, when he
became a real thrall. The debtor could also give his child for a higher
debt than three marks.

If he did not stay with his creditor, he was allowed half a month to go
through the Fylky and try to get the debt paid. If the creditor wanted
only the money and not the person, he could offer the debtor to his
kinsmen; or, if they would not buy him, the creditor could sell him to
any one in the country, though not as a common thrall, and not for a
higher amount than the debt.

If the debtor would not work and was obstinate, then the creditor could
take him to the Thing and offer him to the kinsmen of the debtor to
redeem; if they would not, the creditor could kill or maim him.


“A debtor shall be taken to the Thing. He shall first be offered to his
kinsmen, and first to the nearest one if he wants him, or to the one to
whom he prefers to sell him. No one is allowed to take a woman thus for
the sake of debt, unless with the consent of her kinsmen.... He (the
creditor) shall not drive him to work with blows unless he cannot get
his debt from him. The man has no rétt towards him (the master) and his
wife and all his thralls and each to the other. If others beat him the
master has equal rétt on him as on his steward; the debtor owns the rest
of his rétt according to his birth, and his rétt shall be the same as if
he had no debt.... If a man sells a debtor like a slave he is liable to
pay 40 marks, unless he has run away from his creditor, and the same
must every one pay who sells a free man.... A family-born man may give
his child for debt if he does it at the Thing or at the alehouse or at
church, for 3 marks and not more.... If the debtor is obstinate to the
creditor and will not work for him, he shall be brought to the Thing and
offered to his kinsmen to redeem him. If they will not the creditor can
maim him on the upper or lower part of the body” (Gulath. Law, 71).


Robbery (Rán) was viewed from a different point, according as more or
less violence was employed in its commission.

_Búrán_ (burglary) committed with armed force was considered the worst
form, and was _útlegdarverk_ (outlawry-work). Robbery of a whole farm
was punished with outlawry, and the owner sent an arrow to the men of
the Herad that night to pursue the robber. If when he was caught he
returned the property, he had to pay indemnity to the king. If robbers
defended themselves they were unholy, and no weregild was paid for them
if they were killed.


“If men attack a bondi and rob his farm and take 3 cows or more, or 3
cows’ value, then it is _búrán_. If the bondi owns only 3 cows, it is
_búrán_ if one is taken away. An arrow shall be sent, and each carry it
to the other or pay a fine.[176] If they are pursued and found with the
cattle and give them back, the leader pays 40 marks, and each of his men
3 marks. If they do not they are all outlaws” (Frostath., v. 14).


“In the second place, if a man finds another in his _búr_[177] who has
gathered there a burden of property and clothes, he may slay him if he
likes. He shall go to his neighbours and show them the slain man, and
use their evidence at the arrow-thing. In the third place, if a man
finds another in his sheep-house or cow-stall tying his cattle and
trying to lead them away, he may slay him if he wants” (Gulathing Law,
160).[178]


_Handrán_ was the term applied to robbery without violence of property
out of the hand. Such a robber also was unholy, and could be killed
without indemnity.


“It is _hand-robbery_ if a man tears out of the hand of a man what he
holds in it, or tears anything off his back. This is also liable to
greater outlawry” (Vigslodi, c. 3).


“If a man commits hand-robbery on another, and he proves it by
witnesses, then the robber is liable to pay 3 marks. If the robber runs
away with the thing (robbed), and the owner runs after him and slays
him, then he falls as an outlaw” (Gulath., 143).


The value of the stolen thing was appraised, and if it was worth an
_örtug_, or more, then the thief was to be outlawed and slain, for he
had forfeited his life.

If a man stole something of less value than an _örtug_, he was a _torf
man_,[179] and was made to run the gauntlet while those present threw at
him whatever they had handy; if he got away alive he was thereafter
without rétt.


“If a man steals on trading-journeys he makes himself a _götu-thjóf_
(gauntlet-thief). His head shall be shaved and tarred, and (eider) down
be taken and put on it. Then all the crew shall make a road for him and
stand on both sides, and he shall run to the wood if he can. Every one
present shall throw a stone or a stick after him, and whoever does not
throw is liable to pay 9 _örtugar_”[180] (Bjarkey Law, 146).


If the stealing of the very smallest thing occurred, even of less value
than a _thveit_, the theft was called _hvinnska_ (pilfering), and the
thief was ever thereafter called _hvinn_ (pilferer), and had no rétt.


“If a man steals less than a _thveit_ he shall be called _hvinn_ all his
life and have no rétt” (Bjarkey Law, 147).


Any one who stole fruit or plants from a garden or farm could be beaten
and deprived of his clothes.


“If a man goes into the leek-garden or the angelica-garden of another he
has no rétt, though he is beaten and struck, and all his clothes are
taken off him” (Frostath., xiv. 14).


The act of stealing food in order to sustain life was not, however,
punished.


“Next is this, that no man shall steal from another. Nevertheless it
must be remarked that the man who gets no work to live by, and steals
food to save his life for the sake of hunger, then this theft must not
be punished at all” (N. G. L., ii. 168).


Any one who had been caught stealing three times was held irreclaimable,
and it was considered less expensive to the state to rid society
altogether of such offenders than to imprison them.


“The man who can get work to live on and steals the amount of an eyrir,
and has not done it before, shall be brought to the Thing and redeem his
hide with 3 marks of silver. If he steals as much a second time he shall
redeem his hide with 6 marks of silver. If he does not he shall lose his
hide, and a key shall be put on his cheek. If he steals as much the
third time he shall lose his hide, and the king shall take 6 marks of
silver from his property if he has so much. If the same man steals
oftener he is to be slain” (N. G. L., ii. 168).


Minors were not held responsible for their acts, but if the thief was a
woman of good family, she was sent out of the country; if a native
thrall, he was beheaded; if a foreign thrall, his master could beat him
within five days; if a native bondwoman or a freed woman (free but born
of slaves), she was severely punished.


“If a woman of good family steals, she shall be sent from the country to
another king’s realm. If a minor steals, it shall be paid back. If a
native thrall steals, his head shall be cut off, or his master shall
deny it with _séttareid_.[181] If a foreign thrall, or the son of a
foreigner, his hide shall be flogged, or his master shall have him
flogged within five days.... If a man’s freedwoman (_leysingja_) or a
native bondwoman steals, one of her ears shall be cut off, the second
time her other ear shall be cut off, the third time her nose shall be
cut off; then she is called _stúfa_ and _núfa_, and may steal as much as
she likes” (Gulath., 259).


If a high-born man induced a slave to commit robbery, he and not the
slave was punishable.


“If a freedman and a thrall committed a theft together, the freedman
alone was regarded as the thief, for, says the law, he who steals with
another’s thrall steals alone” (Gulath., 261).


The removal of boundary stones was considered theft.


“If a man takes up standing boundary stones and lays them down in an
another place and moves them into the land of his neighbour, then he is
a thief” (Gulath., 264).


According to the Gulathing Law bargains were made void in case of
_fals_, or cheating, and the cheater was fined 3 marks.


“No man shall sell to another that in which there is fraud or deceit. If
a man sells sand or dirt instead of meal or butter, with which he covers
the sand or dirt, the fine is 3 marks” (Gulath., 40).


To use the property of another man without his permission was called
_fornœmi_[182] if it was a ship, a horse, or snow-shoes, and it was
punished by indemnity to the owner, the special name for which was
_áfang_. If he refused to pay the indemnity his act was robbery.

The king neither received nor paid _áfang_, as his things could be used
by other people, and he could use other people’s things.


“No man shall take the ship or horse of a man except with the leave of
the owner. If he takes it he shall pay one eyrir and a half. If the
owner finds him on the ship or horse and asks áfang it is well if he
will pay. If he will not, the fine is doubled, and a _ranbaug_
(robbery-fine) is to be paid to the king” (Gulathing, 92).


Spoiling the property of another was called _spellvirki_
(spoiling-deed); if the damage was more than half a mark the owner
received damages according to the valuation, and doubtless also
according to his rétt. If the spoiler would not pay he was outlawed.


“No man shall spoil another man’s things. If he spoils so much that the
loss amounts to half a mark it is a _spoiling-deed_, of all which is
valued as much as half a mark. If a man cuts off the tail of another’s
horse so high that he cuts some of its skin, then it is a spoiling-deed.
If a man makes a cut into the side of a ship, fore or aft, worth half a
mark, it is a _spoiling-deed_”[183] (Gulathing, 96).


-----

Footnote 176:

  _Baug._

Footnote 177:

  A place for provisions, still common in Norway. See ‘Land of the
  Midnight Sun,’ vol. i, p. 419.

Footnote 178:

  Cf. also Frostath. xiv. 12, 13.

Footnote 179:

  Literally a man of turf and tar; _i.e._ equivalent to one who was
  tarred and feathered.

Footnote 180:

  Cf. also Gulath. 253; Frostath. xii. 12.

Footnote 181:

  An oath.

Footnote 182:

  The law term for plundering another man’s property.

Footnote 183:

  Frostath. Law, x. 46, applies this to other cattle also.




                              CHAPTER XV.
                          HALLS AND BUILDINGS.

  Vast size and beauty of some buildings—Wood the only material
    used—Halls—Durability of the wooden structures—Carved doorways—Use
    of tapestry—Walls adorned with shields—The seats—Positions of the
    guests—Carved benches—Houses and rooms—Women’s apartments—Open
    hearths—Use of turf as fuel—Representations of episodes from the
    sagas.


From the Eddas and Sagas we sometimes get a vivid conception of the vast
size, beauty, and magnificence of some of the buildings of the Vikings
in their home in the North.

The only material mentioned in their construction is wood.

Each prominent man or chief lived on his estate with his family,
followers, and servants. The collection of buildings they occupied was
called _bœr_;[184] they were of different styles, and varied in number
according to the power, wealth, and taste of the owners, and often seem
to have been far apart from each other; every house was known by a
different name. These buildings appear to have been built so as to form
a quadrangle, the front facing an open space or grass plot called _tún_,
the whole being surrounded by a fence called gard,[185] through which
the entrance was by a gate, “_grind_,” or gateway, “_hlid_.”


“Raudulf lived in the days of King St. Olaf in the Austrdal (Österdal
valley), when the king was journeying round the land and forcing people
to embrace Christianity. He sent his sons to King Olaf, and invited him
home to a feast. It was rather late in the day when the king came to
Raud, with two hundred men; he saw high and well-closed fences, and when
they came to the gate it was open, but nevertheless well guarded....
When the king rode in, Raud bondi stood there with his sons and many
people. Raud received him and his men well; they alighted from their
horses. The king asked the bondi: ‘Is this fine house which I see here
in the enclosure a church?’ The bondi answered: ‘It is my
sleeping-house, which was built this summer, and is now just finished;’
the whole roof of the house was shingle-covered, and tarred. Then they
went to the sitting-room, and the king saw that it was very large; it
was roofed with planks and tarred” (Fornmanna Sögur, v. 331).


The finest buildings were called _holl_ (hall), and were only built by
kings, chiefs, or jarls.[186] Another building, called _sal_,[187] seems
to have been the same as the hall, as it was built for the reception of
guests. Here and there we have descriptions of halls belonging to
prominent chiefs, richly ornamented with carvings, which sometimes
represented the deeds of warriors; and were it not for some of these
mementoes, which have been rescued from oblivion and decay, we might
doubt that the art of carving had been carried to such perfection as it
was. Walls, doors, beds, seats, &c., are mentioned as being richly
carved.


“Olaf Höskuldsson had a hall made in Hjardarholt larger and more
magnificent than people had before seen; on the wall and on the ceiling
famous Sagas were carved with such skill that the hall was thought to be
far more splendid when the hangings were taken down” (Laxdæla, c. 29).


“It was customary at that time to have large halls at the bœr, at which
the people sat before long fires in the evening; tables were placed in
front of the men, who afterward slept alongside the walls, away from the
fires. During the daytime the women carded and spun wool in these halls”
(Gretti’s Saga, ch. xv.).


Some of the churches and farm-houses built in the beginning of the
Christian era, and some of the doors, testify to the durability of their
wooden structures.

The carved doorways with illustrations from the Eddaic songs must have
been taken from buildings of a far earlier date than the churches, but
it is impossible to tell the date. Some of the carvings are from two
inches in depth to a line.

Only in two places are stone-built (_steinhöll_) halls mentioned.


“Gunnhild, Queen of Norway, said to Ögmund (one of her men): ‘Show them
(Rút and his men) the way to my house, and make a good feast for them
there.’ Ögmund went with them to a stone-hall, covered with the finest
tapestry” (Njala, ch. 3).[188]


King Atli sent an invitation to the sons of Gjuki, Gunnar and Högni,
brothers of Gudrun, his wife.

                 Atli sent
                 Early to Gunnar,
                 A man skilled in riding;
                 Knefród was he called;
                 He came to the burgh of Gjuki
                 And to the hall of Gunnar,
                 To the benches around the fire,
                 And to the well-loved beer.

                 There the warriors drank
                 Wine in the foreign hall,
                 Silent and hiding their fear;
                 They feared the wrath of the Hunar;
                 Then shouted Knefród,
                 The southern man,
                 With a chilling voice,
                 Sitting on a high bench—

                 “Atli sent me to ride
                 Hither on his errand
                 On a horse chafing the bit
                 Through the unknown dark forest
                 To bid you both, Gunnar,
                 To come to the bench
                 With eagle-beaked helmets
                 To call on him.”

                 We own seven halls
                 Full of swords;
                 Of each of these
                 The guards are of gold;
                 I know my horse is best,
                 My sword the sharpest;
                 My bow adorns the bench,
                 My brynjas are of gold,
                 My helmet and shield are the whitest.

                                     (Atlakvida.)

The scene depicted on the door-jambs on the following page is thus
described:—

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1089.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1090.
]

  Door-jambs, Osstad Church, Sœtersdal. Height, 6 feet; width, 1¾
    feet.


“King Atli urged his host to make a fierce assault; they fought hard,
but the Gjukimgar made an attack so violent that he retreated into the
hall, and they fought inside very sharply. Many fell, and at last all
the men of the brothers (Gunnar and Högni) were slain, so that they two
alone were alive; but before that many a man went to Hel by their
weapons. King Gunnar was attacked, and because of overwhelming force was
captured and fettered. Thereupon Högni fought with great valour and
manliness, and killed twenty of King Atli’s greatest champions; he threw
many into the fire which had been kindled in the hall; all agreed that
such a man could hardly be found, but nevertheless at last he was
overpowered and taken. King Atli said: ‘It is a great wonder that so
many have been slain by him here; cut out his heart, and that shall be
his death.’ Högni answered: ‘Do as thou likest, I will gladly bear what
you do, and you shall see that my heart is not afraid, I have stood hard
things before. I liked to go into trials while unwounded, but now I am
badly wounded, and you will yet have your will on me.’ The counsellor of
King Atli said: ‘I have better advice; let us rather take the thrall
Hjalli, but spare the life of Högni; that thrall is death-fated, live he
ever so long he will always be as bad as now.’ The thrall heard this and
screamed loudly, and ran away to where he thought he was safe. He said
he was to suffer on account of their fight, and that it was
undeservedly; that the day was evil on which he was to die and give up
his swine-keeping. They seized him and threatened him with a knife; he
cried loudly before he felt its point.

“Högni did what is unusual in such personal peril, interceded for the
thrall’s life, saying he did not want to hear his screaming, and that he
preferred to be the sufferer himself; the thrall was glad to get his
life. Högni and Gunnar were both put in fetters. Atli bade Gunnar tell
where the gold was, if he wished to live. He answered: ‘I will sooner
see the bloody heart of my brother Högni.’ They seized the thrall a
second time, and cut his heart out, and showed it to King Gunnar. He
said: ‘Here you may see the heart of Hjalli the coward, and it is unlike
the heart of Högni the brave, for now it trembles much, but it trembled
twice as much when it lay in his breast.’ They went to Högni, urged by
King Atli, and cut out his heart, but such was his strength of mind that
he smiled while he suffered this torture, and everybody wondered at his
firmness; and the deed is ever since held in remembrance. They showed to
Gunnar the heart of Högni the brave, who said: ‘It is unlike the heart
of Hjalli, for now it quivers little, but less while it was in his
breast; thou wilt lose thy life, Atli, as we do now. I alone know where
the gold is, for Högni cannot tell thee now. I was sometimes going to
tell it while both of us lived, but now I am left to myself; the Rhine
shall keep the gold, rather than the Hunar wear it on their arms. King
Atli told them to take away the prisoner, and it was done. Gudrun with
some men went to Atli, and said: ‘Mayest thou fare as ill as thou didst
keep thy word to me.’

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1091.—Carved doorway, Sauland’s Church, Thelemarken. Height, 13
    feet; width, 7¾ feet; height of door, 7½ feet; width of door, 2⅓
    feet.
]

“King Gunnar was put into a pit in which were many snakes, and his hands
were tied firmly. Gudrun sent him a harp; he showed his art, and played
on it with great skill, striking the strings with his toes. He played so
well and wonderfully that few thought they had heard the harp played so
well with hands, and he continued this idrott until all the snakes fell
asleep except a large hideous viper, which crawled to him, and pierced
into his body with its snout till it reached his heart; and there he
lost his life with great prowess” (Volsunga Saga, c. 37).


The halls had two doors, one for the men, the other for women;[189] many
of them, which were often covered with designs in ironwork and runic
inscriptions, must have been extremely beautiful. Sweden is especially
rich in them. The church door of Versås, represented on the next page,
is undoubtedly of great antiquity, as the svastica is found upon it.

The walls of the halls were hung with tapestry, made by the wives and
daughters of the family, often representing the deeds of their
forefathers or those of their lord; the carvings on the walls were
occasionally very fine. An idea of the vast size of these festive halls
can be gleaned from the number of guests and attendants they could hold.
Some walls were adorned with shields put so closely together that they
overlapped each other; many were inlaid or ornamented with gold and
silver, which must have added to the brilliancy of the scene.


“King Knut began his journey to Borgundarhólm (Bornholm), where Egil had
made a grand feast for him; he went to this with a large hird.[190]
There he had a hall as large as a king’s, hung all over with shields”
(Flateyjarbók iii., p. 401).


“King Harald Sigurdarson came to the chief Aslák, and invited himself to
his house. Aslák went to meet him, and received him very well. The king
and his men were shown in to a hall and seated; it was covered with
shields and most splendidly adorned in all respects”[191] (Flateyjarbók
iii., p. 401).


Once Thorfinn (an Icelandic poet) sat on an easy chair before King Olaf.
The king said to him:


“‘Make a song, Scald, about that which is drawn on the hangings.’
Thorfinn looked at them, and saw that Sigurd slaying Fafnir was
embroidered on them” (Flateyjarbók iii.).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1092.—The Church-door of Versås, Vestergötland. Representation of
    Sigurd slaying the serpent Fafnir: Runic inscription, _Asmutr Kärthi
    Dyrr_ = Asmund made the door; and svastica.
]

The halls were used for feasts,[192] and were built east and west, the
long walls running north and south; along the latter were the benches,
and in the middle of each of these were the _hásæti_ or high-seats, also
called _Ondvegi_ or _Ondugi_, because the two seats were opposite each
other (_Ond_ = opposite, _vegi_ = way). The most important benches were
the _œdri bekk_, which ran along the northern wall, and the high-seat or
the chief seat in the hall, which stood facing the sun, and was for the
use of the master of the household, who never allowed any one else to
use it. The long bench which ran along the southern wall was called
“_úœdri bekk_” (the lower bench); the high-seat on this bench was called
_annat ondvegi_, _nordr ondvegi_ and _ondvegi a hinn uœdra bekk_, and
was opposite to the other high-seat. To be placed in this _ondvegi_ was
the highest honour that could be shown to any one, and consequently this
place was only assigned to most prominent men. The nearer the place on
the benches assigned to any one was to the high-seat, the greater the
honour; the places farthest away, near the doors, were the lowest.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1093.—Door of Faaberg’s Church, 9 feet high, 3 feet wide. Only
    three doors of the same kind (with ironwork) are preserved.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1094.—Door from Vånga Church, Ostergötland, Stockholm Museum.
]


“Thorkel Hák (an Icelander) had been abroad and became renowned in
foreign countries ... he went out to Sweden and became the companion of
Sörkvir, and they ravaged the coast of the Baltic. East of
Balagardssida, Thorkel, when going to get water one evening, met a
_finngalkn_ (a kind of dragon monster), which after a prolonged struggle
he slew. Then he went east to Adalsysla, where he also slew a flying
dragon; afterwards he went back to Sweden, thence to Norway, and then to
Iceland. He had these great feats carved above his locked bed, and on a
chair in front of his high-seat. He was called Thorkel Hák because he
spared no one, either in words or deeds, with whomsoever he dealt”
(Njala, 120).


The seats on the _œdri bekk_ were however more prominent than those on
the lower bench. Next to the king, on the upper bench, on the right sat
the under-kings or other prominent men.

On some occasions at a later period we find that to the left sat the
queen with her women in the order of their rank, for the places of the
women were then upon the long bench to the left of the king, and to the
right of the other _ondvegismen_, the place of the men being on the left
of the ondvegi.

Hildigunn wishing to make preparations to receive her kinsman Flosi,
said:


“‘Now all my men-servants shall stand outside when Flosi rides into the
yard, and the women shall clean the rooms, and put up the hangings and
prepare the high-seat for him” (Njala, ch. 116).


The high-seat was often wide enough to hold two or three persons. Sigurd
jarl of the Orkneys invited Gilli jarl of Sudreyjar (Hebrides) and
Sigtrygg, king in Ireland, for Yuletide.


“Men were so seated that King Sigtrygg sat in the middle of the
high-seat, and each of the jarls on either side of him. The men of
Sigtrygg and Gilli jarl sat on the inner side, and Flosi and Thorstein
Siduhallson on the outer side of Sigurd jarl. The hall was full” (Njala,
c. 154).


There were also, in some halls, transverse benches, called _Pall_ or
_Thverpall_ (cross-benches); on these the women sat. In such cases the
middle seat was the most prominent, and the lowest seat was at the end
of the bench in the corner[193]: the word was used as a term of
contempt.


“It was the custom of Gunnar and Njal to give feasts to each other once
every winter in turns for friendship’s sake. Now Gunnar had to stay with
Njal, and went to Bergthorshval with Hallgerd. Helgi (son of Njal) and
his wife were not at home. Njal received them well. When they had stayed
there for a while Helgi and his wife Thórhalla came home. Then Bergthóra
(Njal’s wife) walked with Thórhalla up to the cross-bench (women’s
bench), and said to Hallgerd: ‘Thou shalt give up thy seat to this
woman.’ She answered: ‘I will not move, for I do not want to be a
corner-woman. I shall have my way here.’ Then Thórhalla sat down”
(Njala, c. 35).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1095.—Door, with knob of iron inlaid with silver, from
    Valthjofsstad Church, Iceland (now in the Copenhagen Museum).
]

The high-seats, which were cushioned, were often very beautifully carved
with arms on both sides, and two pillars called Ondvegisulur, which were
both carved and painted.

Only in extraordinary cases were there more than two high-seats, but we
are told that Ingjald Illrádi, in order to receive the guests at his
_arvel_ after his father’s death, built a new hall with seven high
seats.


“Thordis and Bödvar went up on to the roof of the hall, took away the
window covering to let the smoke out, and looked about the hall; they
saw that the chair of Grima stood in the middle, and that Thór, seated,
with his hammer, was carved on the chair-posts, but they did not see
Thormod” (Fostbrœdra Saga).


To sit on the footboard in front of the king was to show submission; and
it seems to have been usual when a subject was invested with the title
of jarl to sit thus before the ceremony of investiture began.


“One day when King Magnus sat in his high-seat, and had many men with
him, Svein Ulfsson sat on the footboard in front of the king. The king
said: ‘I will make known to the chiefs and all people my intention,
which I want carried out. Svein Ulfsson, a man prominent both by his
birth and deeds, has come to me here. He has become my man, and plighted
me his word. You know that all the Danes have become my men this summer,
and the land is without a chief; when I am gone, it is, as you know,
often attacked by the Vendians, Courlanders, and others from Austrveg
(eastern lands) and by the Saxar also. I promised to give them a chief
to defend and rule the land. I see no man so well fitted for it in every
respect as Svein Ulfsson. By his kin he is a chief. Now I will make him
my jarl, and give into his hands Danaveldi to rule over while I am in
Norway, as Knut the great made his father Úlf jarl chief over Denmark
while he was in England....’ He rose, took a sword and fastened it on
Svein’s belt; then he took a shield and fastened it on his shoulder;
then he put a helmet on his head and gave him the name of jarl, and
those grants in Denmark which his father Úlf jarl had had there before.
Then a shrine with holy things was brought, on which Svein laid his
hands, and took oaths of allegiance to King Magnus, who thereupon led
him into the high-seat with himself” (Magnus the Good’s Saga, ch. 24).


A great change was made in the position of the high-seat in later times
by Olaf Kyrri (the Quiet), King of Norway (1067–1093), who placed it at
the inner end of the hall where the cross-bench stood, instead of being
in the centre of the long benches.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1096.—Chair with five distinct rows of runes. The uppermost
    inscription gives the name of the owner of the chair—Thorunn
    Benedikt’s daughter. On the front part of the seat are carved the
    twelve signs of the Zodiac, and above these their names in Latin,
    with runes; underneath them are inscribed in runes the Latin names
    of the twelve months.
]

The benches were so made as to allow the guests to place at their backs,
along the wall, their shields and swords, &c.


“It was an old custom in Norway, Denmark, and Sweden to have doors at
each end of the hall in king’s residences and feasting halls, with the
king’s high seat on the middle of the long bench facing toward the sun.
The queen sat on the left hand of the king, and the seat was then called
_Ondvegi_ (high-seat); the seats next to this on both sides were the
most dignified for men and women, while the one next to the door was the
least. The most high-born, old and wise man, was the king’s counsellor,
as it was then the custom of kings to have wise men who knew ancient
examples and customs of their forefathers, but the counsellor sat on the
northern bench opposite the king, on what was called the lower
high-seat; there were also women on his right hand, but men on his left.
It was then the custom for chiefs to carry the ale over the fire, and
drink to the man sitting in the opposite high seat, and it was a great
honour at that time to be toasted by the king.

“King Olaf had a raised bench placed in his feast halls, and put his
high seat on the middle of the cross bench. He arranged his pages and
candle boys in front; he also had a candle held in front of every
high-born man who sat at his table, and a page holding a table cup
before each; he had also chairs (stools) for his marshals and other wise
men” (Fagrskinna, c. 219, 220).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1097.—Chair from the Church of Grund, Iceland. Height, 39 inches;
    width, 30½ inches; depth, 17 inches. These two chairs are now in the
    old Northern Museum of Copenhagen. The seats, which are but little
    ornamented on the back, show that they were intended to be placed
    along a wall, and were undoubtedly covered by cushions. The lower
    part of the chair forms a box, with a small lid in the seat; on the
    upper part of its back, and on both the side-pieces, are
    inscriptions in later runes.
]

A few seats, which have been saved from destruction, are beautifully
carved with subjects from the Sagas.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1098.—Inner side of the back. Gunnar in the snake pit. (Volsunga
    saga.)
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1099.—Back of the seat. 1/19 real size.
]

  Side view of chair. 1/19 real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1100.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1101.
]

  Carved bridal chair, formerly in Hitterdal Church, Thelemarken,
    Norway. Now on the farm of Hove. Showing the shape of hats worn
    and Gunnar in the snake-pit.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1102.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1103.—Top part of No. 1102.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1104.

  Chair. 1/13 real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1105.
]

  This carving may be explained by two different interpretations. The
    woman between the two horsemen may be Brynhild and the ring that
    which the gods got from the Dverg Andvari for a ransom for Otr,
    and which he predicted would always bring misfortune to its owner;
    or she may be Gudrun confiding to the messenger of Atli a ring,
    warning Gunnar and Högni of their danger.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1106.—Front view of chair.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1107.—Side view.

  Chair supposed to have belonged to an old church, in Bö, Norway.
]

One of the principal houses was the _skali_, or _eldhús_,[194] an oblong
and quadrangular building, with a door at one, sometimes at both ends,
intended for daily life and for feasting.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1108.—Front view.

  Chair carved with warriors fighting, with helmets on their heads. The
    helmets are similar to those of the Bayeux tapestry.
]

The _skemma_, _dyngja_, _stofa_, and _herbergi_ were separate rooms, or
buildings, sometimes used as sleeping apartments, where the women of the
household dwelt or remained during the daytime with their maids or
attendants, and occupied themselves with all kinds of work.[195]
Sometimes the _skemma_ was built away from other houses, and was then
called _utskemma_. Where there was a loft the lower room was called
_undir-skemma_. In such rooms the light came from window openings, and
no fire could be lighted.[196]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1109.—Side view of chair.

  Warrior, with open helmet, slaying a dragon—Vaage, Gudbrandsdal,
    Norway.
]

The _stofa_, which was usually occupied by women,[197] was large or
small; sometimes it was intended for a sleeping apartment. At the royal
residence in Nidaros, St. Olaf built a large _hirdstofa_ (king’s men’s
house), with doors at both ends, for meals and general intercourse; a
large _svefnskali_ (sleeping house); and also a large _stofa_,[198] in
which he held his _hirdstefna_ (king’s men’s meetings). The common
entrance led first into the _forstofa_ (lobby), and then into the house
proper; both were provided with doors, which could be locked. Sometimes
the door was fastened on the inside with a _slagbrand_ (bar).

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1110.—Back view of chair.

  Warriors fighting on horseback.
]

The lofts, which consisted of rooms in the upper part of the _skali_,
were frequently used as bedrooms, and were lighted by _loft-glugg_[199]
(loft openings). Outside the loft there was, at least on one side, a
_svalir_ (balcony),[200] which was reached by an outside stairway. The
loft generally had no communication with the _undir-skemma_.

When _Fjölnir_ assisted King Frodi in Denmark, he was given a loft-room
as a sleeping apartment; in an adjoining loft-room the flooring had been
removed, in order to fill the large mead-vat standing in the
_undir-skemma_. During the night _Fjölnir_ went out, and as he had to
return along the _svalir_ to his room, he made a mistake as to the door,
and fell down into the mead-vat.[201]

The beds (_hvila_, _rekkja_) were placed round the walls, inside the
benches, and consisted of straw, the covering being the clothes worn in
the daytime, and over the head a _feld_ (fur cloak) was placed.

The buildings had windows, sometimes called light-holes, covered with a
membrane, instead of glass, sufficiently large to enable a man to creep
through them. The material used was the after-birth membrane, enclosing
the fœtus of the cow, which was stretched over the light-hole. This when
dried is almost as transparent as glass, and can, for a certain time,
resist the rain. It is still in use in some out-of-the-way places in
Iceland; in the Sagas it is called _Skjall_, and the window is called
_Skja_.


“Also if men sit in houses with _skjá_ (light-holes) in them, it is so
light inside that all men indoors recognise each other” (Konungs
Skuggsja, p. 47).


There was no ceiling within the roof; the smoke from the open hearths on
the floor, which covered the inside with soot, escaped through the
_Ljori_, of which there was at least one, and which also admitted
light.[202]


“Olaf Tryggvason burnt the hall of the seid-man Eyvind Kelda who escaped
through the _Ljóri_ (the light-hole in the roof)” (Olaf Trygg, c. 69).


We find that turf was occasionally used as fuel.


“Einar sailed westward to Shetland, and many men joined him. After that
he went southward to the Orkneys, against Kalf Skurfa and Thorir
(Treskegg). There a great battle was fought, and both the Vikings were
slain.

                    ‘He gave Treskegg to the Trölls;
                    Torfeinar slew Skurfa:
                    He conquered the islands.’

“After that he conquered the islands, and became a powerful chief. He
was the first man to cut turf from the ground for fuel at Torfnes
(Turfness) in Scotland, for fuel was scarce in the islands”
(Flateyjarbók, vol. i., p. 223).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1111.—Carved wooden work, with runes, Thorpe Church, Hallingdal.
    1/18 real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1112.—Doorway, Flaa Church, Hallingdal; 11½ feet high, 5½ feet
    broad. Height of door, 8 feet; width of door, 2¼ feet.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1113.—Doorway, Tuft Church, Sandver. Height, 11¼ feet; height of
    door, 7 feet; width of carving, 5½ feet; width of door, 2½
    feet.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1114.—Carved doorway.—Portal of Opdal Church in Numedal, Norway,
    with representation of Gunnar in the snake-pit with his hands tied
    on his back. Height of sculptured part, 8 feet; breadth of
    sculpture, 5⅙ feet; height of door, 6⅔ feet; width of door, 2½ feet.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1115.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1116.
]

  Door-jambs of Hyllestad Church, Sœtersdal. Height, 7 feet; width, 1⅔
    feet. Representation of seven episodes from the Volsunga
    Saga—Regin forging a sword; Sigurd trying it; Sigurd piercing the
    snake Fafnir; Sigurd roasting the heart of Fafnir; Sigurd’s horse
    _Grani_; Sigurd slaying Regin; and Gunnar in the snake-pit playing
    the harp with his toes.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1117.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1118.
]

  Door-jambs in Faaberg Church, Gulbrandsdal, about 7½ feet long.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1119.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1120.
]

  Door-jambs in Lardals Church, Jarsberg. Height, 6⅙ feet; breadth of
    broader plank, 1⅔ feet. Representation of the skin of Regin’s
    brother in the shape of an otter, and Sigurd slaying Fafnir.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1121.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1122.
]

  Door-jambs, Ulvick Church, Hardanger; 8 feet high; nearly 2 feet
    wide.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1123.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1124.
]

  Door-jambs, Hyllestad Church, Sætersdal; 7 feet high, 1⅔ feet wide.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1125.—Engraved ornaments of silver upon wood, found in a
    mound.—Ringerike, Norway, earlier iron age.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1126.—Hinge of bronze with rosette of silver gilt. ½ real size.
    Found with shield boss and sword.—Hammenhoj, Scania, earlier iron
    age.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1127.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1128.
]

  Ornaments of silver rivetted upon wood. ⅔ real size.—Mammen find,
    later iron age.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1129.—A unique specimen of a box in extraordinary preservation
    (of box-wood), found in a mound, with a bronze kettle containing two
    ribs, one of a cow, the other of a dog. In the box was a large
    needle of bronze, fragments of a small silver ornament. At the ends
    are seen traces of bronze nails. 9/16 real size.—Norway, earlier
    iron age.
]

We see in smaller objects (as on p. 272) how highly finished were the
carvings in the earlier iron age.

When a house was built the people inquired if the ground be lucky or
unlucky in the new house. They measured the length and breadth
repeatedly, and then they carefully examined if all the measurements
were the same. If the measurements grew longer they thought it foreboded
an increase of well-being for the dwellers; if the opposite they thought
it foreboded a decrease in the well-being of the persons.

Ogmund went to Iceland from Norway.


“He measured the ground for his house. It was a belief that if the
measurement was the same when it was tried repeatedly, then the
well-being of the man whose measuring-yard grew too short would
decrease, but increase if it grew longer. The measurement was performed
three times and the yard was too short.”


-----

Footnote 184:

  Bœr or Bu, meant a dwelling-place occupied by a single family.

Footnote 185:

  The name gard, gaard, still signifies all the buildings of a farm.

Footnote 186:

  Hrolf Kraki, 34, 40; Jomsvikinga Saga, 5, 22; Volsunga, 3; Half’s
  Saga, 12; Egil, 8.

Footnote 187:

  The _sal_ is also called _Disarsal_, a building for sacrifices to the
  Disir.

Footnote 188:

  Cf. also Heimskringla.

Footnote 189:

  “The land-owner shall pay the value of the land at the _Karldyr_
  (men’s door).” Gragas ii.

Footnote 190:

  Bodyguard.

Footnote 191:

  Cf. also Njala, 117.

Footnote 192:

  The banqueting halls were called _veitsluskali_.

Footnote 193:

  Njala 120; Fornmanna Sögur.

Footnote 194:

  The _skali_ is often called the drinking or the sleeping _skali_.
  Orkneyinga, 18, 70, 115; Gisli Sursson, 29; Droplaugarsona Saga, 18,
  28; Fornmanna Sögur, i. 288, 292; Kormak, 58; Fostbrœdra, 13; Njala,
  78; Gunnlaug, XI.

  The _eldhús_ meant a hall or chief room, where fires were kept. Gisli
  Sursson, 14, 15, 97; Eyrbyggja, 98; Laxdæla, 54.

Footnote 195:

  _Dyngja_—cf. Egil, 159; Gisli Sursson, 15; Njal, 66; Kormak, 10; Bjorn
  Hitdk, 68. _Skemma_—Fœreyinga, 259; Gisli Sursson, 7; Kormak, 228;
  Islendinga Sögur, ii. 28. _Herbergi_ seems to have been a general term
  for any kind of room.

Footnote 196:

  Harald Hardradi, 70.

Footnote 197:

  Fœreyinga, 41; Islendinga Sögur, ii. 250; Fostbrœdra, 164. A
  _bad-stofa_, or bath room, is mentioned. Eyrbyggja, Forn. Sögur, xiii.
  In St. Olaf’s Saga, 82, the _stofa_ is said to be in the loft.

Footnote 198:

  A house of the latter kind was also called _málstofa_ (speaking-house)
  (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 45).

Footnote 199:

  Ingi’s Saga, 28; Egil’s Saga, 236; Njal,, 114, 199; Fms., 85;
  Ynglinga, St. Olaf, 116.

Footnote 200:

  Magnus the Good’s Saga, c. 13.

Footnote 201:

  Yngl. Saga, c. 14.

Footnote 202:

  Ynglinga Saga, 34.




                              CHAPTER XVI.
                        FEASTS, ENTERTAINMENTS.

  Conviviality of the Northmen—Recital of poems and sagas at the
    feasts—Music—Arrangement of the hall—Splendour of the table
    decorations—Plainness of the food—Order of precedence—The custom
    of drawing lots for places of honour—Entertainment of the guest by
    high-born maidens—Presents given at the end of the feast—Heavy
    drinking—Viking customs—Manners at table—General hospitality of
    the people—Waiting at table.


In reading the Sagas we are particularly struck at the number of feasts
which marked the life of the Northmen. Every event the least above the
common was celebrated in this fashion, a fashion which has by no means
disappeared from among the Norsemen’s descendants. On the occasion of
such feasts, the houses and halls were prepared in the most elaborate
manner; tapestry and embroidered cloths were hung on the walls, and
spread over the benches. Poems and Sagas were recited, and music was
also occasionally introduced. Among other stringed instruments, the
Sagas mention as used at feasts, were, besides the harp, the _fidla_
(probably fiddle) and _gigja_ (also probably a kind of fiddle).

In some cases as soon as the dishes had been put on the table the
enjoyment of the repast was heightened by music.


“When King Olaf of Sweden came to the table he asked where lawman Emund
was. On hearing that he was at home at his lodgings, he said: ‘Go after
him, he shall be my guest to-day.’ Thereupon the dishes were brought in,
and afterwards players with harps and gigjar entered” (St. Olaf’s Saga,
c. 96).


Harald Fairhair and Eirik Eymundsson of Sweden were at a feast with the
powerful bondi Áki in Vermaland.


“Áki owned a large and old feast-hall; he had a new hall made; it was as
large as the other, and very well made; he had it covered all over with
new hangings, and the old hall with old ones. When the kings came to the
feast, Eirik with his hird was seated in the old hall, and Harald with
his men in the new hall. All the table service was arranged so that
Eirik and his men had old vessels and horns, though they were gilded and
well ornamented. Harald and his men had only new vessels and horns; they
were all ornamented with gold, painted with images and bright like
glass. The drink on both sides was very good” (Harald Fairhair’s Saga,
c. 15).


A young Icelander, Brand, went to Norway with two of his friends. They
visited Harek, who was high-born, but very ill-tempered.


“One day he (Harek) went up to Brand with a large drinking-horn, and
asked him to drink it with him; but Brand refused, saying: ‘I have not
got too much sense, but I do not drink away that which I have, and it
seems to me thou wilt need all thine also’” (Ljósvetninga Saga, c. 8).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1130.—From Bayeux tapestry, showing drinking-horns, bowls, &c.,
    similar to those of the finds.
]


“When King Olaf approached the farm-servants ran ahead, to the farm and
into the house, where Ásta, his mother, sat with her women. They told
her of the king’s journey, and that he would soon be there. Ásta rose at
once, and bade men and women prepare for him in the best manner. She set
four women to take the fittings of the _stofa_, and quickly arrange the
hangings and the benches. Two men spread straw on the floor, two brought
in the _trapiza_ (table at the entrance to the hall), and the _skap-ker_
(a vat from which ale was put in cups); two placed the tables, two the
food (two she sent away from the house), and two carried in the ale; all
the others, both men and women, went out into the yard. Messengers went
to King Sigurd to take him his _tignarklædi_ (clothes of rank) and his
horse, which had on a gilt saddle, and the bit was gilt all over and
enamelled. Four men Ásta sent in four different directions throughout
the district, inviting the high-born men to a feast, in order to welcome
her son. All who were there were dressed in their best clothes, and to
those who had none suitable she lent clothes” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 30).


In contrast with the splendour of the table decorations, the food was
often plain, for cooking had not attained a high standard.

Ölver, a húskarl (free servant) of the chief Thórir, and Egil with
twelve men when on a journey came to Bárd, a steward of King Eirik’s, in
Atley.


“Bárd said: ‘Now we will put the tables for you, I know you will like to
go to sleep, you are tired.’ Ölver liked this well. Then tables were set
and food given to them, bread and butter, and large bowls filled with
curds were set forward. Bárd said: ‘It is a great pity that there is no
ale here, so I cannot entertain you as well as I would like. You must
help yourselves to what there is.’ They were very thirsty, and swallowed
the curds in large draughts. Then Bárd had buttermilk brought in, and
they drank it” (Egil’s Saga, c. 43).


“King Olaf and all his men stayed with his father, Sigurd Syr, awhile.
Sigurd gave them as fare on alternate days fish and milk, meat and ale”
(St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 33).


Great care was taken at the feasts to seat guests according to their
proper rank, as precedence was thought very much of.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1131.—Iron knife, ⅜ real size, in a mound with burnt bones, an
    iron comb, fragments of two urns destroyed by fire, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1132.—Sharpening stone made fast with bauds of bronze, ½ real
    size, found in a large tumulus with a shield boss of iron, several
    arrow-heads of iron, a large fibula of bronze, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1133.—Knife of iron, ½ real size, found in a stone cist, with a
    double-edged iron sword, two spear-heads, &c., and a
    skeleton.—Cairn, Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1134.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1135.
]

  Scabbard of bronze, ⅔ real size, found in a tumulus mound inside a
    skeleton, with iron knife, ½ real size, Rikirde, Götland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1136.

  End of horn.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1137.
]

  Bronze drinking-horn, the rim ornamented with a band of silver with
    figures in repoussé work.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1138.—Ornament of bronze for a drinking-horn, found with a little
    gold bead.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1139.—Fragment of drinking horn of bronze.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1140.—Spoon of Elk horn, ⅔ real size, found in the black earth in
    Björko, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1141.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1142.
]

  Silver ornament for knife (real size), found with a bronze kettle
    containing burnt bones, a gold ring, and two small silver
    ornaments.—Romsdal, Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1143.—Ornamentation drinking-horn of bronze, found with two other
    fragments of drinking horns, &c.
]


“The Icelandic chiefs Olaf Höskuldsson and Usvifr continued their
friendship, though there was some rivalry between the younger men. That
summer Olaf held a feast half a month before winter; Usvifr had also
prepared one on the first winter-nights. Each invited the other, with as
many men as he thought proper. Usvifr went first to the feast of Olaf,
and at the appointed time came to Hjardarholt; his daughter Gudrun with
her husband Bolli and his sons were with him. The next morning, as they
walked along the hall, a woman stated how the women should be seated; at
this time Gudrun stood opposite to the bed where Kjartan Olafsson slept.
Kjartan was dressing, and put on a scarlet kirtle; he said to the woman
who had spoken about the seats, for no one was quicker to answer than
he: ‘Hrefna shall sit in the high-seat, and be most honoured in every
respect while I am alive.’ Gudrun had always before sat in the high-seat
at Hjardarholt and elsewhere. She heard this, and looked at Kjartan and
turned pale, but said nothing” (Laxdæla, c. 46).


The guests sometimes drew lots for the place of honour.

Two brothers, Hreidar and Ivar, had a Yule-feast at Nes, in Vors, in
Norway.


“Twelve guests were to sit together, and lots were drawn about who
should sit next to Astrid, the daughter of Vigfus hersir; Eyjolf, an
Icelander who was on a visit, always drew the lot to sit at her side; no
one noticed that they talked more to each other than other people; but
many said it would end in her becoming his wife. The feast was
magnificent, and the people were sent away with gifts” (Vigaglum’s Saga,
c. 4).


Men and women sometimes went in pairs to the festive board, and sat
together on the same seat. The pride of the high-born girls was very
great, and none but brave men could claim the privilege of leading them
to their seats. Occasionally the women drank together with the men.


“Egil and his brother Thórólf were on a Viking expedition, and went to
Halland. As they did not ravage there, Arnfid jarl invited them to a
feast, and they went, with thirty men from their ships. Before the
tables were put up, the jarl said that the seats would be allotted
there; that men and women should drink together, as many as could, but
those who were without companions should drink by themselves. They
placed the lots in a cloth, and the jarl picked them out. He had a very
handsome daughter, then well full-grown. The lots fell so that Egil
should sit at her side that evening.... Egil rose and took her seat.
When the men sat down in their places, the jarl’s daughter sang:—

               What wilt thou do, lad, in my seat?
               For seldom hast thou given
               A wolf warm flesh;
               I want to be seated alone.
               Thou didst not see the raven in the autumn
               Croak over the heap of carrion;
               Thou wert not where
               Shell-thin edges met.

“Egil took hold of her and seated her at his side; and sang:—

                  I have gone with a bloody blade
                  And with a sounding spear
                  So that the wound-birds followed me,
                  There was hard onset on the Vikings,
                  We made angry battle;
                  Fire played about the seats of men.
                  We let the bloody corpses
                  Fall asleep in the town-gates.

“Then they drank together, and were very merry that evening, and the
next day too. Then the Vikings went to their ships, and they separated
from the jarl in friendship and exchanged gifts” (Egil’s Saga, c. 48).


Sometimes high-born maidens entertained their guests alone.

Hjalti, Gizur, and Óttar, the skalds of St. Olaf, went to Sweden in
order to reconcile the king to St. Olaf.


“They went one day to the house of the king’s daughter Ingigerd; she sat
and drank with many men. She received them well, for they were known to
her.... They sat there the greater part of the day and drank; she put
many questions to Hjalti, and asked him to come often and talk with her.
He did so” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 71 (Heimskringla)).


At the end of a feast presents were given to the guests.

Thorgeir, the famous Godir (lawman), who accepted Christianity on the
people’s behalf at the Althing A.D. 1000, made a feast.


“After the feast Thorgeir gave large gifts. He gave his kinsman Finnbogi
five stud-horses, dandelion yellow in colour. It was said that they were
the best horses in Nordlendinga-fjordung (the northern quarter of
Iceland)” (Finnboga Saga, c. 23).


When Harald Fairhair came to Halogaland, great feasts were prepared for
his reception on his own farms among his lendirmen or powerful bœndr.
The feast that Thorolf prepared was so magnificent, that the king was
jealous of it.


“The king had nearly three hundred men when he came to the feast, but
Thórólf had five hundred men already there. Thórólf had prepared a large
corn-barn, and set benches in it; there they drank, for no other room
was large enough for them all to be in it together. Shields were hung
all round the room. The king sat down in a high-seat. When the room was
full from one end to the other, he looked round and got red in his face,
but said nothing, and they felt that he was angry. The feast was
splendid, and all the provisions were of the best. The king was not very
merry, and stayed there for three nights, as he intended. On the day the
king was about to leave, Thórólf went to him and asked him to go down
with him to the beach. The king went. There the dragon ship which
Thórólf had had made was floating, with tents and all outfittings.
Thórólf gave it to the king, and asked him to consider that so many
guests had been invited to do him honour, and not to compete with him.
The king took this well” (Egil’s Saga, c. 11).


Very many Sagas give instances of the heavy drinking at these feasts.

The Norwegian chief Thórólf Skjálg was at warfare one summer, and in the
autumn when he came home he made a great feast.


“His foster-son Rögnvald said to the cup-bearers, that if men got very
drunk in the beginning the feast would be considered a great feast, and
told them to carry as much drink in as they could. Then Rögnvald burnt
the hall, and the men in their beds were so drunk that they did not
awake till the flames were playing round them, and they were burnt”
(Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, 145 (Fornmanna Sögur)).


“When King Granmar heard of this (King Hjörvard’s arrival) he sent men
to him and invited him to a feast with all his men. He accepted this,
for he had not ravaged in King Granmar’s realm; when he came to the
feast there was a great entertainment. In the evening, when the toasts
were to be drunk, it was the custom for kings who ruled in the land and
for their guests to drink in pairs at feasts in the evening, each man
and woman together, as far as possible, the old ones keeping by
themselves. It was the law of Vikings, even if they were at feasts, to
drink in parties. King Hjörvard’s high-seat was prepared opposite King
Granmar’s, and all his men sat on that bench. King Granmar told his
daughter Hildigunn to make herself ready and carry ale to the Vikings.
She was the most beautiful of women. She took a silver cup, filled it,
and went before King Hjörvard and said: ‘Hail, all Ylfingar, to Hrolf
Kraki’s memory’; she drank half of it and handed it to Hjövrard. He took
the cup and her hand with it, and said she must come and sit at his
side. She answered that it was not Viking custom to drink in pairs with
women.

“Hjörvard said that he would rather make a change in the Viking laws in
order to drink in pairs with her. Then she sat down, and they spoke of
many things in the evening” (Ynglinga Saga, c. 41).


Next day King Hjörvard demanded her in marriage from Granmar, and was
successful in his suit (Ynglinga Saga, c. 41).


In the earliest times that the manners at table of such heavy drinkers
should have been rather coarse is not surprising.


“The champion Bödvar went into the hall of Hrolf Kraki, and sat down
near the door. When he had been there for a short time he heard a noise
from the corner next to it, and saw that a man’s hand, very black,
extended from a large heap of bones which lay there. He walked up to it
and asked who was in the heap of bones; he was answered, timidly: ‘I am
called Hött, good Bökki.’[203] Bödvar said: ‘Why art thou here? and what
art thou doing?’ Hött answered: ‘I make me a shield-burgh, my good
Bökki.’ Bödvar took hold of him and pulled him out of the heap of bones.
Hött shouted loudly: ‘Now thou wantest me to be killed; I had prepared
myself so well for defence before, and now thou hast torn my
shield-burgh asunder....” Bödvar took him and carried him out of the
hall to a lake in the neighbourhood; and few saw it, and he washed him
all over his body. Bödvar then went to the seat he had been sitting in
before, and led Hött with him, and seated him at his side. Hött was so
frightened that all his limbs trembled, but he thought nevertheless that
this man was going to help him. Evening approached and the men came into
the hall, and the champions of Hrólf saw that Hött was seated on the
bench, and they thought the man who had done that had been rather
shameless. Hött had a dismal look when he saw his acquaintances the
hirdmen, for he had only met with unkindness from them; he wished
greatly to live and go back to his bone-heap, but Bödvar held him so
that he could not run away.... The hirdmen threw first small bones
across the floor to Bödvar and Hött; Bödvar pretended not to see this.
Hött was so frightened that he took neither food nor drink, expecting to
be hit every moment; he said to Bödvar: ‘My good Bökki, now a large
joint-bone is going to hit thee, and it is meant to harm us.’ Bödvar
told him to be silent, and parried it with the hollow of his hand; he
got hold of the joint-bone, with the leg attached, and threw it back at
the man who cast it, and into his face, so strongly that he was slain.
The hirdmen became much alarmed. The news reached King Hrolf and his
champions in the castle that a tall man had come to the hall and killed
one of the hirdmen, and they wanted him to be slain. The king asked if
the hirdman had been killed without cause. ‘Almost so,’ they said. When
he heard the truth, he said: ‘The man shall not be slain; you have got
into a bad habit of throwing bones at harmless men; it is a disgrace to
me, and a great shame for you to do such things. I have often spoken of
this before, but you have taken no heed; call the man whom you have now
assailed, that I may know who he is.’ Bödvar came before the king, and
became his hirdman” (Hrolf Kraki’s Saga, c. 43).


It was a great recommendation for a man, when it could be said that his
house afforded accommodation to every one. Hospitality was a leading
trait in the character of the people. In the code of conduct known as
Havamal (see p. 401) we see that the stranger must be well received, and
the Sagas give some remarkable examples of the generous hospitality of
the people, among them that of Geirrid, who had emigrated from Norway to
Iceland:—


“Geirrid settled in Borgardal, inside Alpta fjord. She caused her house
to be built across the high-road, so that all were obliged to ride
through it. A table set with food, which was given to every one who
wanted it, always stood ready.[204] Owing to this she was looked upon as
a high-minded woman” (Eyrbyggja, c. 8).


“Some winters later, Hörd Grimkelson, with his wife Helga, Sigurd,
foster-son of Torfi, Helgi Sigmundarson, and thirty men, landed at
Eyrar, in Iceland. At that time Hörd was thirty winters old; he had then
been abroad for fifteen winters in succession, and had got much property
and honour. Hlugi the red, from Hólm, came to the ship, and invited him
and all his men to stay with him, and did everything most honourable to
them. Hörd took this well, and thought it a good invitation; he went to
him with twenty-five men, and they were treated with ale all the winter,
with the greatest liberality” (Hörd’s Saga, c. 19).


There are several passages in the Sagas from which we see that the usual
length of time for a visit was three days.

When Einar, the poet, went to Iceland, he called on Egil, who was not at
home.


“Einar waited three nights for him; as it was not customary to make a
visit longer than three nights, he prepared to go away” (Egil’s Saga, c.
82).


The waiting at the tables was performed by servants, called _skenkjarar_
(fillers), who filled the horns from the _skapker_, and carried them
round; even women of rank on special occasions filled the horns for the
guests and brought them to them.

After a feast, it was the custom for the host to provide those of his
guests who required them with horses and all necessaries for their
journey home.

-----

Footnote 203:

  Pet name of Bödvar.

Footnote 204:

  Cf. also Landnama, Part ii. 6.




                             CHAPTER XVII.
                             DRESS OF MEN.

  Luxury in dress—Material used—Popular colours—Everyday
    dress—Various garments—Belts of silver and gold—Cloaks—Trailing
    gowns—Shoes—Plaids—Gloves—Hats—Moustaches and beards—Hair worn
    long—Fashions—Splendour of chiefs’ accoutrements.


The finds as well as the Sagas, which are confirmed by the Bayeux
tapestry, show that from a very early period the people of the North
dressed with great luxury; but, with the exception of the complete
garments of the bog finds, only fragments of wearing apparel belonging
to the iron age have been discovered, which in most instances are
thoroughly discoloured.

In the Sagas we have only partial descriptions of the dress worn by men
and women, and though many names of pieces of clothing are mentioned,
very little light is otherwise thrown upon the subject.

The material used for clothing seems to have been the same for both
sexes—linen, wool, silk, skins, and furs. Among the costly materials
mentioned is “_pell_” which is supposed to be like velvet. The materials
were sometimes seamed with gold and silver thread, or embroidered. It
was the custom to have a border on many of the clothes called _hlad_,
which was either a band, ribbon, or a kind of lace.

Blue, red, green, scarlet, and purple, were the colours most in favour;
grey was the colour for everyday use, and white _vadmal_, a coarse or
thick woollen stuff, was the distinctive clothing for slaves.

The trousers were worn at a very early time, as we have seen from the
Bog finds, and were kept in their proper place by a belt round the
waist, and had the socks knitted on to them, over which were shoes. Over
the linen and woollen shirts was the coat of mail. Over the shoulders a
cloak was worn, resembling that of the Romans or Greeks, with a fringe
or border at the sides. These cloaks were fastened by fibulæ. The
costumes of the Bayeux tapestry agree with the descriptions of the
Sagas.

The everyday dress of Geirmund is thus described:—


“He usually dressed thus. He wore a red scarlet kirtle, and over it a
grey cloak (feld), and on his head a bearskin cap (húfa). He wore in his
hand a large sword. It was not adorned with silver, and its blade was
keen and broad and no rust on it. He called the sword Fótbít
(foot-cutter), and never let it go out of his hand” (Laxdæla, c. 29).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1144.—Cloth with representation of lion or leopard. ⅓ real
    size.—Mammen find.
]


Vigaskúta saw “that a large man in a green cloak rode from Thverá (a
farm), and knew that it was Glúm. He alighted from his horse. He had on
a cloak of two colours, black and white” (Viga Glum’s Saga, c. 16).


“Hrút started up in a shirt and linen breeches, and threw over himself a
grey cloak, and had in his hand a halberd adorned with gold, which King
Harald had given him” (Laxdæla, c. 37).


“The king had on a red cloak (möttul)[205] with bands, and a spear in
his hand. He twisted the cloak-pin off, and leaned upon the blade of his
spear. When Heming came down he took hold of the king’s cloak, but the
king bowed down his head, and let go the cloak, so that Heming flew down
off the rock” (Flateyjarbok, iii. 409).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1145.—Piece of cloth found in Bjerringhoi mound at Mammen, near
    Viborg.—⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1146.—Fragment of woollen cloth, ornamented with hands and human
    faces. ⅓ real size.—Mammen find.
]

Helgi, a Norwegian trader, was invited to stay with Gudmund the
powerful, on Mödruvellir, a whole winter. When he left he said to him:—


“‘Now, herra, look at this payment for quarters, though it is less than
you deserve.’ It was a cloak, the fur of which was lined with pell, with
a golden band on the neck-strap, a most costly thing. Gudmund said: ‘I
thank thee for it, I have never received a better gift.’ They parted
good friends” (Ljosvetninga Saga, c. 13).

“Ögmund put on a cloak (feld) of two colours, ornamented with bands
beneath the shoulder; it was very costly” (Fornmanna Sögur, ii.).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1147.—Well preserved bracelet of silk, knitted with gold threads,
    found in Bjerringhoi mound at Mammen, near Viborg. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1148.—Piece of woven woollen cloth, brownish colour.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1149.—Remnant of brown woollen cloth of thin threads and very
    loose weaving.
]


“He (Thormód) had covered himself with a double-furred cloak which he
owned. It was black on one side, and white on the other” (Fóstbrædra
Saga, c. 32).


The different garments were:—

_Skyrta_, or _serk_, the name given to the shirt worn next the body,
which was put on by means of a small opening[206] for the head called
_hofudsmátt_.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1150.—Border of fine woven red silk cloth (1½ inches broad), with
    gold and silver threads woven into it, and four-cornered pattern
    with representation of Svastica, found in the mound.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1151.—Piece of cloth with two lions or leopards facing each
    other. ⅓ real size.—Mammen find.
]

The _kyrtil_ shaped like a shirt with sleeves, and put over it. Blue,
red, and brown seem to have been the favourite colours for this
garment.[207] Sometimes the kirtle is called _skyrta_, or shirt; so both
must have been alike in shape. A sleeveless kirtle is mentioned as
uncommon.[208]

The _hjúp_ which seems to have been a short kirtle without sleeves,
sometimes lined with furs, worn sometimes over the coat of mail.[209]


“Sigurd went up on the island. He wore a red kirtle, and a blue cloak
with straps on his shoulders; he was girt with a sword, and had a helmet
on his head” (Fœreyinga Saga, c. 57).


_Linbrækr_ (linen drawers) which seem to have been often worn, and were
kept on at night.

_Breeches_ seems to have been of two kinds:—

_Brækr_ (the more common) were held up round the waist by a belt,
fastened with a buckle, which was usually wide, but considered more
showy when it was narrow.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1152.—Fragment of woollen stuff, ⅔ real size, found in a tumulus
    with fragments of a sword, spear points, two axes, a shield boss of
    iron, and a large number of pieces of stuffs of different qualities,
    pieces of the skin of a horse still having hair adhering to
    it.—Norway.
]


“He had strange clothes made—hairy breeches (brækr) and cloak, and he
had them put into boiling pitch and hardened” (Ragnar Lodbrók, c. 2).


_Hosur_[210] were a showier kind of breeches; they seem also to have
covered the feet, and to have been tight, like high stockings. They were
of cloth or skin, and resembled high boots: spurs were often attached to
them. Sometimes the breeches were worn outside the kirtle, and a man was
then said to be “girt in breeches,” the waistband serving as a belt.


“A crowd of men had come to the bœr. Some of these had walked up to
Gaulardal. It happened that a broad-shouldered man walked past them; he
wore a cloak and white hose, and was alone” (Fornmanna Sögur, v.).


_Leistabrækr_ were breeches and stockings in one, and seem to have been
tight-fitting, somewhat similar to those found in the Thorsberg bog,
which were of great antiquity. On the relief ornamentation on a superb
silver vase of Greek workmanship found at Kertch, representing the
capture of wild horses, and the different phases of taming them, the men
are represented as wearing such breeches.

_Hökulbrækr._ Of these there is no description.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1153.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1154.
]

  Bronze plates found, Björnhofda, parish of Thorslunda, showing man’s
    trousers, &c.

_Sokkar_ (socks) were also used.

Thórodd had been wounded in a fight, and his breeches were all wet from
the blood.


“The servant of Snorri was to pull off the breeches, and when he pulled
he could not get them off. Then he said: ‘It is not a lie about you, the
sons of Thorbrand, that you are very showy, as you wear such tight
clothes that they cannot be pulled off.’ Thórodd answered: ‘You do not
pull hard enough.’ Then the man put his feet against the bedside and
pulled with all his strength, and the breeches did not come down. Then
Snorri godi came and touched the leg all over, and found that a spear
was standing through the foot between the tendon and the leg, and had
pierced the foot and the breeches” (Eyrbyggja, c. 45).


The belts worn round the waist were often very costly, and of silver and
gold.


“Thjóf (= Fridthjóf) threw off his cloak; he had on a dark blue kirtle
under it, and wore the good ring on his hand (or arm). He wore a broad
silver belt round his waist, and a large bag with pure silver money in
it, and a sword at his side. He had on his head a large hood made of
skin, for he had weak eyes and was hairy all over his face” (Fridthjóf’s
Saga, c. 11).


These cloaks were the most costly part of their dress; they were made of
materials called _gudvef_, _pell_, and _baldakin_.[211] Among the many
kinds of cloaks mentioned were—

The _Kapa_, or hood-cloak, the usual colour of which for everyday use
was grey; for feasts, scarlet; sometimes lined with fur.

The _Feld_, identical with the Kapa, both sides of which were sometimes
of different colours.

There were also rain or dust cloaks, and cloaks made of reindeer-skin.

The finest were the _skikkja_[212] and _möttul_, which were only worn by
the high-born chiefs, being a characteristic of birth, just like the
paludamentum or military cloak of the Romans, or the chlamys of the
Greeks, which were of scarlet bordered with purple. The cloaks and
mantles (möttul) were fastened round the neck or held up by bands or
straps, which were so long that they could be put on the head.

The cloak seems to have been long enough for a sword to be carried under
it without being seen.


“Then Thorólf put off his strap-mantle (_seilamöttul_), which was of
scarlet, lined with grey fur. He laid it over Thorstein, but it did not
reach lower down than his waist when he rose. He then took it off and
told him to wear it himself, and give him another garment, though it
might not be as fine. Thorólf then fetched a hairy cloak (lod-kápa), and
told him to put it on. He threw it over him, and it was neither too long
nor too short” (Svarfdæla Saga).


“He (Sigurd) wore blue breeches, a shirt, and a mantle (_möttul_) with
straps (_tygil_) for over-garment. He looked down and kept the
mantle-straps in his hands, and by turns put them on and off his head.
When they had passed the cape they had got merry and drunk, rowed hard
and kept little guard. Sigurd rose and went to the gunwale, and his two
guards did the same, and both took his mantle and held it up as was the
custom to do with highborn men” (Magnus Blind, c. 16).


“Halldór had on a cloak on which were long brooches[213] as was then
customary” (Laxdæla, ch. 75).[214]


The Slœdur was a trailing gown of costly stuff embroidered with gold and
ornamented with bands.

In the time of Olaf Kyrri (the Quiet, 1066–93) the men’s gowns had
trains, laced on the side, with sleeves 10 feet long, so tight that they
had to be pulled on with a leather thong, and jerked up to the shoulder.
These gowns were soon considered old-fashioned: it was also customary to
wear gold rings round the legs.


“In the days of King Olaf Kyrri, drinking at the inns and parting-bouts
began in the trading-towns, and the people became fond of show; they
wore costly breeches laced tight to the leg, and some fastened gold
rings round their legs; the men wore trailing gowns (drag-kyrtil), laced
on the sides, with sleeves ten feet in length, and so narrow that they
had to be put on with a running-string and laced tight up to the
shoulder; the shoes were high, sewed with silk, and some of them
ornamented with gold. There was much other display at this time” (Olaf
Kyrri, c. 2).


This sort of sleeve belonged to the old-fashioned kind of clothing.


“He (Arinbjörn) gave Egil as Yule-gift a gown (_slœdur_) of silk,
largely embroidered with gold, and set with gold-buttons all the way
down the front; he had this made so as to fit Egil. Arinbjörn also gave
him a new cut suit of clothes, of many- English cloth” (Egil’s
Saga, 70).


Erling jarl was tall and brawny, somewhat high-shouldered, with a long
and thin face and light complexion; he was very grey-haired, and carried
his head on one side. He was amiable and high-minded, and wore
old-fashioned clothes, high-necked and long-sleeved, kirtles and shirts,
and foreign cloaks (valaskikkja)[215] and high shoes. Thus also he
dressed King Magnus while he was young, but as soon as he had his own
way he dressed very showily (Magnus Erlingsson’s Saga, c. 37).


Shoes made of leather or skins were used, and made fast by strings,
sometimes adorned with fringes: silk strings were wrapped round the leg
to the knees, and sometimes very high shoes were worn, often seamed with
silk and partly covered with gold, but they were old-fashioned.


“It is told about his (Sigurd’s) dress, that he wore a blue kirtle and
blue hose, high shoes laced round his legs, a grey cloak (kápa) and a
grey broad-brimmed hat and a hood over his face, a staff in his hand
with a gilt silver-mounting at the upper end, from which a silver ring
hung” (St. Olaf’s Saga,[216] c. 31).


“Sigurd jarl had a brown kirtle and a red cloak, the skirts of which
were folded up; he wore shoes made of the skin of sheep’s legs; he had a
shield and the sword called Bastard” (Magnus Erlingsson’s Saga, c. 13).


“The king (St. Olaf) and his men went into the bath and laid their
clothes on the ground, and a tent was pitched over it. At that time it
was common to wear silk strings like garters, which were wound round the
leg from the shoe to the knee; the first and high-born men always wore
them, and the king and Björn had the same.... Björn always had these
thongs around his legs while he lived, and was buried with them”
(Bjarnar Saga Hitdælakappa).


Magnus Barefoot (1093–1103) adopted the Scotch custom (then also used in
Ireland) of having _bare legs_ and _plaids_, but this fashion was
antiquated a hundred years later.


“It is told that when Magnus came from _Vestrviking_ (warfare in the
west), he and many of his men adopted the customs in dress that were
common in the western lands (Scotland and Ireland). They walked
bare-legged in the streets, and wore short kirtles and over-garments”
(Magnus Barefoot, c. 18).


On the hands gloves (_glófar_) of skin, especially hart’s-skin,
sometimes stitched with gold, were worn; occasionally they were lined
with down. In the hand a staff was generally carried, with or without an
axe.


“Bard sat in a high-seat; he was bald and dressed in scarlet clothes,
and wore gloves of hart-skin” (Fornmanna Sögur, ii. 148).


On the head a _hött_ (hat) was worn. _Skálhatt_ (a hat formed like a
bowl) is mentioned, also black, grey, and white hats. Another
head-covering mentioned is a silken cap ornamented with lace; those from
Gardariki seem to have been most appreciated.

After a battle at sea between King Ingi and Sigurd Slembidjákn, a
pretender to the crown of Norway, in which Ingi got the victory, Sigurd
jumped overboard and took off his coat-of-mail while swimming under his
shield. The king’s men nevertheless found him.


“Thjóstólf Alason went to him (Sigurd) where he sat and struck off his
head a silk cap ornamented with lace bands.”[217]


“Thorkel Sursson had on his head a hat from Gardariki, a grey fur cloak,
with a gold buckle on the shoulder, and a sword in his hand” (Gisli
Súrsson, p. 55).


Karl and Leif saw a man approaching, “who had in his hand a cudgel
(_refdi_), wore a broad-brimmed hat, and a green woollen cloak; he was
barefooted, but had linen breeches tied (with a band) round his legs”
(St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 153).


“The everyday dress of Án was a white fur-coat, so long that it touched
his heels; a grey short fur-coat over it reached down to the middle of
the calf of his leg; over it was a red kirtle, which reached below the
knee. Over this was a common trading cloth blouse (stakk), which reached
to the middle of his thigh. He had a hat on his head, and a chopping-axe
in his hand” (An Bogsveigi’s Saga, c. 5).


The wearing of moustaches by warriors seems to have been very common
from the earliest time; this is seen from the bracteates and antiquities
belonging to the earlier and later iron age. The custom, which continued
to the end of the Pagan era, and which is also well illustrated in the
Bayeux tapestry, was so common that it is but seldom mentioned in the
Sagas.

                    Laughed then Jormunrek,
                    Put his hand on his moustaches;
                    He did not want tumult,
                    Was drunk with wine;
                    Shook his brown hair,
                    Looked on his white shield;
                    Let the golden cup
                    Turn in his hand.

                                (Hamdismál, 20.)

After the burning of Njal, Skarphedin, his son, was found dead.


“He had been standing at the gable, and the greater part of his legs
were burnt up to his knees, but the rest of his body was not burnt; his
eyes were open and not swollen; he had bitten his moustache, and had
struck with the axe so fast into the gable that its blade went in as far
as its middle, and therefore it was not softened” (Njala, c. 132).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1155.—Man with moustache; reverse of silver coin with ship.
]

A peculiar story is related of Ögmund Eythjófsbani, a famous Viking,
full of witchcraft and devilry, who often fought against Örvarodd.


“When Ögmund left Odd he went into Austrveg (eastern lands) and married
the daughter of Geirröd the Jötun, and made all the kings in Austrveg
pay tax to him; every twelve months they were to send him their lower
and upper moustache. From these Ögmund had a fur cloak made” (Orvar
Odd’s Saga, c. 23).


The men wore their hair long, hanging over their neck; their foreheads
were ornamented with a gold band like a diadem, and from the finds we
learn that they parted their hair in the middle.


“Kjartan, Olaf’s son, grew up at Hjardarholt; he was the handsomest of
men born in Iceland. He had fine and marked features in his face, with
most beautiful eyes and fair complexion; he had much hair as fine as
silk, which fell down in locks. He was large and strong as his mother’s
father Egil (Skallagrimsson), or Thorolf had been. He was better shaped
than any man, so that all wondered who saw him; he also fought better
than most other men; he was a good smith, and swam better than any other
man; he surpassed others greatly in all idrottir; he was better liked
and more humble than any other man, so that every child loved him; he
was merry and open-handed. Olaf (the Irish) loved him most of all his
children” (Laxdæla Saga, ch. 38).


“He (Hakon jarl) was the most handsome man that men had seen, with long
hair, fine as silk, and a gold band on his head” (Fornmanna Sögur, iv.).


“Odd was dressed every day in a scarlet kirtle, and had a _gullhlad_
(gold band) tied round his head” (Orvar Odd, c. 1).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1156.—Fragments of the upper part of a bronze kettle (the eyes
    had probably been adorned with stones), showing how men parted their
    hair.—Bog find, Fyen.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1157.—Ornaments inside the kettle on another plate of bronze.
]


“He (Gunnar of Hlídarendi) looked handsome, and had a light complexion,
a straight nose, slightly turned up, blue and keen eyes, and red cheeks.
His hair was long, thick, and yellow, and sat well” (Njala, c. 19).


Chiefs seem to have often set the fashions.


“One summer a seagoing ship owned by Icelanders came from Iceland. It
was loaded with trade-cloaks (_varar-feld_), and they went with it to
Hardangr, for they heard that many people were there. When they began to
sell none wanted to buy the cloaks. The steersman went to King Harald,
for he had spoken to him before, and told him this difficulty. Harald
said he would come down, and did so. He was a condescending and very
merry man. He came on a fully-manned skúta. He looked at the goods, and
said to the steersman: ‘Wilt thou give me one of the grey cloaks?’
‘Willingly,’ answered the steersman: ‘more than one.’ Harald took one
cloak and put it on, and then went down into the skúta. Before they
rowed away every one of his men had bought a cloak. A few days after
there came so many who all wanted to buy cloaks that not half of them
got any. Thereafter the king was called Harald gráfeld (grey cloak)”
(Harald Gráfeld’s Saga, c. 7).


The fashion in the time of King Sverri is thus described:—


“Thou shalt always choose brown cloth for hose; it is not wrong to use
black skin for hose or other kinds of cloth except scarlet. Thou shalt
also have a brown or green or red kirtle of good and beseeming cloth.
Thy linen clothes thou shalt have made of good linen, but not much of
it; have thy shirt short and all thy linen-clothes light. Always have
thy shirt a good deal shorter than thy kirtle, for no good-mannered man
can make himself look well with flax or hemp. Thy beard and hair thou
shalt have well prepared before thou comest before the king, after the
customs prevailing at the time in the hird.[218] When I was in the hird
it was customary to cut the hair shorter than the lobes of the ears, and
comb it so that each hair would lie flat, and a short lock of hair be
over the eyebrows. It was customary to cut the beard and the moustaches
short and have whiskers like the German custom; it is not likely that
there will be any better or more becoming fashion for warriors” (Konungs
Skuggsjá, p. 66).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1158.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1159.
]

  Iron tweezers, ⅔ real size, found in a quadrangular stone setting,
    with a bent sword, a bent spear head, both of iron, and burnt
    bones.—Öland.

From the earlier Edda and the Sagas we find that kings or warriors were
easily recognised by the splendour of their accoutrements. They wore
gilt spurs.


“When the king (St. Olaf) had said this, he sat down and let his shoes
and stockings be pulled off, put cordovan hose on his feet and put on
gilt spurs. Then he took off his cloak and kirtle and dressed himself in
clothes of pell, and over these a scarlet cloak. He girded himself with
an ornamented sword, put a gilt helmet on his head, and mounted his
horse” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 32).


“King Hakon was easily recognized before all others; his helmet
glittered when the sun shone upon it” (Hakon the Good’s Saga, c. 31).


“Kjartan Olafsson took up the scarlet clothes which King Olaf
(Tryggvason) gave him at their parting and dressed himself
magnificently; he girt himself with the sword which was the king’s gift;
he wore on his head a gilt helmet, and had a red shield at his side with
the holy cross marked thereon in gold, and in his hand a spear with a
gilt handle. All his men were in  clothes; they were more than
twenty” (Laxdæla, c. 44).


“The king (Hakon) put on his dress of war; he wore a coat of ring-mail,
and was girt with the sword _Kvernbit_; he had on a gilt helmet, a spear
in his hand, and a shield at his side. Then he arrayed in ranks his hird
and the bœndr, and raised his standard” (Fornmanna Sögur, vol. i., pp.
42, 43).


“One day Gilli and Leif (kinsmen) went from their booths to a hill,
which was on the island, and there talked together; they saw many men on
the headland on the eastern side of the island ... there glittered in
the sunshine fine shields and magnificent helmets, axes and spears, and
the men looked very valiant; they saw that a man, tall and bold-looking,
went in front of the rest in a red kirtle, with a shield half blue and
half yellow, a helmet on his head, and a long cutting spear in his hand;
they thought they recognized in him Sigurd Thorlaksson. Next to him
walked a stout man in a red kirtle, who had a red shield; they thought
they recognized him with certainty as Thórd Lági (the low); the third
man had a red shield, with a man’s face painted on it, and a large axe
in his hand; this was Gaut the red” (Færeyinga Saga, c. 48).


While King Olaf was at Stiklastadir a man came to him who was not like
other men.


“He was so tall that no other man reached higher than to his shoulders;
he was very handsome, and fair-haired. He was well armed; he had a very
fine helmet, a coat of mail, and a red shield; he was girt with an
ornamented sword and had a large spear inlaid with gold, whose handle
was so thick that it could scarcely be grasped with the hand” (St.
Olaf’s Saga, c. 22).


It was the custom for those who attended the Thing to put on their best
clothes.


“The champion Gunnar came to the Althing, so finely dressed that none
were dressed as well, and the people came out of every booth to admire
him. He had on the scarlet state[219] clothes which King Harald Gormsson
(Denmark) gave him, and a gold ring on his hand from Hakon jarl” (Njala,
c. 33).


-----

Footnote 205:

  Here the word _möttul_ = mantle, the same garment which elsewhere is
  called _skikkja_.

Footnote 206:

  Laxdæla, 46.

Footnote 207:

  Fornmanna Sögur; Harald Hardradi.

Footnote 208:

  Magn. Baref., 8.

Footnote 209:

  Flateyjarbok, i. 481.

Footnote 210:

  In the time of Olaf Kyrri, before 1100, very tight _hosur_ were used.
  Blue trousers and blue and grey hosur are mentioned.

Footnote 211:

  Baldakin, stuff or skin from Bagdad.

Footnote 212:

  It seems to have been the custom to fold up the edges of the skikkja
  (Magnus Erlingson, ch. 13, 37; Magnus Barefoot, 8; Flateyjarbók,
  iii.).

Footnote 213:

  Brooches = fibulæ.

Footnote 214:

  Cf. also for cloaks.—Egil’s Saga, c. 77; Eyrbyggja, c. 37; Vigaglum’s
  Saga, c. 6; Ljosvetninga Saga, c. 17.

Footnote 215:

  Valaskikkja = Welsh (foreign) cloak.

Footnote 216:

  Cf. also Eyrbyggja Saga, c. 43.

Footnote 217:

  Cf. Svarfdæla Saga, c. 5, and Magnus Barefoot, c. 8.

Footnote 218:

  The _hird_ or hirdmen were so called because they guarded their lord
  or king; the word being derived from _hirda_, to guard or preserve.
  The hird of a king was often very considerable: King Harald Fairhair
  sometimes had a hird of 400 men.

Footnote 219:

  Fignarklœdi = dignity-clothes; clothes of highborn men.




                             CHAPTER XVIII.
                            DRESS OF WOMEN.

  The gown—Festive dress—Outer garments—Under garments—Head-dress—Mode
    of wearing the hair—Ornaments—Buckles and fibulæ—Numerous jewels
    of gold.


The most important piece of clothing worn by women was the _kyrtil_
(gown). It was made very wide, with a train, and was usually provided
with long sleeves reaching to the wrists. It was fastened round the
waist by a belt, often made of gold or silver, from which a bag was
suspended for rings, ornaments, housewife’s keys, &c. Sometimes this
dress was narrow at the waist, and had a close-fitting jacket. Over the
kirtle was wore a kind of apron (_blœja_), which sometimes had fringe at
the bottom.

The _slœdur_, mentioned in Rigsmál, was a festive dress for women as
well as for men; it did not reach so high as to entirely cover the neck
and bust; therefore a separate piece of clothing, called _smokk_
(collar), was worn with it, and a _dúk_ (neckerchief) was also wrapped
round the neck. The neck and bust were frequently left bare, and
ornamented with a necklace and other ornaments. A kind of shoulder
ornament is also mentioned, under the name of _dvergar_.

                     And the housewife
                     Looked at her sleeves,
                     She smoothed the linen,
                     And plaited them,
                     She put up the head-dress;
                     A brooch was on her breast,
                     The dress-train was trailing,
                     The shirt had a blue tint;
                     Her brow was brighter,
                     Her breast was more shining,
                     Her neck was whiter
                     Than pure new fallen snow.

                               (Rigsmál, 28, 29.)


“Gisli could not sleep, and said he wanted to go from the house to his
hiding place, south of the cliffs, and try if he could not sleep there.
They all went there (Gisli, his wife Aud, and her foster-daughter
Gudrid); they (the women) had on kirtles, which left a track in the dew”
(Gisli Sursson’s Saga, p. 67).


From the four representations here given, we get an idea of the dress of
women, and the peculiar manner in which they arranged their hair. The
long trailing dress reminds us of the descriptions in the Sagas. Three
of the figures are presenting drinking-horns to some persons unseen. On
the Hallingbrö stone[220] a woman, dressed in a somewhat similar way, is
presenting a drinking-horn to a warrior on horseback.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1160.—Chain of silver. Real size. Found in the interior of a
    sepulchral chamber in a tumulus. Earlier iron age.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1161.—Silver (11th century); real size. Found with Arabic,
    German, and old English coins.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1162.

]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1163.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1164.

  Real size.—Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1165.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1166.
]

  Hanging ornament. Real size.—Sweden.

The women’s outer garments were more or less similar to those of men.
The principal were the _skikkja_ and _möttul_, a kind of cloak worn by
high-born women, without sleeves, usually fastened on the breast with a
fibula, and the _tygla möttul_ (strap-cloak), used by men and women,
sometimes with costly borders (_hladbuinn_), and lined with fur; but the
term _kvennskikkja_ (woman’s cloak) implies some difference between
theirs and those of the men. When travelling they wore overcoats, like
men; the _ólpa_, with hood of felt, and _hekla_.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1167.—Pin of iron. Earlier iron age. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1168.—Pin of silver. Real size. Found inside a sepulchral chamber
    about 9 feet long, 3 feet wide, and over 3 feet in height, with the
    remains of an unburied body, the head turned towards the north; a
    basin of bronze, a clay urn, a glass cup, three finger rings of
    gold, one silver fibula, a pair of shears, fragments of a wooden
    bucket, &c., &c. Earlier iron age.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1169.—Pin of bronze. Real size. Found in a round tumulus with
    charcoal and pieces of a clay urn, an iron blade of a knife, &c.
    Earlier iron age.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1170.—Silver pin, with gold head. Probably for the hair. Earlier
    iron age. Real size.
]


“A beggar-woman who died left a hekla, which was embroidered with much
gold. The men of King Magnus (Erlingsson) took the cloak and burnt it,
and divided the money among themselves. When the Birkibeinar (Sverris
men) heard this they called them _heklungs_” (Sverri’s Saga, c. 41; Fms.
viii.).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1171.—From Bayeux tapestry. Woman with long dress.[221]
]

Women wore the _skyrta_ or _serk_ (chemise), either of linen or silk,
next to the body. It was so made that the breast was partly uncovered.
They slept in night-shirts, as we find from the frequent occurrence of
the word _nattserk_, which in earlier times had long sleeves.

When the house of the chief Gissur at Flugumýri was burnt by enemies,
Ingibjörg, daughter of Sturla, escaped out of the fire.


“She was dressed only in a night-shirt (_natt-serk_), and was
barefooted; she was then fourteen winters old, tall and fine. A silver
belt was round her legs when she jumped out of her bed; a bag containing
many of her precious things was hanging on it” (Sturlunga, ix., c. 3).


King Hakon went to tell his queen the news that her father, Skúli, had
assumed the title of king.


“He went to the bed, and the queen stood in a silk shirt, and threw over
herself a red _möttul_; she received him well, and he was kind to her.
She took a silk cushion and asked the king to sit down; he said he would
not. She asked for news. ‘There is little news,’ the king answered;
‘there are two kings in Norway now.’”


Women’s socks or hose were called _skoklædi_ (shoe clothes); they are
still worn in Sœtersdal in Norway, and are often richly embroidered.

Married women generally had their head covered with a _höfudduk_
(head-cloth). High-born women wore a gold band, or diadem of gold, round
the head, a fashion occasionally adopted by men.


“One day Án met Drifa, Karl’s daughter, and with her three women. She
was handsome, and well dressed in a red kirtle with long sleeves, narrow
below, and long and tight at the waist. She wore a band (_hlad_)[222]
round her forehead, and her hair was very fine” (An Bogsveigi’s Saga, c.
5).


One kind of head-dress was called _fald_ (fold); others were _sveig_,
_motr_, and _krókfald_. The last word probably means a crooked
head-dress, perhaps somewhat similar to those now worn in Normandy and
Iceland. It must be concluded that the so-called _fald_ was often made
of linen, and it was considered stately to wear this head-dress high.

_Skupla_ was another head-dress, which fell down over the face.


“Once when the famous chief and Saga-writer Snorri Sturluson was
travelling, he met a woman who wore a blue jacket (_ólpa_) with a felt
hood, which was fastened round her head; she wore it instead of a hat”
(Sturlunga, iv., c. 36).


Girls wore the hair, when long, wrapped round their belt; widows also
wore their hair hanging down. Long yellow hair, and a delicate
complexion, were considered essentials of beauty.

Bui once went to Dofrafjöll (Dovrefjeld) on an errand for King Harald
Fairhair, and there met a woman of large stature.


“She was fair to look at, and dressed in a red kirtle, ornamented all
over with lace; she wore a broad silver belt; she wore her long and fine
hair loose, as is the custom of maidens; she had beautiful hands, and
many gold rings on them” (Kjalnesinga Saga, c. 13).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1172.—Bone comb, a little less than ⅓ real size, found in a round
    tumulus, with an iron kettle, glass beads, charcoal, and burnt
    bones.
]

Ermingerd, a queen in Valland, at a feast which she gave to Rögnvald
jarl,


“came into the hall with many women. She had in her hand a
drinking-vessel of gold, and was dressed in the finest clothes; her hair
was loose, as is the custom of maidens, and on her forehead she had
placed a golden band” (Orkneyinga Saga, p. 280).


“Helga was so beautiful, that wise men say she was the most beautiful
woman in Iceland. Her hair was so long that it could cover her whole
body, and was as fine as gold; no match was then thought equal to her in
the whole of Borgarfjord and many other places” (Gunnlaug Ormstunga, c.
4).


“Then Hallgerd was sent for, and came with two women. She wore a blue
woven mantle (_vefjarmöttul_), and under it a scarlet kirtle with a
silver belt; her hair reached down to her waist, on both sides, and she
tucked it under her belt” (Njala, c. 13).


When Gunnar went to the Althing he met the widow Hallgerd, daughter of
Höskuld, who


“was dressed in a red ornamented kirtle, and over it a scarlet cloak
ornamented with lace down to the skirt. Her long and fair hair reached
down to her bosom” (Njala, c. 33).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1173.—Fibula in silver gilt, adorned with niello and two green
    glass pieces. ½ real size.—Gillberga, Nerike, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1174.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1175.
]

  Beads of bronze, real size, found in a stone cist, Sojvide, Götland.
    There were 500 of these used to be fastened on a garment. Found
    with buckle.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1176.

  Ring and ornament of bronze, with rivets of iron. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1177.—Necklace of gold, weight about 1½ lbs., Thorslunda, Öland,
    consisting of tubes fastened one above the other and ornamented with
    filigree work. Two other of these have been found in
    Vestergötland—one on the <DW72>s of the Alleberg Hills, near
    Falköping, the other near Möne Church, about seventeen miles from
    the former. A similar one was found in Southern Russia, now in the
    Hermitage Museum, with upper and lower end, ending in well formed
    long head of snake.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1178.—Back of the necklace. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1179.—Belt buckle of bronze. Real size.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1180.—Belt hook of bronze. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1181.—Bronze ring for belt, real size, found with a pincette of
    bronze in a round tumulus inside a sepulchral chamber.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1182.—Heavy gold arm-ring; weight, 1 lb. 7 oz. ⅔ real size. Found
    in a very large tumulus, with fragments of a two-edged sword, with a
    magnificent scabbard of wood and bronze mounted with silver gilt,
    and partially ornamented; a gold ring, six small rings of gold, a
    gold pin, fragments of bronze kettle and vases, pieces of a bronze
    sieve, ornaments of silver of drinking horn, fragments of
    spear-heads of iron, &c.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1183.—Bracelet of silver plated with silver gilt with the
    exception of the heads of the small nails.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1184.—Spiral bracelet of gold. Real size. Weight, over 1½ oz.
    Found in the lower part of a stone cairn with a gold spiral ring. A
    little below the soil of the cairn were found charcoal, pieces of
    bone, and fragments of iron destroyed by rust.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1185.—Spiral bracelet of gold, ⅔ real size, found in a mound
    inside a cist. Weight, nearly 3 oz.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1186.—Ring of gold. Real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1187.—Gold ring, found in a mound with a bronze vase, pieces of a
    large spiral gold bracelet, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1188.—Finger ring of gold with a cornelian. Real size.—Karneol
    Sneda, near Ystad, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1189.—Spiral finger ring. Real size.—Bohuslan.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1190.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1191.
]

  Gold ring, real size, found in a tumulus with fragments of a
    two-edged sword with its bronze mountings, &c.—Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1192.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1193.
]

  Gold ring, real size, found in a round mound with four other gold
    rings, &c. The stone in the middle is a flat cornelian, the one
    above a piece of convex glass; the lower one is missing.—Verdalen,
    Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1194.—Ring of gold. Real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1195.—Ring of gold. Real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1196.—Necklet of gold, weight over 4 oz., found under a large
    stone.—Södermanland, Sweden. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1197.—Diadem of gold, found while digging potatoes; weight
    slightly over 6 oz. ⅗ real size.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1198.—Diadem or necklet of gold, weight 6½ oz., found in a ditch
    near the city of Abo, Finland. ½ real size.
]

  These types of diadems in spiral bracelets have been found in bog
    finds of the Thorsberg, and also with Valoby graves.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1199.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1200.
]

  Button of gold, front and reverse, with garnets
    _enchassés_.—Götland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1201.—Gold bead. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1202.—Glass bead. Real size. Found when ploughing.—Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1203.—Necklet of almost pure gold (99·5), weighing 6 oz. ⅔ real
    size.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1204.—Spiral bracelet of gold; weight, 7 oz. Real size.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1205.—Filigree bead of gold.—Vestmanland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1206.—Charm of gold. Real size.—Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1207.—Human figure of gold on the necklace of Möne, found in a
    stone-heap; double real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1208.—Necklace of gold, ornamented with filigree work and Roman
    and Byzantine coins of the 5th century; ⅓ real size.—Scania,
    Copenhagen Museum.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1209.—Bracelet of bronze, found in a mound at Husby,
    Erlinghumdra,
  Upland. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1210.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1211.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1212.
]

  Figures of animals, real size, in amber, found in a
    tumulus.—Indersöen, Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1213.—Diadem of gold. ½ real size. Found under a big stone in a
    heap of stones; weight, 8 oz.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1214.—Probably a diadem of gold melted with silver; weight over 2
    lbs.
  ½ real size.—Medelpal, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1215.—Diadem of gold; weight just over 6 ozs. ⅔ real
    size.—Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1216.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1217.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1218.
]

  Charm of gold, three different views.—Vestmanland.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1219.—Figure of gold; real size.—Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1220.—Neck-ring of gold. ⅔ real size. Found under a big stone.
    Weighs 11¼ oz.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1221.—Pendant of gold, found in a field. Real size.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1222.—Neck-ring of almost pure gold, forming part of one of the
    largest finds of gold ornaments ever made in Sweden, which weighed
    over 27 lbs.; weight, 2½ lbs. ⅔ real size.—Thureholm, Södermanland,
    Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1223.—Necklace of gold with a bracteate in the centre. Found in a
    tumulus in Norway with two gold rings. ¾ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1224.—Necklace of silver. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1225.—Pendant on necklace as seen from below. Real size. Found in
    a tumulus, in a deep hole, made on purpose, with a fragment of a
    silver gilt fibula, a small spiral ring of gold having been used as
    money, five clay vessels, a glass cup, fixtures of iron for two
    wooden buckets, one lever balance of spindle in clay, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1226.—Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1227.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1228.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1229.
]

  Bracteates of gold found with other bracteates. ⅔ real size.—Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1230.—Bronze fibula having the form of a tumulus; the pin of iron
    has been destroyed by rust.—Helgö, Smaaland. Collection Wittlock,
    Vexio. ½ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1231.—Fibula of iron, found with burnt bones in a clay
    urn.—Tanum, Bohuslan. ¾ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1232.—Fibula of iron, found in a stone cist by the side of a
    skeleton, with a clay urn and an iron sword, &c., &c., in Stora
    Dalby, Öland. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1233.—Fibula of silver, plated with gold, found in a stone cist
    with a skeleton seated. ¾ real size.—Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1234.—Fibula of silver, plated with gold, found under a stone
    with several glass and silver beads. Collection of Captain
    Ulfsparre, Stockholm.—Götland. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1235.—Fibula of bronze plated with silver gilt. ½ real size.
    Found in a large sepulchral room built of slabs, with a bronze
    kettle, two clay urns, &c.—Aak, Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1236.—Fibula of silver found in a mound with a gold bracelet,
    bronze ring gilt, bronze knife, and a broken urn, etc. Real
    size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1237.—Silver fibula. Real size. In a mound with burnt bones and
    charcoal.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1238.—Fibula of silver gilt. ⅔ real size.—Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1239.—Silver gilt fibula in tumulus. ½ real size.—Hagby, Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1240.—Fibula of bronze. Real size, found in a mound with a wooden
    bucket ornamented with bronze, pieces of iron scissors, a flat ring
    of gold, &c.—Near Stavanger, Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1241.—Fibula of bronze found in a clay urn with burnt bones near
    the border of a tumulus. Real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1241A.—Fibula of bronze inlaid with silver. In a mound with
    shield boss, spear-point and arrow-points of iron, belt ring, and
    knife handle of bronze, and an ornamented leather belt. ⅔ real
    size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1242.—Fibula of bronze. Place of find unknown. 3/7 real
    size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1243.—Fibula of bronze inlaid with silver, found in a tumulus
    with three other bronze fibulæ, fifteen gilt buttons, &c. ⅔ real
    size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1244.—Fibula of bronze, ½ real size.—Nordland, Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1245.—Fibula of bronze in a tumulus. In a mound with other
    fibulas, a silver ring, &c. ⅔ real size.—Near Stavanger, Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1246.—Fibula of silver gilt. The most elevated flat parts are
    niellés. There are many blue stones here and there, some fastened
    with gold. ¾ size. Found in a mound, with three gold bracteates, a
    spiral ring of gold, three small fibulæ of silver gilt of the same
    type, a bronze key, pieces of a two-edged sword, a small spear-head,
    &c., &c., unburnt bones and teeth of a cow and other animals, &c.,
    and a quantity of burnt grain (rye).
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1247.—Fibula of bronze plated with silver work, found with a
    bronze kettle filled with burnt bones, and covered with a slab; a
    gold chain, and a spiral ring. Real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1248.—Fibula of bronze. Real size. Found in a funeral chamber of
    stone, with two clay urns with burnt bones, a belt, ring,
    &c.—Lödingen, Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1249.—Earring of bronze with glass beads. Real size. Found in a
    round mound under a bronze kettle, glass beads, &c. The kettle
    contained burnt bones, and was in a bed of charcoal and calcined
    earth.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1250.—Fibula of silver gilt, partly niellé. ⅔ real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1251.—Fibula in bronze. Real size. Found when ploughing over an
    ancient tumulus. Nearly similar in form to the fibulæ found at
    Camirus, Rhodes. Not very archaic pottery.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1252.—Fibula, real size.—Bornholm, Denmark.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1253.—Fibula, real size.—Bornholm, Denmark.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1254.—Fibula, plated with gold, only a little of the metal
    remaining. Real size.—Southern Jutland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1255.—Buckle of a belt in silver and bronze, ornamented with
    garnets _enchassés_. Real size. Earlier iron age.—Norway.
]

Men and women loved to adorn themselves with jewels and objects of
gold;[223] the ornaments for both sexes seem to have been somewhat
similar; rings, bracelets, fibulæ (used to fasten together on to the
right shoulder the ends of cloaks), brooches, clasps and buckles, pins,
hooks, pendants round the neck, bracteates, diadems, necklaces, beads of
silver, gold, and glass, &c., and gold rings worn round the legs, were
most common.

The numerous illustrations of jewels and ornaments seen throughout the
pages of this work show the taste of the people, and the different forms
worn by them, even in very early times.

To gold the poets gave many figurative names which are derived from
either the myths or history of the people, and which often show in their
metaphors the different uses to which gold was applied:—The fire of the
hand, or arm; the beacon of the hawk-seat (the wrist); the fire of the
top of the masthead, &c.

Some of the rings and necklaces were of such remarkable workmanship that
they had special names, and their fame was known far and wide. Among the
more celebrated rings were the _Sviagris_,[224] _Draupnir_, and
_Hnitud_; and among the necklaces that of Freyja made by the Dvergar.


“Ulf the Red was always accustomed to be with King Olaf during
midwinter. Ulf brought the king many precious things which he had
acquired during the summer. And one gold ring he had got called _Hnitud_
(the welded). It was welded together in seven places. It was of much
better gold than other rings. This ring had been given to Ulf by a bondi
named Lodmund” (Thatt of Norna Gest).


Beads are often mentioned.

Bardi, a good champion, was going to a fight, and when his foster-mother
took leave of him


“she took out of her shirt a large necklace of beads, and put it round
his neck over his shirt.[225]

“Thorbjörn ran at Bardi and struck his neck; a very loud crash was
heard; the blow hit the bead in the necklace, which had moved when Bardi
gave his knife to Njal’s son. The bead burst asunder, and blood gushed
out on both sides of the necklace, but Bardi was not wounded. Thorbjörn
said: ‘Thou art a tröll, as irons bite thee not’” (Viga-Styr and
Heidarviga, c. 23).


Towards the later centuries of the Viking period the brooches, fibulæ,
&c., become coarse and heavy.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1256.—Fibula of bronze, ornamented with gold and silver.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1257.—Fibula of bronze, ⅔ real size.—Zeeland, Denmark.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1258.—Fibula of bronze, ⅔ real size.—Bjornhofda, Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1259.—Fibula of gilt bronze, ornamented with walrus tusk and
    garnets (later iron age). ⅔ real size.—Othemar’s, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1260.—Bronze ornament gilt, found with glass beads, fragments of
    an axe, spears and arrow heads, &c., &c. Real size.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1261.—Bracelet of massive gold, ¾ real size, found in a field at
    Vallakra, Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1262.—Silver fibula, ⅘ real size, with filigree work and ring for
    a chain.—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1263.—Buckle of silver; ⅓ real size; weight, 13½ ozs.—Björkås,
    Tanum parish, Bohuslan.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1264.—Silver buckle; ⅔ real size; weight, 9 oz.; found in
    1739.—Vible, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1265.—Silver chain with Thor’s hammer. ½ real size.—Bredsättra,
    Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1266.—Bracelet of gold, real size. Middle iron age.—Gudme,
    Svendborg Amt.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1267.—Amber beads, ½ real size.—Denmark.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1268.—Gold bead, ⅔ real size.—Denmark.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1269.—Ornament of silver, real size, found in a grave mound, with
    a large hoard consisting of two neck rings, five bracelets, two
    finger rings, two fibulæ, &c., &c., of silver, three hanging
    ornaments of bronze, one representing a human face, three silver and
    fourteen glass beads, &c., &c. Earlier iron age.—Tuna parish,
    Helsingland, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1270.—Silver brooch. ⅔ real size. Found in a tumulus. The
    sepulchral chamber was about 13½ feet long, 3 feet wide and high,
    made of slabs and lined with oak planks and birch bark. There were
    remains of several other brooches, a large bronze vessel with three
    handles, remains of a silver-gilt fibula and two small silver
    fibulæ. Earlier iron age.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1271.—Fibula ornamented with filigree work and chain of silver;
    length, 10½ inches. Found in a field at Ekelunda, Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1272.—Bronze pin. ½ real size.—Aronstorp, Öland.
]

-----

Footnote 220:

  See p. 154.

Footnote 221:

  The name of Ælgyva, mentioned on the tapestry, is evidently the same
  as the Northern Alfifa.

   “Svein, son of King Knut and Alfifa, daughter of Alfrun jarl, had
  been put in Jomsborg to rule Vindland” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 252).

Footnote 222:

  _Hlad_ seems to mean band rather than lace, as it is sometimes
  translated; the finds show that gold bands or diadems were worn.

Footnote 223:

  Among the objects made of gold were spurs, see Völsunga Saga, c. 27;
  gold chairs, Hrolf Kraki’s Saga, c. 18; gold chests, Fornmanna Sögur,
  vii.; gold horse-shoes, Fornmanna Sögur, vii.; gold dog-collars,
  Gautrek’s Saga, c. 9; gold ring-coats of mail, Sigurdarkvida, iii.;
  gold tablets, Orvar Odd’s Saga, c. 26; cows’ horns occasionally seem
  to have been covered with gold, as we see from Thrymskvida, st. 23,
  Helgakvida Hjörvardssonar.

Footnote 224:

  Cf. Hrolf Kraki’s Saga, c. 10–12.

Footnote 225:

  This was probably given him as an amulet to protect him in the fight.




                              CHAPTER XIX.
                            THE BRACTEATES.

  Gold bracteates—Peculiarity of their designs—Mystic and symbolical
    signs—Earlier runes—The Vadstena bracteate—The svastica, triskele,
    and triad.


Among the most curious and beautiful ornaments that have been discovered
in the north are the gold bracteates, which occur in great numbers, but
are seldom found in graves, and which were used, as we can see from the
loop attached to them, as an ornament to be worn hanging from the neck;
that they were held to be protective amulets, and were used by the
temple priests in religious ceremonies, is probable.

They are formed by embossing or stamping upon a disc, and the gold is
extremely thin. The peculiarity of their designs, and the mystic and
symbolic signs which are used upon them, such as the _svastica_, the
_triskele_, the _cross_, the _triad_ in dots, birds, snakes, &c.,
peculiar shapes of animals, and the head-dress of men, are very
remarkable; and the sign in the shape of an S, found also on objects of
the bronze age, makes them specially interesting.

We must receive with a great deal of caution the interpretation put upon
these signs by some of the archæologists who have tried to unravel their
meaning, and have taken the _svastica_ for the sign of Thor, for this
sign has been found in Greece by Schliemann and other antiquarians; the
_triskele_, or the triad with dots, to mean Odin, Vili, Ve, or Odin,
Hœnir and Löd; the birds to be the ravens of Odin; the human heads to be
representations either of Thor, Odin, or Frey; the animals to be the
goat of Thor, and Odin’s horse, Sleipnir. That the representations with
the sacred signs and the figure upon them had some peculiar meaning
there is, I think, no doubt; but what they really meant is a mystery
which has not yet been unravelled.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1273.—Bracteate—with man’s head and horned animal below—found at
    Helsingborg, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1274.—Bracteate—with man’s head with helmet, and horned
    animal—found at Raflunda, Scania, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1275.—Bracteate—horse (?) apparently loaded with treasure,
    probably the horse _Grani_ mentioned in Volsunga Saga—found at
    Eskatorp, Halland, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1276.—Bracteate—warrior with spear, a two-horned animal, and
    runes, found in Zeeland, Denmark.
]

The runic characters stamped upon these ornaments show them to be
peculiarly northern, and to belong to a rune-writing people.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1277.—Bracteates forming part of a necklace found at Faxö,
    Sjælland, Denmark. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1278.—Bracteate—man’s head with symbolic signs, a hand,
    &c.—Lolland, Denmark. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1279.—Bracteate—man, and two-horned animal, and runes—in
    Stockholm Museum. Real size.
]

  Bracteates.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1280.—Real size.—Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1281.—Real size.—Scania.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1282.—Real size.—Zeeland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1283.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1284.—Reverse.
]

  Roman gold coin (Valentinian), real size, found with fragments of a
    bronze vessel, glass beads, &c.—Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1285.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1286.—Reverse.
]

  Imitation of Roman gold coin, real size, found in a tumulus with
    charcoal, gold ornaments, glass and amber beads, &c.—Norway.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1287.—Bracteate from Lögstör, Jutland. Real size. On it are the
    cross signs and _triskele_ and two birds which recall the Saga about
    Sigurd Fafnisbani, or Odin and his ravens. A similar one with two
    birds has been found in Vestergötland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1288.—Bracteate. Southern Jutland. A warrior, bird, stag, or
    horse, and dots. Real size.
]

Of the hundreds of bracteates[226] which have been discovered, a large
number were found together; and those of similar design, which have
evidently been struck from the same die, are sometimes found in regions
far apart. The bracteates with the peculiar mystic signs above
enumerated disappear entirely towards the year 600, and though
bracteates are still found they are of quite different designs; for
those with representations of dragons, serpents, &c., are of a much
later period.

Many of these designs may perhaps represent the deeds of great heroes
told in ancient songs, such for example as the scene upon the gold
bracteate found under the altar in the ancient wooden church of Gudsdal
Troen parish in Gudbrandsdal, Norway, on which an armour-clad warrior on
horseback fights a dragon. The purity of their gold is as remarkable as
the skill of their workmanship.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1289.—Bracteate. Real size.—Blekinge, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1290.—Bracteate. Real size.—Vestergötland, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1291.—Bracteate with runic alphabet.—Vadstena, Sweden. Real size.
]

The most important bracteate found is one of the two discovered near the
little town of Vadstena on the Wettern, in Sweden. It has around its
border an inscription in earlier runes, which evidently must be read
from right to left. It has been ascertained by the scholars who have
made a study of runes that, with the exception of the first division of
eight, they represent the runic alphabet in its earliest form, the
letter D being, for want of space, the only one missing.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1292.—Bracteate, Lyngby, Jutland, representing a man with a
    two-horned animal, surrounded by the _svastika_, the _triskele_, and
    four dots forming a cross, a circle of men’s heads, and a circle of
    animals. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1293.—Bracteate in Copenhagen Museum. Warrior, with a sword,
    fighting animals. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1294.—Bracteate found at Hitterdal, Norway, with _svastica_, and
    dots on it. Warrior’s head with helmet over the face, and crown
    above the helmet. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1295.—Bracteate found at Raflunda, Scania. Triangle of heads.
    Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1296.—Bracteate; place of find unknown. Real size.—Stockholm
    Museum.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1297.—The largest existing bracteate, found at Åsum, Scania,
    Sweden, with _svastica_, in 1882. ⅘ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1298.—Bracteate found at Upland, Sweden. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1299.—Reverse, with horseman apparently riding on the bare back
    of the horse.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1300.—Bracteate found at Gudbrandsdal, Norway. Warrior fighting a
    dragon. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1301.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1302.—Reverse.
]

  Bracteate found at Trollhättan, Sweden. Real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1303.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1304.
]

  Bracteates found at Slangerup, Zeeland. Real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1305.—Bracteate, Zeeland, Denmark. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1306.—Bracteate found in Scania. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1307.—Bracteate found in Scania. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1308.—Bracteate found at Raflunda, Scania. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1309.—Bracteate found at Lelling, Zeeland. Real size.
]

One of the facts which attracts great attention is the different mystic
signs[227] found upon bracteates and other numerous objects represented
in these pages. These no doubt had some symbolical meaning, just as the
Christian cross when used as an ornament, or placed upon a grave as a
symbol.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1310.—Runic stone with three horns in the shape of
    triskele.—Snoldeley, Zeeland.
]

Some of the signs appear to have been common to various nations, who
probably adopted the same religion from which they spring, just as
to-day the Christian cross is the emblem of numerous nations or tribes
scattered over the globe.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1311.—Fibula of silver, plated with gold, in shape of svastica. ⅖
    real size.—Woman’s skeleton grave, Fyen.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1312.—Fibula of gold ⅗ real size.—Skeleton grave, Fyen.
]

The cross with four arms of equal length seems to be one of if not the
most ancient of symbolic signs; it is seen on the rock-tracings of
Bohuslan (of which several illustrations are given in this work),
sometimes surrounded by a ring, at others a double cross is represented
by itself. Such tracings cannot be taken for wheels or shields.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1313.—Fibula, ⅔ real size; appears to have been gilt.—Norway.
]

Bronze knives, with a cross surmounted by a ring, are also to be seen.

The _svastika_, or hooked cross, in its various modifications, seen on
so many objects in the North, is of very ancient origin, and occurs in
the Vedaic religion.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1314.—Bracteate of gold, real size, found with the door.—Tuft
    Church, Sandver.
]

Other remarkable signs are the triad, in the shape of dots placed in a
triangle, and the _triskele_, which are seen on many objects. There was
evidently importance attached to the numbers “Three” and “Nine;” but it
is impossible to tell what was the true meaning in the mythology of
these people of the triad, which is very common on the jewels and other
objects illustrated in this work,[228] and it is remarkable that some of
the graves are made to represent the above signs.[229]

-----

Footnote 226:

  Some magnificent works have been published on bracteates, the finest
  being ‘Atlas for Nordisk Oldkyndighed,’ Copenhagen, 1857; but since
  then many valuable additions have been discovered.

Footnote 227:

  We find constant mention of the numbers 3 and 7, 9 and 12, which seem
  to have been holy:—

  Heimdall had ix sisters for his mothers.

  Ægir had ix daughters.

  In Helgi Hundingsbani, ii., ix Valkyrjas help Helgi in a storm and
  save his ships.

  Halfdan the old had ix + ix sons, of which ix were born first, and ix
  after.

  Dag, one of Halfdan’s sons, had ix sons, and from all Halfdan’s sons
  there are ix generations to Harald Fairhair.

  Draupnir begets 8 rings every ix night, and is itself the ix. The ring
  did not get this quality before going through the fire on Baldr’s
  pyre.

  The following will show the frequent occurrence of the number Nine in
  the literature of the North:—

  With Harald Hilditönn were ix Scalds (Sögubrot, c. 8).

  IX nights had Frey to wait for Gerd.

  Njörd and Skadi watched in turns every ix nights by the sea or on
  mountains (S. E. i. 92, 94).

  IX days at a time were Sigmund and Sinfjötli in wolves’ shapes.

  IX nights in succession comes King Siggeir’s mother as a she-wolf and
  kills ix Volsungas (Volsunga, c. 5).

  IX nights did Odin hang on the windblown tree (Hávamál, 138).

  IX nights did Hermod ride through deep and dark valleys without any
  sun, when he was going to Helheim.

  IX days lasted the battle on Dunheath.

  IX times 60 doors there are in Valhalla.

  IX times 60 halls in Bilskirnir.

  IX paces did Thor go from the Midgard’s serpent and die.

  IX paces are red-hot irons carried (Fornmanna Sögur, i.).

  IX red-hot plough-shares are stepped upon (Fornmanna Sögur, vii. 164,
  x. 418).

Footnote 228:

  The S sign is also common, especially in the bronze age.

Footnote 229:

  A kind of trinity of the higher deities is represented in Persia,
  India, Chaldæa, and other countries.




                              CHAPTER XX.
                     OCCUPATIONS AND SPORTS OF MEN.

  Honour in which work was held—Kings superintend their
    own estates—Importance of fisheries—Skill of the people
    in the working of iron, and in shipbuilding—The Thiele
    find—Sports—Falconry—Retrievers and hounds—Dancing not
    a favourite amusement—Chess and backgammon—Several
    varieties—Costliness of chessboards—Games with dice—Jugglers and
    buffoons—Horse-fights—Parables and puzzles—Gest’s riddles.


Prominent chiefs did not disdain to take part in or superintend the work
on their estates, and neither master, mistress nor children of wealthy
families were ever idle.


“Harald Grœnski’s son, Olaf, was fostered with his stepfather Sigurd Syr
and his mother Ásta. Hrani Vidförli (the Wide-travelling) was with her,
and fostered King Olaf Haraldsson. Olaf soon became an accomplished man,
fair of face, of middle stature, and wise and eloquent. Sigurd Syr was a
great husbandman; his men were always at work, and he often went himself
to look to the fields, meadows, and cattle, and to the smithy, or
wherever anything was going on” (St. Olaf, c. 1).[230]


“King Olaf often stayed in the country on the large bœr which he owned.
When he was at Haukbœr in Ránriki, he fell sick and died” (Olaf the
Quiet’s Saga, c. 11).[231]


The well-to-do generally had a very large number of servants, both free
and thralls, to assist them in their work.


“It is told that Gudmund Riki was much superior to other men in
magnificence, and had 100 servants and 100 cows; it was his custom to
have the sons of prominent men with him, and he treated them well; they
had not to do any work, but were always to sit with him, though it was
their custom when they were at home, high-born though they were, to
work” (Ljósvetninga Saga, c. 5).[232]


The bœndr after the spring cultivation went on Viking expeditions,
returned at Midsummer and attended to the harvest; then again went on
Viking expeditions, from which they did not return until winter, which
was spent quietly at home.[233]


“King Sigurd Syr was on his field when the messengers came to him and
told him this news (that Olaf was coming) and all the doings of Ásta at
the bœr. He had many men there; some cut corn, others tied it (into
sheaves), others drove corn home, others stowed it in hay-houses or
barns. He, and two men with him, walked sometimes on the field,
sometimes where the corn was stacked” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 31).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1315.—Plough of oak wood. Length, 9 feet. Found in Döstrup,
    Jutland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1316.—Shears. ⅓ real size.—Ultuna. Earlier iron age.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1317.—Sickle, ⅓ real size, found in a tumulus on burnt bones in
    an urn.—Norway. Earlier iron age.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1318.—Sickle, ⅓ real size, found in a tumulus on burnt bones and
    charcoal, with fragments of a bone comb and a needle of
    iron.—Norway. Earlier iron age.
]

The Sagas often mention people possessing sheep, and shears are often
found. The one here represented was in the Ultuna ship’s find, and had
been placed with weapons and other objects belonging to the warrior, who
probably owned great estates and large flocks of sheep.

The fisheries were of great importance, and much care was bestowed upon
them even by great chiefs, among whom were Eyvind Skáldaspillir and
Erling Skjalgsson. The seal, herring, and cod fisheries gave occupation
to a large number of people.


“Erling always kept at home thirty thralls, besides other bond-people.
He allotted to them a certain day’s work, and afterwards gave them leave
and time to work for themselves at twilight or at night; he gave them
land for tillage, to sow grain for themselves and use the produce for
getting property. He placed on each one his value and price. Many
redeemed themselves in the first or second season, and all who were
thrifty did so in three winters. With this property Erling bought
himself other thralls; and he sent some of his produce to the herring
fishery, and some to other kinds of business; some cleared the woods and
made themselves farms; to all he gave some means of support” (St. Olaf,
c. 22).[234]


We have seen that the people of the North were great shipbuilders, and
the numerous discoveries of various tools as well as weapons show the
skill of their smiths and workers in iron, some of whom were high-born
men.


“He (Thorolf) had a large long ship made with a dragon’s head, and had
it fitted out in the best manner. He sailed in it southward, and made a
great sweep of the provisions then found in Halogaland. He also sent men
herring fishing and cod fishing, and in many places seals were caught
and eggs taken; all the produce of this expedition was brought to him.
He had never fewer free men than a hundred at his home. He was
open-handed and liberal, and became a good friend of the chiefs and all
his neighbours; he became powerful, and paid much attention to the
outfitting of his ships and weapons” (Egil’s Saga, c. 10).


“Skallagrim was a very hard-working man. He had always many men with
him, and had fetched many of the provisions and means of subsistence,
for at first they had but few cattle in comparison with what was needed
for so many. His cattle found their own food during the winter in the
forests. He was a great shipwright, and there was no want of
drift-timber[235] west of Myrar. He had a bœr built at Alp-tanes, and
had another household there; his men went out fishing, seal-catching,
and egg-gathering from there, as there was a quantity of these things;
he also had drift-timber brought in. Many whales were there then, and
they could shoot as many as they wanted, for the creatures were not used
to men. He had a third bœr near the sea, in the western part of Myrar,
where it was still easier to procure drift-wood; there he had grain
grown and called the farm Akrar. Some outlying islands there were called
Hvalseyjar, because whales were found on them. Skallagrim also had his
men up at the salmon rivers to fish, and placed Odd Einbúi at Gljúfrá to
take care of the catch; he lived at Einbuabrekkur, and Einbuanes is
named from him.... When the cattle of Skallagrim grew numerous they all
went up on the mountains in the summer. He found that those cattle which
went up on the heaths became much larger and fatter, and that the sheep
kept themselves during the winter in mountain valleys if they were not
taken down, so he had a farm made up at the mountain, and had a
household there where his sheep were taken care of. Gris took care of
that farm, and Grisartunga is named from him” (Egil’s Saga, c. 29).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1319.—Celt, of iron, ⅓ real size, found with five Roman silver
    coins (Adrian-Commodus).—Gotland.
]


“Thorstein had built a church on his farm. From this he had made a
bridge with great skill; under the beams which supported it were rings
with tinkling bells[236] attached to them, so that when people walked
over it they were heard at Skarfsstadir, half a sea-mile distant.
Thorstein took much pains with this bridge, for he was a great worker in
iron. Gretti worked hard in beating the iron that winter, though at
times he did not care to do it. He was however quiet that winter, so
that nothing happened” (Gretti’s Saga, c. 53).[237]


“Then Skallagrim set up a household in Knarrarnes, and there had a farm
for a long time after. He was a great iron-smith, and used much red iron
ore[238] during the winters. He had a smithy made close to the sea, far
from Borg, at Ranfarnes” (Egil’s Saga, c. 30).


“Ulf was son of Bjalfi and Hallbera, daughter of Ulf Uargi; she was the
sister of Hallbjörn Half-Troll in Hrafnista, the father of Ketil Hœng.
He was so tall and strong that his like was not found in the land at
that time; when he was young he went on Viking expeditions. Berdlu-Kari,
high-born, berserk, of great strength and boldness, was with him. He and
Ulf had one money-bag together, and the most intimate friendship existed
between them. When they returned from their expedition Kari went to his
bœr at Berdla; he was very wealthy and had three children, Eyvind Lambi,
Ölvir Hnufa, and a daughter Salbjörg. She was one of the fairest of
women and very accomplished. Ulf married her, and went to his bœr; he
was rich both in lands and movables. He took the rights of a lendr man,
as his forefathers had done, and became a powerful man. It is said that
he was a great husbandman. It was his custom to rise early in the
morning and overlook the work of the men or of his smiths, and see over
his cattle and fields, and sometimes to give advice to those who needed
it. His counsel was good in everything, for he was very wise; but every
evening he became so peevish that few men could speak to him, and he was
then fond of sleep. It was believed that he was a great shape-changer
(hamramm = shape-strong), and he was called Kveldulf (evening wolf).
Kveldulf had two sons by his wife, the older named Thórolf, and the
younger Grim. When they grew up they were both tall and strong like
their father. Thorólf was very handsome and accomplished; like his
mother’s kin, very cheerful and a liberal man in everything, and a great
trader; he was beloved by all; Grim was swarthy and ugly, like his
father, both in looks and character. He became a great man of business,
and was skilled in working wood and iron and became a great smith. In
winter he often went herring fishing with a _lagnar skuta_ (fishing
sloop), and many servants with him” (Egil’s Saga, c. 29).[239]


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1320.—Blacksmith’s pincers of iron, found with an urn containing
    burnt bones, a hammer of iron, 29 small glass beads, &c. ⅓ real
    size.—Skåggesta, Södermanland, Sweden.
]

                              THIELE FIND.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1321.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1322.
]

  Two of nine different weights of iron, covered with thin plates of
    brass. Real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1323.

  Iron tongs, 12 inches
  long. ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1324.

  Iron pincers, 6 inches
  long. ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1325.

  Iron tongs, 10 inches long.
  ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1326.—Flat iron hammer of peculiar shape, 6¼ inches
  long, 1 inch square at the head, and ½ inch broad at the
  pointed end. ⅓ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1327.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1328.
]

  Iron hammers (?) ⅓ real size.

Several finds have been discovered which evidently belonged to a
blacksmith. At Thiele, Viborg, Jutland, was discovered in the ground a
great number of objects which undoubtedly had belonged to one.[240]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1329.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1330.—Two mountings of iron and a kind of light- bronze,
    5½ inches; consisting of two parallel twisted iron bars, between
    which there had been soldered a square iron bar, held together by a
    bronze ring. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1331.—Two-edged sword, in an unfinished state, with
    trade-mark.—Norway. Found with other objects, which appear to have
    been quite new when placed there, and some unfinished, among which
    were two swords with similar analogue trade-mark as those found in
    the Nydam and Vimose bog finds.
]

Among the different occupations mentioned are those of salt and tar
making.[241] Salt making or burning seems to have been one of the
humblest of occupations or trades.


“A man is allowed to take bark and birch of his tenant-land for roofing
his house and buy food-salt with it, and he shall make salt if he lives
by the sea in order to buy birch and bark with it, and as much as he
needs himself, but not more” (Frostath, xiii. 4).


“A man named Karl had a brother, Björn. They were of low birth, but very
industrious men. They had before been salt-burners, and had earned money
and become traders. They went on trading-journeys to Saxland and
Sudrriki”[242] (Magnus the Good’s Saga).[243]


Among the favourite pastimes of the Norsemen were falconry and hunting.
Falconry existed in the North from the earliest times, and may have been
brought into France, England, and other countries in Europe by the
Northmen. Its existence is not, I think, mentioned in the Roman accounts
of the countries conquered by them, and the low civilisation of the
tribes inhabiting Germania in the Roman period did not admit of such a
pastime.

Men had their hawks burned with them and a number of the talons of these
birds have been found in several graves.

The inference drawn from the Sagas that men when going on a journey had
their hawks with them, is corroborated by the Bayeux tapestry, where
numerous chiefs are seen with these birds.

When Hrólf Kraki and his men walked into the hall of King Adils at
Upsala, it is said—


“They had their hawks on their shoulders, and it was thought a great
ornament in those times. King Hrólf had a hawk called Hábrók”[244]
(Hrólf Kraki’s Saga, c. 40).[245]


“One day the king (Olaf of Sweden) rode out early with his hawks and
dogs[246] and men with him. When they let loose the hawks the king’s
hawk in one flight killed two heathcocks (_Tetrao tetrix_), and at once
he again flew forward and killed three more. The dogs ran underneath and
took every bird that fell down on the ground. The king galloped after,
and picked up the game himself, and boasted much. He said: ‘Long will it
be before you hunt like this.’ They assented, and answered that they
thought no king had such luck in hunting. Then they all rode home, and
the king was very glad” (Heimskringla, St. Olaf, c. 90).


Hawks were protected by the laws.


“If a man kills a hawk on a man’s hand he shall pay a mark valued in
silver, and damages for the outrage, but half a mark if he kills one in
another place, all valued in silver” (Earlier Frostathing’s Law, xi.
25).


Besides hunting-dogs there were other kinds, among which were shepherd
and watch-dogs.


“When Olaf was in Ireland he went on a coast-raid.[247] As they needed
provisions they went ashore and drove down many cattle. A bondi came
there and asked Olaf to give him back his cows. Olaf replied that he
might take them if he could recognise them and not delay their journey.
The bondi had with him a large sheep-dog. He pointed out to it the herd
of cattle, which numbered many hundreds. The dog ran through all the
herds, and took away as many cows as the bondi had said belonged to him,
and they were all marked with the same mark. Then they acknowledged that
the dog had found out the right cattle. They thought it a wonderfully
wise dog. Olaf asked if the bondi would give him the dog. ‘Willingly,’
answered the bondi. Olaf at once gave him a gold ring, and promised to
be his friend. The dog’s name was Vigi, and it was the best of all dogs.
Olaf owned it long after this” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, c. 35).


“If a man kills a lapdog of another he must pay 12 aurar if the dog is a
lapdog whose neck one can embrace with one hand, the fingers touching
each other; 6 aurar are to be paid for a greyhound (mjóhund), and for a
hunting-dog half a mark, and also for a sheep-dog, if it is tied by the
innermost ox,[248] or untied by the outermost ox, and also at the gate.
One aurar is to be paid for a dog guarding the house, if it is killed”
(Frostath., xi. 24).


Chess, among house pastimes, was included in the Idrotter, as was
gambling with dice, music, &c.

From an early period the game of chess, or at least a game resembling
it, was known in the North; skill in playing it was held to be an
accomplishment worthy of powerful chiefs. Judging from the numerous
finds, the game must have been very common. It must have been of very
great antiquity, for it is mentioned in Voluspa.

The game, of which there were several varieties, though in what they
differed we do not know, was called _tafl_,[249] and the pieces
_toflur_. In _Hnot-tafl_, the pieces were called “_hunar_” (sing.
_hunn_, or _huni_).

_Hnefa-tafl_ was played with black and white pieces; one of them,
probably the most important, was called _Hnefi_, from which the name of
this peculiar game is probably derived. _Skak_, or _Skak-tafl_, was
played on a board divided into squares, and seems to have been most like
the present chess.[250] The board was like the chessboard of our day. To
learn the game was part of the education of the high-born, and was
considered idróttir. It must have been a great pastime on board ship,
for in many of the pieces found are little holes in the centre for pegs,
which made them fast and prevented them from being upset or changing
place when the vessel rolled. The placing of the pieces was decided by
the throwing of dice.


“After the battle at the river Helga, Ulf jarl made a feast for Knut at
Roiskelda. They played skaktafl, but the king was very gloomy.... When
they had played for a while, the jarl took one of the king’s knights;
the king put the piece back, and told him to make another move. The jarl
got angry, upset the chessboard (taflbord), and went away” (St. Olaf’s
Saga, ch. 163).


The board itself was often very costly, being sometimes made of gold,
and was counted among valuable inheritances, and as worthy of adorning
the temple of the gods; it was such a treasure that Hrolf Nefia, at the
risk of his life, sought to capture one in the temple of Bjarmaland.

Sturlaug went to Bjarmaland, and with his men walked up to a temple.


“He looked into the temple and saw a very large (image of) Thor sitting
in a high-seat; in front of him was a splendid table covered with
silver.... He saw a chessboard and chess-pieces of bright gold”[251]
(Sturlaug’s Saga Starfsama, ch. 18).


The people often spent their time during the long winter evenings in
playing chess.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1332.—Chess piece of bone.—Norway. ⅔ real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1333.—Chess piece of bone, found with two other pieces.—Norway. ⅔
    real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1334.—Chess piece of clay, found with three others.—Norway. ⅔
    real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1335.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1336.
]

  Chess, backgammon, or draughtsman, of bone, showing hole for peg,
    found with fragments of a double-edged sword, iron spurs,
    &c.—Norway. ⅔ real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1337.—Draught piece of bone.—Ultuna find. Real size.
]


“In Brattahlid (a farm), in Grœnland, during the winter, they often
amused themselves with chess-playing (_tafl_), and saga-telling, and
many things that could improve their homelife” (Thorfinn Karlsefni, c.
7).


It was customary for women, as well as men, to play at the game.


“He (Gunnlaug Ormstunga) and Helga often amused themselves with chess;
they soon liked each other well, as was afterwards seen. They were
almost of the same age” (Gunnlaug Ormstunga, 4).


“One night in the spring Thorir could not sleep; he walked out and it
rained hard; he heard a loud bleating from where the lambs were
separated from the ewes; Thorir walked there and saw that two kids and
two lambs were lying tied on the wall of the fold, and in the fold sat
two women playing at chess; the pieces were made of silver, but all the
red ones were gilded. They were much startled. Thorir got hold of them
and seated them at his side, and asked why they stole his sheep....
Thorir agreed that they might take the sheep with them, but that he
should have the chessboard and what belonged to it; on the strings of
the _taflpung_ (chess-bag) was a gold ring set with stones, and a silver
ring was in the chessboard. Thorir took all this, and they parted”
(Gullthori’s Saga, ch. 14).


The temper of the players did not always remain unruffled.


“It happened that Thorgils Bödvarsson and Sám Magnússon quarrelled over
a game of chess; Sám wanted to move back a knight which he had exposed,
but Thorgils would not allow it. Markús Mardarson advised them to move
the knight back and not quarrel. Thorgils said he would not take his
advice, and upset the chess, put (the pieces) into the bag, rose and
struck Sám on the ear, so that blood flowed” (Sturlunga Saga viii., vol.
ii. c. 1).


“Fridthjof sat at a hnefa-tafl when Hilding came. He said: ‘Our kings
send thee greetings, and want to have thy help for battle against King
Hring, who wants to attack their realm overbearingly and unjustly.’
Fridthjof answered nothing, and said to Björn, with whom he played the
game: ‘There is an empty place, foster-brother, and thou shalt not make
a move but I will attack the red piece (tafla), and see if thou canst
guard it.’ Björn said: ‘Here are two choices, foster-brother, and we can
move in two ways.’ Fridthjof answered: ‘It is best to attack the hnefi
(= the highest piece) first, and then it is easy to choose what to do’”
(Fridthjof’s Saga, ch. 3).


It seems that the pieces that had just been moved were called out in a
loud voice.


“The king (Magnus the Good) sat and played at _Hneftafl_, and a man
called out the names of the king’s pieces when Ásmund came.”


Games with dice were of great antiquity, as seen from the finds, which
prove even more than the Sagas how common dice-throwing was. The
dice-throwing of the three Northern kings about Hisingen shows that the
highest throw won.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1338.—Die of bone. Real size.—Ultuna
  find.
]


“On Hising (an island at the mouth of the Gauta river) was a district
which had at one time belonged to Norway, and at another to Gautaland.
The kings agreed to cast lots about the possession thereof, and throw
dice, and that he should have it who threw the highest. The Swedish king
threw two sixes, saying that King Olaf need not throw; but he replied,
shaking the dice in his hand, ‘there are yet two sixes on the dice, and
it is easy for God, my lord, to let them turn up again.’ He threw, and
got two sixes. Olaf King of Sweden threw and again got two sixes. Olaf
King of Norway threw and there was on one die six, but the other burst
asunder, and then there were seven. He then took possession of the
district” (St. Olaf’s Saga).


Dancing does not seem to have been a popular amusement before the end of
the 11th century; and it is only referred to in a very obscure manner in
the following Saga.


“King Godmund, of Glæsisvellir, was to give his sister in marriage to
Siggeir, son of King Harek of Bjarmaland, and had prepared a splendid
wedding-feast. Bosi was present, disguised in the garb of King Godmund’s
councillor Sigurd, whom he had slain. It is not stated how the chiefs
were placed, but it is mentioned that Sigurd played on a harp for the
bridesmaids; and when the horns were brought in the men said that no one
was his equal.... When the horn consecrated to Thor was brought in,
Sigurd changed the tune; then all that was loose, both knives and
plates, began to move; many jumped from their seats and moved to and fro
on the floor; and this continued for a long while. Then came the horn
consecrated to all the Asar. Sigurd once more changed the tune, and
played so loud that it echoed all around. All in the hall rose, except
the bride and bridegroom and the king, and everyone was moving round the
hall, for a long while. The king asked if he knew any more tunes, and he
said he still had some left, but he told the people to rest first. The
men sat down and began to drink. Then he played the _gygjarslag_ (air of
jötun-woman), and _draumbut_ (dream-piece), and _Hjarrandahljod_ (air of
Hjarrandi). When the horn consecrated to Odin came, Sigurd opened the
harp, which was so large that a man could stand upright in it; it shone
all over like red gold; he took from it white gloves embroidered with
gold, and played the air called _faldafeykir_ (the head-dress blower).
At this the head-dresses flew off the women, and moved above the
crossbeams; the women jumped up, the men sprang to their feet, and
nothing could be kept quiet. When this toast was finished, the toast
consecrated to Freyja, which was to be the last, came in; Sigurd touched
the string which lay across all the others, and which he had not struck
before, and told the king to expect hard playing; the king was so
startled that he, as well as the bride and bridegroom, jumped up, and
none were more lively than they, and this continued for a long while”
(Herraud and Bosi’s Saga, ch. 12).


Some of the chiefs or kings had jugglers or buffoons and performing dogs
to amuse them and their guests. It seems to have been customary to
exercise dogs in jumping over poles. A beggar came to King Magnus
Erlingsson.


“The king asked who he was. He answered he was an Icelander of the name
Mani, who had come northward from Rúm (Rome). The king said: ‘Thou must
know some wisdom, Tungli;[252] sit down and sing.’ He then sang the
_Útfarardrápa_ (poem on a voyage to the Holy Land) which Haldór Skvaldri
made about King Sigurd Jorsalafari, and the poem was much liked and
thought amusing. Two players[253] were in the stofa, who made small dogs
jump over high poles in front of high-born men, and the more high-born
they were the higher they jumped” (Fornmanna Sögur, viii.; Sverri’s
Saga).


“Tuta, a Frisian, was with King Harald; he was sent to him for show, for
he was short and stout, in every respect shaped like a dwarf” (Harald
Hardradi’s Saga).


Horse-fights were a favourite amusement with the people. Several mares
were kept near in order to make the horses fight more fiercely: each
horse was led by the owner or the trainer. When they rose on their hind
feet and began to bite each other, the men who followed supported and
urged them on, partly by inciting them with a stick. Great chiefs often
followed their stallions, and sometimes umpires were chosen, who in
doubtful cases decided which horse had the best of it; to own the best
horse was a great honour, and in such horse-fights many stallions were
often led against each other.


“It happened one summer, as it often does, that there was a horse-fight
(in Bergen, Norway). A man by name of Gaut of Mel, high of kin, a great
friend of the Sturlungar, had received from Sturla a good horse; it was
said by many to be the best in Norway. Arni öreyda, an Icelander, had
sent the king a horse which he called the best in Iceland; and these
horses were to fight. A large crowd of people gathered there. When the
horses were led forth, each of them seemed to be very fine; they were
let loose, and came together fiercely, and there followed a splendid
fight, both severe and long; but when the fight had lasted some time,
the king’s horse slackened. The king did not like this, as could easily
be seen. Gaut went round the circle of men, and made good use of the one
eye he had. Aron was present there, and with him Thorarin, his kinsman;
they were much displeased at the defeat of the horse. Aron was the
friend of Arni, but not of Gaut; he thought he knew why it was defeated.
As they saw that the king did not heed his horse, they went to him, and
Aron said: ‘Do not undervalue your horse, lord, for it must be most
precious; but this is not the way of fighting he is used to.’ ‘What way
is that?’ asked the king. ‘A man follows each horse, as it is led forth,
with a staff in his hand, and strikes the horse’s quarters, and supports
the horse when he rises.’ ‘If thou thinkest thou canst make the horse
stand,’ said the king, ‘then go.’ Now Aron and Thorarin took off their
overcoats, and took sticks in their hands; then they went to where the
king’s horse stood outside the circle; they touched it with their
sticks, and it started as if it knew why they had come; it rushed at the
horse of Gaut, and the latter at it, and they came together violently.
The horse of Gaut was now much pressed, for the king’s horse was
supported with strength; and it was said that it so had the best chance.
As day declined, the horse of Gaut slackened (its efforts), though it
would neither retreat nor run. Aron and Thorarin pushed their horse the
harder, till the horse of Gaut fell down from exhaustion and hard
fighting, and never afterwards rose. Gaut could not remain quiet on
account of his anger, and thought that Aron had killed his horse, and
was greatly displeased; but one could see that the king liked it well.
Then other horses were led forth, of which there is no account” (Biskupa
Sögur, i.; Aron’s Saga, ch. 18).


Some kinsmen of the chief Glúm came to him one autumn, and a feast was
made for them.


“When they made ready to go home, Glúm gave his kinsman Bjarni a red
stallion, six winters old, and said he would give him another if any
horse surpassed this one. They went home from the feast, and Bjarni at
once fed it on hay, and it was very well kept there. The next summer he
was very curious to know how it would fight. He talked about having a
fight against a horse owned by Thorkel Geirason of Skörd, and it was
decided that they should make the horses fight at Midsummer at
Máfahjalli. Thormód and his son Eyjúlf had a grey stallion with a mane
of a different colour, and always sold horses begotten by it, but did
not like to use it in a horse-fight. It is said that once the stallions
of Thormód and Bjarni met and bit each other so that they were all
bloody. The servant of Bjarni came to him and said that he had seen the
two stallions bitten, and red all over. Bjarni sent word to Thorkel that
they would not have the horse-fight, as his stallion was no longer able
to fight. Bjarni supposed that Eyjúlf and his father Thormód had made
the horses fight, as they could not have maltreated each other thus by
themselves, and therefore offered to have a horse-fight when eight weeks
of the summer had passed. Thormód asked his son to decide whether to do
it or not, for he wanted the fight. The horses were led forward, and the
fight went on well till eleven rounds had passed. Then Eyjúlf’s stallion
took hold of the jawbone of Bjarni’s, and held on until Bjarni came up
and struck it off. Eyjúlf turned round and struck the stallion, and the
stick rebounded heavily from the horse and hit Bjarni’s shoulder. The
horses were parted at once. Eyjúlf went to Bjarni and said this mishap
had not been wished by him. ‘I will show whether I did this
intentionally or not. I will give thee sixty rams if thou wilt not blame
me for this, and then thou canst see that I did not wish this to
happen.’ Bjarni said that he had caused it himself, and thought they had
not made the stallions bloody. Then they went home. In the autumn at the
_réttir_ (sheep-meeting) Eyjúlf took out sixty rams. Thormód asked what
he was going to do with these. Eyjúlf answered that he had given them to
Bjarni. Thormód said, ‘The blow was heavy, nor is the payment little.’
As soon as he had said this Bjarni turned to him and struck him a
death-blow, and would not receive the sheep” (Vemund’s Saga, ch.
23).[254]


These horse-fights occasionally led to a struggle.


“In the summer a large horse-fight (_hestathing_) was appointed at
Langafit above Reykjar, and thither came many men. Atli of Bjarg
(Gretti’s brother) had a good horse, with a dark stripe along the back,
and of Keingála’s breed (a famous mare which had been owned by Gretti’s
father). Father and son thought a great deal of the horse. The brothers
Kormak and Thorgils of Mel had a brown horse, fearless in fight. The
horse of the brothers and that of Atli from Bjarg were to fight against
each other. There were also many other good horses. Odd Úmagaskald, a
kinsman of Kormak, was to attend the horse of the brothers during that
day; he had become a strong man, was very proud, overbearing, and
reckless. Gretti asked his brother Atli who should attend to his horse.
‘I have not quite decided that,’ Atli said. ‘Do you wish me to stand
near it?’ Gretti asked. ‘Be very quiet, then, kinsman,’ Atli added, ‘for
we have to deal with proud men.’ ‘They will have to pay for their
overbearing,’ continued Gretti, ‘if they do not keep it within bounds.’
These horses were now led forward, while the others were standing tied
together near the bank of the river, which was there deep.

“The horses bit each other savagely, and afforded the greatest
amusement. Odd followed his horse eagerly, while Gretti retreated and
seized the horse’s tail with one hand, holding in the other a staff,
with which he whipped him.... The horses while fighting moved towards
the river; Odd thrust at Gretti with the staff, and hit his
shoulder-blade, which was turned towards him. The blow was so violent
that the flesh was bruised, but Gretti was only slightly wounded. At
that moment the horses rose high on their hind legs. Gretti jumped under
the haunch of his horse and thrust his staff into the side of Odd, with
such force that three of his ribs were broken, and he fell into the
river with his horse as well as all the others. Men swam out to him, and
he was pulled up from the river. At this there was much shouting. Kormak
and his men and those from Bjarg seized their weapons; when the men from
Hrutafjord and those from Vatnsnes saw this they interceded, and they
were parted, and went home threatening each other; but they nevertheless
kept quiet for awhile. Atli spoke little of it, but Gretti was rather
loud-spoken, and said they would meet again, if he had his way”
(Gretti’s Saga, ch. 29).


“Wherever a man makes the horse of another fight without the owner’s
permission he shall pay the loss that ensues and _öfundarbót_[255] to
the owner, according to lawful judgment. If the hurt is valued at half a
mark, he shall pay full rett according to law, as if it were done from
hatred or envy. Every man shall answer for himself at a horse-fight,
whoever may have the fight. If a man strikes a horse without necessity
at a horse-fight, he shall pay öfundarbót to the owner; and if the horse
is damaged by it, he shall pay indemnity for damages and rett-of-envy to
the owner” (N. G. L., ii. 126).


-----

Footnote 230:

  Cf. also Njala, cc. 44, 53.

Footnote 231:

  Cf. also Njala, cc. 44, 53, 111; Ragnar Lodbrok.

Footnote 232:

  Cf. also Vatnsdæla, c. 22.

Footnote 233:

  Orkneyinga Saga.

Footnote 234:

  Cf. also c. 21.

Footnote 235:

  Forests then existed in Iceland.

Footnote 236:

  Din-bells = dyn-bjöllur.

Footnote 237:

  Cf. also Gisli Sursson’s Saga, p. 47.

Footnote 238:

  Extracted much iron out of iron-ore—haematite.

Footnote 239:

  Cf. also St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 234.

Footnote 240:

  Among the objects belonging to that find which are preserved in the
  Old-northern Museum of Copenhagen, were:—

  A small (2¾ inches long) anvil of iron of the shape common at the
  present day.

  A heavy iron hammer, 6 inches long, of similar shape to those now in
  use.

  A pair of iron shears, 10 inches long, like those used for cutting of
  metal plates.

  Three iron files, from 7¼ to 8¾ inches long. The cutting of the files
  being straight across the length of the file. Similar files have been
  found in the Vimose bog find.

  An iron chisel, 5½ inches long.

  Soldering spoons of iron, containing remains of a very hard melted
  metal, which, on examination, has been found to be a whitish alloy of
  base metals.

  Seven fragmentary pieces of scales.

  Two bronze bells.

  An iron axe, 6 inches long.

  A 4½-inch long iron point for an arrow or spear.

  An iron spike, 7½ inches long, with head.

  An iron key, 5 inches long.

  An iron buckle, in which the pin is wanting.

  A mass of fragments of iron mountings.

  Several fragments of bronze plates covered with thin silver-foil, and
  of bronze mountings, and thin bronze wire; also lumps of melted
  bronze.

  Three small fragments of bone; the largest piece has snake ornaments
  engraved on it.

Footnote 241:

  In N. G. L. ii. 145, tar work on the place where tar is made is
  mentioned.

Footnote 242:

  By Sudrriki seems to be meant the south of Europe.

Footnote 243:

  Cf. also Fridthjof’s Saga, c. 11.

Footnote 244:

  Hábrók is mentioned in the earlier Edda Grimnismal, 44, as “the best
  of hawks.”

Footnote 245:

  Cf. also c. 44, _ibid._

Footnote 246:

  They had many kinds of dogs, some of which were very fierce. Irish
  sheep-dogs were known, and their value appreciated at a very early
  time by the Northmen, and there were penalties for killing dogs.

Footnote 247:

  Lit. a strand-raid.

Footnote 248:

  At the two ends of the cow-stall.

Footnote 249:

  Cf. Kormak, c. iii.; Hörd’s Saga, c. 21.

Footnote 250:

  Cf. Hervarar Saga, 15.

Footnote 251:

  Lysigull (bright gold) probably meant yellow gold, and we find that
  red gold is also often mentioned.

Footnote 252:

  Tungli has the same meaning as Mani, namely moony; tungl = máni =
  moon.

Footnote 253:

  “Players” seems to mean jesters, fools.

Footnote 254:

  Cf. also Njala, c. 59.

Footnote 255:

  Öfundarbót = indemnity paid for intentional outrage.




                              CHAPTER XXI.
                         OCCUPATIONS OF WOMEN.

  Weaving and embroidery—The housewife’s keys—General occupation
    of ordinary women—Queens brewing ale and bleaching
    linen—Looms—Amazons.


High-born women occupied themselves with weaving and embroidery,
participated in the household duties, and took charge of the estate
while their husbands were absent.

The wife had a bunch of keys at her side, to show her authority over the
household; and in many graves of women keys either of iron or bronze
have been found.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1339.—Bundle of bronze keys in a large stone cist made of slabs;
    found with two human skeletons upon a bed made of birch bark, &c. ¼
    real size.—Norway.
]

The women had a special habitation called _Dyngja_ or _Skemma_, which
men were not allowed to enter, and where their female friends visited
them.

In earlier days it seems to have been the custom for fathers to have
champions outside keeping guard in order to prevent men from coming into
the women’s quarters; and these champions are described as having taken
animal shape.[256]

The Bayeux tapestry[257] corroborates in many points the truthfulness of
the Sagas; for example, when referring to the dragon-ship, ornamented
with shields, striped sails, small boats, &c., the ancient wood
carvings, some of which are shown in this work, the clothing and cloaks
which are only worn by the higher-born, and which are fastened with
fibulæ on the right shoulder, and the embroidery.


“Then his foster-daughter Brynhild returned to Heimir. She spent her
time in a bower with her maidens, and surpassed in handiwork all other
women. She made embroidery with gold, and sewed thereon the great deeds
of Sigurd, the slaying of the serpent, the taking of the treasure, and
Regin’s death” (Volsunga Saga, c. 24).


“Gudrun went on until she came to the hall of King Half, and stayed
there with Thora, Hakon’s daughter, in Denmark seven seasons (i.e.,
half-years), and was well entertained; she made embroidery, and worked
thereon many great deeds and fine games, which were customary at that
time, swords and coats of mail and all the outfit of a king, and King
Sigmund’s ships gliding along the shore. They also embroidered how Sigar
and Siggeir fought on Fyen. This was their enjoyment, and Gudrun now
somewhat forgot her grief” (Volsunga Saga, c. 32).


The general occupation of ordinary women was to milk cows, prepare food
and drink, serve the men, work in the field, and especially make the
hay, card wool, attend to the clothes,[258] wash the men’s heads, and
pull off their clothes when they went to bed; a custom still prevalent
in many parts of Scandinavia.[259]

Women of high rank even superintended the work of the farm, and had at
times no small amount of authority.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1340.—Needle of iron. Real size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1341.—Needle of bronze. Real size. Found with a pincette of
    bronze, a fragment of a double-edged sword, an axe of iron, a bronze
    chain, &c.—Norway.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1342.—Silver needle. Real size. Found in an oblong mound with
    glass and amber pearls and two clay urns, in one of which were burnt
    bones.—Norway.
]


“Thorbjörn Skrjúp lived next to the farm of Thórd in Laxárdal. He was
wealthy, mostly in gold and silver; he was also large in stature and of
great strength.... Höskuld bought a ship from a Shetlandman and equipped
it, announcing that he intended to go abroad, but would leave Jórun at
home to take care of the farm and their children. He set sail....”
(Laxdæla, c. 11).


Grettir had been captured, and they were going to hang him.


“Then they saw six men ride farther down in the valley; one of them was
in  clothes. They guessed that Thorbjörg, housewife at
Vatnsfjord, was there, and so it was. She was going to the sæter
(mountain pasture). She was a highly accomplished woman, and very wise;
she ruled the district, and settled all matters, when Vermund, her
husband, who was a godi, was not at home” (Gretti’s Saga, c. 52).


One summer, Thorodd, bondi at the farm Froda, in Iceland, rose early one
morning—


“And distributed work; some took the horses, and the women had to dry
the hay, and the work was divided between them. Thorgunna had to dry as
much as the fodder of a bull, and they did much work that day”
(Eyrbyggja, ch. 51).


The mischief caused by gossiping women is occasionally referred to.


“The hall was 100 ells[260] long, and five fathoms broad; to the south
of it was the room (dyngja) of Aud and Asgerd, and they sat there
sewing. Thorkel went thither and lay down near it. Asgerd said: ‘Help
me, Aud, and cut a shirt for my bondi Thorkel.’ Aud answered: ‘I know no
better than thyself how to do that, and thou wouldst not ask me if thou
hadst to make one for my brother Vestein.’ Asgerd replied: ‘What
concerns Vestein is a thing by itself; and thus it will be for some
time; but I love him more than my husband Thorkel, though we may never
enjoy each other.’ Aud added: ‘I knew long ago what Thorkel thought
about it, and how it went; let us talk no more of it.’ Asgerd said: ‘I
think it no fault that I love Vestein, but I heard that thou and
Thorgrim often met before thou wast married.’ Aud replied: ‘No harm was
in that, and I preferred no man to Gisli so there was no dishonour in
it; let us leave off this talk.’ And so they did. Thorkel heard every
word, and exclaimed: ‘Hear great wonders! hear words of fate! hear great
talk, which will cause the death of one man or more!’ Thereupon he went
away. And said: ‘The talk of women often causes evil, and it may be that
by this evil will be occasioned; let us think over what we shall do.’
Asgerd said: ‘I have bethought myself of an expedient.’ ‘What is that?’
asked Aud. ‘I will put my arms around the neck of my husband, Thorkel,
when we get into bed this evening and be very affectionate; his mind
will change at this, so that he will forgive me. I will also tell him
that this is such a lie, that it is of no consequence though we have
babbled about it. But if he should want to make any fuss about it, give
me other advice. Or what expedient art thou going to take?...’ In the
evening Gisli came home from his work. It was the custom of Thorkel to
thank his brother Gisli for the work; this time he did not, and spoke
not a word to him. Gisli asked: ‘Art thou not well, brother, as thou art
so silent?’ Thorkel answered: ‘I am not sick, but this is worse than
sickness.’ Gisli asked: ‘Have I done anything which thou dislikest,
brother?’ ‘Nothing,’ said Thorkel. Gisli said: ‘It is well, for I would
least of all that we should disagree. But nevertheless I should like
much to know what is the cause of thy sadness.’ Thorkel answered: ‘Thou
wilt know it, although later.’ Gisli went away, and then went to bed.
Thorkel retired first. When Asgerd came to bed Thorkel said: ‘I do not
mean thee to sleep here this night.’ She said: ‘What is more befitting
than that I should sleep with my husband? or why has thy mind changed so
soon? But what is the cause?’ ‘Thou knowest the cause,’ said Thorkel,
‘and I know it also.’ ‘What is the need of talking in this way?’ added
she; ‘believe not the foolish talk of us women, for when we are alone we
always chatter about things in which there is little truth; and so it is
in this case.’ Asgerd then put both arms around his neck, and was very
affectionate, and begged him not to believe such things. Thorkel told
her to go away. Asgerd said: ‘... I give thee two choices: either to
take as unsaid what we have talked about, and not believe that which is
not true; or that I at once name my witnesses and declare separation
from thee. Then I will do what I like, and it may be that thou then wilt
have reason to speak of real enmity. I shall let my father claim my
_mund_ and dower.’ Thorkel was silent, but after a while said: ‘I think
it is best for thee to creep under there at the bedside to-night.’ She
got into bed, and they agreed as if nothing had occurred. Aud went to
the bed of her husband Gisli, and told him all the talk of herself and
Asgerd. She begged him not to be angry, and to give good advice if he
thought necessary. ‘I know that Thorkel wants my brother Vestein to be
killed, if possible.’ Gisli answered: ‘I cannot give any good advice,
but I will not blame thee for this, because some one must speak the
words of fate’” (Gisli Sursson’s Saga).


Even queens attended to the brewing of ale and bleaching of linen.[261]


“One day when Thordis went out to her linen,[262] the weather was fine,
the sun shone and the wind blew from the south” (Ljosvetninga, ch. 5).


“King Alrek, who lived in Alreksstadir, ruled over Hördaland; he was
married to Signy, a king’s daughter from Vörs. One of his hirdmen, Koll,
followed him north into Sogn, and told him much of the beauty of
Geirhild, Drif’s daughter; he had seen her at the brewing of ale, and
said he wanted him to marry her. Hött, who proved to be Odin, went to
visit her when she was at her linen, and bargained with her that Alrek
should marry her, but that she should invoke him for all things. The
king saw her on his way home, and made their wedding the same autumn. He
rewarded Koll well for his faithfulness, and gave him jarldom and
residence in Kollsey, south of Hardsæ which is a populous district. King
Alrek could not have them both as wives on account of their
disagreement, and said he would have the one who brewed the best ale for
him when he should come home from an expedition. They vied in the
ale-brewing. Signy invoked Freyja, and Geirhild, Hött, who gave his
spittle as ferment, and said he wanted for his help that which was
between the tub and herself;[263] the ale proved to be good; then Alrek
sang:

                          Geirhild, my maiden,
                          Good is this ale,
                          If no defect
                          Follows it;
                          I see hanging
                          From a high gallows
                          Thy son, woman,
                          Given to Odin.

In that year, Vikar, the son of King Alrek and Geirhild was born”
(Half’s Saga, c. i.).


That the people knew the art of weaving[264] we have ample proofs in the
sagas, and also in the finds. From the following description we know
what the looms were like.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1343.—Ancient loom from the Färoes in Bergen Museum.
]


“It happened one morning, Good Friday, in Kateness (Caithness,
Scotland), that a man called Dorrud went out of doors, and saw that
twelve men were riding together to a woman’s house and there
disappeared. He went there and looked through a ‘light hole’ and saw
other women who had set up a web on the loom. The weights (whorles) were
human heads, but the woof and the warp were intestines of men, a spear
was used as a spindle and an arrow as a shuttle” (Njal Saga).


Whorls are very common in the graves.

Many examples occur of women taking to the profession of arms, and often
fighting as bravely as the most valiant warriors;[265] and that this
custom was not altogether unknown in some parts of Europe at a later
period than that of the Viking age is shown by the appearance of Joan of
Arc.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1344.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1345.
]

  Whorle of spindle of burnt clay, ⅔ real size, found by the side of a
    clay urn containing burnt bones in an oblong mound—Greby,
    Bohuslan. From a neighbouring hill one can count about 160 tumuli,
    sixty of which are oblong—varying from 25 to 36 feet in length,
    and 15 to 20 feet in width—several have memorial stones upon them,
    the highest being 14 feet.—Earlier iron age.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1346.—Specimen of a peculiar weaving shuttle formed in the shape
    of a short double-edged blade—the back being formed for putting on a
    handle. Specimens found in several women’s graves. About ¼ real
    size.—Norway.
]


“Svafa, the daughter of Bjartmar jarl, gave birth to a girl; most people
thought she ought to be exposed, and said she would not have the
character of a woman if she became like the kinsmen of her father.[266]
The jarl had her besprinkled with water, and brought up and called her
Hervör, and said the kin of Arngrim’s son was not quite dead while she
was alive. When she grew up she was fair; she practised more shooting
and the handling of sword and shield than sewing and embroidering; she
was tall and strong, and as soon as she was able she oftener did evil
than good; when she was hindered from that she ran into the woods and
slew men in order to take their property. When the jarl knew this he
took her home, and there she stayed for a while” (Hervarar Saga, ch. 6;
also Herraud and Bosi’s Saga, c. 2, and Atlakvida.)


-----

Footnote 256:

  Ragnar Lodbrok’s Saga.

Footnote 257:

  This valuable piece of work contains 72 distinct scenes, 623 persons,
  202 horses and mules, 55 dogs, 505 divers animals, 41 ships and boats,
  49 trees—in all, 1,512 distinct objects. And well worth while, indeed,
  is a journey to Bayeux for the special object of seeing it. The
  historical part does not take up more than 11 inches; in the space
  above and below there is a border, where lions, birds, dragons and
  fantastic objects are represented. The most accurate work on it that
  has been published is ‘La Tapisserie de Bayeux, reproduction d’après
  nature en 79 planches photographiques, avec un texte historique,
  descriptif et antique, par Jules Comte, conservateur du dépôt légal au
  ministère de l’instruction publique et des beaux arts. Paris. J.
  Rothschild, éditeur, 13, Rue des Saints-Pères. 1878.’

Footnote 258:

  Eyrbyggja, 51.

Footnote 259:

  Such expressions as “She was well versed in all kinds of
  accomplishments that belonged to women” are often used. (Heidarviga
  Saga, 21; Viglund, 17.)

Footnote 260:

  1 ell = 2 feet.

Footnote 261:

  Half’s Saga, i.

Footnote 262:

  Implies that her linen lay bleaching.

Footnote 263:

  She was with child.

Footnote 264:

  Looms can be seen in the Museum of Christiania, and were still in use
  a short time since in the neighbourhood of Bergen.

Footnote 265:

  In the famous Bravalla and Dunheath battles, and in other cases,
  Amazons are mentioned; they are called Shield-maidens (_Skjald-mær_,
  pl. _Skjald-meyjar_).

Footnote 266:

  Angantyr and his brothers were all very fierce tempered.




                             CHAPTER XXII.
                          EXERCISES—IDRÓTTIR.

  Bodily and mental exercises—Love of
    athletics—Jumping—Climbing—Popularity of wrestling—Different modes
    of wrestling—Running—Games of ball—Skin-pulling—Swimming—Some
    extraordinary feats in swimming—Webbing the fingers—Warlike
    exercises—Dexterity in the handling of weapons—Archery—Proficiency
    of chiefs in athletics and gymnastics.


Bodily as well as mental exercises were known under the name of
_Idróttir_. In no ancient records have we so many detailed accounts of
games as we have in the Sagas. The education of the Northmen was
thoroughly Spartan in its character. To this day the love of athletic
games is one of the characteristics of their most direct descendants,
the English people; and other countries have lately awakened to the
importance of physical training.

Their exercises or games may be classified under three heads.

1st. _Athletic_ games or gymnastic exercises, such as wrestling,
swimming, running, jumping, leaping, balancing, climbing, playing at
ball, racing on snow-shoes, skin-pulling, &c., &c.

2nd. _Warlike_ exercises with weapons, which embraced fencing,
spear-throwing, arrow-shooting, slinging, &c., &c.

3rd. _Mental_ exercises, consisting of poetry, Saga-telling, riddles,
games of chess and draughts, and harp-playing.

In those days of incessant warfare, physical training was considered of
the highest importance. Old and young constantly practised games of
strength and dexterity; they knew that it was only by constant exercise
that they could become or remain good warriors. This made the young men
supple, quick of foot, dexterous in motion, and gave them great power of
endurance, insuring a good physique, which told on their children and
future generations. They were thus always prepared for war, and this is
the key to the character of the old Viking. We see what a healthy and
powerful man he must have been, skilful alike to strike the fatal blow,
and avoid the treacherous sword, spear or arrow. The result of such
education was seen in the powerful and strong bodily frame that was
attained by the youth of the country, the young men being of age and
ready for war at the age of fifteen.

There were constant competitions for the honour of the championship in
each of the particular games or exercises, and young and old competed
together on special grounds which were selected for that purpose, where
the assembled and admiring multitude came to witness these contests.
There seem to have been no prizes given to the successful competitor—at
least no mention is ever made of them. All that was desired was the fame
which fell to the victor, and every great warrior always excelled in the
use of weapons or in athletic exercises.

Their love of physical exercise explains how these dauntless and manly
tribes, who had a virile civilisation of their own, contributed to
regenerate the blood of the people among whom they settled or whom they
conquered.

_Jumping_ was a favourite exercise of the Norsemen. Some men could jump
higher than their own height, both backwards and forwards, and this with
their weapons and complete armour on.

Agility was absolutely necessary in order to obtain victory or escape
from danger; many a man owed his life either to a timely jump to one
side, or to a leap from a height, or over a circle of surrounding foes.


“One day as they (Herraud and Bosi) sailed near the land in a strong
gale, a man standing on a rock asked to be allowed to go with them.
Herraud said he could not go out of his course for him, but if he could
reach the ship he might go with them. The man jumped from the rock, and
came down on the tiller; it was a leap of thirty feet” (Herraud and
Bosi’s Saga, ch. 3).


“Sigurd ran down on the single path, but Leif came to where Heri, one of
Sigurd’s companions, lay, and quickly turned, ran forward on the island,
and jumped down to the foreshore, and men say it is ninety feet down to
the beach” (Færeyinga Saga, ch. 57).

“Lambi Sigurdson ran at Kari from behind and thrust a spear at him; but
Kari saw him and jumped up, at the same time spreading his legs. The
spear came down into the ground, and Kari stepped on the handle and
broke it asunder” (Njala, ch. 146).


“Skarphedin stood with his axe on his shoulder, smiling scornfully, and
said: ‘This axe I had in my hand when I leapt 12 ells (24 feet) over
Markarfljót and slew Thrain Sigfusson, and they stood there eight men,
and none of them got hold of me’” (Njala, c. 120).


“Skarphedin (son of Njal, a great champion) started up when he was
ready, holding the axe _Rimmugyg_ in the air; he ran forward to the
channel of the river, which was so deep that it was completely
impassable. Much ice had been forced up on the other side of the river,
and it was as slippery as glass; they (Thrain and his men) stood in the
middle of it. Skarphedin swung himself aloft and leapt over the river
between the sheets of ice, and did not stop, but ran sliding on the ice.
This was very slippery, and he advanced as swiftly as a flying bird.
Thrain was going to put on his helmet. Skarphedin came up to them and
aimed at Thrain with his axe, struck his head, and cleft it down to the
jaw, so that they fell down on the ice. This happened so suddenly that
nobody could deal him a blow. He ran away instantly with great speed”
(Njala, c. 92).[267]


Climbing was another of their exercises.


“King Olaf once had his ships in a harbour, not far from a very high
mountain and most steep rocks. One day two of his _hirdmen_ were talking
about their _idróttir_, and each thought himself the better, and that he
knew more games than the other. They contended as to who could climb the
steepest rock; they disputed about this so keenly, that at last they
made a bet, and one wagered his gold ring, and the other his head. After
this they both climbed the rock. The first went so far that he was in
danger of falling down, and then returned in fear, and could with
difficulty save himself from injury; the other climbed up to the middle
of the mountain, but there he dared go neither forward nor backward, nor
even move, for he had but little hold either for hands or feet; his
position was so dangerous, that he saw his downfall and death were
certain if he should make the least movement where he was. He shouted in
great fear for King Olaf or his men to help him. When the king heard his
shout, and found out what it was about, he bade them save him, saying
that it would be a deed of great bravery if any one should dare to do
it. When the king saw that no one stirred, he threw off his cloak and
ran up the rock to the man as if it had been a level plain, took him
under his arm, and went farther up with him. He then turned to go down
with the man under his arm, and laid him unharmed on the ground. All
praised this as a great feat, and the fame thereof was widely spread”
(Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, vol. ii.; Fornmanna Sögur).[268]


_Wrestling_ was a very popular pastime, and had a beneficial effect on
the body, to which it gave suppleness, strength and firmness; it was a
great favourite at the Things and festivals. The most simple form of
this sport was for the wrestlers to take hold of each other’s arms or
waists as best they could, and by the strength of their arms to throw
each other off their feet. The wrestlers often threw off not only the
outer clothing, but also their under-garments, in order to be more free
and agile. The competitors were divided by lots into two parties, each
of which was drawn up in a row with its leader. These paired off their
men to wrestle in the arena or space between the two rows, one after the
other. If one side was weaker in numbers, or one man had had all his men
defeated, he could challenge his antagonist, and the result of their
wrestling decided the game.

A more difficult form of wrestling was that of grappling, and attacking
each other (sometimes fastened together by a belt at the waist)
according to certain rules, and by systematic turnings and grip
movements, with arms and legs, seeking to bring each other to the
ground. These combats for the championship sometimes ended fatally.


“The sons of Thórd were the leaders of the games. Thorbjörn Öngul was
very overbearing, and quickly forced any one he wanted to take part in
the game, seizing him by the hand, and pulling him forward to the field.
Those who were less strong wrestled first, and then one after the other,
which caused great amusement. When most of them had wrestled, except the
strongest, the bœndr talked about who of these should contend against
each of the sons of Thord; but no one came forward. They went before
different men and challenged them, with the same result. Thorbjörn Öngul
looked around, and saw that there sat a man of large size, whose face
could not be clearly seen. Thorbjörn took hold of him, and pulled hard;
but he sat still and did not move. Then Thorbjörn said: ‘No one has sat
so firm before me to-day as thou; but who art thou?’ ‘My name is Gest’
(guest), he replied. ‘If thou wilt take part in some game, thou art a
welcome guest.’ He answered: ‘It seems to me, many things may change,
and I will not join in games with you, who are entirely unknown to me.’
Many said that he would do well if he, though a stranger, would give
them some amusement. He asked what they wanted of him. They asked him to
wrestle with some one. He said he had ceased to wrestle, ‘but,’ he
added, ‘there was a time when I enjoyed it greatly.’”

“Thord rushed at Grettir, but he stood firm without flinching. Grettir
then stretched his hand to the back of Thord and got hold of his
breeches, lifted him off his feet, over his head, and threw him down
behind him, so that Thord’s shoulders came down with a heavy thud. Then
they said that the two brothers should attack him at the same time, and
they did so; there was a hard tussle, and each had the better of it by
turns, although Grettir always had one of them under him. They fell by
turns on their knees or dragged each other along; they grasped each
other so tightly that they were all blue and bloody. All thought this
the greatest fun, and when they stopped thanked them for the wrestling;
and it was the opinion of all who were present that the two brothers
were not stronger than Grettir, though each of them had the strength of
two strong men” (Gretti’s Saga, c. 72 and 74).


Thórd Fangari challenged Klaufi, who was only ten winters old, to
wrestle, and called him a coward if he would not.


“They summoned many people to Hof, for Thórd would wrestle nowhere
except there. They began and wrestled long, until a bondmaid came into
the door of the women’s room and called it bondmaid-wrestling, as
neither of them fell, and told them to kiss each other and then stop.
Klaufi got angry at this, and raised Thórd up on his breast, and threw
him down so hard that all thought he was hurt” (Svarfdæla, c. 12).


“One summer at the Althing men were divided in two parties at the
Fangabrekka (wrestling-brink, <DW72>), Nordlendings (men from the
northern part of the land) and Vestfirdings (from the western fjords).
The Nordlendings were defeated, and their leader was Már, the son of
Glúm. Ingolf, the son of Thorvald of Rangárvellir, came there. Már said:
‘Thou art a stout man; thou must be strong; be on my side in the
wrestling.’ He answered: ‘I will do it for thy sake.’ The man who
opposed him fell, and the second and the third also; this pleased the
Nordlendings. Már said: ‘If thou needest my help in words I will help
thee; but what art thou going to do now?’ He answered: ‘I have not
decided on anything, but I would like best to go northward and get
work.’ Már said: ‘I want thee to go with me’” (Viga Glum, c. 13).[269]


Some men were said to run as fast as the fleetest horse. It was often
customary to run with loads, especially arms.


“There was in Iceland an outlawed thief named Geir, who was so quick of
foot that no horse could overtake him” (Sturlunga, ii., ch. 13).


“Harald Gilli was a tall and slender man, long-necked, rather
long-laced, black-eyed, dark-haired, nimble and swift; he often wore an
Irish dress, short and light clothes; he spoke Norwegian with great
difficulty,[270] and stammered much, and many made much fun of this.
Once Harald sat at a drinking-bout, and spoke to another man about
Ireland; he said that there were men in Ireland so swift-footed, that no
horse when galloping could overtake them. Magnus, the king’s son, heard
this, and said: ‘Now he lies once more, as he is wont.’ Harald answered:
‘This is true, that men can be found in Ireland whom no horse in Norway
will outstrip.’ They talked somewhat about this; they were both drunk.
Then Magnus said: ‘Thou shalt bet thy head that thou canst run as fast
as I ride my horse, and I will lay my gold ring against it.’ Harald
answered: ‘I do not say that I can run so fast, but I can find men in
Ireland who will, and I can make a wager about that.’ Magnus, king’s
son, answered: ‘I will not go to Ireland; let us make the wager here and
not there.’ Then Harald went to sleep, and did not want to have any more
to do with him. The next morning, when the matins were finished, Magnus
rode up to the roads; he sent word to Harald to come there. When he came
he was dressed in a shirt and strap-breeches, a short cloak (möttul),
with an Irish hat on his head, and a spear in his hand. Magnus marked
out the race-course. Harald said: ‘Thou makest it too long.’ Magnus at
once made it far longer, and said it was still too short. There were
many people present. Then they galloped off, and Harald followed the
whole way at the shoulder of the horse. When they came to the end of the
course, Magnus said: ‘Thou hadst hold of the strap of the saddle-girth,
and the horse pulled thee along.’ Magnus had a very fast horse from
Gautland. Then they raced again, and Harald ran in front of the horse
the whole way. When they came to the end, Harald asked: ‘Did I this time
take hold of the saddle-girth?’ Magnus answered: ‘Thou didst begin the
race first.’ Magnus let the horse breathe awhile; when he had done that
he pricked his horse with his spurs, and it soon started off; Harald
stood quiet. Then Magnus looked back, and shouted: ‘Run now.’ Then
Harald soon outran the horse far in front of it, and so all the way to
the end of the course; he reached the end so long before Magnus that he
lay down, jumped up and greeted him when he came. Then they went home to
the town. King Sigurd had been at mass during that time, and did not
hear of the matter until after his meal that day. Then he said angrily
to Magnus: ‘You call Harald silly, but I think you are a fool; you do
not know the customs of men in other lands; did you not know before that
men in other lands train themselves in other idróttir than in filling
their belly with drink, or making themselves mad and disabled, and
unconscious; give Harald his ring, and never hereafter, while my head is
above ground, make fun of him” (Sigurd Jorsalafar’s Saga, ch. 35).


There were three kinds of games of ball: _Knattleik_, _Soppleik_, and
_Sköfuleik_. The latter was played with sköfur (scrapers).


“Once the king (Hring) had a game called _soppleik_; it was played with
eagerness, and they tried Bósi in it; but he played roughly, and one of
the king’s men had his hand put out of joint. The next day he broke the
thigh-bone of a man, and the third day two men attacked him, while many
were harassing him; he knocked out the eye of one with the ball, and he
knocked down another man and broke his neck” (Herraud and Bósi’s Saga,
c. 3).


These games of ball and other athletic games became serious when two
districts met, or when two men were jealous of each other, and sometimes
ended in bloody fights.

Kolgrim the old, son of Alf hersir in Throndheim, lived at Ferstikla in
Iceland; he was one of the first settlers.


“Kolgrim sent word to the men of Botn to have _Sköfuleikar_ and
_Knattleikar_ at Sand, to which they agreed. The games began and
continued until after Yule; the men of Botn were usually defeated, for
Kolgrim arranged it so that the men from Strandir were the stronger in
the game. Many shoes were used up by the men of Botn, as they often
walked there; and the hide of an ox was cut up into shoes.[271] The
people thought Kolgrim wanted to know about the disappearance of the ox,
and therefore had had these games; he thought he recognized the hide of
the ox on their feet. Then they were called ox-men, and again were
ill-used. At home they talked about this ill-treatment, and said they
would soon give up the games. Hörd spoke harshly to them, saying that
they were great cowards if they dared not to take revenge, and were only
ready for evil doings. Then Thórd and Thorgeir Gyrdilskeggi, an outlaw,
had come to Hörd. Hörd had made horn scrapers during the night. Every
man was ready to go to the game when Hörd went, though they were rather
backward before. Önund Thormódsson of Brekka was to play against Hörd;
he was a popular and strong man. The game was very rough, and before
evening six of the men of Strandir lay dead, but none of the men of
Botn; and both parties went home” (Hörd’s Saga, ch. 29).


“One day the sons of the King (Njörfi) and of Jarl Viking played at
ball; as usual the sons of Njörfi were very keen, and Thorstein spared
his strength. He played against Jökul, and Olaf against Thórir, and the
others according to their age. Thus it was during the day. Thórir threw
down the ball so hard that it bounded over Olaf and fell a long way off.
Olaf got angry and fetched the ball. When he came back the men were
preparing to go home. Then Olaf struck at Thórir with the bat, and when
Thórir saw it he ran under the bat, which hit his head and bruised it.
Thorstein and others ran between them, and they were parted” (Thorstein
Vikingsson, 10).[272]


One day two unknown men came to Thorgnýr Jarl in Jotland, and said they
were brothers.


“There often were games of ball; many asked the brothers to go to the
games: they said they had often been at these games and were rather
rough-handed. The Jarl’s men said they would take care of themselves
whatever might happen. The next morning the brothers went to the games,
and generally had the ball during the day; they pushed men and let them
fall roughly, and beat others. At night three men had their arms broken,
and many were bruised or maimed; the Jarl’s men now thought themselves
ill-treated, and this lasted for several days.”


Then Stefnir, the Jarl’s son, got Hrólf to go with him against them.


“The next day Hrólf and Stefnir went to the games; the brothers had also
come. Hrafn took the ball, and Krák the bat, and they played as they
were wont. The Jarl sat on a chair and looked at the game, and when they
had played it for a while Hrólf got hold of the ball. He snatched the
bat from Krák and handed it to Stefnir. They then played for a long
time, and the brothers did not get hold of the ball. Once when Hrafn ran
after the ball a young kinsman of the Jarl’s, who liked to banter with
others, put out his foot so that Hrafn fell. He got very angry, jumped
up at once, caught the man, lifted him up, and flung him down on his
head so that his neck was broken” (Göngu Hrolf, ix.).


“Once Víglund struck the ball out of Jökul’s (of Foss) reach; Jökul got
angry, took the ball, and flung it at Viglund’s forehead so hard that
both his eyebrows hung down. Trausti cut a piece from his shirt and tied
up the brows of his brother. When he had done that the men of Foss had
gone” (Viglund’s Saga, ch. 11).


The most popular of these games was the _Knattleik_. Special places were
chosen, generally the ice of a frozen lake. The Breidvikings used to
have games of ball during the long winter nights; and where these took
place shelters were built for the people, for the games often lasted for
a fortnight.

The balls, which were very hard and seem to have been made of wood, were
struck by a bat of wood called _knatt-tré_. In this game, which often
became serious from the wounds inflicted by ball or bat, two men of
equal strength usually played together. _Knattleik_ was played as
follows: The ball, usually of wood, was thrown with the hand into the
air, and then struck with the bat; another person caught it with his
hands, or knocked it back with a kind of bat. This the other players
sought to prevent by shoving him aside or throwing him down, or by
striking the ball away from him. If he let the ball fly beyond the
bounds, or fall to the ground, he had to go in search of it.


“It was the custom of the men of Breidavik in the autumn to have games
of ball about the winter nights. Men came there from the whole district,
and large halls were raised for the games. Men dwelt there for half a
month or more” (Eyrbyggja, ch. 43).


“Games were then held in Asbjarnarnes, and men gathered for them from
many districts, from Vididal, from Midfjord, Vatnsnes, Vatnsdal, and all
the way from Langadal. There was a crowd of people. All talked about how
much Kjartan surpassed others. Then the games were prepared, and Hall
managed them. He asked Kjartan to take part in them. ‘We want thee,
kinsman, to show thy skill in them.’ Kjartan answered: ‘Little exercise
did I have in games during the last time, for King Olaf employed himself
with other matters; but this time I will not refuse thee.’ He made ready
for the play, and the strongest men present were pitted against him.
They played during the day, and no man equalled Kjartan, either in
strength or skill. In the evening, when the games were finished, Hall
Gudmundsson rose and said: ‘It is the offer and will of my father that
all those who have come the longest way here shall remain overnight and
begin the amusement again to-morrow.’ This offer was thought chief-like
and much praised. Kálf Asgeir’s son was there, and was a great friend of
Kjartan; Hrefna, his sister, was also there, splendidly dressed. That
night 100 men were on the farm besides the household. The following day
they were divided for the games. Kjartan then sat and looked on”
(Laxdæla, ch. 45).[273]


Skin-pulling, which was like the modern pastime the tug-of-war, is
seldom mentioned.


“The king said: ‘We (Hörd and himself) will pull a goat’s skin across
the fire in this hall to-morrow....’ Early next morning they went into
the hall; a large fire had been made there. A little after the king
came, and said: ‘I will get Hástigi to pull with thee, Hörd.’ Hörd
answered: ‘It is well for us to try skin-pulling; so make thyself ready,
Hástigi.’ Hástigi took off all his clothes, but Hörd did not take off
his fur-cloak. A very strong walrus-hide was given to them. Then they
set to with hard grips and tuggings, and each alternately was
successful. They soon pulled the hide asunder between them. The king
ordered the ox-hide to be brought to them. Then they pulled with all
their might, and so hard, that they were in danger of falling into the
fire. Hástigi was the stronger, but Hörd was more agile and nimble. The
king said: ‘Thou dost not pull, Hástigi, as thou allowest this child to
struggle so long against thee.’ Hástigi replied: ‘It will not last long
if I use all my strength.’ While they were speaking, Hjalmter took the
sword and the sax, and put them in front of the feet of Hörd; nobody saw
this, because the fur-cloak projected. Then Hástigi pulled so hard that
Hörd nearly fell into the fire, and thought he had never had such a tug.
They both pulled so hard, that all wondered that they were not dead from
over-exertion and could endure it. Hörd said to Hástigi: ‘Look out; for
now I will use my strength, and thou wilt not live long.’ ‘I will,’
answered Hástigi. Hörd then pulled with all his strength, and pulled
Hástigi forward into the fire, and threw the hide over him; he jumped on
his back, and then went to his bench. The king ordered them to take the
man out of the fire; he was much burnt. The king was very angry, though
he saw it was chiefly his own fault” (Hjalmter’s and Olver’s Saga, ch.
17).


To such a maritime people, the idrótt of swimming was most important.
There were men who could swim for miles with armour on, or with a
companion on their shoulders. Occasionally it happened that a fierce
struggle ensued in the water, and that the stronger carried his
adversary down to the bottom, holding him until he was almost half
drowned, and unable to offer any further resistance.


“One day in fine weather and warm sunshine many men were swimming, both
from the long-ship and the trading-ship. An Icelander who was swimming
amused himself by taking under water the men who did not swim so well as
himself. They laughed at it. King Sigurd heard it and saw; then he threw
off his clothes and jumped out, swam to the Icelander, took hold of him
and put him under water, and kept him there, and as soon as the
Icelander came up again the king put him down again. Then Sigurd
Sigurdsson said: ‘Shall we let the king drown the man?’ A man said that
no one seemed very willing to go to them. Then he answered: ‘If Dag
Eilifson were here, he would be the man to do it.’ Then he jumped
overboard and swam to the king, took hold of him, and said: ‘Do not kill
the man, lord; all now see that thou swimmest far better. The king said:
‘Let me alone, Sigurd, I shall kill him; he wants to drown our men.’
Sigurd said: ‘Now let us play first; and thou, Icelander, swim to the
land.’ He did so. The king let Sigurd loose and swam to his ship; Sigurd
did the same” (Sigurd Jorsalafar’s Saga, ch. 36).


“They (Olaf Tryggvason and Eindridi) went to the shore and the men with
them. The king and Eindridi undressed. They swam off and played a long
time with each other, and alternately dragged each other down, and
finally they were so long under water that they were not expected to
come up; but at last King Olaf rose and swam ashore. He went up and
rested himself, but did not dress; no one knew nor dared to ask what had
become of Eindridi. After a long time they saw him; he had got a very
large seal, and sat on its back; he clung to it with both hands in its
bristles, and thus steered it, and, when he came near the shore, let it
go. The king sprang up and swam out to him, thrust him under water and
held him down for a long time; when they came up, the king swam ashore,
but Eindridi was so exhausted that he could not save himself; when the
king saw this, he went to him and helped him ashore. When Eindridi began
to recover and they were dressed, the king said: ‘Thy swimming idrótt is
great, Eindridi; but nevertheless God is to be thanked that thou wast
inferior to me, as all could see, when I had to take thee ashore.’ ‘Thou
canst think whatever thou likest about that,’ replied Eindridi. ‘But,’
asked the king, ‘why didst thou not kill the seal, and drag it ashore?’
‘Because,’ answered Eindridi, ‘I did not want thee to say that I had
found it dead.’” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga, vol. ii., p. 270; Fornmanna
Sögur).


Kjartan, son of the Icelandic chief Olaf, went to Nidaros in Norway.


“One fine day in autumn men went from the town to swim in the river Nid.
The Icelanders saw this. Kjartan told his companions that they ought to
go to the swimming and amuse themselves; this they did. One man swam far
better than others. Kjartan asked Bolli if he would try his powers of
swimming with this man of the town. Bolli answered: ‘I do not think I am
able to do it.’ Kjartan said: ‘I do not know where thy ambition is now;
then I will.’ Bolli replied: ‘Do as thou likest.’ Kjartan threw himself
into the river, and swam to the man who was the best swimmer; he took
him down at once, and kept him beneath the surface for a while; he then
let him come up, and when they had not been long above water the man
took hold of Kjartan and pulled him under water, and they were under
water as long as Kjartan thought convenient. They came up again, and
said nothing. They went down a third time, and were by far the longest
time under water. Kjartan did not see how it would end, and thought he
had never been so hard tried before. At last they came up and swam to
the bank. The townsman asked: ‘Who is this man?’ Kjartan told his name.
The townsman said: ‘Thou art a good swimmer; art thou as skilled in
other idróttir as in this?’ Kjartan answered, rather slowly: ‘When I was
in Iceland it was said that my other idróttir were equal, but now it is
of little consequence’”[274] (Laxdæla, ch. 10).


“Then he (Egil) took his helmet, sword, and spear; he broke off his
spear-handle and threw it into the water; he wrapped the weapons in his
cloak, made a bundle of it, and tied it to his back. He jumped into the
water and swam across to the island” (Egil’s Saga, c. 45).


Sometimes, in order to swim better men had their fingers webbed.


“Now Grettir got ready to swim, and had on a hooded cloak, of common
cloth, and breeches; he had his fingers webbed together. It was fine
weather. He left the island late in the day. Illugi, his brother,
thought his journey very dangerous. Grettir swam into the fjord, the
current being with him, during a perfect calm. He swam fast, and reached
Reykjanes after sunset” (Gretti’s Saga, ch. 77).


That warlike exercises should have played such a prominent part in
physical education is not surprising.

Some men could change weapons from one hand to the other during the
hottest fight, use both hands with equal facility, shoot two spears at
the same time, or catch a spear in its flight.


“Gunnar Hámundsson lived at Hlidarendi in Fljótshlid. He was of large
size and strength, and more skilled in fight than any other man. He
could shoot and strike with both hands equally when he wanted; he moved
his sword so swiftly that it seemed as if three swords were in the air.
He shot better with a bow than any one else, and never missed his aim.
He could leap as well backwards as forwards, more than his height, in
full war-dress. He could swim like a seal, and there was no game in
which any man was able to cope with him, and it has been told that no
man was his equal” (Njala, ch. 19).


“Sigmund (during his fight with the Holmgard viking Randver) showed his
idrótt. He threw his sword and flung it into the air, and caught it with
his left hand, and took the shield in his right hand and dealt Randver a
blow with the sword, cutting off his right leg below the knee. Randver
then fell. Sigmund thereupon struck a blow on his neck, and cut off his
head” (Færeyinga Saga, ch. 18).


_Archery_ was another favourite amusement. The Thelemarkians (Norway)
and Jomsvikings were in this respect considered as excelling all others,
and the former distinguished themselves at the battle of Bravalla.

Of their skill in slinging, stone-throwing, archery, &c., &c., we have
most remarkable examples.


“After the fall of Olaf Tryggvason, Eirik jarl gave peace to Einar
Thambarskelfir, son of Eindridi Styrkársson. Einar went with the jarl to
Norway, and it is said that Einar was the strongest of all men and the
best archer in Norway.... He shot with a _bakkakólf_ (a thick arrow
without a point, shot from a crossbow), through a raw ox-hide which hung
on a rafter” (Snorri Sturluson; St. Olaf’s Saga, ch. 20).


“The next day they went to the woods, not far from the farm. The king
took off his cloak, placed a target on a hill-<DW72>, and marked out a
long-shooting distance. Then a bow and arrow were given to him. He shot,
and the arrow hit the target near its edge, and stuck there. Eindridi
shot farther in on the target, but not in the middle. The king then shot
a second time; they went to the target and the arrow was in the middle,
and all called it a famous shot. Eindridi also praised the king’s skill,
and said he thought it was not worth his while to try again. The king
told him to give up if he liked, and acknowledge himself beaten in this
idrótt. Eindridi replied that it might be so, but still he would try
again; he shot, and his arrow entered the notch for the bowstring of the
king’s last arrow, so that both of them stuck there. The king said: ‘A
very skilled man art thou at idróttir, but this idrótt has not yet been
fully tried. That handsome boy shall now be taken whom thou saidst thou
lovedst so well the other day, and he shall be a target as I shall
direct.’ The king let a piece of _hnefatafl_[275] be placed on the boy’s
head. ‘Now we will shoot the piece down from the boy’s head,’ said the
king, ‘so that he shall not be hurt.’ ‘You can do that if you wish, but
I will certainly take revenge if the boy is harmed,’ replied Eindridi. A
long linen cloth was tied round the boy’s head, and two men held the
ends, so that he could not move his head when he heard the whistling of
the arrow. The king went to the place where he was to stand, and made
the mark of the cross before himself and before the point of the arrow
before he shot; but Eindridi grew very red in the face. The arrow flew
under the piece, and carried it off the boy’s head, but so near the
skull that blood dripped from the top of his head. The king then told
Eindridi to shoot after him if he wished; but Eindridi’s mother and
sister begged him, weeping sorely, not to try it. Eindridi said to the
king: ‘I am not afraid if I risked shooting that I should do the boy any
harm, but nevertheless I will not shoot this time.’ ‘Then,’ said the
king, ‘it seems to me that thou must acknowledge thyself beaten’” (Olaf
Tryggvason’s Saga, vol. ii.; Fornmanna Sögur).


Playing with dirks was a common practice. It consisted in playing
simultaneously with three short swords, or dirks, so that one was always
in the air, while one was in each hand; as one was thrown up, the player
seized the falling one.

A very uncommon accomplishment was to run on the oar-blades around a
ship whilst it was being rowed. Among those thus skilled was Olaf
Tryggvason, who, while he was walking over his ship, the _Long Serpent_,
on the oar-blades of the rowers, could play with three dirks or short
swords.


“On the third day the king said to Eindridi: ‘Now the weather is fine
and calm, and we will try the handsax game.’

“The men went out to look on; each took two saxes, and they played with
them for awhile.

“Then a third sax was given to each, and they played so that all the
time one was in the air and two in their hands; they always caught them
by the handle, and no one could determine who was most skilled. After a
long while the king said: ‘This game has not yet had sufficient trial.’

“They went down to the shore and out on a large longship, and the king
bade his men row the ship, and the king then walked outside the board,
on the oars along the side of the ship, and there played with three
handsaxes as skilfully as before on land; and Eindridi did the same. The
king played first, and Eindridi after him. The king then went again in
the same manner along the oars, and thus in front of the stern, not
dropping the handsaxes, and not even getting his shoes wet; he came back
along the other side on the oars, and up into the ship. No one could
understand how he did this. Eindridi stood before the king, when he came
upon the ship, and looked at him in silence. The king said: ‘Why dost
thou stand, and not try after me?’ Eindridi replied: ‘You, lord, could
by no means do this with your idrótt alone, without the power of that
God in whom you believe; and from this I see that he is all-powerful,
and therefore I shall henceforth believe that he and no one else is the
only God’” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga; Fornmanna Sögur).


Among such warlike and Spartan-like people the chiefs had to be the
foremost in all athletic and gymnastic exercises if they wished to enjoy
the respect and confidence of the people, and have rule over them. To
talk of what their forefathers had done was not sufficient; they had to
show themselves worthy of them, and if incapable of ruling, they were
deposed by the people in Thing assembled.

There are several examples in the Sagas of powerful chiefs showing their
anger and jealousy when any man excelled them.


“King Olaf was in every respect, of all the men who have been spoken of,
the greatest man of idróttir in Norway; he was the strongest and most
skilled of all, and many accounts of this have been written. One is
about how he climbed Smalsarhorn and fastened his shield on the top of
the rock; he helped his hirdman who had climbed the rock and could
neither get up nor down again; the king walked up to him and carried him
under his arm down to the level plain.... He could fight equally well
with both hands, and shoot two spears at once” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga,
ch. 92 (Heimskringla)).


“Magnus (the king) exercised himself and was skilled in many games and
idróttir even in his youth; he walked along the gunwales as young men
used to at that time, and he did it with great nimbleness, and showed
his accomplishments in this as in other things” (Magnus the Good’s Saga;
Fornmanna Sögur, vi. 5).


“Olaf was a great man of idróttir in many respects, highly skilled in
the use of the bow and spear, a good swimmer, expert and of good
judgment in all handicrafts, whether his own or others. Olaf Haraldsson
was eager in games and wanted to be the first, as was fitting for his
rank and birth” (St. Olaf’s Saga, ch. 3 (Heimskringla)).


“One day King Olaf talked to Sigmund in the spring, and said: ‘We will
amuse ourselves to-day, and try our skill.’ ‘I am very unfit to do that,
lord,’ said Sigmund; ‘though this shall, like other things that I can
do, be as you wish.’ Then they tried swimming and shooting and other
idróttir, and it is said that Sigmund was next to King Olaf in many
idróttir, though he was surpassed by the king in them all, but
nevertheless nearer to him than any other man in Norway”[276] (Fœreyinga
Saga, ch. 28–32).


               “I (Harald Hardradi) know eight idróttir;
               I can make the drink of Ygg;[277]
               I can ride fast on a horse;
               I have sometimes practised swimming;
               I can run on snow-shoes;
               I shoot and I row well enough.”

                       (Fornmanna Sögur, vi. 169.)


“The king asked: ‘Art thou a man of idróttir?’ Heming answered: ‘My
foster-father and foster-mother thought that I knew many things well,
but I have not shown my skill to others, and I think you will find it
slight. One idrótt I think I can perform for you.’ ‘Which?’ asked the
king; ‘I do not care with whom I try running on snow-shoes, for nobody
can surpass me in that.’ The king added: ‘We will see thy skill, and
know what it is worth.’ Heming replied: ‘I shall try to perform what you
have had performed first.’ ‘Let us go out,’ said the king, ‘and strive
against each other.’ Aslak went to him and said: ‘I have prepared ships
for your departure if you please, because I think it is best to have no
games.’ But the king said: ‘We will stay here to-day;’ and all went out.
The island was very woody, and they went to the forest.

“The king took a spear, and put its point into the ground; then he
placed an arrow on the string and shot into the air; the arrow turned
itself in its course, came down with its point into the end of the
spear-shaft, and stood there upright. Heming took an arrow and shot, it
went very high, then the arrow point came down into the shaft of the
first arrow. The king took the spear and threw it; he shot so powerfully
and so far, and nevertheless straight, that all wondered. Heming threw
further than all, so that his spear socket lay on the point of the
king’s spear. The king took the spear and shot another time, and the
whole spear beyond Heming’s. ‘I will not throw any more, for I see it is
useless.’ ‘Throw,’ said the king, ‘and further if thou canst.’ Heming
shot, and far ahead.

“The king placed an arrow on the string, and took a knife and stuck it
into an oak. He shot into the back of the knife-handle so that the arrow
stuck fast. Heming took his arrows. The king stood near him and said:
‘With gold are thy arrows wound round, and a very ambitious man art
thou.’ ‘I did not cause these arrows to be made; they were given to me,
and I have not taken any ornaments off them.’ Heming shot and hit the
knife-handle, and split it; the arrow point stuck in the upper point of
the blade. Then the king said: ‘Now we will shoot further.’ With an
angry look he laid an arrow on the string, and drew the bow so as to
bend its tips together. The arrow flew very far, and stopped in a very
slender bough. All thought this a most excellent shot. Heming shot
somewhat farther, and the arrow went through a nut. All present wondered
at this. The king said: ‘Now the nut shall be taken, and placed on the
head of thy brother Björn, and there thou shalt hit it. Thou shalt not
shoot from a shorter distance than before, and, if thou dost not hit,
thou hast forfeited thy life.’ ‘Thou canst decide over my life, but I
will never shoot this shot.’ Björn answered: ‘Thou must shoot rather
than choose death, for every man is bidden to prolong his life while he
may.’ ‘Wilt thou stand still, and not shrink, if I shoot at the nut?’
‘Certainly,’ said Björn. ‘Then the king shall stand at his side,’
replied Heming, ‘and see if I hit the nut.’ The king agreed to stand at
his side. He called Odd Ofeiggson, who went to where Björn stood, and
said it was a fit trial for him to keep his courage there. Then Heming
went to where the king would have him stand, and made the sign of the
cross. ‘I call God to witness that I make the king responsible for this,
and that I do not want to harm my brother.’ Heming shot; the arrow went
swiftly, and skipped over the crown of his head and under the nut, and
Björn was not wounded. The nut rolled backwards down from his head, but
the arrow went much farther. When the king asked if the shot had hit the
nut, Odd replied: ‘Better than hit, for he shot under the nut and it
rolled down, and he harmed not Björn.’ ‘It does not seem to me that he
has shot as I ordered,’ added the king. They slept over night.

“In the morning Aslak went to speak with the king, and told him he had
again prepared his journey if he wanted to go to the mainland, but he
determined to stay that day. When the drinking hour was over, he called
his men, and they went down to the shore. The king said to Halldór
Snorrason (an Icelander): ‘I entrust it to thee to kill Heming while
swimming to-day.’ Halldór answered: ‘It would be difficult for abler men
than I am.’ Then the king told Bödvar Eldjarnsson to do it. He replied:
‘Though I had all the idróttir of those here present, I would not harm
him in anything, but least of all as I know that he surpasses me in
everything.’

“The king bade Nikulas Thorbergsson to tire out Heming in swimming.
Nikulas was doubtful of success, but consented to try. The king told
them both to swim. Heming said: ‘Now I need not spare myself, as I
should have liked best to contend with him if I did with anybody.’ They
undressed, and began swimming. Nikulas asked if they should try a long
swimming match. ‘We may try that as thou hast had the better of it in
the other’ (modes of swimming). When they had been swimming for a long
time, Nikulas seemed anxious to go back, but Heming said: ‘I guess you
the king’s bellies will stop farther from the shore.’ Heming kept on.
Nikulas swam somewhat slower, and asked shortly after: ‘Art thou going
to swim longer?’ Heming said: ‘I thought thou wouldst be able to swim
alone ashore, and I will swim farther.’ ‘That is good, I will risk going
back,’ said Nikulas, and turned, but had not gone far before he became
faint. At last Heming swam to him and asked how it went with him. He
told him it did not concern him, and he might go his way. Heming
answered: ‘I think thou deservest that I do so, but we will nevertheless
now go both together.’ ‘I will not refuse that,’ said Nikulas. ‘Lay thy
hand on my back and thus support thyself;’ and in this way they came to
land. Nikulas walked up, and had become quite stiff, but Heming sat down
upon a stone at the flood-mark. The king asked Nikulas the result of the
swimming. Nikulas replied: ‘I should not be able to tell any tidings on
land if Heming had not been a better man to me than thou art to him.’
‘Now thou, Halldór, shalt kill Heming,’ said the king. ‘That I will not
do,’ answered Halldór, ‘it seems to me that the man who tried the
swimming before has won little.’ The king threw off his clothes. Aslak
went to Heming, and cried: ‘Save thyself; the king wants thy death, and
there is a short way to the wood.’ Heming said: ‘Face to face the eagles
shall fight with their claws, and he shall not be drowned whom God will
exalt; he may go into the water as soon as he likes.’ Heming rose from
the stone, and the king from another place, and as soon as they met the
king swam to him and thrust him down into the deep. Others did not see
their doings, but the sea became very restless above them. As it drew
towards evening, and when it was almost dark, the sea became quiet and
the king swam ashore. He looked so angry that no man dared to speak to
him. Dry clothes were brought to him; no one saw Heming, and all thought
him dead, but none dared to ask. The king went home with his men, but
there was little merriment over the beer. The king was overcome with
anger, and Aslak with sorrow. Lights were kindled in the hall, and the
king was in his seat, when Heming entered and placed on the king’s knees
the knife which he had worn on his belt. Everybody knew that he had
taken the knife from the king.

“Again in the morning Aslak said to the king: ‘We have prepared your
journey if you intend to go.’ The king replied: ‘Now I will not stay,
but Heming shall follow us to the mainland.’ They made ready and
departed.

“They landed at a large mountain, very steep towards the sea, and there
was a path along the mountain-side on which only one man at the time
could walk. There were precipices beneath and a high mountain above, and
the ledges on the mountain-side were only wide enough for one man on
horseback. The king ordered him to amuse them by running on snowshoes,
Heming said: ‘It is now not suitable to run on snowshoes, for there is
no snow, but only ice, and the mountain is very hard.’ The king replied:
‘There would be no danger if all was in the best condition.’ ‘As you
will,’ said Heming, and took his snowshoes and ran about the
mountain-side, up and down, and all said they had never seen any one run
so nimbly....” (Flateyjarbók, iii.).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1347.—Handle of Shield, iron, in a mound with skeleton. One-third
    real size—Öland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1348.—Shield boss, of iron, edges covered with bronze. One-third
    real size—Öland.
]

-----

Footnote 267:

  Cf. also Sturlunga, i. c. 9; Orkneyinga, c. 18; Njala, c. 120, 145;
  Færeyinga, c. 37.

Footnote 268:

  Cf. also Gretti’s Saga, c. 78.

Footnote 269:

  Cf. also Liosvetninga Saga, c. 9; An’s Saga Bogsveigis, c. 4; Gunnlaug
  Ormstunga’s Saga, c. 10.

Footnote 270:

  He had been brought up in Ireland.

Footnote 271:

  Their foot-gear was made of undressed ox-hide.

Footnote 272:

  Cf. also Göngu Hrolf’s Saga, ix.

Footnote 273:

  Cf. also Egil’s Saga, c. 40; Gisli Sursson’s Saga.

Footnote 274:

  Cf. also Gretti, 77; Ingi’s Saga, 11; Olaf Tryggvason, vol. ii., c.
  160; Fornmanna Sögur.

Footnote 275:

  A piece belonging to a chess board.

Footnote 276:

  Cf. also Fœreyinga Saga, c. 13; St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 112.

Footnote 277:

  Odin = poetry.




                             CHAPTER XXIII.
       IDRÓTTIR.—POETRY OR SCALDSHIP, MUSIC AND MENTAL EXERCISES.

  Poetry a gift from the gods—The scald—Many sagas based on
    poems—Honour paid to poets—Their moral power—Poets on the
    battle-field—Recital of poems at feasts—Saga telling—Forms of
    poetry—The harp—Parables and puzzles—Gest’s riddles.


Poetry (or _Scaldship_) was reckoned among the Idróttir, and was
considered a gift from the gods. The people looked to their poets to
perpetuate in songs and transmit to future generations the deeds of
their heroes, and the fame which was to cling to their names when they
had gone to Valhalla. From these poets, or _scalds_, we learn all we
know of the history of the earlier Norse tribes; from their songs the
people heard of the birth of their religion; of the creation of the
world, of the wisdom of the past, &c. Without them the history and deeds
of the race must have been lost to us, and we would only have had left
the antiquities of the early times to ponder over. These songs filled
the youth of the country who listened to them with ambition, urging them
to emulate the deeds of those whose praises were sung.

In no literature which has come down to us do we see dying heroes such
as Ragnar Lodbrok, Hjalmar, Orvar Odd, and others, singing the deeds
they had accomplished as life is ebbing away from them, and they are
ready to enter into _Hel_. Whether these heroes sang these songs at such
a time or not, or whether they were written by poets at a later time,
matters little. The people of the land believed in them.

In this peculiar branch of poetry the earlier Norsemen stand wholly
apart from those of other lands.

The figurative names given to scaldship[278] by the poets show how the
earlier traditions were impressed upon the mind—_Kvásirs blood_,
_Dvergar mead_, _Suttungs mead_, _Asar’s mead_, _Odreyris liquid_,
_Odin’s gift_, _Odin’s freight_, _The Dvergar’s sea_, _The Dvergar’s
ale_, _Jötnar’s mead_.

Bragi was supposed to be the most eloquent scald among the Asar.

The origin of poetry is given in Hávamál; but in the later Edda we have
a more minute account of how it was learned by the Asar.

When Hler of Hlessö, who was also called Ægir, came to Asgard to visit
the Asar, he made many inquiries, among which was the following:—


“Ægir said: ‘Whence has come the idrótt which you call scaldship?’ Bragi
answered: ‘The origin was that the gods (Asar) went to war with a people
called Vanir. They appointed a truce thus; both went to a vessel and
spat on it. When parting, the gods, unwilling to let this mark of truce
be lost, took it, and out of it shaped a man, Kvasir. He is so wise that
no one can ask him any question that he cannot answer. He travelled far
and wide about the world to teach wisdom to men. When invited home to
the Dvergar, Fjalar and Galar, they called him to a secret meeting and
slew him. They let his blood run into two tubs and a kettle called
_Odreyrir_ (song-rearer), but the tubs are called _Són_ (sacrifice), and
_Bodn_. They mixed[279] the blood with honey, and therefrom came the
mead of which whosoever drinks becomes a skald or a wise man. The
Dvergar told the Asar that Kvasir had been suffocated by too much
wisdom, because no one was so wise that he could put questions to him.
Thereupon these Dvergar invited to them a Jötun called Gilling and his
wife, and offered him to row out to sea with them. Rowing along the
shore they struck on hidden rocks, and the boat was upset. Gilling could
not swim, and was drowned. But the Dvergar turned over their boat and
rowed to the shore” (Later Edda 57, Bragarœdur).


Many of the sagas, if not all, were based upon the poetry which is often
quoted in them, and both were used and kept as historical records.


“Olaf had been king in Norway fifteen years, including the winter when
Svein Jarl and he were both in the land. Yule was past when he left his
ships and went on shore, as has been told. This record of his reign was
first written by the priest, Ari Thorgilsson, the wise, who was
truthful, had a good memory, and was so old that he remembered the
saga-telling of those who were so old that they could remember these
events. Ari has himself related this in his books, and has named the men
from whom he had this knowledge” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 189).


The scalds were honoured above all men, and married even mighty kings’
daughters, and many of them were great warriors.


“Thórolf, son of Herjolf Hornabrjot, and Olaf, his brother, were kings
in Upplönd; with them was the poet Flein Hjörsson, who was brought up in
Mæri on an island called Jösrheid where his father lived. Flein went to
Denmark to visit King Eystein, and there got so much honour on account
of his poetry that the king gave him his daughter” (Landnama v. ch. 1).


King Harald Fairhair had a feast for his friends and followers.


“Of all his hirdmen the king valued his scalds the most. They were
placed on the second high-seat bench (_annat ondvegi_). At the furthest
end from them sat Audun Illskœlda (thus called because he wrote
satirical songs). He was older than any of them, and had been the scald
of Halfdan Svarti (black), the father of King Harald. Next to him sat
Thorbjorn Hornklofi, and then Olvir Hnufa, and next to him Bard was
placed” (Egil’s Saga, ch. 8).


“Thereupon Gunnlaug sailed from England (London) with traders north to
Dublin. At that time King Sigtrygg Silkiskegg (silk-beard), son of Olaf
Kvaran and Queen Kormlöd, ruled Ireland; he had then ruled only a short
time. Gunnlaug went before him and greeted him well and honourably. The
king received him well. Gunnlaug said: ‘I have made a song about you,
and I want to get a hearing.’ The king answered: ‘No man has before
delivered a poem to me, and I shall certainly listen to it.’ Gunnlaug
then sang the _drapa_, and this is the refrain:

              Sigtrygg feeds
              The horse of Svara (the wolf) with corpses.

              I know distinctly
              Whom I will praise,
              The kinsman of kings,
              He is the son of Kvaran;
              The king will not to me
              (He is wont to be liberal,
              The champion knows it)
              Spare the gold rings;
              Let the king tell me
              If he has heard made
              A more glorious song;
              This is the lay of drapa.

“The king thanked him for the song, and asked his treasurer with what it
should be rewarded. He answered: ‘With what will you reward it, lord?’
The king said: ‘How will it be rewarded, if I give him two knerrir
(trading-ships)?’ The treasurer replied: ‘That is too much, lord; other
kings give costly things, good swords or good gold-rings, as rewards for
a song.’ The king gave him his own clothes of new scarlet, a
lace-ornamented kirtle, a cloak with the finest furs on it, and a gold
ring which weighed a mark. Gunnlaug thanked him, and stayed there for a
short time, and went thence to the Orkneys” (Gunnlaug Ormstunga’s Saga,
ch. 8).


The moral power of a renowned poet was often very great.


“Sindri, a high-born man, was renowned among Halfdan the Black’s
warriors; formerly he had been with King Harald, and was the greatest
friend of both. Guthorm was a great scald, and had made a song about
each. They had offered him a reward, but he refused it, saying that they
must grant him one request, and this they promised. He went to King
Harald (to reconcile him and Halfdan), and so much did the kings honour
him that they were reconciled at his request” (Olaf Tryggvason, Fms.,
vol. i. c. 12).


The scalds were always on the battlefield near the shieldburgh, in order
to witness the heroism of the combatants, and sing their victory or
glorious death. With their _vapnasong_ (weapon-song) they encouraged the
champions in battle, or with their _Sigrljod_ (lay of victory) praised
the bravery of the hero.


“It is said that King Olaf (before the battle of Stiklastad 1015–30)
arrayed his men, and then arranged the shieldburgh which was to protect
him in the battle, for which he selected the strongest and most valiant
men. He then called his scalds and bid them go into the shieldburgh.
‘You shall stay here,’ said the king, ‘and see what takes place, and
then no Saga is needed to tell you afterwards what you shall make songs
about’” (Fostbrœdra Saga, c. 47).


These rulers loved to be surrounded by men who could entertain them and
their guests during the long winter evenings, or at festivals, and took
great pride in having poems made about them.


“One summer an Icelander came to King Harald, who asked him what he
knew. He said he knew some sagas. The king said: ‘I will receive thee,
and thou shalt join my hird this winter, and always entertain my men
when they want it, whoever asks thee.’ He did so. He was soon well liked
by the hird; they gave him clothes, and the king himself gave him a good
weapon. This went on till near Yule, when the Icelander began to look
sad; the king saw it, and asked him for the reason, and he said it was
his variable temper. The king answered: ‘That is not the reason, but I
will guess it; I suspect that thy sagas are now all told, for thou hast
always entertained every man who asked thee this winter, and often by
night and day; now thou dost not like the sagas to be wanting during
Yule, but wilt not tell the same sagas again.’ The Icelander said: ‘Thy
guess is right; the only saga that remains is one which I dare not tell
here, for it is your Utfarar saga’ (saga of Harald’s voyage to the Holy
Land). The king answered: ‘That is a saga which I am most curious to
hear; now thou shalt not recite before Yule, for people are now very
busy, but the first Yule-day thou shalt begin this saga and tell part of
it; then there will be great drinking, and they cannot sit long
listening to it. I will manage that the saga shall last during Yule, and
thou wilt not find while thou tellest it whether I like it well or ill.’
Accordingly the Icelander began his saga first Yule-day, and after he
had told it a short while the king told him to stop. People then began
to talk much about this entertainment; some said it was very bold of the
Icelander to tell this saga, and had doubts how the king would like it;
some thought he told it well, others less well. The king took good care
that they listened well; he managed that it lasted as long as Yule. The
thirteenth day the king said: ‘Art thou not curious to know, Icelander,
how I like the saga?’ He answered: ‘I am afraid to hear, lord.’ The king
said: ‘I think it very well told, and nowhere is the truth deviated
from; but who taught thee?’ He answered: ‘I used in Iceland to go to the
Thing every summer, and every summer I learnt a part of the saga which
was told by Haldór Snorrason.’ The king said: ‘It is not strange that
thou knowest it well, as thou hast learnt it from him, and this saga
shall be of use to thee; thou art welcome to stay with me as long as
thou wilt.’ He stayed with the king that winter, and in the spring the
king gave him some good wares to trade in, and he became a thriving man”
(Harald Hardradi, c. 6).


Saga-telling seems to have taken place also in England.


“Then Játvard the good (Edward Confessor), son of King Adalrad
(Ethelred), was chosen king in England. He remembered the friendship of
his father Adalrad with King Olaf Tryggvason. He adopted the custom of
telling on the first Easter-day the Saga of King Olaf Tryggvason to his
chiefs and hirdmen” (Flateyjarbók, i. 506 (Olaf Tryggvason’s
Saga)).[280]


Some poets used poetry as their mode of speech.


“Sigvat scald had been a long time with King Olaf, who had made him his
marshal. Sigvat was not quick of speech in _unbound words_ (prose), but
poetry was so easy to him that song flowed from his tongue as fast as he
talked; he had made journeys to Valland, and during these he had come to
England and met Knut the powerful” (St. Olaf’s Saga (Heimskringla), ch.
170).


There were two well-known forms of poetry.

The _Drapa_, a heroic laudatory poem, generally written in memory of a
deceased man, and _Flokk_, a shorter poem.

The memory of some men was extraordinary; the blind scald Stuf recited
before King Harald Hardradi in one evening thirty songs; in answer to a
question he said that he knew at least half as many more longer drapas.

An Icelander, named Stuf, went to Norway, and stayed with a bondi in
Upplönd. To him came King Harald Hardradi on a visit, and sat talking to
Stuf.


“Then the bondi came into the stofa, and said the king must find it
dull. ‘It is not so,’ answered the king, ‘for this winter guest of thine
entertains me well, and I will drink to him this evening’; and thus it
happened. The king talked much to Stuf, and he gave wise answers; when
the men went to sleep the king asked Stuf to stay in the room where he
was to sleep, in order to entertain him. Stuf did so; when the king was
in his bed Stuf entertained him, and sang a flokk, and when it was
finished he asked him to sing more.

“The king was awake a long time, while Stuf entertained him, and at last
said: ‘How many songs hast thou sung now?’ Stuf answered: ‘I intended
that you should count them.’ ‘I have done it,’ said the king; ‘they are
thirty now, but why doest thou only sing flokks? Doest thou not know any
drapas?’ Stuf answered: ‘I know no fewer drapas than flokks, though many
flokks which I know are still unsung’” (Fornmanna Sögur, c. 6).


The harp is mentioned in Voluspa, and seems to have been used in early
times. Gunnar played his harp with such skill that even champions were
moved. He could also play with his toes, and charm snakes with its
tones, Rognvald also reckoned harp-playing among his Idróttir. Norna
Gest was very skilful on this instrument, and played famous tunes.


“Gest took his harp and struck it long and well that evening, so that
every one thought it pleasant to listen; he played Gunnar’s tune best;
finally he played the old _Gudrúnarbrögd_, which they had not heard
before; afterwards they went to sleep” (Norna Gest’s Saga, ch. 2
(Fornaldarsögur i.)).


King Hugleik’s orchestra consisted of harp[281] and other instruments,
and Olaf Skautkonung kept for his table regular performers.

We have no description of the shape or size of the harp. It was no doubt
a large instrument, as a little girl, Aslaug, wife of Ragnar Lodbrok,
could be hidden in it, and from Herraud and Bosi’s Saga we learn that a
man could stand in it upright. They sometimes had strings of silver and
gold.

The harp shown on the wood carvings give us an idea of its shape.

_Mental Exercises._—The unravelling of puzzles seems to have been one of
the most favourite pastimes among chiefs and other powerful men, and
deep penetration was required to understand them. Heidrek, a king of
Reidgotaland, was credited with having been able to unravel any riddle
that had ever been propounded to him.


“A man named Gest the blind was a powerful hersir in Reidgotaland, but
wicked and overbearing; he had kept back the tribute belonging to King
Heidrek, and there was great enmity between them. The king sent him word
that he must come to him and submit to the judgment of his wise men, or
fight. Gest did not like either of these terms, and became very uneasy,
for he knew that he had committed many offences; he then resolved to
sacrifice to Odin for help, and begged of him to look on his case, and
promised a large reward. Late one evening there was a knock at the door,
and Gest the blind went to open it; he asked the name of the man who had
come, and he answered his name was Gest; then they inquired of each
other about the tidings. The guest asked if anything grieved him; Gest
the blind told him everything carefully. The guest said: ‘I will go to
the king on thy behalf, and see how it will go; let us exchange
appearance and clothes;’ and thus they did. The bondi[282] went away and
hid himself while the guest went in and stayed there during the night,
and every one thought it was Gest the blind. Next day Gest went on the
journey to the king, and did not stop until he came to Arheimar
(Heidrek’s seat); he went into the hall and greeted the king well. The
king was silent and looked angrily at him. ‘Herra (lord),’ said Gest, ‘I
am here in order to be reconciled with you.’ The king asked: ‘Wilt thou
obey the judgment of my wise men?’ Gest replied: ‘Are there no other
terms?’ The king said: ‘There are; if thou wilt come with a riddle which
I cannot guess, and thus procure thyself peace.’ Gest answered: ‘I am
little able to do that, and besides the other part (the king) may be
heard about it.’ ‘Wilt thou rather submit to the decision of the wise
men?’ said the king. ‘I should prefer,’ said Gest, ‘to come with some
riddles.’ The king agreed, and two chairs were brought on which they sat
down. Gest then propounded his riddles’” (Hervarar Saga, ch. 15).


                         _Gest._

         I should wish to have
         That which yesterday I had;
         Try to know what it was,
         Peace-maker among men!
         Tamer of words,[283]
         And starter of words,
         King Heidrek,[284]
         Think of the riddle.

                       _Heidrek._

         Good is thy riddle,[285]
         Gest the blind!
         It is guessed;
         Ale changes the temper
         And quickens prattle,
         But in others the tongue is wrapped around the teeth.

                         _Gest._

         I went from home,
         I travelled from home,
         I looked on the road of roads,
         Road was above,
         Road was beneath,
         And road in every direction.

                       _Heidrek._

         A bird flew above,
         A fish swam beneath,
         Thou walkedst on a bridge.

                         _Gest._

         What kind of drink was it
         I drank yesterday?
         It was neither water nor wine,
         Mead nor ale,
         No kind of food.
         However, I went thirstless thence.

                       _Heidrek._

         Thou went’st into sunshine,
         Hiddest thyself in the shade;
         There fell dew in the valleys;
         Then thou didst taste
         The night-dew,
         Cooling thy throat by it.

                         _Gest._

         Who is the shrill one
         That on hard roads walks
         On which he has been before?
         He kisses rather roughly,
         Has two mouths;
         And walks on gold only.

                       _Heidrek._

         The hammer walks
         On the fire of Rin,[286]
         It sounds loudly
         Falling on the anvil.

                         _Gest._

         What wonder is that
         Which I saw outside
         Before the door of Delling?[287]
         Two lifeless ones
         And breathless,
         Seethed wound-leek.[288]

                       _Heidrek._

         There is neither breath nor heat
         In the bellows of smiths,
         They have neither life nor power;
         However one can before them
         Make a sword
         By the wind they give.

                         _Gest._

         What wonder is it
         I saw outside
         Before the doors of Delling?
         It has eight feet,
         Eyes four,
         And bears its knee higher than its belly.

                       _Heidrek._

         From east thou went’st
         To the door of a house
         To see the hall;
         Thou earnest thereto
         Where the king of webs[289]
         Wove a web from its bowels.

                         _Gest._

         What wonder is it
         I saw outside
         Before the doors of Delling?
         It turns its head
         On the way to Hel
         And its feet to the sun.

                       _Heidrek._

         The head of the leek turns
         Towards the bosom of the earth
         And its leaves into the air.

                         _Gest._

         What wonder is it
         I saw outside
         Before the doors of Delling?
         Harder than horn,
         Blacker than raven,
         Brighter than shield,
         Straighter than shaft.

                       _Heidrek._

         Now thy riddle-making
         Begins to slacken;
         Why should a ready man tarry?
         Thou lookedst on the roads,
         There lay raven-flint,
         Glittering in a sunbeam.

                         _Gest._

         Two bondwomen,
         Light-haired maidens,
         Carried ale
         To the skemma;[290]
         It was not touched with hand,
         Nor with hammer shaped;
         The wave-breasting one who made it
         Was outside the islands.[291]

                       _Heidrek._

         White-feathered skin
         Have the swans
         Which by islands
         Sit on the sea;
         Nests they built,
         Had no hands,
         With other swans
         Eggs begat.[292]

                *       *       *       *       *

                         _Gest._

         What beast is that
         Which defends the Danes?
         It has a bloody back
         And shelters men,
         Meets the weapons,
         Exposes its life,
         Man lays his body
         Against its palm.

                       _Heidrek._

         The shields shine
         In the battles,
         And protect those who wield them.

                         _Gest._

         Who are the play sisters
         That pass over lands
         And play much at will?
         They wear a white shield
         In winter,
         But a dark one
         In summer.

                       _Heidrek._

         Ptarmigans call
         The sons of men
         Feather-wearing birds;
         Their feathers become black
         In summer-time,
         But white during the bear’s night.[293]

                         _Gest._

         Who are the maidens
         That sorrowful go
         To seek their father?
         To many they have
         Harm done,
         Passing their life therein.

                       _Heidrek._

         The evil-minded
         Maidens of Eldir[294]
         Slay many men.

                         _Gest._

         Who are the maidens
         Going many together
         Seeking their father?
         They have light hair,
         These white-hooded ones,
         Men cannot be safe against them.

                       _Heidrek._

         Gymir[295] has
         By Ran begotten[296]
         Wise-minded daughters;
         Billows they are called,
         And also waves;
         No man can be safe against them.

                         _Gest._

         Who are the widows
         That go all together
         To seek their father?
         They are seldom gentle
         To men,
         And they must be awake in the wind.

                       _Heidrek._

         These are the waves,
         Daughters of Ægir,
         They let themselves fall heavily.

                *       *       *       *       *

                         _Gest._

         Who are the maidens
         That walk over the reefs
         And journey along the fjords?
         These white-hooded women
         Have a hard bed,
         And make little stir in calm weather.

                       _Heidrek._

         Billows and waves
         And all breakers
         At last lay themselves on skerries;[297]
         Their beds are
         Rocks and stone-heaps,
         But the calm sea stirs them not.

                *       *       *       *       *

                         _Gest._

         Who lives on high mountains?
         Who lives in deep dales?
         Who lives without breath?
         Who is never silent?

                       _Heidrek._

         Ravens live on high mountains;
         Dew falls in deep dales;
         Fish live without breath in water,
         But the sounding waterfall
         Is never silent.

                         _Gest._

         Four are walking,
         Four are hanging,
         Two showing the way,
         Two keeping dogs off;
         One lags behind
         All his days,
         That one is always dirty.

                       _Heidrek._

         A cow is that beast
         Which thou didst see
         Walk on four feet,
         Four teats hang,
         And horns defend her:
         Her tail hung behind.

                         _Gest._

         What kind of wonder is it
         I saw outside
         Before the door of Delling?
         It had ten tongues,
         Twenty eyes;
         Forty feet
         That being moves forward.

                       _Heidrek._

         If thou art the one thou sayest,
         Then thou art wiser
         Than I expected;
         Thou talkest of
         A sow outside
         Which walked in the yard;
         She was slaughtered
         At the king’s will,
         And she was with nine pigs.

                         _Gest._

         Who are those two
         That go to the thing?
         They have three eyes both,
         Ten feet,
         And one tail have they both.
         Thus they pass over lands.

                       _Heidrek._

         It is Odin
         When riding along on Sleipnir;
         He has one eye,
         His horse two,
         The drösul[298]
         Runs on eight feet,
         Ygg[299] on two,
         The horse has one tail.

                         _Gest._

         Tell me that only,
         As thou seemest to be
         Wiser than any king;
         What did Odin say
         Into the ear of Baldr
         Before he was carried on the pyre?

                       _Heidrek._

         This is wonder and wickedness,
         And cravenness only,
         Jugglery and trickery only;
         But no one knows those words of thine
         Except thyself,
         Thou evil and wretched being.

                *       *       *       *       *

         The king burnt with anger,
         He drew Tyrfing[300]
         And wanted to strike Gest;
         But he turned himself
         Into the shape of a hawk,
         And thus saved his life.
         The hawk attempted
         To escape by the light-holes,
         But the king struck after him;
         He cut off the tip of his tail
         And shortened his feathers,
         Therefore the hawk has a docked tail.


“The sword hit the tail, and took off what it touched, and therefore the
hawk has a short tail ever after; then the sword hit a man of the hird,
and he was at once slain. Odin then said: ‘Because thou, King Heidrek,
drewest thy sword and wantedst to slay me, and thyself brokest the truce
which thou hadst set between us, the worst of thralls shall be thy
slayers.’ Then Odin flew away, and thus they parted” (Hervarar Saga, c.
15).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1349.—Gilt silver fibula, one-quarter real size—Zeeland.
]

-----

Footnote 278:

  Skaldskap = scald-ship, derived from skald, a poet.

  The leading poets were:—

  Bragi Boddason the old (about 800). The earliest who appears within
  historical periods.

  Thjodolf of Hvin and Thorbjörn Hornklofi, Harald Fairhair’s scalds.

  Eyvind Skaldaspillir, Hakon the Good’s greatest poet.

  Egil Skallagrimsson.

  Kormak Ogmundsson, famous for love songs.

  Hallfred Vandrœdaskald, the troublesome scald, Olaf Tryggvason’s
  greatest poet.

  Sighvat Thordarson, St. Olaf’s greatest scald.

  Thjodolf Arnorsson, Harald Hardradi’s scald.

  The scalds who made songs on Knut the Great were: Thord Kolbeinsson,
  Sighvat Thordarson, Ottar the black, Thorarin Loftunga
  (praise-tongue), Hallvard Harekublesi, Bersi Skaldtorfuson.

  The greatest masterpiece of scaldic art was composed in 1222–23 by
  Snorri Sturluson on Hakon Hakonsson, King of Norway, and the jarl
  Skuli, Bard’s son. Hattatal (the list of metres) is its title, and of
  the 102 strophes each one is in a different metre.

Footnote 279:

  Cf. mixing blood in foster-brotherhood.

Footnote 280:

  Cf. Flateyjarbók, iii.

Footnote 281:

  The harp is also mentioned in Atla Kvida, 31; Oddrunargrat, 29;
  Atlamal, 62; Bard’s Saga.

Footnote 282:

  Hersir is called here a bondi.

Footnote 283:

  One who subdues words—an eloquent man—for every chief was trained to
  be a good speaker.

Footnote 284:

  These two lines, which are repeated in every stanza in the original
  text, are omitted in subsequent stanzas here.

Footnote 285:

  These three lines are repeated at the beginning of each stanza, but
  are omitted in subsequent stanzas.

Footnote 286:

  Rin = Rhine river, fire of Rhine = gold, because hidden in the river.

Footnote 287:

  Door of Delling, a Dverg = the rock; before his door = on the ground.

Footnote 288:

  A sword.

Footnote 289:

  Spider.

Footnote 290:

  Woman’s house.

Footnote 291:

  On the sea.

Footnote 292:

  The swans swim to their nests and lay eggs; the shell of the eggs is
  neither made by hand nor shaped by hammer, but the swan with whom they
  beget the eggs is breasting the waves outside the islands.

Footnote 293:

  The bears of the North sleep all winter.

Footnote 294:

  Ægir.

Footnote 295:

  Ægir = the sea.

Footnote 296:

  Ran, the wife of Ægir. According to the Prose Edda, Gymir is the same
  as Ægir and Hlér.

Footnote 297:

  Rocks.

Footnote 298:

  Horse.

Footnote 299:

  Odin.

Footnote 300:

  His sword.




                             CHAPTER XXIV.
                    THE CONDUCT OF LIFE—THE HÁVAMÁL.

  Rules of life—The duty of hospitality—Folly of boasting—The wise
    man keeps his eyes and ears open—Wits are better than
    wealth—Drink destroys reason—The duty of cheerfulness and
    bravery—Over-eating—We should not worry—All who smile on a man
    are not his friends—The value of silence—A guest should not
    outstay his welcome—The value of a home however humble—No man
    should be the friend of his foe’s friend—Every man has two sides
    to his character—Man’s happiness—Wealth is the most unstable of
    friends—The fickleness of woman—All is fair in love—Do not
    neglect your friends—No man is without his faults—Proverbs and
    wise savings.


To all great popular leaders and lawgivers are often attributed the
dogmas and words of wisdom which form part of their creed. It is not
therefore surprising to find the great Norse code of morality, known
under the name of Hávamál,[301] attributed to Odin; Hávamál meaning the
“Song of the High.”

            All door-ways
            Before one goes forth
            Should be looked over,
            Should be searched out,
            For ‘tis hard to know
            Where foes sit
            On the benches before one.

            Hail my host![302]
            A guest has come in;
            Where shall he sit?
            In hot haste is he
            Who has to try his luck
            On snow-shoes.

            Fire is needed
            By him who has come in
            And is benumbed in his knees;
            Food and clothes
            Are needed by one
            Who has travelled over the mountain.

            Water is needed
            By the one who comes to the meal,
            A towel and a hearty welcome,
            Good-will
            If he can get it,
            Talk and answer.

            Wisdom is wanted
            By him who travels widely;
            Anything is easy at home;[303]
            He who nothing knows
            And sits among the wise
            Becomes a gazing-stock.

            A man with a thinking mind
            Should not boast,
            But rather be heedful in his mood.
            When a wise and silent man
            Comes to a homestead
            The wary man seldom makes a slip,
            For a more faithful friend
            Will a man never get
            Than great man-wit.[304]

            The wary guest
            Who comes to a meal
            Is silent and talks little,
            Listens with (his) ears,
            Looks on with (his) eyes;
            Thus every wise man looks about him.

            He is happy
            Who gets for himself
            Praise and good-will;
            That which a man must own
            In the mind[305] of another
            Is less easy to deal with.

            He is happy
            Who himself has
            Praise and wits while alive;
            For evil counsels
            Has one often got
            Out of another’s breast.

            A better burthen
            A man carries not on the road
            Than great wits;
            Better than wealth
            It is thought at strange places;
            It is the strength of the poor.

            Better burthen
            A man carries not on the road
            Than great good sense;
            No worse journey-provisions
            Weigh him to the ground
            Than too much ale-drinking.

            The ale of men’s sons
            Is not so good
            As men say it is;
            For the more
            A man drinks
            The less has he his senses.

            He is called heron of Oblivion
            The one who soars over ale-bouts,
            He steals away men’s senses;
            With the feathers of that bird
            I was bound[306]
            In the house of Gunnlód.[307]

            I got drunk,
            I got too drunk
            At the wise Fjalar’s;
            The ale is best when
            Every man
            Gets his reason back.

            Silent and thoughtful
            Should a king’s son be
            And bold in battle;
            Glad and cheerful
            Should every man be
            Till he meet his death.

            The unwise man
            Thinks he will live for ever
            If he shuns fight,
            But old age gives him
            No peace
            Though spears may spare him.

            A fool gapes
            When he comes into company,
            He mutters or sulks;
            All at once
            If he gets a drink
            His mind is displayed.

            He alone knows
            Who widely travels
            And has seen much
            What the temper is
            Of every man
            Who has his wits about him.

            A man shall not send away the cup
            But drink mead moderately,
            Speak usefully or be silent;
            No man will blame thee
            For ill-breeding
            Though thou goest early to sleep.

            A greedy man
            Unless he has sense
            Eats ill-health for himself;
            A foolish man’s belly
            Often causes laughter
            When he is among the wise.

            Herds know
            When they shall go home
            And then walk off the grass;
            But an unwise man
            Never knows
            The measure of his stomach.

            A wretched man
            With evil mind
            Sneers at everything;
            He knows not that,
            Which he needed to know,
            That he is not himself faultless.

            An unwise man
            Is awake all night
            Worrying about everything;
            He is weary
            When the morning comes
            All the woe is as it was.

            An unwise man
            Thinks all who smile on him
            To be his friends;
            He does not know
            When he sits among wise men
            Though they speak badly of him.

            An unwise man
            Thinks all who smile on him
            To be his friends;
            But he will find
            When he comes to the thing
            That he has few spokesmen.[308]

            An unwise man
            Thinks he knows everything
            If he has shelter in a corner;
            He knows not
            What he should say
            If men test him.

            An unwise man
            When he comes among people,
            Had best be silent;
            No one knows
            That he nothing knows,
            Unless he talks too much;
            The man who nothing knows
            Knows not of it
            Though he talk too much.

            He who can ask
            And answer questions
            Thinks himself wise;
            The sons of men
            Can hide nothing
            That passes among men.

            He who is never silent
            Speaks too many
            Meaningless words;
            A glib tongue
            Unless it has restrainers
            Often does harm to itself.

            A man shall not
            Have another for a gazing-stock[309]
            Though he come into company;
            Many one thinks himself wise
            If he is not asked questions
            And can loiter with dry clothes.

            Wise thinks himself
            The guest who drives away
            Another guest with mocking;
            He is not wise
            Who sneers at a meal
            If he prates among angry men.

            Many men
            Are kind to one another,
            Yet quarrel at the meal;
            This will always be
            The cause of men’s strife;
            Guest gets angry with guest.

            An early meal
            Should a man often take
            And not go without it into company;
            (Otherwise) he sits and sulks,
            Looks as if he were hungry,
            And cannot talk.

            It is long out of one’s way
            To a bad friend,
            Though he live on the road;
            But to a good friend
            There are short paths
            Though he be farther off.

            One should take leave,
            The guest should not stay
            Always in one place;
            The loved becomes loathed
            If he sits too long
            In another’s house.

            A homestead is best
            Though it be small;
            A man is master at home;
            Though he has but two goats
            And a straw-thatched hall (house)
            It is better than begging.

            A homestead is best
            Though it be small;
            A man is a man (master) at home;
            Bleeding is the heart
            Of him who must beg
            His food for every meal.

            A man shall not on the ground
            Go a step forward
            Without his weapons;
            For it is hard to know
            When out on roads
            If a man may need his spear.

            I never met a man
            So openhanded or free with his food
            That he would not take a gift,
            Nor one so lavish
            With his property
            That rewards were to him unwelcome.

            A man
            When he has gained property
            Should not suffer want;
            What was meant for the loved
            Is often spared for the hated;
            Many things go worse than expected.

            With weapons and clothes
            Such as are most sightly on oneself
            Shall friends gladden each other;
            Givers and receivers
            Are the longest friends,
            If they give with good wishes.

            A man should be
            A friend to his friend
            And give gift for gift;
            Laughter for laughter
            And lie for lie
            Should men return.

            To his friend
            A man should be a friend,
            To him and his friend;
            But no man
            Should be the friend
            Of his foe’s friend.

            Know if thou hast a friend
            Whom thou trustest well
            And thou wilt good from him get,
            Thou must blend thoughts with him,
            And exchange gifts,
            Go often and meet him.

            If thou hast another
            Whom thou trustest little
            Yet wilt good from him get,
            Kindly shalt thou talk to him,
            But think deceitfully
            And give lie back for lie.

            That is further from him
            Whom thou trustest little
            And whose mind thou suspectest,
            Thou shalt smile at him
            And speak contrary to thy thoughts,
            The reward should be like the gift.

            I once was young,
            I travelled alone,
            And missed my way;
            I thought myself wealthy
            When I another met;
            Man is the delight of man.

            Liberal and valiant
            Men live best;
            They seldom harbour grief;
            But unwise men
            Fear everything;
            The miser always longs for gifts.

            My clothes
            Gave I to two wood-men (men of the forest)
            In the field;
            They thought themselves men,
            When they got the garments;
            Ashamed is a naked man.

            The fir withers
            That stands on a fenced field;
            Neither bark nor foliage shelter it;
            Thus is a man
            Whom no one loves;
            Why should he live long?

            Hotter than fire
            Burns between bad friends
            Friendship for five days;
            But when the sixth comes
            It is quenched
            And all the friendship vanishes.

            Much at once
            Should one not give;
            With little you often get praise;
            With half a loaf
            And a half-filled cup
            I got a companion.

            Small are sand grains,
            Small are drops of water,
            Small are men’s minds;
            For all men
            Were not made equally wise;
            Men are everywhere by halves.[310]

            Middling wise
            Should every man be,
            Never too wise;
            Happiest live
            Those men
            Who know many things well.

            Middling wise
            Should every man be,
            Never too wise;
            For the heart of a wise man
            Is seldom glad
            If its owner is all-wise.

            Middling wise
            Should every man be
            Never too wise;
            No man ought to
            Know his fate beforehand,
            Then his mind is freest from sorrow.

            Brand is kindled from brand
            Till it is burnt out;
            Fire is kindled from fire;
            A man gets knowledge
            By talk with a man
            But becomes wilful by self-conceit.

            Early should rise
            He who wants the property
            Or the life of another;
            Seldom a sleeping wolf
            Gets a thigh-bone
            Or a sleeping man victory.

            Early should rise
            He who has few workers
            And go to his work;
            Many hindrances has he
            Who sleeps in the morning;
            Half one’s wealth depends on activity.

            Of dry logs
            And thatching-bark
            A man knows the measure
            And of the fire-wood
            Which can last
            For meals and for seasons.[311]

            Washed and well-fed
            Should a man ride to the thing,
            Though he be not so well dressed;
            Of his shoes and breeches
            Let no man be ashamed,
            Nor of his horse, though he has not a good one.

            Sniffs and hangs with its head,
            When it comes on the sea,
            The eagle on the old ocean;
            So is the man
            Who comes among many
            And has few spokesmen.

            Ask and answer
            Should every sage man
            Who wants to be called wise;
            One may know
            But not another;
            All know if three know.

            His power
            Should every foresighted man
            Use moderately;
            He will feel
            When he comes among the skilled
            That no one is the best.

                   *       *       *       *       *

            For the words
            That a man says to another
            He has often to pay the penalty.[312]

            Much too early
            Came I to many places
            And too late to some;
            The ale was drunk
            Or it was unbrewed;
            An unwelcome man seldom finds the ale.

            Here and there
            Might I be invited home
            If I needed not food for a meal
            Or if two hams hung
            At my trusty friend’s
            Where I had eaten one.

            Fire is the best thing
            Among the sons of men,
            And the sight of the sun,
            His good health
            If a man can keep it,
            And a blameless life.

            A man is not utterly unhappy
            Though he be in ill-health;
            Some are happy in sons,
            Some in kinsmen,
            Some in much wealth,
            Some in good deeds.

            Better is it to live
            Than not to live;
            A living man (may) always get a cow;
            I saw fire blaze
            Before a wealthy man
            And outside was death at the door.

            The lame may ride a horse,
            The handless may drive a herd,
            The deaf may fight and do well;
            A blind man is better
            Than a burnt one;
            The dead are of no use.

            A son is better
            Though he be late born,
            After a man’s death;
            Seldom memorial stones
            Stand near the road
            Unless kinsman raise
            Them after kinsman.

            Two are of one host
            The tongue is the head’s bane;
            Under every fur-coat
            I expect a hand.[313]

            He who trusts to his knapsack
            Is glad when night comes;
            The ship’s corners are small;
            The autumn night is changeable;
            There are many weathers
            In five days[314]
            And more in a month.

            He who nothing knows
            Knows not this;
            Many are made fools by wealth;
            One man is wealthy,
            And another poor;
            Blame not a man for that.

            Cattle die,
            Kinsmen die,
            One’s self dies too;
            But the fame
            Never dies
            Of him who gets a good name.

            Cattle die,
            Kinsmen die,
            We ourselves die;
            I know one thing
            That never dies,
            The doom over every dead man.[315]

            Full stocked folds
            I saw at the sons of Fitjung;
            Now they carry beggars’ staffs;
            Wealth is
            Like the twinkling of an eye
            The most unstable of friends.

            An unwise man
            If he gets
            Wealth or a woman’s love
            Grows in pride,
            But never in wits;
            He goes on further in his conceit.

            It will be found
            When thou askest about
            The god-born runes
            Which the high powers made,
            And the all wise marked,
            Then it is best that he be silent.

            A day should be praised at night,
            A woman when she is burnt,
            A sword when it is tried,
            A maiden when she is married,
            Ice when crossed,
            Ale when drank.

            In a gale should trees be cut,
            In a breeze row out at sea,
            In the dark to a maiden talk,
            Many are the eyes of day,
            A ship is made for sailing,
            A shield for sheltering,
            A sword for striking,
            A maiden for kisses.

            At the fire shalt thou drink ale
            And glide on the ice,
            Buy a lean horse,
            And a rusty sword,
            Fatten (thy) horse at home,
            And (thy) dog at (thy) farm.

            The words of a maiden
            Or the talk of a woman
            Should no man trust;
            For their hearts were shaped
            On a whirling wheel,
            And fickleness laid in their breasts.

            A creaking bow,
            A burning flame,
            A gaping wolf,
            A croaking crow,
            A squealing swine,
            A rootless tree,
            A waxing wave,
            A boiling cauldron,

            A flying arrow,
            A falling billow,
            A one night old ice,
            A ring-coiled snake,
            The bed-talk of a bride,
            Or a broken sword,
            The play of a bear,
            Or a king’s child

            A sick calf,
            A wilful thrall,
            The kind words of a volva,
            The new-felled slain,[316]

            An early sown field
            Shall no man trust,
            Nor his son too early;
            The weather rules the field,
            And wit guides the son;
            Each of them is uncertain.

            Let no man be so trustful
            That he trust
            His brother’s slayer,
            Though he meet him on the highway,
            A half-burnt house,
            A very swift horse,
            A horse is useless
            If a leg be broken.

            Thus is the love of women
            Whose hearts are false
            As riding on slippery ice,
            With an unshod,
            Wild, two year old,
            Badly broken horse,
            Or like cruising
            Rudderless in a strong gale,
            Or like the lame reindeer
            On thawing mountain sides.

            Now I speak openly
            For I know both;
            Fickle is the mind of men to women;
            We speak most fair
            When we think most false;
            That beguiles wise minds.

            Finely must talk
            And offer gifts
            He who would win woman’s love,
            Praise the shape
            Of the bright (fair) maiden;
            He wins who woos.

            In matters of love
            Should a man never
            Blame another;
            The bewitching hues[317]
            That do not move the dull
            Often move the wise.

            A man must not
            Blame another
            For what is many men’s weakness;
            For mighty love
            Changes the son of men
            From wise into fools.

            The mind alone knows
            What is near the heart;
            It alone sees what is near the heart;
            It alone sees what is in the breast;
            No sickness is worse
            For a wise man
            Than to enjoy nothing.

            I tried that when
            I sat in the rushes
            And waited for my love;
            The gentle maiden
            Was like my own flesh and heart;
            Yet she was not mine.

            I found the sun-bright
            Maiden of Billing[318]
            Asleep on her bed;
            The happiness of a jarl
            I thought worth nothing,
            Unless living with that maiden.

            And near evening (in the twilight)
            Must thou come, Odin,
            If thou wilt talk with a maiden;
            It will fare badly
            Unless we alone know
            Of such unlawful love.

            I went away;
            It seemed to me I loved
            Out of my wise will;[319]
            I thought
            I had won
            All her heart and love.

            When next I came
            All the doughty household
            Was awake;
            With burning lights
            And carried torches
            That way of woe was marked for me.

            Near morning,
            When I came again,
            The household was asleep;
            A dog I found
            Tied to the bed
            Of the good woman.

            Many a good maiden
            If thou searchest well
            Is fickle to men;
            That I found
            When I the counsel wise maiden
            Sought to beguile;
            Every mocking
            Showed me the wise maiden,
            And from that woman nought had I.

            At home shall a man be merry
            And cheerful to his guests,
            Cautious about himself,
            Of good memory and ready speech,
            If he wants to be very wise;
            A good man is often talked of;
            A great fool is he called
            Who little can tell;
            That is the mark of a fool.

            I visited the old jotun;
            Now I have come back;
            Little got I silent there;
            Many words
            I spoke for my good
            In the halls of Suttung.

            Gunnlod gave me
            On a golden chair
            A drink of the costly mead;
            Ill reward
            I gave her afterwards
            For her strong love,
            For her true love.

            The point (mouth) of Rati
            I let make its way
            And gnaw the rock;
            Over me and under me
            Were the ways of jotuns,
            Thus I risked my head.

            The trick-bought mead
            I have enjoyed well;
            The wise lack little,
            For Odrerir[320]
            Has now come up
            On the skirt of the earth of men.[321]

            I doubt whether
            I should yet have come
            Out of the jötun halls,
            If I had not had help
            From Gunnlod, the good maiden
            Round whom I laid my arm.

            The next day
            The Hrim-thussar came,
            To ask about the purpose of Hár[322]
            Into his hall;
            They asked about Bólverk[323]
            If he was among the gods,
            Or Suttung had slain him.

            An oath on the ring,[324]
            I think, Odin took;
            Shall his plighted faith be trusted?
            He defrauded Suttung
            Of his mead,
            And made Gunnlod weep.

            It is time to speak
            From the chair of the wise man
            At the well of Urd;
            I saw and was silent,
            I saw and pondered,
            I listened to the talk of men;
            I heard talk of runes,
            Nor were they silent about their plans
            At the hall of Hár;
            In the hall of Hár
            I heard this spoken.

            I advise thee, Loddfafnir,
            Take thou my advice;
            Thou wilt profit by it if thou takest it;[325]
            Rise not at night
            Unless thou goest a spying
            Or thou art compelled to go out.

            Thou must not sleep
            In the arms of a witch
            So that she clasp thee with her limbs.

            She (the witch) causes that
            Thou dost not heed
            The thing or the words of a chief;
            Thou wantest not food
            Nor the amusement of men;
            Thou goest sorrowful to sleep.

            The wife of another man
            Tempt thou never
            To be thy ear-whisperer.[326]

            On a mountain or a fjord
            If thou to travel wantest
            Take thou good store of food.

            A bad man
            Do thou never
            Let thy misfortunes know;
            For from a bad man
            Gettest thou never
            Reward for thy goodwill.

            I saw the words
            Of a wicked woman
            Wound a man deeply;
            Her false tongue
            Became his death,
            Though he had no guilt.

            Know this, if thou hast
            A friend whom thou trustest well,
            Go often to see him;
            For with brushwood
            And with high grass will overgrown
            The road on which no one walks.

            Draw a good man to thee
            For the sake of pleasant talk,
            And learn healing spells while thou livest.

            Be never the first
            To forsake
            The company of thy friend;
            Sorrow eats the heart
            If one cannot tell
            All his mind to some one.

            Thou shouldst never
            Words exchange
            With fools.

            For from a bad man
            Wilt thou never
            Get return for good;
            But a good man
            Will be able to make thee
            Liked and praised.

            Souls are together blended,
            When a man tells to one
            All his mind;
            All is better
            Than to be fickle;
            No friend is he who speaks as one wishes.[327]

            Not even in three words quarrel
            Shalt thou with a worse man;
            Often the better one yields
            When the worse one strikes.

            Be not a shoe-smith
            Nor a shaft-smith
            Except for thyself;
            Is the shoe misshaped,
            Or the shaft wry,
            Then is evil wished to thee.

            Where thou canst do harm
            Do not keep from it,
            And do not give peace to thy foes.

            Be never
            Glad at evil,
            But be pleased with the good.

            Never look up
            Shalt thou in battle;
            Like swine[328]
            May become the sons of men;
            Let no man spell-bind thee.

            Wouldst thou get a good woman
            To talk pleasantly,
            And get delight from her,
            Promise thou fair things
            And firmly keep it;
            No man dislikes the good if he can get it.

            I bid thee be wary,
            But not too wary;
            Be most wary at ale,
            And with another’s wife,
            And thirdly
            That thieves play not tricks on thee.

            Thou must never
            Mock or laugh at
            A guest or a wayfarer.

            Often know not well
            Those who sit within
            Of what kin they are who come;
            No man is so good
            That a fault follows him not,
            Nor so bad, that he is good for nothing.

            Never laugh
            At a hoary wise man;
            Often it is good which old men say,
            Skilled words come often
            Out of a shrivelled skin
            Hanging among hides,
            Dangling among dry skins,
            And going among the sons of toil.

            Scoff not at the guest,
            Nor drive him to the door;
            Be kind to the poor.

            Strong is the door-bar,
            That shall turn
            And open for all;
            Give a ring,[329]
            Or to thy limbs
            Will every kind of evil be wished.

            Wherever thou drinkest ale,
            Take earth’s strength;
            For the earth acts against ale,
            And fire against constipation,
            The (corn) ear against spells,
            The spurred rye against hernia;
            The moon shall be called on against curses,
            Heather against contagious diseases,
            Runes against evil spells;
            The mould must receive the liquid.

The following proverbs and wise sayings occur in the Sagas:

                    Courage is better
                    Than the power of sword
                    Where the angry must fight;
                    For I saw a bold man
                    Win....
                    Victory with a blunt sword.

                    ‘Tis better for the bold
                    Than cowards
                    To be in the game of Hild;[330]
                    It is better to be merry
                    Than to be downhearted
                    Whatever may come to hand.

                                        (Fafnismal.)

When Heidrek, the son of Hofund, was outlawed by his father for his
misconduct, he asked to have advice given him:


“King Hofund said: ‘Little advice will I give him, for I think he will
make bad use of it; but, since you ask, I will give him first the advice
never to help the man who has betrayed his master; the second is never
to spare the life of (always to slay) a man who has murdered his
companion; the third is not to let his wife visit her kinsmen often
though she ask; the fourth not to tell his concubine all his secrets;
the fifth not to ride on his best horse when in a hurry; the sixth never
to raise the child of a more high-born man than he is himself; the
seventh never to break his truce; the eighth never to take with him many
captured thralls. If he follows all this advice he will be a man of
luck, though I outlaw him now for breach of the law” (Hervarar Saga, c.
8).


“A tree falls not at the first blow,” said an Icelander to the priest
Thangbrand, who was going to christianize Iceland. (Njala, ch. 103.)


“Cold (fatal) are the counsels of women,” said the chief Flosi to his
kinswoman Hildigunn, who urged him to revenge her husband. (Njala, ch.
116.)


“You have much of a swine’s memory” (a very short memory), said Gudrún,
when she was urging her brothers to slay Kjartan, her former lover.
(Laxdæla, ch. 48.)


“It must be worse before it gets better.” (Fms. v. 199.)


“A sheepless household starves.”


“The bondi is bú-pillar; the bú is the pillar of the land.”


Sigrdrífa gives the following counsels to Sigurd:

                       _Sigrdrífa._

         First, I advise thee
         Do no wrong to
         Thy kinsmen;
         Do not avenge thyself
         Though they harm thee.
         It is said to be good after death.

         Secondly I advise thee,
         Swear not an oath,
         Unless it be true;
         Cruel roots
         Strike perjury;
         Wretched is the wolf of plighted faith.

         Thirdly I advise thee
         That thou at a thing
         Do not quarrel with fools;
         For an unwise man
         Often says
         Worse words than he knows.

         All is difficult
         If thou art silent,
         Then thou art thought to be born a coward,
         Or his (the fool’s) words to be true:
         The home-judgment is dangerous
         Unless thou gettest a good one.
         The next day
         Thou shalt slay him (the fool),
         And thus reward people for their lie.

         Fourthly I advise thee,
         If a witch
         Full of evil lives on the way,
         It is better to walk on
         Than lodge there
         Though the night overtake thee.

         Eyes of foresight
         Need the sons of men
         In the angry fight;
         Often wicked women
         Sit near the road,
         Who blunt both sword and sense.

         Fifthly I advise thee
         Though you seest
         Fair brides on the benches;
         Let not the goddesses of silver
         Hinder thy sleep,
         Do not entice women to kisses.

         Sixthly I counsel thee,
         Though among men be
         Evil ale-talk;
         Thou shalt not quarrel
         With drunk battle-trees;[331]
         Many a one’s wits wine steals.

         Strife and ale
         Have caused
         Grief of mind to many men,
         Death to some,
         Curses to others,
         Many are the evils of men.

         Seventhly I advise thee,
         If thou hast to fight
         Against fearless men,
         It is better to fight
         Than to be burnt
         In the house.

         Eighthly I advise thee
         That thou beware of evil
         And shun false words;
         Do not beguile a maiden,
         Nor a man’s wife,
         Nor entice them to overmuch pleasure.[332]

         Tenthly I advise thee,
         Do thou never believe
         The plighted faith of an outlaw’s son,
         Whether thou art the slayer of his brother
         Or hast killed his father;
         There is a wolf in a young son
         Though he be cheered (comforted) with gold (wergild).

         I think
         That strife and hate (are not sleepy),
         Nor the grief;
         Wisdom and weapons
         Are not easy to get
         For a chief that would be the foremost among men.

         Eleventhly I advise thee
         That thou beware of evil
         In every way from thy friends;
         I think I know
         The chief’s (Sigurd’s) life will not be long;
         Strong contests have arisen.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1350.—Roman gold coin (solidus) of 5th Century (Libyus Severus),
    found with many Byzantine and Roman coins. Real size—Öland, Sweden.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1351.—Coin from Tyre.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1352.—Coin from Sidon with Greek and Phœnician
    inscriptions.—Gotland, Sweden.
]

-----

Footnote 301:

  Háva = of the high, namely Odin; mál = song.

Footnote 302:

  Giver in the text = host.

Footnote 303:

  Meaning: anything will do at home.

Footnote 304:

  Good sense.

Footnote 305:

  Here the text has breast for mind or heart. The meaning of the stanza
  is that it is very hard to know another man’s mind.

Footnote 306:

  This refers to Odin getting drunk from the mead of poetry which he
  stole from Suttung. (See later Edda.)

Footnote 307:

  A Jotun woman.

Footnote 308:

  I.e., supporters.

Footnote 309:

  Make fun of him.

Footnote 310:

  The meaning of this line is somewhat obscure; it probably means that
  every man has two sides to his character.

Footnote 311:

  The application is missing in the text.

Footnote 312:

  The text of part of this verse is missing.

Footnote 313:

  The sense of this stanza is most difficult; the meaning of first part
  seems to be that tongue and head are of one host, and nevertheless the
  tongue may be the head’s bane. The latter part probably means: the
  hand of a foe or friend may be hidden under any cloak.

Footnote 314:

  Here we see the custom of counting weeks by five.

Footnote 315:

  Doom, judgment passed by men over man = his name.

Footnote 316:

  In a paper MS. of 1684 some verses are found which are not on the skin
  text.

Footnote 317:

  Lostfagr = so fair as to kindle lust.

Footnote 318:

  Billing occurs in Voluspa as a name of dverg.

Footnote 319:

  This means—as if I was mad with love.

Footnote 320:

  Odrerir = song-inspirer or vessel for the poetic mead.

Footnote 321:

  Midgard.

Footnote 322:

  Odin.

Footnote 323:

  Odin.

Footnote 324:

  I.e., the Temple ring which, like the Bible now, was formerly used for
  oaths.

Footnote 325:

  These three verses are repeated at the head of nearly each stanza but
  omitted after this stanza.

Footnote 326:

  I.e., mistress.

Footnote 327:

  No man is another’s friend who says only what he wishes.

Footnote 328:

  To Odin is attributed the power to make men in battle mad with terror
  like swine.—‘Ynglinga Saga,’ ch. 6.

Footnote 329:

  Something as alms.

Footnote 330:

  War.

Footnote 331:

  Men.

Footnote 332:

  Two stanzas missing, see vol. i. p. 322.




                              CHAPTER XXV.
                          SORROW AND MOURNING.

  Egil’s sorrow—Egil’s song—The first song of Gudrun—The second song
    of Gudrun—Halls draped with black and grey.


There are several beautiful examples in Northern literature showing how
strong were the affections in the hearts of the people, even among the
bravest warriors. Conspicuous amongst these examples are Egil’s and
Gudrun’s songs of sorrow, the former mourning the death of a son, the
latter that of a husband.


“When Egil returned from his last journey to Norway and Vermland,
Bödvar, his son, was full grown. He was a most promising man; handsome,
tall, and strong as Egil or Thorol had been at his age. Egil loved him
greatly, and Bödvar also was fond of him. One summer a ship came into
Hvita (white river), where there was a large gathering for trade. Egil
had bought much wood there, and had it brought home. The _huskarls_ went
in an eight-oared boat which Egil owned. Bödvar begged to go with them,
and this they granted him; he went to Vellir with the huskarls, who were
six in number, in an eight-oared boat. At the time fixed for their
departure the high tide was late in the day, so they waited for it and
left late in the evening. Then came a violent south-west gale, and the
ebb tide was opposed to it; the sea rose high in the fjord, as often
happens there, and the boat was swamped in the heavy sea, and all were
drowned; the bodies were thrown ashore the next day. That of Bödvar came
ashore in Einarsnes, but others on the southern shore of the fjord,
where the boat was driven, and were found at Reykjarhamar. Egil heard of
it the same day, and forthwith rode to search for the bodies. He found
that of Bödvar outstretched: he took it up, and put it on his knee, and
rode with it out to Digranes to the mound of Skallagrim. He had the
mound opened, and laid Bödvar at the side of Skallagrim, the mound was
then closed, but this was not done until sunset. Egil rode home to Borg
(his farm), and there went at once to the locked bed-closet where he was
wont to sleep; he laid himself down and locked himself up, and nobody
dared talk to him. When they laid Bödvar down in the mound, Egil wore
hose fitting tight to the leg; a fustian-kirtle, red, narrow, small at
the upper end, and laced on the side, but he swelled so much from grief
that the kirtle as well as the hose were rent. The next day Egil did not
unlock the door, nor did he take any food or drink. He lay there that
day, and the night following it; nobody dared speak to him. The third
morning at dawn Asgerd made a man take horse and ride as swiftly as he
could west to Hjardarholt, and tell Thorgerd (daughter of Egil, wife of
Olaf Höskuldsson) all these tidings. He arrived there about noon, and
said that Asgerd asked her to come as soon as possible to Borg. Thorgerd
at once had a horse saddled, and two men followed her. They rode that
evening and all night till they reached Borg. Thorgerd at once went into
the hall; Asgerd greeted her, and asked if they had supped. Thorgerd
said loudly “I have had no supper, and shall have none until with
Freyja.[333] I know of no better resolve than to do like my father. I
will not live after my father and brother.” She went to the bedroom, and
shouted, ‘Father, open the door. I want you to go with me.’ Egil drew
back the latch. Thorgerd went up and shut the door; she laid herself
down in another bed which was there. Then Egil said ‘Thou didst well,
daughter, in wishing to follow thy father. Thou hast shown me much love.
Who can expect me to live with this grief?’ Then they were silent for a
while. Then Egil said ‘What is that, daughter? Dost thou chew anything?’
‘I am chewing _samphire_ (sea-weed),’ she answered, ‘and I think that I
shall suffer for it; otherwise I think I shall live too long.’ ‘Is it
hurtful?’ asked Egil. ‘Very much so,’ said she; ‘wilt thou eat?’ ‘What
does it matter?’ said he. Soon after she called and asked for drink.
Water was then given her to drink. Then Egil said: ‘When one eats
_samphire_, one gets more and more thirsty.’ ‘Wilt thou drink, father?’
said she. He took deep draughts from a horn. Then Thorgerd said: ‘We are
deceived, this is milk.’ Egil bit from the horn what his teeth clutched,
and threw it away. Thorgerd said: ‘What shall we do, now that this plan
is upset? I should like, father, to lengthen our life, so that thou
mightest compose a funeral poem on Bödvar, and I will carve it on a
stick of wood; then let us die if we like. I think thy son Thorstein
will be slow in making a poem on him, but it is not proper that there
should be no funeral feast, for I do not think we shall sit at the
drinking at his _arvel_.’ Egil said it was unlikely that he could make a
poem then, even if he tried, but he would make an attempt” (Egil’s
Saga).


I give the leading stanzas of the poem.


                 SONA-TORREK (the loss of sons).[334]

               It is very difficult
               To move my tongue,
               Or the heavy air
               Of the steel-yard of sound.[335]
               Now there is little hope
               Of the theft of Vidrir,[336]
               Nor is it easy to draw it
               Out of the hiding-place of the mind.[337]

               The silent find[338]
               Of the kinsmen of Thriggi,[339]
               Brought of yore
               From Jötunheimar
               Is not easily driven
               From the abode of the mind.
               Heavy sorrow
               Is the cause.

               The blameless Bragi
               Got famous
               On the boat
               Of Nokkver (a Dverg);[340]
               The wound[341] of the neck of the Jotun
               Roars
               Down at the door
               Of the house of my kinsman.[342]

               For my kin
               Has come near to its end
               Like the death-beaten
               Branches in the forest.
               The man is not merry
               Who carries
               The bones of his kinsmen
               From the place of dead bodies.[343]

               Nevertheless
               I recall first
               The death of my father,
               The death of my mother.
               That timber of song,[344]
               With words for leaves,[345]
               I bring out
               Of the temple of speech.[346]

               Cruel was the gate
               Which Hronn[347] broke
               On the kin-wall[348]
               Of my father.
               I see the place of my son,
               Made waste by sea,
               Stand empty
               And open.[349]

               The want of brothers
               Comes often
               Into the mind
               Of the women of Björn.[350]
               I look round
               When the battle thickens;
               I heed this
               And look to see if

               Any other Thegn
               Daring in fight
               Stands
               At my side;
               I need it often.
               Such are the tempers of men;
               My flight becomes faint
               When my friends get few.

               It is also told
               That no one gets
               The equal of his son
               Unless he begets another;
               Nor a kinsman
               Who is to him
               Like the man
               Who is his born brother.


                       THE FIRST SONG OF GUDRUN.

The brothers of Gudrun, daughter of Gjuki, had slain her husband, Sigurd
Fafnisbani, in his bed. Gudrun sat over Sigurd when he was dead; she did
not weep, as other women, but almost died from grief. Both men and women
came to comfort her, but did not find it easy to do so.

                   Gudrun was
                   Near to death
                   When she sat, full of grief,
                   Over Sigurd;
                   She did not weep,
                   Nor wring her hands,
                   Nor wail
                   Like other women.

                   Very wise jarls
                   Came forward,
                   Who tried to soothe
                   Her heavy heart;
                   Though Gudrun was
                   Unable to weep;
                   She was so sad;
                   Her heart almost broke.

                   The high-born
                   Brides of jarls
                   Sat, gold adorned,
                   By Gudrun;
                   Each of them
                   Related her woes,
                   The bitterest sorrow
                   She had suffered.

                   The sister of Gjuki,
                   Gjaflang, said:
                   No women on earth
                   Lack love more than I;
                   I have felt the loss
                   Of husbands five,
                   Of daughters two,
                   Of sisters three,
                   Of brothers eight,
                   And yet I live alone.

                   Still Gudrun
                   Could not weep,
                   So full of grief was she
                   For her dead husband,
                   And heavy-hearted
                   O’er the king’s corpse.

                   Then said Herborg,
                   The Queen of Hunaland:
                   I have a harder
                   Sorrow to tell;
                   My seven sons
                   And my eighth husband
                   Fell among the slain
                   In the southern lands.

                   My father and mother,
                   My four brothers;
                   The wind played with them
                   On the deep;
                   The wave dashed them
                   Against the gunwale.

                   I myself had to wash,
                   I myself had to bury,
                   I myself had to handle
                   Their corpses;
                   All that I suffered
                   In one year,
                   And no man
                   Gave me help.

                   The same year
                   I became a bondwoman;[351]
                   I had to dress,
                   And to tie the shoes
                   Of a hersir’s wife
                   Every morning.

                   She threatened me
                   Because of jealousy,
                   And struck me with
                   Hard blows;
                   Nowhere found I
                   A better house-master
                   Nor anywhere
                   A worse housewife.

                   Still Gudrun
                   Could not weep,
                   So sad was she
                   For her dead husband
                   And heavy-hearted
                   O’er the king’s corpse.

                   Then said Gullrönd,
                   The daughter of Gjuki:
                   Little comfort
                   Canst thou, foster-mother,
                   Wise though thou art,
                   Give the young wife.
                   She bid them uncover
                   The king’s corpse.

                   She drew the sheet
                   Off Sigurd
                   And threw it on the ground,
                   Before the knees of the wife:—
                   Look on thy beloved one,
                   Put thy mouth to his lips,
                   As if thou did’st embrace
                   The living king.

                   Gudrun looked
                   At him once;
                   She saw his hair
                   Dripping with blood;
                   The flashing eyes
                   Of the king were dead;
                   His breast[352]
                   Was cut with a sword.

                   Then Gudrun sank down
                   Upon the pillow;
                   Loose was her hair,
                   Flushed was her cheek
                   And a tear-drop
                   Fell on her knee.

                   Then wept Gudrun,
                   The daughter of Gjuki,
                   So that the tears
                   Flowed through her tresses;
                   And the geese
                   Screamed in the yard—
                   The good fowls
                   Which the maiden owned.

                   Then said Gullrönd,
                   The daughter of Gjuki:
                   I never knew
                   A greater love
                   Among all men
                   Upon earth
                   Than that of you two.
                   Thou wast never happy,
                   My sister,
                   Indoors or out,
                   Unless with Sigurd.

                   Then said Gudrun,
                   The daughter of Gjuki:
                   Such was my Sigurd
                   Among the sons of Gjuki,
                   As a garlic[353]
                   Grown high among grass,
                   Or a shining stone
                   Set on a band,
                   A precious gem,
                   So was he above the high-born.

                   I seemed also
                   To the king’s champions
                   Higher than any
                   Dis of Herjan;[354]
                   Now I am lowly
                   As a willow leaf,
                   After the king’s death.

                   I miss in the seat
                   And in the bed
                   The talk of my friend;
                   The sons of Gjuki cause
                   My misery,
                   And the sore weeping
                   Of their sister.

                   So shall you
                   Lose your land
                   As you kept not
                   The sworn oaths;
                   Thou, Gunnar, wilt not
                   Enjoy the gold;
                   Those rings
                   Will be thy death,
                   As thou to Sigurd
                   Did’st falsely swear.

                   Oft was it merrier
                   When my Sigurd
                   Saddled Grani
                   In the grass-plot (tun),
                   And they went
                   To woo Brynhild,
                   The cursed being
                   With bad luck.

                   Then said Brynhild,
                   The daughter of Budli:
                   May that being lack[355]
                   Husband and children
                   Who made thee
                   Weep, Gudrun,
                   And to thee this morning
                   Gave power of speech.[356]

                   Then said Gullrönd,
                   The daughter of Gjuki:
                   Speak not these words,
                   Much hated one;
                   Thou hast always been
                   The Urd[357] of the high-born;

                   Every man disowns thee,
                   Thou evil being!
                   Sore sorrow
                   Of seven kings,
                   And the greatest spoiler
                   Of wives’ friends.[358]

                   Then said Brynhild,
                   The daughter of Budli:
                   Atli alone causes
                   All the misery;
                   The son or Budli,
                   My brother,

                   When we in the hall
                   Of the Hunnish people
                   Saw with the king
                   The fire of the serpent lair[359]
                   I have paid since
                   For that journey;
                   Of that sight
                   I was not afraid.

                   She stood at the door-post;
                   She clasped the alder-tree;[360]
                   Fire flashed
                   Out of the eyes
                   Of Brynhild, Budli’s daughter;
                   Venom gushed from her
                   When she saw the wounds
                   Of Sigurd.

Gudrun’s second song to King Thjodrek at the hird of Atli.

                I was a maiden of maidens,
                My bright mother
                Raised me in her house;
                I loved my brothers well,
                Till Gjuki endowed me with gold,
                And gave me to Sigurd.

                So was Sigurd
                Among the sons of Gjuki
                As a green leek
                Grown high in the grass,
                Or a long-legged hart
                Among the swift deer,
                Or ruddy gold
                Amidst grey silver.

                Until my brothers
                Begrudged me
                A husband,
                Who was the foremost of all;
                They could not sleep
                Nor judge law-cases
                Till they had slain Sigurd.

                Grani[361] ran from the Thing;
                The noise (of his hoofs) was heard;
                But then Sigurd
                Himself did not come.
                All the saddle-deer[362]
                Were soiled with blood,
                And wearied
                Under their murderers.

                I went in my tears
                To talk to Grani;
                With wet cheeks
                I asked him to speak.
                Grani drooped his head,
                Bowed it down to the grass;
                The steed knew
                His owner was no more.

                A long while I wavered,
                Long was my mind divided
                Before I asked
                The people-defender
                For news of the king.

                Gunnar drooped his head;
                Högni told me
                The painful death
                Of Sigurd:
                The slayer of Gothorm
                Lies slain
                Beyond the water,
                Given to the wolves.

                Seek for Sigurd there,
                On the southern road;
                Then thou wilt hear
                Ravens croak,
                Eagles scream,
                Glad at their booty,
                Wolves howl
                Over thy husband.

                Why wilt thou, Högni,
                Such sorrows tell
                To me so joy-bereft?
                The ravens should
                Tear thy heart
                In far-off lands,
                Where thou art a stranger.

                Högni answered:
                Some day, Gudrun,
                With heavy mind,
                With great grief;
                More cause wilt thou have
                To weep,
                If my heart
                By ravens be torn.

                I went alone thence
                From this talk
                Into the forest
                To gather what the wolves had left.[363]
                I did not moan
                Nor wring my hands,
                Nor wail,
                Like other women,
                When I sat over
                The dead Sigurd.

                Pitch dark
                The night seemed
                When I sat sorrow-stricken
                Over Sigurd;
                I should have liked
                The wolves far better
                Had they taken my life,
                Or I
                Had been burnt
                Like birch-wood.

In the following remarkable account of a battle between Knut and Harald,
the two sons of King Gorm, in which Knut was killed, we find that when a
family was in mourning the halls were draped with black and grey.


“After this Harald and his men proceeded until they reached King Gorm’s
farm late at night, and went ashore fully armed. It is said, by some who
know, that Harald did not know how he should tell his father, for he had
made a vow that he would die if he heard of the fall of his son Knut,
and would kill the man who told him of his death.

“Harald sent his foster-brother, Hauk, to his mother, Queen Thyri, and
requested her to find some way to give him the news. She bade him go
himself and tell the king that two hawks had been fighting, one of which
was entirely white, the other grey, and both brave. At last the white
hawk was killed, which was thought a great pity. Hauk thereupon returned
to Harald, and reported what his mother had said. Harald thereupon went
to the hall, where King Gorm and his men were drinking, went up to his
father, and told him about the hawks, as his mother had advised, ending
by saying that the white hawk was dead. He said no more. It is not
stated where Harald and his men took up their quarters that night. King
Gorm did not appear to comprehend this. The men sat drinking as long as
they liked that night, and then went to bed; but after they had left the
hall Queen Thyri took down the hangings, and instead put up black and
grey cloth until all was covered. She had done this because it was the
custom in those days when tidings of grief came to do as she did.

“King Gorm, the old, rose in the morning, and went into his high-seat,
intending to begin drinking. He looked at the walls of the hall; the
queen sat in the high-seat with him. He said: ‘Thou, Queen Thyri, must
have ordered the hall to be thus prepared.’ ‘For what purpose should I?’
she asked. ‘Because,’ the king added, ‘thou wishest now to tell me of
the fall of my son Knut.’[364] ‘Thou now tellest it thyself,’ said the
queen. He had been standing in front of the high-seat while they were
talking, but now sat down suddenly, answered nothing, fell back against
the wall of the hall, and died. He was carried to burial, and a mound
was thrown up over him by order of Thyri. She then sent word to her son
Harald to return with all his men and drink _arvel_ after his father.
This he did, and it was very splendid.

“After this Harald took possession of the kingdom and all the lands of
his father, and held a Thing with the men of the country, at which the
Danes chose him as king over the whole of Denmark” (Flateyjarbok, vol.
i.; Jomsvikinga Thatt).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1353.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1354.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1355.
]

  Small clay urns, with burnt bones and objects of bronze, buttons,
    needles, knives, etc. In a mound, Zealand. ¼ real size.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1356.—Clay urn, in a mound with burnt bones. Björkö, Lake Mälar.
    ¼ size.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1357.—Small clay urn. ¼ size.
]

-----

Footnote 333:

  Meaning that she would have no meals before she came to the gods, as
  she intended to die with her father.

Footnote 334:

  He had a son called Gunnar, who had died a short time before. The best
  stanzas only are given.

Footnote 335:

  I.e., tongue. The heavy air of the tongue = breath.

Footnote 336:

  Odin’s the t = poetry.

Footnote 337:

  The breast. The people believed that thought came from the breast.

Footnote 338:

  The mead, stolen by Odin, poetry, song. See the later Edda.

Footnote 339:

  The kinsmen of Odin are the Asar.

Footnote 340:

  Boat of the Dvergar, the poetical mead.

Footnote 341:

  Ymir’s blood, the sea. Egil thinks he hears the roar of the surf near
  the mound of the drowned son; it intensifies his sorrow.

Footnote 342:

  House of my kinsmen, the mound where his son with other kinsmen was
  buried.

Footnote 343:

  The shore bringing the bodies of the drowned.

Footnote 344:

  As timber is the material for workmanship, so “timber of songs” means
  the subject from which the song is made.

Footnote 345:

  As the leaves hang on the branches of the trees, so the words hang on
  the timber of song.

Footnote 346:

  The mouth.

Footnote 347:

  Daughter of Ægir.

Footnote 348:

  Meaning that his kinsmen are round him like a sheltering wall.

Footnote 349:

  I.e., he sees the seat of his son empty.

Footnote 350:

  Björn = Thor. The women of Björn = the Troll women.

Footnote 351:

  We see the custom of slave-women.

Footnote 352:

  Breast, called here the burg of the mind.

Footnote 353:

  Geirlauk.

Footnote 354:

  Odin.

Footnote 355:

  To be an old maid seems to have been looked upon as a curse.

Footnote 356:

  Speech runes.

Footnote 357:

  One of the Nornir, representing the past.

Footnote 358:

  Husbands.

Footnote 359:

  The gold of Fafnir’s lair.

Footnote 360:

  The door-post.

Footnote 361:

  Sigurd’s horse.

Footnote 362:

  Horses.

Footnote 363:

  Probably Sigurd’s body had been thrown into the forest after he was
  slain in his bed.

Footnote 364:

  Knut Dana-ast was the brother of Harald Blue-tooth.




                             CHAPTER XXVI.
                        CHAMPIONS AND BERSERKS.

  The warrior’s aim to be a Berserk—Berserk frenzy—The twelve sons of
    Arngrim—They fight without coats of mail—Hrolf’s champions—Hakon
    Jarl’s Berserks—The life of a Berserk—Disregard for death.


To be considered the foremost champion or _Kappi_ was the greatest
ambition of every warrior; and to attain this proud position was no easy
task among so many men who were equally brave and perfectly reckless of
their lives, and thoroughly skilled in the handling of weapons.

After such a reputation had been acquired, the champion had either to
challenge or be challenged by those who vied with him, and these duels
or trials of strength and skill generally took place before a large
assembly.

The aim of every champion was to become a “Berserk” (so called,
probably, because they fought without serk (shirt)), who was regarded as
the bravest of men. When within sight of their foe Berserks wrought
themselves into such a state of frenzy, that they bit their shields and
rushed forward to the attack, throwing away their arms of defence,
reckless of every danger, sometimes having nothing but a club, which
carried with it death and destruction.


“In the time of Hákon, Æthelstan’s foster-son, there lived in Norway
Björn the Pale, who was a Berserk. He went round the country and
challenged men to _holmganga_ (duel) if they would not do his will”
(Gisli Sursson’s Saga, p. 1).


This berserk-fury was not only utilised in war, but for the performance
of hard feats which were held to be out of the power of ordinary people.
In some cases this fury seems to have come over the Berserks apparently
without cause, when they trembled and gnashed their teeth.


“The Berserk Arngrim of Bólm had twelve sons; Angantýr was the oldest,
the second Hervard, the third Seming, the fourth Hjörvard, the fifth
Brani, the sixth Brami, the seventh Barri, the eighth Reytnir, the ninth
Tind, the tenth Bui, the eleventh and the twelfth both called Hadding.
They were both together equal to one of the others, but Angantýr was
equal to two, and was a head taller than any of them; they were all
great Berserks. They went on warfare when they were quite young and
ravaged far and wide, but met with no equal in strength and courage;
thereby they got renown and victory. The twelve brothers went together
on one ship with no others; but they often had more ships. Their father
had taken in war the most excellent weapons; Angantýr got Tyrfing,
Hervard Hrotti, Seming Mistiltein (Mistletoe), which Thráin[365]
afterwards took out of his mound. All the brothers had excellent
holmganga-swords. It was their custom if they were only with their own
men when they found the _berserks-gang_ (berserk-fury)[366] coming over
them, to go ashore and wrestle with large stones or trees, otherwise
they would have slain their friends in their rage. Never did they engage
in battle without gaining the victory; therefore great sayings were told
of them. There was no king who would not give them what they wanted
rather than suffer their overbearing. They were on warfare during the
summer, but during the winter they remained at home in Bólmey with their
father” (Hervarar Saga, c. 3).[367]


In the following Sagas we have an example of the stuff the men of the
North, or the Vikings, were made of.


“When Fridthjof landed after a storm ... in the Orkneys, one of the
Berserks of the jarl said: ‘Now we will try if it is true that Fridthjof
has made a vow that he will never be the first to ask peace of another.’
They were ten wicked and greedy men, and often had berserk-rage; when
they met (Fridthjof) they took their weapons. Atli (one of the Berserks)
said: ‘Now it is best, Fridthjof, to look us in the face, for the eagles
must fight with their claws face to face, and now it is best to stand by
one’s words, and not be the first to ask for peace’” (Fridthjof’s Saga,
c. 7).


It was believed that neither fire nor weapons could harm the Berserks.
In war they fought without coats of mail in a bare shirt or kirtle;
hence their name.


“King Hálf went up to King Asmund’s farm, where there were many men,
with one-half of his men. The entertainment was good, and the drink was
so strong, that Hálf’s champions fell fast asleep. King Asmund and his
hird set fire to the hall. The one of Hálf’s champions who awoke first
saw the hall nearly full of smoke. He called out: ‘Now it will smoke
round our hawks,’ and then again lay down to sleep. Then another woke
and saw the hall burning, and said: ‘Wax will now drip from our saxes,’
and then lay down.

“But then King Hálf awoke, rose and roused the warriors, and told them
to arm themselves. They then rushed at the walls with such strength that
the joints of the timbers broke” (Half’s Saga).


They were also believed to change shape, and in their greatest fury to
take the outward shape of an animal[368] of great strength and ferocity.

It was the aim of every great chief to gather round him the greatest
champions of the land, and if he was renowned for bravery, liberality,
and convivial qualities, they would come to him from even the remotest
parts of the North. When a new champion came who wished to be the
foremost, he asked his future companions if they objected to his
becoming so among them, and if any one objected, he would at once
challenge him to a holmganga to assert or prove his claim. In some cases
the fame of a new-comer was so great that he was at once recognised to
be foremost.

Among the great champions whose fame and name were sung for generations
were the champions of Hrólf Kraki and King Hálf.

Hrólf’s champions flocked to him from every part of the North; among the
most celebrated were Bodvar Bjarki, from Norway, and Svipdag, from
Sweden. Other kings seem to have had twelve Berserks in their train.


“King Hrólf made himself ready for his journey with one hundred men,
besides whom he had his twelve champions and twelve Berserks. Nothing
more is told of their journey before they came to a bondi” (Hrolf
Kraki’s Saga, c. 39).


“Haki and Hagbard were the names of two very famous brothers. They were
sea-kings and had a large host; sometimes they went together, sometimes
each went by himself; many champions followed each of them. King Haki
went with his host to Sweden against King Hugleik, who gathered a host;
two brothers, Svipdag and Geigad, both far-famed and great champions,
came to help him. Haki had with him twelve champions, among whom was
Starkad the old; Haki himself was a very great champion. They met on the
Fýrisvellir (plain of Fýri) in a great battle; Hugleik’s men fell fast.
The champions Svipdag and Geigad then made an onset, but six of Haki’s
champions went against each of them and they were captured. Then Haki
went into Hugleik’s shieldburg and slew him and his two sons. Thereupon
the Swedes fled, and Haki conquered the land and became king over the
Swedes. He stayed at home for three winters, and during that time his
champions went away on viking-expeditions and thus earned property”
(Ynglinga, c. 25).


The twelve Berserks of Hrólf Kraki followed King Adils of Sweden in a
battle against King Áli of Norway, on condition that they were to get
pay, and be allowed to choose three costly things for Hrólf.


“After the battle, each of them asked three pounds of gold as pay, and
to take with them three costly things which they might choose for Hrólf:
they were, the helmet _Hildigölt_ (war-boar), the brynja _Finnsleif_,
which was impenetrable to weapons, and the gold ring _Sviagris_ (the
Svia-pig) which the forefathers of Adils had owned” (Prose Edda
(Skáldskaparmál), c. 44).


“With Hákon Jarl were two brothers of Swedish kin: one was named Halli,
the other Leiknir. They were much taller and stronger men than were to
be found in Norway or in other places. They went a-berserking, and when
they were angry lost their human nature and went mad like dogs; they
feared neither fire nor iron, but in everyday life they were not bad to
have intercourse with if they were not offended, though they were most
overbearing if offended. Eirik Sigrsæli (the victorious), King of
Sweden, had sent the Berserks to the Jarl, and told him to be careful to
treat them well, and said, as was true, that they could be a great help
if regard was had to their tempers” (Eyrbyggja, c. 25).


The following account gives a picture of the life of these champions:


“The bóndi Svip lived in Sweden far away from other men; he was wealthy
and had been the greatest champion and not all he looked, as he knew
many things. He had three sons, Svipdag, Geigad, and Hvitserk, who was
the oldest; they were all well skilled, strong, and fine-looking men.
When Svipdag was eighteen winters old he said one day to his father:
‘Our life here in the mountains, in far-off valleys and unsettled
places, where men never visit nor receive visits, is dull; it would be
better to go to Adils and follow him and his champions, if he will
receive us.’ Svip answered: ‘I do not think this advisable, for King
Adils is a cruel man and not trustworthy though he uses fair words, and
his men are jealous and strong, but certainly he is powerful and
famous.’ Svipdag said: ‘A man must risk something if he wishes to get
fame; he cannot know, before he tries, when luck will come to him.’ His
father gave him a large axe and said to his son, ‘Be not greedy; do not
boast, for that gives a bad reputation, but defend yourself if attacked,
for a great man should boast little and behave well in difficulties.’ He
gave him good war clothes and a good horse. Then Svipdag rode and at
night came to the burg of King Adils; he saw that games were taking
place outside the hall, and Adils sat on a large gold chair and his
Berserks near him. When Svipdag came to the fence[369] the gate of the
burg was shut, for it was then customary to ask leave to ride in;
Svipdag did not take that trouble, and broke open the gate and rode into
the yard. Then the King said: ‘This man comes here recklessly, as this
has never been done before. It may be that he has great strength and has
no fear.’ The Berserks at once got very angry and thought that he
asserted himself too much. Svipdag rode before the King, and saluted him
well in a skilful manner. Adils asked who he was, and he told him. The
King soon recognized him, and every one thought he was a great and
high-born champion. The games were continued; Svipdag sat on a fallen
tree and looked on. The Berserks eyed him angrily, and said to the King
that they wanted to try him; the King answered: ‘I think that he has no
little strength, but I should like you to try whether he is such a man
as he considers himself.’

“When men gathered into the hall the Berserks walked towards Svipdag and
asked him if he was a champion, as he made so much of himself: he
answered that he was as great a one as any of them. At these words their
anger and eagerness (to fight) increased. But the King told them to be
quiet that night; they began to frown, and howled loudly, and said to
Svipdag: ‘Darest thou fight us? Then thou wilt need more than mere big
words and boasting. We will try how much there is in thee.’ Svipdag
answered: ‘I will consent to fight one at a time and will see if more
can be done.’ The King was well pleased that they should do this. Queen
Yrsa said: ‘This man shall be welcome here.’ The Berserks answered her:
‘We knew before that thou didst want to send us all to Hel, but we are
too big to be killed by words alone or ill-will.’

“In the morning began a hard _holmganga_, and there was no lack of heavy
blows; the new-comer knew how to use his sword with great strength and
the Berserks gave way. Svipdag killed one, and another wanted to avenge
him but suffered the same fate, and Svipdag did not stop before he had
slain four; then Adils said, ‘Great loss hast thou caused to me, and now
thou shalt pay for it,’ and he asked men to rise and kill him. The Queen
got men and wanted to help him, and said that the King could see that
there was much more skill in him alone than in all the Berserks. The
Queen made peace between them, and every one considered Svipdag to be a
man of great prowess. Now he sat on the lower bench opposite the King,
by the wish of Queen Yrsa. He looked round and thought he had not done
harm enough to the Berserks, and wished to urge them to fight, and
thought it likely that if they saw him alone they would attack him; it
was as he thought, for they began at once to fight. The King came when
they had been fighting for a while and parted them. Afterwards the King
outlawed the remaining Berserks as they could not all together fight a
single man, saying he had not before known that they were great only in
boasting. They had to go, but threatened to make warfare in the realm of
King Adils. The King replied that he did not care for their threats.

“Adils asked Svipdag to help him as much now as all the Berserks had
done before, especially as the Queen wanted him in their place. Svipdag
stayed there for some while” (Hrólf Kraki, c. 18, 19).


“Now the winter passed, and the time came when the Berserks of King
Hrólf were expected home. Bödvar asked Hjalti about their customs; he
answered that it was their habit when they came home to the hird to walk
first up to the king, and then to every man, and ask if the man thought
himself their equal. The king used to answer, that is hard to tell as
you are such valiant men, and as you have won renown in bloody battles
against several people in the southern and northern half of the world.
He gives this answer more from his good-will than unmanliness, for he
knows their temper and they win great victories and much property for
him. They then walk up to every man in the hall and put the same
question, and no one answers that he is their equal. Bödvar said: ‘Few
good warriors are here with Hrólf, as they are all cowed by the
Berserks.’ No more was said. Next yule-eve Bödvar had been one year with
Hrólf, and when they sat at table the door of the hall was thrown open,
and in came twelve Berserks, all over grey with iron (coat of mail),
which looked like broken ice. Bödvar asked Hjalti in a low voice if he
dared try himself against one of them. ‘Yes,’ said Hjalti, ‘not against
one, but against all of them, for I cannot get frightened though there
is an overwhelming strength against me, and not one of them shall scare
me.’ The Berserks first walked up the hall, and saw that the champions
of Hrólf had increased in number since they left. They looked carefully
at the new men, and thought that one of them was no small man, and it is
told that the one who walked foremost was a little startled. They went
as they used before King Hrólf, and asked him the customary question; he
answered what he thought fit, as he was wont. They walked up to every
man in the hall, and last up to the comrades (Bödvar and Hjalti); the
foremost one then asked Bödvar if he thought himself his equal. Bödvar
said he thought himself not equal, but superior to him in anything they
might try; that foul son of a mare should not treat him like a sow. He
jumped up at the Berserk who was in full war dress, and threw him down
so strongly that he came near breaking his bones; Hjalti did the same,
so that a great tumult arose in the hall, and the king saw that a great
loss was likely to take place if his men were to be killed. He rushed
from his high seat to Bödvar, and asked him to take it all in a quiet
and friendly manner. Bödvar said the Berserk should lose his life unless
he acknowledged himself to be a lesser man than he. The king said that
would be easily done, and allowed the Berserks to rise to their feet.
Hjalti did the same after the king’s order. Every man sat down in his
seat, and the Berserks likewise in theirs with grief in their mind. The
king spoke long to them, and told them that now they might see that no
one was so great, strong, or renowned but that he might find his equal,
and said: ‘I forbid you to cause any trouble in my hall, and if you do
not obey that you will forfeit your lives; be as fierce as you can when
I fight my enemies, and thus win fame and renown to yourself. Now I have
so chosen champions that I need not depend upon you. All agreed with the
king’s words and were fully reconciled. They were then seated thus that
Bödvar was most honoured. He sat next to the king on the right hand; at
his side sat Hjalti the Bold-minded, which name the king gave him....
Bödvar was so highly honoured by King Hrólf that he married his only
daughter Drifa” (Hrólf Kraki’s Saga, c. 37).


“Thereafter King Adils had his hall cleaned; the dead men were carried
out, for many of Adils’ men were slain and wounded. He said: ‘Now we
will make long fires (on the floor) for our friends, and treat well such
men as they are. Now men were put to kindle the fire. Hrólf’s champions
always sat with their weapons, and never let hold of them. The fire was
soon burning, for pitch and dry fire-wood was not spared. King Adils
seated himself and his hirdmen on the one side of the fire, and Hrólf
Kraki and his champions opposite. They sat on long benches, and spoke
very friendly together. King Adils said: ‘The bravery and hardihood of
the champions of Hrólf is not exaggerated; you think yourself better
than others, and no lies have been told about your strength; now
increase the fire, for I do not see distinctly where the king is, and
though you may be warmed somewhat you will not flee from the fire.’ This
was done. He wanted to see where King Hrólf was, for he knew that he
could not stand the heat as well as the champions, and thought he would
get at him more easily when he knew where he was, for truly he wanted to
slay him. Bödvar and others saw this and sheltered him from the heat as
well as they could, but not in the way that he could be known. As the
fire advanced very rapidly King Hrólf remembered the vow he had made
neither to flee from fire nor iron weapons; he saw that King Adils tried
to burn them or let them break their vow. They saw that Adils’ seat had
moved (of itself) to the door of the hall, and also those of his men.
The fire advanced fast and they saw they would get burnt if they stayed.
Their clothes were much scorched, and they threw their shields on the
fire. Bödvar and Svipdag said: ‘Now let us increase the fire at Adils’
burg (hall). Each of them took one of the men who had kept up the fires
and flung them into them, and said: ‘Now warm yourselves at it for your
work and toil; we have got warmth enough; now warm yourselves, as you
were so busy for a while to make fire for us. Hjalti took the third one
and flung him into it where he sat, and then he did the same with all
those who kept up the fires, and they were burnt to ashes, and not
helped, for no one dared to come so near. When they had done this King
Hrólf said: ‘He flees not the fire who jumps (leaps) over it.’ Then they
all leapt (on their shields) over the fire, and wanted to take King
Adils. When he saw this he saved his life, and ran to the tree which
stood in the hall, and was hollow inside, and thus he got out with
witchcraft and sorcery. He came into the hall of Queen Yrsa and talked
to her, and she received him disgracefully, and spoke many big words to
him: ‘Thou first didst slay my husband Helgi, and betray him and keepest
the property from its owner, and besides this thou wantest to slay my
son, and thou art much crueller and worse than any other; now I will in
every way help Hrólf to get the property, and thou wilt get shame as
thou deservest.’ Adils answered: ‘Here neither will trust the other, and
hereafter I shall not come before their eyes.’ Thereupon they ceased to
talk” (Hrólf Kraki’s Saga, c. 41).


In those days of incessant warfare, the life of the warrior was a
magnificent drama from the beginning to the end; his death the closing
of a grand career; and his entrance into Valhalla the reward for a life
of bravery, in which he showed entire disregard of death, and in which
he often exhibited the highest qualities of manhood. As he saw life
ebbing away he sang the deeds he had accomplished, and when his eye
became dim, and darkness was for ever to close from him the light of the
sun, he could hear resounding in his ears the lay of the scald
recounting the deeds of his life.

No other literature that has come down to us from ancient times
describes so vividly and minutely as that of the North the deeds of the
grand heroes of old. We can imagine ourselves on the battle-field, can
hear the clatter of arms, and the whistling of arrows and spears, the
blows resounding against helmet, shield, or coat-of-mail, and the fierce
onslaught; and see before our eyes the boarding of vessels and the
carnage on deck.

In the Sagas which speak of the earliest times we find a magnanimous and
chivalrous spirit, for the contest had to be equal, ship against ship,
man against man. In a great battle chief was against chief, champion
against champion, while the combatants of both sides were looking on,
and he who was successful had to fight with the rest, himself at last
falling mortally wounded, or standing victorious over all. In these
deadly fights, more than anywhere else, do we see this cool daring and
courage of the hardy Norsemen, men looking death in the face calmly and
unflinchingly, feeling that it was better to die with honour or fame
than live with shame, as is so often told in the Sagas; for it is only
towards later times that we see the decay of this spirit of chivalry.

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1358.—Bracteate of gold found in a field, Jutland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1359.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1360.
]

  Gold bracteates, Norway, ⅔ size, found with many other gold
    bracteates.

-----

Footnote 365:

  Thráin, some unknown champion.

Footnote 366:

  Berserks-gang = going like a Berserk into fits of frenzy.

Footnote 367:

  Cf. also Ynglinga Saga, 6; Njal, 104; Egil, 27, 40; Vatnsdæla, 46;
  Fornmanna Sögur, i. 132; Svarfdæla, 7; Orvar Odd, 14; Droplaugar Sona
  Saga, 19.

Footnote 368:

  Landnama, Part V., ch. 5; Hrolf Kraki’s last fight, 50, 51.

Footnote 369:

  The wall of the burg is called here fence.




                             CHAPTER XXVII.
              SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS.

  Harald Hilditönn’s claim to England—King Hring in England—Battle of
    Brávöll—Battle of Dúnheidi—Warlike character of the Race.


In the preceding chapters we have dealt with the customs of the
forefathers of the English-speaking nations of to-day, and will now
proceed to give extracts from those Sagas which deal with the lives and
deeds of some of the earlier kings of the North who claimed to own part
of England, and which mention events that relate to, or took place in,
England, France, Ireland, Scotland, and other countries in later times.
In quoting from the different Sagas there is necessarily a certain
amount of repetition.

Among the earliest kings who claimed to own or have possessions in
England were Ivar Vidfadmi, Harald Hilditönn, Sigurd Hring, and Ragnar
Lodbrok.


“When Sigurd Hring (7th and 8th centuries, A.D.), father of Ragnar
Lodbrok, King of Sweden and Denmark, had made peace in both, and placed
over them tax-kings and jarls, he bethought himself of the kingdom which
his kinsman Harald Hilditönn (war-tooth) had possessed in England, and
before him Ivar Vidfadmi; but it was then ruled by King Ingjald, who it
is said was brother of Petr, Saxon king” (Forrmanna Sögur).[370]


“Ingjald was a powerful king.

“King Hring summoned a great levy from his kingdom, went westward to
England, and, when he came to Northumberland, asked for help, which many
people gave him.

“But when King Ingjald heard of this, he gathered a large host and went
against him, and they fought several battles, in the last of which King
Ingjald and his son Ubbi, with many of their warriors, fell. Hring
thereupon took possession of Northumberland and the whole of Ingjald’s
kingdom.

“King Hring left England, placing as tax-king over Northumberland Olaf,
son of Kinrik, who was said to be a nephew of Moalda the Stout, mother
of Ivar Vidfadmi.

“Then King Hring returned to his realm, and Olaf ruled over
Northumberland, until Eava (or Eana), son of Ubbi, gained the throne. He
and Olaf had many battles; after the last one King Olaf fled, and Eava
won the kingdom.

“Olaf went to Sweden to see King Hring, who then made him chief of
Jutland, and for long afterwards he was tax-king there, first under King
Hring, and afterwards under Ragnar Lodbrok.

“He was called Olaf the English, and his son was Grim the grey, who got
the kingship after his father.

“Grim was father of Audulf the strong, who was tax-king in Jutland under
Ragnar Lodbrok; Audulf’s son was Gorm, who was also tax-king in Jutland,
and was named Gorm the childless.

“King Gorm had many thralls, and some of these had been sent to
Holtsetaland (Holstein) to buy wine, which they carried on many horses”
(Fornmanna Sögur, vol. i.).


Among the most renowned and powerful chiefs and Vikings of the North in
the Sagas, who sailed far and wide, are Ragnar Lodbrok[371] and his
sons, whose deeds are closely connected with the earlier history of
England.

The Saga which follows shows that the Northmen went to England long
before the time mentioned by the English Chronicles.

It is, as we have shown, vain to try to reconcile the English or
Frankish Chronicles with the Sagas. It is therefore obvious that the men
of the chronicles, whose names were similar to the names of Ragnar and
Lodbrok, are not Ragnar Lodbrok, while on the other hand the so-called
sons of Lodbrok, who plundered England, could not be sons of the
above-named Ragnar. We must therefore suppose either that the name
Lodbrok’s sons was used as a family name, both by Ragnar’s grandsons and
following descendants, or that in a family nearly related to his own
there appeared a _Lodbrok_ named after him, who did not rule any realm
in the North, but whose sons were the mightiest and most valiant Vikings
England had ever seen.

That several Ragnars existed at different periods is as certain as that
there were several Halfdans, Sigurds, Haralds, Ivars, Knuts, Olafs, &c.
The custom of calling children after their father and grandfather still
prevails to this day in Scandinavia.

Sigurd Hring, the victor of Bravöll, who succeeded Harald Hilditönn, was
a mighty chief; his realm included the whole of the present Denmark,
Sweden, the countries bordering the Baltic, and others westward, among
them England. As was the custom of those times, the vast possessions of
great and powerful chiefs were ruled by under or tax-kings.

Sigurd Hring had a son, Ragnar. When old enough he obtained ships and
men, and became the greatest of warriors.[372]


“Sigurd Hring was king over Sweden and Denmark after Harald Hilditönn;
his son Ragnar grew up in his hird; he was the largest and strongest man
ever seen, and was like his mother and her family in looks. It is known
from all old sayings about the people called Alfar that they were much
handsomer than other men in the Northern lands, for all the forefathers
of Alfhild his mother and all their kindred were descended from Alf the
old; they were called Alfar, and the two large rivers which are called
Elf[373] are named after him; the one divided his realm from Gautland,
and was therefore called Gautelf; the other separated it from the land
now called Raumaríki, and is called Raumelf. Ragnar was like his father
and his kinsmen in size, like Harald Hilditönn or Ivar Vidfadmi. When
Hring began to grow old and unwieldy his realm began to lessen, and the
remote parts were first lost. King Adalbrikt (Adalbrecht) was descended
from King Ella,[374] whom Hálfdán Ylfing (Wolfing) had slain. He
subjugated that part of England which is called Nordimbraland
(Northumberland); this part was owned by King Hring, and before him by
Harald (Hilditönn). Adalbrikt ruled over it for a long while; his sons
were called Ama and Ella, and were kings of Northumberland after their
father.”


Two of the most famous ancient battles of the North, accounts of which
have been handed down to us, were those of Brávöll and Dúnheidi.


“Sigurd Hring got the kingship in Denmark. He fought against King Harald
Hilditönn on Brávöll[375] in Eastern-Gautland, and there King Harald and
a great many men were slain. This battle, and the battle between
Angantýr and his brother Hlöd in Dúnheidi (Dúnheath), have been most
mentioned in old Sagas, and most men have been slain in them (have been
more spoken of in old Sagas, and more men have been slain in them than
in any other battle)” (Hervarar Saga, c. 16).


_Battle of Brávöll._—In this battle the champions of King Harald seem
chiefly to have come from Denmark and from England and Ireland (the
west), also from Saxland, which was tributary to him; the champions of
King Hring from Sweden, Norway, and the east.


“One autumn he (Sigurd Hring) went to visit King Harald, his father’s
brother, was well received, and remained there for awhile in good
favour. As King Harald was getting old, he placed Hring, his kinsman,
over his host to defend his lands, and he dwelt a long time with Harald.
When old age was heavy upon the king, he made Hring king over Uppsalir,
and gave into his power the whole of Sweden and West Gautland, but he
himself retained the rule over all Denmark and Eastern Gautland (East
Gotland). King Hring married Alfhild, daughter of King Alf, who
possessed the land between the rivers Gautelf and Raumelf, which then
was also called Alfheim; these were great forest-lands. Hring had one
son, Ragnar (Lodbrok), by his wife. King Harald had two sons by his
wife, Hrærek _Slöngvandbaugi_ (Ring-slinger) and Thrand the old.

“When King Harald Hilditönn (war-tooth) was 180 winters old, he lay in
bed, unable to walk; Vikings disturbed his realm with war far and wide.
His friends thought the people fared badly, as there was no rule in the
land; many thought that he was too old. Some chiefs resolved when he was
bathing in a tub to cover it with timber and stones, intending to choke
him therein. When he found that they wanted to kill him, he asked to be
allowed to leave the bath, saying: ‘I know that you think I am too old;
that is true, but I would rather die my fated death. I do not wish to
die in the bath, but in a much more kingly way.’ Then his friends came
and took him away. A little while after he sent word to Sweden, to King
Hring, his kinsman, that he should gather a host from all the lands he
ruled over, and meet him on the frontier and fight against him, and told
him all about the reason, namely, that the Danes thought him too old.

“Hring gathered men from all Sweden and Western Gautland, and many from
Norway; it is said that when Swedes and Norwegians went with the levy
out of Stokksund the ships were two thousand and five hundred. Hring
rode with his hird and the West Gotlanders higher up past Eyrasund, and
then westward, to the forest Kolmörk which separates Sweden from Eastern
Gautland. When he reached a place called Brávik his ship-host met him,
and he encamped on Brávöll near the forest, between it and the bay.

“King Harald gathered men from all Denmark, and a great host came from
Austrriki (the eastern realm) and all the way from Kœnugard[376] and
Saxland. When his host had gathered on Selund, at Kögja, the passage to
Skáneyri from Landeyri could be made on ships only; the whole sea seemed
to be covered with his ship-host. He sent Herleif with his Saxon host to
King Hring, in order to stake out the field chosen for the battle, and
declare the truce and peace broken. King Harald was seven days on his
journey eastwards to Brávik. Both made ready for the battle, and arrayed
their hosts.

“It is said that in the host of King Harald and with him there was a
chief named Brúni, the wisest of all his men, whom he bade to draw up
the host, and assign to the chiefs their places under the standards;
that of the king stood in the midst of the array, and his bodyguard was
placed around it.

“With Harald were: Svein, Sám, Gnepi the Old, Gard, Brand, Blæng, Teit,
Tyrving, Hjalti; these were his scalds and champions. In his hird were
these champions: Hjört, Borgar, Beli, Barri, Beigad, Tóki. There were
the shield-maidens Visma and Heid, each of whom had come with a numerous
host. Visma carried Harald’s standard, and with her were the champions
Karri and Milva. Another shieldmaiden was Vebjorg, who came from the
south from Gotland, and many champions followed her, of whom the most
valiant and renowned were Ubbi Friski (the Frisian), Brat Irski (the
Irish), Orm Enski (the English), Búi Bramuson, Ari the One-eyed, and
Geiralf.

“Many Vindar (Vends) were in the train of Visma; they were easily
recognised, for they had long swords and bucklers,[377] but not long
shields like the other men. On one wing was Heid with her standard, and
one hundred champions; these were her Berserks, and many chiefs were
there too. On the other wing was Haki Höggvinkinni (the cheek-cut one),
and the standards were carried in front of him; there were many kings
and champions with him, amongst them Alfar and Alfarin, the sons of King
Gandalf, who had before been hirdmen at home with Harald. Harald was in
a waggon, for he was not able to fight on foot in the battle. He sent
Brúni and Heid to see how Hring had arrayed his host, and if he was
ready for battle. Brúni said: ‘It seems to me that Hring and his host
are ready; but he has arrayed them in a strange way; he has drawn up his
men in a _swine-array_,[378] and it will not be easy to fight against
him.’ Harald asked: ‘Who has taught Hring to draw up his men in a wedge
shape? I thought nobody knew this except myself and Odin; or is Odin
going to fail in giving the victory to me? That has never happened
before, and even now I ask him not to do it; if he does not want to
grant me victory, may he let me fall in the battle with all my host; if
he does not wish that the Danes should gain the victory as formerly; all
the men who fall on this battle-field I give to Odin.’ It was as Brúni
had told. Hring had arrayed his men in wedge-shape, so the array looked
all the deeper for this; nevertheless it was so broad that one flank
reached to the river Vatá, and the other to Brávik.

“Hring had many kings and champions with him; the foremost was King Ali
the valiant, who had a great many men and many other famous kings and
champions; with him was the champion whose renown is the highest in old
Sagas, Störkud the Old Stórverksson, who had been brought up in Norway,
in Hördaland, in the island Fenring, and had travelled abroad far and
wide, and had been with many kings.”


Many other champions had come from Norway to this battle.


“Thrand from Thrandheim, Thorir from Mœri; Helgi the White, Bjarni,
Hafr, Finn from Firda fylki; Sigurd; Erling the Snake, from Jadar;
Saga-Eirik, Holmstein the White, Einar from Egda-fylki; Hrut the
Rambler, Odd the Wide-travelling, Einar, Ivar.

“The following were the great champions of Hring: Aki, Eyvind, Egil the
Squinting, Hildir Gaut, Gudi, Tollus, Stein from the Venern lake, Styr
the Strong.

“These also had a host of their own: Hrani Hildarson, Svein Reaper,
Hlaumbodi, Soknarsoti, Hrokkel Hœkja, Hrolf the Woman-loving. There were
besides: Dag the Stout, Gerdar the Glad, Duk the Vend, Glum the
Vermlander, Saxi the Plunderer, Sali the Gautlander.

“These from the Swedish realm: Nori, Haki, Karl Kekkja, Krokar,
Gunnfast, Glismak the Good.

“There were from Sigtunir: Sigmund, the Kaupang champion, Tolufrosti.

“Adils the Gay from Uppsalir stood in front of the standards and the
shields and not in the Fylkings; Sigvaldi, who had come with eleven
ships; Tryggvi and Tvivivil were there with twelve ships; Lœsir had a
skeid all manned with champions; Eirik Helsing had a large dragon, well
filled with warriors. Champions had also come to Hring from Thelamörk
(Thelemarken) and they were least honoured, for they were thought
slow-speaking and slovenly; these were: Thorkel the Stubborn, Thorleif
Goti the Overbearing, Hadd the Hard, Gretti, Hroald Toe. There was yet
one more who had come to Hring: Rögnvald the Tall, or Radard Hnefi, who
was the greatest of all champions; he was foremost in the point of the
wedge; next to him were Tryggvi and Lœsir, and then the sons of Alrek
and Yngvi; then were the Thelemarkians, whom none wanted to have, as
they were thought to be of little use; they were great archers.

“When these hosts were ready for battle, both had the horns sounded, and
raised the war-cry. The arrays met, and the battle was so severe, that
it is said in all old Sagas that no battle in the Northern lands was
ever fought with so many and so valiant picked men. When it had raged a
little while, Ubbi the Frisian, a champion, advanced in front of the
host of Harald, and attacked the snout of the array of Hring, and first
of all Rögnvald; their fight was very hard, and terrible blows could be
seen in the host where these dauntless champions rushed at each other,
dealing many and heavy cuts. Ubbi was such a great champion that he did
not cease until their single fight ended by Rögnvald’s fall; then he
rushed at Tryggvi, and gave him his death wound. When the sons of Alrek
saw his appalling rush into the host, they went against him; but he was
so hardy and skilled that he slew them both; then he killed Yngvi; and
rushed so furiously into the ranks that every one fled before him; he
slew all who were foremost in the snout, except those who were fighting
other champions.

“When Hring saw this he urged the host not to let one man overcome all,
such proud men as there were. He shouted: ‘Where is Störkud, who till
now always has borne the highest shield (gained victory)?’ Störkud
answered: ‘We have enough to do, lord, but we will try to gain a victory
if we can, though where Ubbi is, a man may be fully tried.’ At the
urging of the king he rushed to the front against Ubbi, and there was a
great fight between them with heavy blows, as each of them was fearless.
After a while Störkud gave him a large wound, and himself received six,
all of them severe, and he thought he had rarely been so hard pushed by
a single man. As the arrays were dense they were torn from each other,
and so their hand-to-hand fight ended. Then Ubbi slew the champion
Agnar, and cleared a path in front of himself, dealing blows on both
hands; his arms were bloody up to his shoulders; thereupon he attacked
the Thelemarkians. When they saw him they said: ‘Now we need not go
elsewhere, but let us shoot arrows at this man for awhile, and little as
everybody thinks of us let us do the more, and show that we are valiant
men.’ The most skilled of the Thelemarkians began to shoot at him,
namely Hadd the Hard, and Hroald Toe; these men were such excellent
archers that they shot twenty-four arrows into his breast; this much was
needed to destroy his life. These men slew him, but not before he had
slain six champions and severely wounded eleven others, and killed
sixteen Swedes and Goths who stood in the front of the ranks. Vebjörg,
shieldmaiden, made hard onsets on the Swedes and Goths; she attacked the
champion Soknarsoti; she had accustomed herself so well to the use of
helmet, coat of mail and sword, that she was one of the foremost in
chivalry,[379] as Störkud the Old says; she dealt the champion heavy
blows and attacked him for a long while, and with a blow at his cheek
cut through his jaw and chin. He put his beard into his mouth and bit
it, thus holding up his chin. She performed many great feats. A little
after Thorkel the Stubborn, a champion of Hring, met her, and they
fiercely attacked each other; finally she fell with many wounds and
great courage.

“Great events happened here in a short time; and first one, then the
other array got the better; many a man from both hosts never returned
home, or was maimed. Störkud then made an attack on the Danes, and on
the champion Hún, and at last slew him, and a little after one who tried
to revenge his death, by name Ella. Then he attacked Borgar, and after a
hard fight slew him. Störkud rushed through the ranks with a drawn sword
and killed one after another; he cut down Hjört; whereupon Visma,
shieldmaiden, who carried the standard of Harald, met him. Störkud made
a fierce attack on her. She said to him: ‘The fierceness betokening
death is over thee, and now thou shalt die, Thurs!’[380] He answered:
‘First thou shalt nevertheless let the standard of Harald fall,’ and cut
off her left hand. Then Brai, Sækalf’s father, tried to avenge her, but
Störkud pierced him with his sword. In the host in many places could now
be seen large heaps of slain and fallen men. A little after Gnepja, a
great champion, attacked Störkud; they fought hard, and Störkud gave him
his death-wound. Afterwards he slew Haki, but received many large wounds
himself; he was cut on the neck at his shoulders so that one could see
into his chest, and on his breast he had a large wound so that his lungs
were hanging out, and he had lost one finger on his right hand. When
Harald saw that so many of his hird and champions fell, he rose on his
knees and took two saxes, whipped fast forward the horse which drew the
waggon, and thrust the saxes with both hands and slew many a man with
his hands, though he was not able to walk or sit on horseback. The
battle went on thus for a while, and the king performed many great
deeds. Towards the end of the battle Harald Hilditönn was struck on the
head with a club,[381] so that his skull was broken; and that was his
death-wound, and Brúni slew him. When Hring saw the waggon of Harald
empty, he knew that he had fallen; he had the horns blown and shouted
that the host should stop. When the Danes became aware of this the
battle ceased, and Hring offered truce to the entire host of King
Harald, which all accepted”[382] (Sögubrot, c. 9).


Then follows the grand and imposing funeral of King Harald, given in
Vol. I., page 326.

_The Battle of Dúnheidi._—It arose out of a quarrel between Hlöd, son of
Heidrek, and the hitter’s brother, Angantyr, in regard to the
inheritance claimed by the former; he went to his mother’s father, King
Humli of Hunaland, who was also his foster-father, and both went to war
against Angantyr.


“In the spring they (Hlöd and Humli) gathered a host so large that no
man able to fight was left in Húnaland. All from twelve winters old up
to sixty went; the host was so large that it could be numbered by
thousands, and no less than thousands were in the fylkings. A chief was
put over every thousand, and a banner over every array; five thousand
were in every fylking, and thirteen hundred in every thousand, and in
every hundred four times forty (160); and the fylkings were
thirty-three. When this host had gathered it rode to the forest called
Myrkvid (the dark wood), which separates Húnaland and Reidgotaland. When
they came out of the forest there were level plains, and the land was
much cultivated; on the plains there stood a fine burgh, which Hervör,
the sister of Angantyr, and Hlödver and her foster-father Ormar ruled.
They were there to defend the land against the host of the Hunar, and
had many men.

“One morning at sunrise, as Hervör stood on a tower over the burgh-gate,
she saw such large clouds of dust in the direction of the wood that the
sun was hidden for a long time; then she saw so distinctly through the
dust-clouds that it looked as if all were gold under them, with fine and
gold-covered shields, gilded helmets, and white _brynjas_; she saw it
was the Huna-host,[383] and a large mass of men. Hervör went quickly
down, called her horn-blower, and told him to summon her men together.
Then she said: ‘Take your weapons and make ready for battle; and thou,
Ormar, shalt ride to the Hunar, and challenge them to battle in front of
the southern burgh-gate.’ Ormar answered: ‘The Hunar have so large a
host that we cannot withstand it; therefore I advise that thou shalt
ride to thy brother, King Angantyr, and tell him how matters stand.’
Hervör asked: ‘Art thou afraid, Ormar, to meet the Hunar? Do as I said,
and challenge them to battle.’ Then Ormar rode out of the town towards
the Hunar; he shouted loudly, and told them to ride to the burgh and in
front of the southern gate. ‘I challenge you to battle there; those who
come first shall wait for the others.’ Ormar rode back to the town; then
Hervör was ready for battle, and they rode with all their host out of
the burgh against the Hunar. Horns were blown, and thereupon a great
battle began, and soon more men fell on Hervör’s side, for the Hunar had
a far larger host. Ormar rode forward into the host of the Hunar, and
slew so many that it would take a long time to enumerate them, and none
whom he could reach with the sword had any chance of living; both his
arms were bloody up to the shoulders. When Hervör saw that her men fell
she became exceedingly angry, and slew men and horses to the right and
left; she always slew six men at each blow, and all fled from her. She
was more like a lion than a man to look at. Were a man ever so valiant,
if he met her, he met his death; she could not, however, withstand the
great odds she fought against. When ten thousand of her men had fallen,
she shouted to Hlöd and said: ‘Come to single fight against me, Hlöd, if
thou hast the bold heart of a man.’ Hlödver answered: ‘I am not thirsty
for thy blood, sister.’ He entreated his men to take her, ‘for she must
be first in our power.’ When Hervör heard this she spared no one, and
slew all that met her, and thus it went on for a long time; then the
host attacked her, but she slew all who came near her, until she fell
dead from her horse. Large streams of blood gushed out of her mouth, and
every man thought she had died from exhaustion; none had ever heard that
a woman had fought so valiantly. Hlödver had her laid in a mound with
great honour. When Ormar saw that Hervör fell, he galloped much wounded
out of the battle, and did not stop until he came to Arheimar; the
remnant of Hervör’s men fled to the town. When Ormar found King
Angantyr, he received him well and asked for tidings. Ormar sang:

                ‘From the south I have come
                To tell this tale;
                Burned is all
                The heath of Myrkvid;
                The whole Goth-thjód
                Is besprinkled with blood of men.

                I know the maiden of Heidrek,[384]

                       *       *       *       *       *

                Thy sister,
                Sank to the ground;
                The Hunar have
                Slain her,
                And many others
                Of your thegns;
                She was better at ease
                In the fight
                Than talking with a wooer
                Or going to the bench
                In a bride-walk.’[385]

“When Angantyr heard this he curled his lips, and it was a long time
before he spoke; at last he said: ‘In an unbrotherly manner wast thou
treated, my famous sister.’ Thereupon he looked over his hird, and there
were not many. He sang—

                       ‘Very many were we
                       When we drank the mead;
                       Now we are fewer
                       When we should be more;
                       I do not see one
                       Among my men
                       Who would ride
                       And carry a shield,
                       And go to meet
                       The Huna-host,
                       Though I entreated him
                       And paid him with rings.’

“Gizr the Old said—

                      ‘I will not
                      Ask for an eyrir[386]
                      Nor a sounding
                      Piece of gold,
                      But will however ride
                      And carry a shield
                      To challenge the Huna-thjód
                      To the fight.’

“It was the law of King Heidrek, that if a host of foes came into a
land, and the king of the land enhazelled a battle-field and appointed
the place of the battle, the Vikings should not plunder before the
battle was fought. Gizr war-dressed himself and took good weapons; he
mounted his horse as if he were a young man. He said to the king: ‘Where
shall I tell the Hunar to fight?’

“Angantyr sang—

                     ‘Tell them on Dylgja,
                     And on Dun-heath,
                     And on all
                     The Jossar-mountains,
                     There the Gotar often
                     Carried the spear and fought,
                     And the renowned got
                     A fine victory.’

“Gizr rode onwards till he came to the Huna-host; he rode so near that
he could speak to them, and shouted with a loud voice—

                      ‘Your king is full of fear,
                      Your king is death-doomed,
                      Your standard floats high,
                      Odin is angry with you.
                      I challenge you at Dylgja,
                      And at Dun-heath,
                      To battle under
                      The Jossar-mountains;
                      May Odin slight you
                      In every fight,
                      And may he let
                      The arrow fly,[387]
                      As I foretell.’

“When Hlöd heard the words of Gizr, he sang—

                     ‘Take Gizr
                     The man of Angantyr
                     (Who has) come from Arheimar.’

“King Humli said—

                          ‘We shall not
                          Slay the messengers
                          Who alone
                          On a journey go.’

“Gizr said: ‘The Hunar cannot, nor can their horn-bows make away with
us.’ He pricked his horse with his spurs, and rode to Angantyr, went
before him and greeted him. The king asked if he had found the
Huna-host. Gizr replied: ‘I spoke to them, and summoned them to
battle-field on Dunheath in Dylgja-dales.’ Angantyr asked how many
warriors the Hunar had. Gizr answered: ‘Great is their mass;
thirty-three fylkings, five thousand men in each fylking, thirteen
hundred in each thousand, a hundred and sixty men in each hundred.’

“King Angantyr then had a war-arrow sent, and sent men in every
direction, and summoned every one who was willing to help him and could
wield weapons; thereupon he went to Dunheath with his men, and had fifty
thousands; the Huna-host came against him, and it is said that the odds
were so great at first, that seven were against one of Angantyr’s men.
Both raised their war-booths, and slept during the night.

“Next morning they prepared for battle and drew up their arrays; the
horns were blown so that they were heard twenty miles away in every
direction, and the land shook as if hanging by a thread. Then the array
closed; first spears and arrows, shafts and gaflok (a kind of arrow),
cross-bows and pole staffs (poles with iron points) were shot, and all
that could kill a man was aloft, and that went on for a long time. When
the shooting ceased they drew their swords, and a hard hand-to-hand
fight began, and kept on all that day; then they went to their
war-booths in the evening. Now a third of Angantyr’s men had fallen, but
few of the Hunar; warriors gathered round Angantyr by night and day from
every direction. Early in the morning they began the fight, and it was
no less hard than the first day; there was many a shield broken, many a
brynja torn, and many a good rider lost his life; thus it went on all
day; again more men fell on Angantyr’s side, and the night ended the
fight. In the same way it went on the third day; they fought till night,
and the Hunar had better success. The fourth day they called all their
men by the blowing of horns to the battle-field, and began the fight
with an immense beating of drums and sounding of horns, and then there
was a great slaughter among the men of Angantyr. Gizr the Old saw this,
and could not stand it; he rode forward into the Huna-host, as if he
were very young, and slew so many that it would take a long time to
enumerate them; no shield was so hard, and no armour so safe, that it
could resist his blows. Ormar also fought exceedingly well in the
Gota-host, though the wounds he had got in the former battle were
scarcely cured. Wherever Angantyr went among the host all drew back; no
one whom he was able to reach with _Tyrfing_ had a chance to live; now
so much blood was on the battle-field that it reached up to the belt (of
the warriors).

“At the end of the day they went to their tents, and dressed the wounds
of their men. The Gotar grumbled much, for the Hunar always had the best
of it. Still they went to the battle the fifth day, and defended
themselves valiantly, for Angantyr always fought most bravely. Late in
the day they heard a war-blast and beating of drums; Herlaug was there
with sixty thousand men to help Angantyr. Angantyr said he was welcome
in his need; then they raised war-booths for themselves, and the host
slept during the night. When it was light enough for fighting they began
the battle; so many fell that day that no one knew their number, and the
horses waded in the blood up to the saddle-girths; they could no longer
fight in the battle-field because of the bodies of the dead, and the
battle turned much against the Hunar. The ninth day Hlöd sent Angantyr
word that they should rest themselves that day in order to make handles
to the spears and repair their shields. Angantyr assented. None of the
chiefs were then wounded. Angantyr had no fewer men than when the battle
began (fifty thousand) for warriors had gathered to him all the time by
night and day; Hlöd had no more left of his host than forty thousand,
and of his men three times one hundred thousand, and eight hundred had
fallen. It is not told how many Angantyr had lost, and old sagas name
this battle only as the greatest north of the sea.

“When the tenth day came, they wanted to fight it out, so the one or the
other should be free at night. Hlödver urged the Hunar on as well as he
could, and said it would not be easy to ask the Gotar to spare their
lives; ‘I want to find Gizr the Old before this battle is ended, for we
have something to talk over.’ On the other side Angantyr said to his
men: ‘Let us go forward like warriors, and defend our freedom and
foster-land.’ Herlaug replied he would willingly follow him, and he had
to take revenge on the Hunar for his sister’s daughter. Then both the
hosts put horns to their mouths and blew a war blast, so that the
mountains echoed it, and it could be heard more than twenty miles away
when they rode to the battle. Then they drew their swords and began
fighting, and no man’s courage needed to be sneered at. Hlöd rode forth
foremost of his men, and slew warriors to right and left like the most
savage lion; and wherever he met a thick array he killed twelve with one
blow; fear entered many breasts, and they said that none in the host was
his like; he had his arms bloody up to his shoulders, and never ceased
with this onset till near mid-day. King Humli fought best of the Hunar
next to Hlödver, and none to whom he dealt a sword blow had a chance of
living. Of the Gota-host, King Angantyr, Herlaug, and Gizr the Old
fought best; Angantyr always slew twelve at a blow if he found them
standing together; for a long time the brothers did not look at each
other, and rode past each other. Many a thick helmet was cleft, and many
a strong brynja torn; there one could see many riders cut asunder and
many horses running with their saddles empty. The arrows and the spears
flew so thickly that the sun could not be seen, and the din of weapons
was so loud that no man understood what was spoken; many events took
place, though few are mentioned here.

“King Humli and Ormar met in the battle, and exchanged hard blows, and
at last Ormar fell dead. Gizr the Old saw this, and struck at King
Humli; the sword hit his shoulder, and cut off his arm and his side; the
king fell dead from his horse. Hlöd saw this, and rode to Gizr and smote
on his helmet with all his strength, and cleft the head, the brynja, the
body, the saddle and the horse through the middle; the sword stuck in
the ground. Herlaug was near, and rode to Hlödver and said: ‘I am daring
enough to slay this Troll, or I will get a blow from him like that which
Gizr got.’ He struck at Hlödver with all his strength, and hit his
helmet and cut off the part he hit; then his sword was turned to the
shoulder, and cut the brynja, and Hlödver was slightly wounded; then he
smote at Herlaug, who retreated; nevertheless the sword-point touched
his breast, and cut his brynja and his belly open. Angantyr saw this,
and riding forward between them, struck at Hlödver with Tyrfing. Hlödver
parried with his sword, and Tyrfing hit it in the middle; it gave a loud
clang; they fought thus long during the day that Angantyr could neither
hit him with thrust nor blows; then Angantyr cut both the guards off
Hlödver’s sword with _Tyrfing_, but he did not slacken at that. Now Hlöd
smote on Angantyr’s helmet, but it was so hard that the blow did no
harm; the sword broke in two where Tyrfing had hit it before. Once more
Angantyr struck at Hlödver, but he parried with the rest of his sword;
Tyrfing hit his shoulder at the breast, and its point went inwards;
Angantyr did no more, and they parted thus; the battle at once ceased.
So many were slain of the Huna-host that only three hundred men lived of
all the great number, and these were all wounded and tired; fifteen
thousand lived of Angantyr’s and Herlaug’s men. Angantyr offered peace
to the Hunar, which they willingly accepted. He went to search for
Herlaug, and at last found him; he had ridden far away from the
battle-field to the war-booths, and lay near to the king’s tent; he had
wrapt clothes round his belly, and could not speak; the king carried him
to his tent, and sewed his belly together with a silken thread, and then
laid him in a silk-bed; it had become dark and they went to sleep during
the night.

“Next morning the king caused the battle-field to be searched, and no
man was found living; all who could not leave the battle-field were
drowned in the blood. The king searched for Hlödver, and found him dead
on a high hill; then he sang—

                   ‘I offered thee, brother,
                   Uncut rings,
                   Property and many treasures
                   For which thou didst yearn most;
                   Now thou hast neither
                   Bright rings
                   Nor land
                   As reward for this battle.
                   We are cursed, brother,
                   I have become thy slayer;
                   That will never be forgotten;
                   Evil is the decree of the Nornir.’

“Angantyr had him laid in a mound on the hill where he had fallen, and
three of the foremost men before named with him; but all the common men
were heaped together into large piles, and covered with mould; the place
where the slain lay was eight miles in circumference; the mounds may be
seen this day. It is said that Reidgotaland and Hunaland are now called
Thydskaland (the Scandinavian name for Germany); Thydskaland numbers
twelve kings’ realms as Norway. It is not mentioned whether Angantyr
subjugated Hunaland or not. King Angantyr ruled Reidgotaland till his
death, and was very like his grandfather, King Höfund; his son was
Heidrek Ulfsham (wolf-skin), who got the kingship after his father, and
held it for a long time” (Hervarar Saga, c. 17).


The whole Saga literature teems with figurative expressions and
expressions showing the warlike character of the race.

In no other language do we find such poetical and forcible expressions
for battles, weapons of offence and defence, ships, blood, &c., as those
given by the people of the North. The following are a few of the
figurative expressions used for battles:

The Odin’s storm, Odin’s rain, the Valkyrjas’ storm, the weapon’s wind,
the song of the spears, the din of spears, the weapon’s-thing, the
sword’s game, the Ran’s battle (the goddess of the sea), the Thing of
Gunn (a Valkyrja), the judgment of the weapons, the storm of weapons,
the storm of wounds, the iron voice, the trial of helmets, the ground
reddener, the storm of war-kings, the rattling wind of Göndul, the spell
song of Odin, the song of Brúni (Odin), the anger of Odin, the Yule of
Hugin (one of the ravens of Odin), the thaw of Göndul, the shower of Ali
(a sea-king), and other celebrated sea Vikings, the uproar of the sea.

Warriors were often called:

The thegn of the rain of swords, the helmet heeder, the diminisher of
peace, the lord of the battle, the trier of weapons, the feeder of the
wolf, the raven-feeder, the servant of the High one (Odin), the oak of
Odin, the dyer of hedges, the bush of Odin, the field-reddener, the
reddener of the mouth of Hugin (Odin’s raven), the dyer of the brynias,
the waterer of the wolves, the reddener of eagles’ soles (claws), the
breaker of brynias, the urger of swords’ play, the crane of battle, the
cheerer of the wolf, the raven starver, the steerer of the shield.

Blood is called:

The dew of the sword, the dew of Skogul, the dew of arrows, the wine of
the corpse, the surf of the wound, the wine of the wolf, the sweat of
the wounds, the drink of Hugin, the beer of the battle-ground, the
lather, foam, froth of weapons, the mighty fjords of swords, the tears
of the sword, the ale of the wolf, the rain of the wound, the stream of
the sword, the liquid of life, the feast of the birds of battle, the
wine of the hawk, the rivulet of the wound.

The raven and eagle were called:

The oath brother of the eagle, the wound-bird, Odin’s hawk, the gull of
the wound.

The wolf was called:

The grey deer, the boar of the slain, the dog of the nornir, the horse
of the Jotun, the dog of Odin, &c.

Horses were sometimes called:

The bloody-hoofed one, the silver-maned, the gold-maned, the galloping
fire, the deer of the saddle, the ship of the ground, the wind, the
gilded hoofed, the noisy goer, &c.

Fire, so often used for burning houses, is called:

The brother of the wind, the thief of the house, the wolf of the hall,
the dog of the embers, the noise maker.

-----

Footnote 370:

  Two other manuscripts, Vestra Saxa king.

Footnote 371:

  “Ragnar Lodbrok’s Saga is only a continuation of the Volsunga Saga,
  and especially dwells upon the subject that Ragnar’s wife Aslaug was
  descended from Sigurd Fafnisbani. The other story seems to be a
  fragment of the same large Saga about Harald Hilditonn and his
  descendants, which describes the end of Ivar Vidfadme and the Bravalla
  battle” (Munch: ‘History of Norway’).

  Trustworthy registry of relationship in ancient Northern writings
  unite in putting Ragnar Lodbrok three generations earlier than the
  discovery of Iceland, which took place between 870–880.

Footnote 372:

  Ragnar Lodbrok’s Saga, c. ii.

Footnote 373:

  They seem to have believed that Elf (river) was derived from Alfar.

Footnote 374:

  Apparently there were two kings of the name Ella.

Footnote 375:

  The date of the battle was probably about the year A.D. 700.

Footnote 376:

  Kœnugard (Kief).

Footnote 377:

  _Buckler_, probably a smaller shield.

Footnote 378:

  The “wedge shape” was the same as that called _cuneus_ by the ancient
  Romans, and was very old; it is mentioned by Tacitus.

Footnote 379:

  Riddaraskap = equestrian exercises.

Footnote 380:

  The word Thurs is used as an abusive term.

Footnote 381:

  _Kylfa._ In several places in the Sagas the use of heavy clubs as
  weapons is mentioned.

Footnote 382:

  For continuation see chapter on “Burials.”

Footnote 383:

  The numbers of the Huna-host are differently given in different texts.
  It is difficult to find the exact numbers, as Latin letters are used,
  and sometimes forty and sixty (XL., LX.) seem to be confused; this may
  be due to the carelessness of the scribe.

Footnote 384:

  Part of the text of this stanza is missing.

Footnote 385:

  Walking with her bridesmaids.

Footnote 386:

  Money.

Footnote 387:

  The custom of throwing a spear over the host to give it to Odin.




                            CHAPTER XXVIII.
              SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS.
                             (_Continued._)

  Ragnar Lodbrok—His voyages and wars—His death in England—The sons of
    Ragnar Lodbrok—Ivar revenges his father’s death—Wide extent of the
    expeditions of Ragnar’s sons—Ivar king in England.


After King Hring’s death his son Ragnar assumed the sovereignty of
Sweden and Denmark, whereupon several kings threw off their subjection
and claimed independence, because he was a young man and appeared to
them little fitted for counsels or ruling the land.

There was then a jarl in Western Gautaland called Herraud; he was the
jarl of King Ragnar. He was a wise man and a great warrior. He had a
daughter, who was called Thora Borgarhjort (the hart of the burgh).
Ragnar Lodbrok[388] was married to Thora. Their children were Agnar and
Eirik, and Alof,[389] who was married to Hunda-Steinar Jarl in England.
Their son was Bjorn,[390] father of Audun Skokul, father of Thora
Moshals, mother of Ulfhild, who was married to Gudbrand Kula; their
daughter was Asta, mother of St. Olaf.


“Now it is told that Ragnar sat at home in his realm, and knew not where
his sons were; nor did his wife Randalin know, and he heard every one of
his men say that no one could equal his sons, and he thought that no men
could equal them in renown. He pondered on what fame he might seek which
would be as lasting. At length he resolved to engage craftsmen, and had
wood felled in the forest for two large ships, and men saw that they
were two knörrs[391] so large that none equal to them had been built in
Northern lands; he also made great war preparations all over his realm.
By this men saw that he was going on an expedition out of the country,
and the rumour of it spread widely in the neighbouring lands, so that
their rulers, fearing that they would not be left at peace in their
realms, proceeded to guard their lands against the invader, in case he
might come. Randalin asked Ragnar whither he was going. He told her he
intended to go to England with only two knörrs, and as many men as they
could hold. Randalin answered: ‘This expedition seems to me rash. I
think it better for thee to have more and smaller ships.’ He said: ‘It
would be but a poor exploit to win lands with many ships, but there is
no example of a land like England having been conquered by two ships; if
I am defeated, the fewer ships I take out of the country the better.’
Randalin said: ‘It seems to me as costly to make ready these ships as to
have many longships for this expedition; thou knowest that it is
difficult to land with ships in England, and if thy ships are lost thy
men cannot defend themselves, though they get ashore, if an army attacks
them, and longships are more convenient for effecting a landing than
knerrir.’ Then he had his ships prepared and got men so that they were
fully manned; people talked much about his intention. When his ships and
men were ready and a fair wind came, he said he would go down to his
ships. When he was ready she led him down to the ships, and before they
parted she said she would reward him for the shirt he had given to her.
He asked her how, and she sang:

                    ‘I give thee the long shirt,
                    Nowhere sewn,
                    Woven with a loving mind
                    Of hair—[392]
                    Wounds will not bleed
                    Nor will edges bite thee
                    In the holy garment;
                    It was consecrated to the gods.’

“In making his voyage to England he met with adverse gales, so that both
his ships were wrecked on the coast of England, but all his men got
ashore with their clothes and weapons. Thereupon he succeeded in taking
villages and burghs and castles, one after the other. King Ella, who
ruled England, had heard that Ragnar had left his country; he sent men
to tell him when he had landed; they came and brought news of Ragnar.
Ella sent messengers all over his realm, summoning every man to come
that could wield a shield and ride on a horse and dared fight; he thus
gathered such a large host that it was a wonder, and made ready for
battle. Ella said to his men: ‘If we gain the victory in this battle,
and you see Ragnar, you must not attack him with weapons, for he has
sons who sooner or later will avenge his death.’ Ragnar made ready for
battle, and used the cloth which Randalin had given him to be used as a
coat-of-mail, and had the spear in his hand with which he slew the
serpent that lay round the hall of Thóra, which no other man dared to
face; he had no armour except a helmet. When they met the fight began.
Ragnar had far fewer men. Many of Ragnar’s men fell after a short time,
but where he went himself his foes drew back, and that day he walked
through their ranks; whenever he cut or thrust at shields, coats-of-mail
or helmets, his blows were so heavy that nothing stood against them, but
never did any blow or shot harm him; he got no wounds, and slew many of
King Ella’s men. In the end, when all Ragnar’s men had fallen, he was
surrounded by shields and taken. He was asked who he was, but was silent
and gave no answer. Ella said: ‘That man must be punished if he will not
tell who he is; now throw him into a snake-pit and let him sit there a
long time, and if he says anything by which we can see that he is
Ragnar, he shall be taken away as soon as possible.’ So Ragnar was taken
there and sat there a long time, and the snakes did not attack him.
People said, ‘This is a great man; the weapons did not wound him to-day,
and now the snakes do no harm to him.’ Ella told them to take off his
outer garment, and when they had done so the snakes attacked him all
over his body. He said: ‘The pigs would grunt now if they knew what the
old one[393] is suffering;’ and though he said this they yet knew not
that he was Ragnar or any other king. He sang:

                   ‘I have fought battles
                   Fifty and one
                   Which were famous;
                   I have wounded many men.
                   I little thought that snakes
                   Would cause my death;
                   Often that happens
                   Which one least expects.

                   The pigs would grunt
                   If they knew the hog’s suffering;
                   The gnawing hurts me;
                   The snakes thrust in their snouts
                   And stick to me cruelly;
                   They have sucked me;
                   Soon shall I be a corpse;
                   I will die among them.’

“He died, and was taken away. Ella saw that it was Ragnar. But Ella
pondered how he should succeed in retaining his realm, and wondered how
the sons of Ragnar would receive the news of their father’s death. He
had a ship made ready, and appointed a wise and hardy man to command it;
he manned the ship well, and told the men that he sent them to Ivar and
his brothers to tell them of the fall of their father; most of them had
little mind to go. Ella said: ‘Notice carefully how each of the brothers
receives this news; then go your way when you get a fair wind.’ He had
them so well equipped that they needed nothing; their journey was
prosperous.

“The messengers (of Ella) came with their men to the burg, where the
sons of Ragnar were enjoying a feast, and went into the hall where they
drank, and to the high-seat, in which Ivar (the eldest of Ragnar’s sons)
sat. Sigurd (snake-eye) and Hvitserk the bold sat playing chess, while
Björn jarnsida (ironside) was sharpening a spear-shaft on the floor.
When the messengers came up to Ivar they greeted him respectfully; he
answered their greeting, and asked whence they were and what tidings
they had to tell. Their leader said they were Enskir menn (English men),
and that Ella had sent them with the tidings of the fall of their father
Ragnar. Hvitserk and Sigurd immediately dropped the chessboard, and
listened attentively to this news. Björn stood on the floor of the hall,
leaning on his spear-shaft. Ivar inquired of them minutely how his death
had occurred. They told all that had taken place after he came to
England till he lost his life. When it was told that Ragnar had said
‘the pigs would grunt,’ Björn moved his hands on the spear-shaft, and
grasped it so firmly that the print of his fingers could be seen on it
afterwards; when the messengers had finished, Björn shook his spear so
that it brake in two. Hvitserk had in his hand a chess-piece which he
had taken, and squeezed it so hard that blood started out from under
each of his nails; and Sigurd had a knife in his hand and was trimming
his nails at the time, and listened so attentively that he felt nothing
until the knife had cut him to the bone, and did not move. Ivar inquired
about everything as minutely as he could, while his face became red,
blue and pale by turns, and his features were so distorted that all his
skin became swollen on account of the anger in his breast. Hvitserk
began to speak, and said they could most speedily commence their revenge
by killing the messengers of King Ella. Ivar said: ‘That shall not be;
they shall go in peace wherever they like, and if they lack anything
they may tell me, and I will give it to them.’ When they had performed
their errand they went out of the hall to their ship, and with a fair
wind sailed out to sea, and returned in safety to Ella.

“When the messengers of Ella had gone, the brothers met to talk over how
they should avenge their father. Ivar said: ‘I will not take part in or
gather men for that, because Ragnar met with the fate I anticipated. His
cause was bad; he had no reason to fight against King Ella, and it has
often happened that when a man wanted to be overbearing and wrong others
it has been the worse for him; I will take wergild from King Ella if he
will give it.’ When his brothers heard this they became very angry, and
said they would never so disgrace themselves, even on his
recommendation. ‘People will say that our prowess is departed if we do
not avenge our father. We have been all over the world on warfare, and
slain many innocent men. That shall not be; we will fit out every
seaworthy ship in Denmark; every man who is able to carry a shield
against Ella shall go with us.’ Ivar said he and the ships he commanded,
except his own ship, should remain behind. When people heard that Ivar
was not going, the brothers obtained fewer men, but nevertheless went.
As soon as they landed in England Ella heard of it, and had his horn
blown, and bade all who were willing to follow him; he got so many men
that no man could number them, and went against them. They met, and Ivar
was not in that battle, the end of which was that Ragnar’s sons fled,
and Ella got the victory. During the flight Ivar said: ‘I will not go
back; I will try whether King Ella will give me some honour or not; I
will rather take wergild from him than be again defeated like this.’
Hvitserk said they could not prevent him from doing what he liked, but
they would never take wergild. Ivar said he would leave them, and asked
them to rule over their realm and send him as much movable property as
he wanted. When he had said this he took leave of them and went to Ella,
and when he came before him he saluted him, and said: ‘I have come to
you and want to be reconciled to you, and get as much honour as you will
give me; I see that I cannot defeat you, and will rather get from you
such honour as you will give me than lose more men or my own life.’ Ella
answered: ‘Some say thou art not to be trusted, and that thou often
speakest fair when thou thinkest foul, and it is not easy to be a match
for thee and thy brothers.’ Ivar said: ‘I ask for little; if thou
grantest it I swear never to go against thee.’ The king asked what he
wanted. Ivar answered: ‘I want thee to give me as much of thy land as an
oxhide stretches over, and this ground shall be marked out; I want no
more, and thou wilt do me no honour if thou wilt not do this.’ Ella
said: ‘I cannot see that it will do us harm if thou ownest so much of my
land, and I will give it thee if thou wilt swear not to fight against
me; I fear not thy brothers if thou art faithful to me.’ It was
accordingly agreed that Ivar should swear not to fight against him, nor
give any advice to harm him, and in return he obtained as much English
land as the largest oxhide he could procure stretched over. Ivar got the
hide of a bull, and had it soaked and stretched three times; then he had
it cut into very thin strips, and the fleshy side separated from the
hairy side; and when the strips were joined the length of the thong was
astonishing. He stretched this out on a broad field, and the ground
surrounded by it was so large that a great burgh could stand on it, and
on the outskirts he had ground marked out for large burgh-walls; he
engaged many workmen, and had many houses built on that field, and
raised a great burgh called[394] Lundúnaborg,[395] which is the greatest
and most famous of all burghs in all the Northern lands. He used all the
loose property for making this burgh; he was so liberal that he gave
gifts with both hands, and his wisdom was so renowned that all came to
him for advice in difficulties; he settled all disputes to the
satisfaction of the parties, and was so beloved that he had a friend in
every man; he helped Ella much in ruling the land, and settled many
matters for him without the king requiring to look at it afterwards. And
when he was thought to be the owner of all wisdom he sent men to his
brothers to ask them for gold and silver, as much as he wanted to have.
Messengers came to the brothers, told their errand, and how it had fared
with Ivar, for no one knew what devices he had in his mind; the brothers
saw that his mind was not as it used to be. They sent as much as he
wanted; and when the messengers returned to Ivar, he gave all that he
had received to the leading men in the country, and thus drew them away
from King Ella, so that they all promised to be quiet in case of war.
When he had done this he sent men to tell his brothers that he wanted
them to levy a host in all the lands which belonged to their realm, and
bring every man they could get. When the brothers got this message they
knew that he now thought it likely they would be victorious. They
gathered men from Denmark, Gautland, and all the realms they ruled over,
and having drawn together an enormous host, they sailed to England, and
stopped neither night nor day, as they did not want their journey to be
heard of. The news, however, reached Ella, who summoned his men, but got
few, for Ivar had drawn many from him. Ivar went to him and said he
would do what he had sworn, but could not rule over his brothers’
doings, though he might see them and find out if they would withdraw the
host and do no more harm. He went to them and urged them to go forward
and engage in a battle, for the king had much fewer men. They answered
that he need not urge them on, as their mind was the same. Ivar told
King Ella that they were so eager and incensed that they would not
listen to his words. ‘When I wanted to reconcile you they remonstrated;
I will do as I swore, and not fight against thee; I and my men will be
quiet while the battle goes as it may.’ Ella saw the host of the
brothers, which ran forward in great haste. Ivar said: ‘Now, King Ella,
array thy men, as I foresee they will make a severe attack for some
time.’ When they met there was a great fight, and the sons of Ragnar
rushed fiercely forward through the ranks of Ella’s host, and they were
so eager that they only thought of doing as much as they could, and the
battle was both long and hard. At last Ella and his men fled, and he was
taken. Ivar was present, and told them how to slay him. He said: ‘Now it
is time to remember what kind of death he chose for our father; the man
who is best skilled in wood-carving shall mark an eagle as deep as he
can on his back, and that eagle shall be reddened with his blood.’ The
man who was told to do this did as Ivar said. Ella got so deep a wound
by this that he died, and now it seemed to them they had avenged their
father. Ivar said he would give them his part in their realm, but rule
England himself.

“Thereupon Hvitserk, Björn and Sigurd went home to their realm, and Ivar
remained and ruled over England. After this their host was less
concentrated, and they made warfare in various countries. Once Hvitserk,
when his mother Randalin was old, made warfare in eastern lands, and
such an overwhelming force met him that he could not raise his shield,
and was captured. He chose as the means of his death that a pyre should
be made of human heads, and he be burnt on it; and thus he died. When
Randalin heard this, she sang:

                   ‘A son whom I owned
                   Met death in the eastern lands;
                   Hvitserk was he called,
                   Nowhere willing to flee;
                   He was warmed by the heads
                   Of men slain in battle;
                   The strong-minded chief
                   Chose that death before he died.’

“From Sigurd Snake-eye there descended a great family; his daughter was
Aslaug, mother of Sigurd Hart, who was father of Ragnhild, mother of
Harald Fairhair, who first ruled all Norway alone. Ivar ruled England
till his death from disease. When on his death-bed he told them to carry
him to a certain spot exposed to attacks, and said he was confident that
those who landed there would not obtain a victory. When he died they did
as he said, and he was buried in a mound. It is told by many that when
Harald Sigurdsson came to England he landed where Ivar was, and he was
slain in that expedition. When Vilhjálm bastard (William the Conqueror)
came ashore, he went there and broke Ivar’s mound, and saw that his body
had not decayed. Then he had a large pyre made and Ivar burned on it.
Thereupon he landed and got the victory. Björn Ironside had many
descendants, among them Thórd, a great chief who lived at Höfdi in
Höfdaströnd (Iceland)” (Ragnar Lodbrók’s Saga, cc. 10–19).


After the battle just mentioned on the preceding pages we have an
account of the doings of Ragnar Lodbrók’s sons; and here again we are
reminded that their kinsmen owned part of England before them.


“After this battle Ivar[396] became king over the part of England which
his kinsmen had owned before. He had two brothers born of a concubine,
Yngvar and Hustó; they tortured King Játmund the holy at Ivar’s bidding,
and then conquered his realm. The sons of Ragnar made war in many
lands—in England, Valland, Frakkland, and Lumbardi. It is told that they
came furthest when they took the burg called Luna, and secretly intended
to go to Rome and take it; their expeditions were the most famous
throughout all the Northern lands of the Danish tongue. When they came
back to Denmark they divided the lands. Björn Ironside got Uppsalir, the
whole of Sweden, and what belonged to it. Sigurd Snake-eye[397] got
Selund (Zeeland), Skani, Halland, the whole of Vik (Christianiafjord),
Agdir to Lidandisness, and a great part of Upplönd; but Hvitserk got
Reidgotaland and Vindland” (Ragnar’s Sons’ Saga, c. 3).


From the Sagas we find that even in the times of their father their
renown was very great, and their expeditions extended far and wide.


“The sons of Ragnar Lodbrok went thence till they came to a town called
Luna, having destroyed nearly every burgh in all Southern realm
(Sudrriki); they had become so famous all over the world that there was
hardly a little child that knew not their name. They intended not to
cease until they came to Romaborg, for they were told that this town was
both large, populous, and famous and wealthy; they did not exactly know
how far distant it was, but they had so many men that food was not to be
procured. In Luna they consulted about the expedition. There came
thither an old and grey man, who said he was a beggar, and had been
travelling all his life. ‘Thou must be able to tell us many tidings we
wish to know.’ He answered: ‘I know of no lands you can ask about, about
which I cannot tell you.’ ‘We want thee to tell us how far it is from
here to Romaborg.’ He said: ‘I can tell you one thing as a mark; you see
these iron shoes which I wear? They are now old, and those which I carry
on my back are also worn out. When I left Rome I tied on my feet these
worn-out ones on my back. They were new then, and I have been on the
journey since.’ When they heard this, they thought they could not carry
out their intention of going to Rome, and so they returned with their
host, taking many burghs on their way which had never been taken before,
the traces of which are seen to this day” (Saga of Ragnar Lodbrok, c.
13).


“Sigurd was married to Heluna, daughter of King Ella. The sons of
Ragnar, after having ravaged in England, Valland, Saxland, and all the
way to Lombardy (Lungbardi), Sweden, Denmark, and Vindland, returned
home; they divided between themselves the lands which they had won.
Björn Jarnsida (ironside) got in his share both Sweden and Gautland;
Sigurd Snake-eye, Eygotaland, Halland, and Skaney; Hvitserk,
Reidgotaland (probably some part of Northern Germany), and Vindland.

“When Sigurd Snake-eye was in Denmark, his wife bore a son named Knut;
he was born at Hord in Jutland, and on that account was called Horda
Knut. King Gorm brought him up. Gorm died on a bed of sickness, while
Horda Knut became king of Eygotaland, Skaney, and Halland, for these had
been the share of his father Sigurd Snake-eye” (Flateyjarbok;
Jomsvikinga Thatt).


“Ivar the Boneless was long King in England, but had no children, as his
nature was such that he had no love lust; but he did not lack wisdom or
cruelty, and died from old age in England, and was mourned there. Then
were all the sons of Lodbrok dead.

“After Ivar, Adalmund Jatgeirsson got the kingship of England; he was a
brother’s son of Jatmund (Edgarson) the holy, and he christianized
England widely; he took taxes for Northumberland, because it was
heathen. After him got the kingship his son Adalbrigt (Ethelbert); he
was a good king, and became old. In his old age a Danish host came to
England, and their leaders were Knut and Harald, sons of King Gorm. They
underlaid (subdued) a large realm in Northumberland which Ivar had
owned. King Adalbrigt went against them, and they fought north of
Kliflönd (Cleveland), and many Danes fell. The Danes went ashore at
Skardaborg (Scarborough) and fought there and got the victory; then they
went south to Jorvik (York) and all the people became their men and they
were not afraid of themselves (were secure).

“One day in hot weather the men went to swim, and as the king’s sons
(Gorm’s sons) were swimming between the ships men came running down on
the shore and shot at them; Knut was struck to death with an arrow; they
took the body out to the ships. When the men of the country heard this
they gathered so that the Danes could not get ashore any more because of
the great number of people (against them), and went back to Denmark.
Gorm was then in Jutland. When he heard the news he sank backwards and
died of grief the next day after at the same time as he had got the news
the day before. Then Harald got the kingship after him over the Dana
realm; he was the first of his kinsmen who was baptized” (Ragnar’s Sons,
c. iv.).


“Sigurd Hjort (hart) was king in Hringariki; he was larger and stronger
than any other man, and one of the handsomest men. His father was Helgi
Hvassi, and his mother Aslaug, daughter of Sigurd Snake-eye, son of
Ragnar Lodbrok. It is told that when Sigurd was twelve winters old he
slew Hildebrand, berserk, in single fight, and twelve berserks in all.
He performed many great deeds, and there is a long Saga of him. Sigurd
had two children; his daughter Ragnhild surpassed other women and was
twenty years old while her brother Guttorm was young. It is told of King
Sigurd that he rode alone into unsettled places (deserts) and hunted big
and dangerous animals; he always was very eager in that. One day, as was
his wont, when he had ridden a long distance, he came to a clearing near
Hadaland; here he met the berserk Hake with thirty men, and a fight took
place, in which fell Sigurd Hjort and twelve of Hake’s men. Hake himself
lost one hand, and received three severe wounds. Hake then rode with his
men to Sigurd’s farm, and captured his daughter. Thus Harald Harfagr, on
his mother’s side, was descended from Ragnar Lodbrok.

“Halfdan married Ragnhild, and she became a powerful queen. The mother
of Ragnhild was Thyri, daughter of Klakk-Harald, King of Jutland, sister
of Thyri Danmarkarbot, the wife of Gorm the old Dana king, who then
ruled Denmark” (Halfdan the Black’s Saga, c. 5).


Here we have an account of a terrible battle, which nevertheless has not
been considered as great as that of Bravoll and Dunheath by the people
of the North.


“Sigurd Snake-eye, Björn Ironside, and Hvitserk had made warfare widely
in Frakkland (France); thereupon Bjorn went home to his realm.
Thereafter Ornulf Emperor fought against the brothers and one hundred
thousand men fell of the Danes and Northmen. There fell Sigurd Snake-eye
and another king, Gudrod, who was the son of Olaf, son of Ring, son of
Ingjald, son of Ingi, son of Ring, after whom Ringariki is named; he was
the son of Dag and Thora, mother of warriors; they had nine sons, and
the family of the Doglings has sprung from them. Helgi the bold,
Gudrod’s brother, took out of the battle the standard and the shield and
the sword of Sigurd Snake-eye. He went home to Denmark with his men and
found Aslaug, Sigurd’s mother, and told her the tidings.[398] But as
Hordaknut was young, Helgi stayed there long with Aslaug to defend the
land. Sigurd (Snake-eye) and Blœja had a daughter, who was a twin-sister
of Hordaknut. Aslaug gave her her own name and then raised her.
Afterwards Helgi the Bold married her; their son was Sigurd Hart; he was
the finest, largest, and strongest man seen at that time. But when
Sigurd was twelve winters old, then he killed in a single fight
(Einvigi) the berserk Hildibrand. After that Klakk Harald gave him in
marriage to his daughter Ingiborg. They had two children, Gudthorm and
Ragnhild. Then Sigurd heard that King Frodi, his father’s brother, was
dead, and went northward to Norway, and became king over Ringariki, his
kin-inheritance. About him there is a long Saga; for he performed many
great deeds. But of his death it is told that he rode out into
uninhabited places to hunt game, as was his custom, and there came to
him Haki Hadaberserk (berserk from Hadaland) with thirty fully armed
men, and fought with him. There Sigurd fell, but had before that slain
twelve men, and King Haki had lost his right hand and had besides three
other wounds. Thereupon Haki rode with his men to Stein in Ringariki,
which was Sigurd’s farm, and took away his daughter Ragnhild and his son
Gudthorm and a great deal of property home with himself to Hadaland; and
a little later he had a great feast prepared, and intended to keep his
wedding, but that was delayed, because his wounds would not get cured.
Ragnhild was then fifteen winters old, but Gudthorm fourteen winters.
Thus passed the autumn and winter to Yule, while Haki lay sick from his
wounds. Then was King Halfdan the Black in Heidmork at his farms. He
sent Harek Gand (the wolf, the wizard) with a hundred men, and they
crossed on the ice of the Mjors (Mjosen) to Hadaland one night and
arrived at dawn to King Haki’s farm and took possession of all the doors
in the skali, in which the hirdmen slept, and then they went to King
Haki’s sleeping-chamber (skemma) and took Ragnhild and Gudthorm her
brother, and all the property that was there and carried away with them,
and burned the skali with all the hirdmen and then went away. But King
Haki arose and dressed himself and walked after them for awhile, and
when he came down to the ice, then he turned the guards of his sword
downward and threw himself upon its point and died therefrom, and is
mound-laid on the brink. King Halfdan saw that they were driving across
the ice with a tented waggon, and therefore thought that they had
performed his errand as he wanted it. He then sent word all around the
neighbourhood, and invited all the prominent men of Heidmork, and that
day had a great feast and held his wedding with Ragnhild, and they then
lived together for many days. Their son was King Harald Fairhair, who
was the first sole king of Norway” (Ragnar Lodbrok’s Sons, c. 5).


“There ruled in Denmark two kings, Sigrfrodi and Halfdan, and after them
Helgi; the latter had a fight with Olaf King of Sweden in which he fell,
and Olaf afterwards ruled long over Denmark (Danmork) and Sweden, dying
on a sick bed. After him Gyrd and Knut took the kingship in Denmark, and
after them Siggeir, followed by Olaf Kinriksson, who was a nephew of
Moallda the Stout (digra), mother of Ivar Vidfadmi; he ruled long as
king over Jutland, and was called Olaf Enski (the English). His son Grim
Gani, who took the kingship after his father, was father of Audulf the
Rich, tax-king in Jutland of Ragnar Lodbrok’s sons. Audulf’s son Gorm,
who also was tax-king in Jutland, was called Gorm the Childless. He was
powerful and well loved by his men. He had long ruled over the country
at this time” (Flateyjarbok, vol. i.).


-----

Footnote 388:

  Lod-Brók = Hairy breeches. He made a dress of hairy breeches and a
  hairy cloak, which he boiled in pitch and then hardened: this was done
  in order that he should be able to attack the serpent which watched
  over Thora, who was said to surpass all other women in beauty as the
  hart does other animals, and was most accomplished in all handiwork.
  Afterwards he appears to have married Aslaug, the daughter of Sigurd
  Fafnisbani by Brynhild. They begat several children. The oldest, Ivar,
  had no bones in his body, but was very wise; the others were Bjorn,
  Hvitserk, Rognvald, and Sigurd (Snake-eye).

Footnote 389:

  From Landnama we find that Ragnar had been previously married, and had
  other children in addition to those already enumerated.

Footnote 390:

  Another son of Hundasteinar and Alof was named Eirik, father of Sigurd
  Bjódaskalli, father of Vikinga Kári, father of Bödvar, Vigfús and
  Eirik, who was the father of Ástrid, mother of King Olaf Tryggvason.
  (Landnama, p. 234.)

Footnote 391:

  In Ragnar’s Sons’ Saga, ch. ii., the two are said to be built in
  Norway. Ragnar says to Aslaug: “I have had two knörrs built in
  Vestfold, because his realm extended to the Dofrafjalls and
  Lidandisness.”

Footnote 392:

  Following word obscure.

Footnote 393:

  The old one = Ragnar; the pigs = his sons.

Footnote 394:

  In another the name is given as Jorvik or York.

Footnote 395:

  It may have been a suburb of the present London.

Footnote 396:

  Ivar, who, according to the Sagas, did great things in England, is no
  doubt the same man who is called in the chronicles Ingvr, Lodbrók’s
  son, who in 870 killed King Eadmund the Holy.

  The English writers mention Ingvar and Ubbi, the sons of Lodbrók, as
  having taken a leading part in killing the king; and as the Sagas
  don’t speak of any son of Lodbrók who fought in England other than
  “Ivar,” Ingvar and Ivar must be one and the same person.

Footnote 397:

  Sigurd Snake-eye was married to Blœja, daughter of King Ella; their
  son was Knut, or Horda-Knut, who acquired the realm after his father,
  and Selund, Skani, and Halland.

Footnote 398:

  Stanza omitted; corrupted, cannot be made out.




                             CHAPTER XXIX.
              SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS.
                             (_Continued._)

  The first Jarl of Normandy—His banishment from Norway—Genealogy of
    the Jarls of Normandy—Political connection between kings of the
    North and of England—Jealousy between Athelstan and Harold
    Fairhair—Hákon of Norway educated in England—Northern chiefs come
    to the help of English kings—Battle of Brunanburgh.


Very little is said in the Sagas of Göngu Hrolf, the first jarl of
Normandy, for he, like all those who left their country to settle in
foreign lands, was forgotten by the scalds at home, as these did not
take part in their expeditions. We give here different sagas which
confirm each other in regard to him. But the little we have concerning
him is extremely interesting, as his descendants conquered England and
part of France. All the different Sagas agree in calling him a son of
Rognvald jarl of Norway.

The causes which led to his banishment are simply and clearly related.


“Rögnvald Mæra jarl was a very great friend of King Harald, and was much
valued by him. Rögnvald was married to Hrolf Nefja’s daughter Hild,[399]
and had by her the sons Hrolf and Thorir.... Hrolf was a great Viking,
and so large that no horse could carry him, so that he walked wherever
he went, and for this reason he was called Göngu Hrolf (walking Hrolf).
He made much warfare in the east. One summer when he returned from
‘Vikingry,’ or a raiding expedition in the east, he committed acts of
depredation in Vikin. King Harald, who was then in Vikin, was very angry
when he heard of this, for he had strictly forbidden robbery within his
land. He therefore announced at a Thing that he made Hrolf an outlaw
from Norway. When Hrolf’s mother Hild[399] heard this, she went to him
to ask for pardon for Hrolf, but the king was so angry that her prayers
were of no avail. Then she sang:

           Disgrace not Nefja’s namesake[400]
           Nor drive the wolf from the land,
           The wise kinsman of Höld,[401]
           Why dealest thou thus with him, king?
           It is bad to worry
           Such a wolf of Ygg’s,[402]
           He will not be gentle toward
           The king’s herds if he runs into the woods.”[403]

Göngu Hrolf then went westward across the sea to the Sudreyjar
(Hebrides), and thence west to Valland, and made war there, and got a
large jarl’s realm, where he induced many Northmen to settle down. It
was afterwards called Nordmandi.

“Göngu Hrolf’s son ‘William’ (Vilhjálm) was father of Richard (Rikard),
father of Richard the Second, father of Robert Longsword,[404] father of
Vilhjalm (William) the Bastard, king of the English, from whom all
subsequent English kings are descended. The jarls in Normandi are also
of Hrolf’s family” (Harald Fairhair’s Saga, c. 24).


“Rögnvald jarl of Mæri was married to Ragnhild, daughter of Hrólf Nefja;
the first of their sons was Ivar, who fell in the Hebrides on an
expedition with Harald Fairhair; the second was Göngu Hrolf, who won
Northmandi; from him are descended the Ruda-jarls (Rouen jarls), and the
Engla-kings (English kings); the third was Thórir jarl the Silent, who
was married to Alöf Arbot, the daughter of Harald Fairhair, and their
daughter was Bergljot, mother of Hakon jarl the Powerful”[405]
(Landnama, iv., 8).


“Rögnvald jarl conquered the country with Harald Fairhair, who gave him
the rule over the two Mæri’s and Raumsdal. He was married to Ragnhild,
daughter of Hrolf Nefja; their son was Hrolf, who won Northmandi. He was
so large that no horse could carry him, and he was therefore called
Göngu Hrolf. From him are descended the Rouen jarls, and the kings of
England” (Flateyjarbok, vol. i.).


“Rögnvald, jarl of Mæri, was the son of Eystein Glumra, son of Ivar
Uppland jarl, son of Halfdan the old; Rögnvald was married to Ragnhild,
daughter of Hrolf Nefja.

“The sons of Rögnvald were: Ivar, who fell in the Hebrides when with
King Harald Fairhair; Göngu Hrolf, who won Northmandi, and from whom the
Ruda (Rouen) jarls are descended, as well as kings of England; and
Thorir jarl the Silent, who was married to Harald Fairhair’s daughter
Arbot, their daughter was Bergljot, mother of Hakon jarl the Great”
(Landnamabok, iv. 8).


“King Olaf had been on warfare west in Valland two summers and one
winter. Two jarls were then in Valland, Vilhjalm and Rodbert; their
father was Rikard Ruda-jarl (jarl of Rouen); they ruled Northmandi.[406]
Their sister was Queen Emma, who was married to Adalrad (Engla-king);
their sons were Jatmund, Jatvard the Good, Jatvig and Jatgeir. Rikard
Ruda-jarl was the son of Rikard son of Vilhjálm Langaspjót (longue
epée); he was the son of Göngu Hrölf jarl who won Nordmandi; he was the
son of Rögnvald Mæra jarl the Powerful, as before is written. From Göngu
Hrölf have sprung the Rúda jarls, and long after they reckoned
themselves to be the kinsmen of the chiefs of Norway, and thought so for
a long time, and were always great friends of the Northmen, and all of
these men had a peace-land in Normandy who would accept it. For the
autumn King Olaf came to Normandy, and stayed during the winter in Signa
(Seine), and had peace-land there” (St. Olaf’s Saga, ch. 19).


Here is the genealogy of the jarls of Normandy.


“King Harald was the son of Halfdan (the Black), king in Uppland;
Halfdan the Black’s father was Gudröd Veidikonung (hunting king), son of
Halfdan, who was called the liberal and food-stingy, for he gave his men
as much pay in gold as other kings theirs in silver, but he kept them
short in food. The mother of Halfdan the Black was Asa, daughter of
Harald Granraud, King of Agdir.

“The mother of Harald Fairhair was Ragnhild, daughter of Sigurd Hjört
(Hart), whose mother was Aslaug, daughter of Sigurd Snake-eye, son of
Ragnar Lodbrok.

“Sigurd Snake-eye’s mother was Áslaug, daughter of Sigurd Fafnisbani.
Sigurd Hjört was married to Thyri, daughter of Klakkharald of Jutland
and sister of Thyri, Denmark’s improver (Danmarkarbot), who was married
to Gorm (the Old) King of Denmark” (Flateyjarbok, vol. i., ch. i.).


The testimony of the Sagas, as we see, is here unmistakable, clear, and
to the point. When we compare them with the Frankish annals and their
fabulous and strange stories and discordant dates, we cannot but give
the preference to the Sagas.


“Alfred the Powerful (_riki_) ruled over England; he was the first of
his kinsmen who was absolute king in the days of Harald Fairhair, King
of Norway. After him his son Edward was king; he was the father of
Athelstan the Victorious (the foster-father of Hakon the Good), who was
king after his father. There were several brothers, sons of Edward. When
Athelstan became king those chiefs who had lost their lands through his
forefathers rose against him, thinking it would be easier to regain
their lands from so young a king. These chiefs were Bretar (Britons) and
Skotar (Scots) and Irar (Irish). Athelstan gathered a host, and gave pay
to every man, both foreigners and natives, who wanted it. The brothers
Thórólf and Egil were going southward past Saxland and Flæmingjaland
(Flandre); when they heard that the King of England needed men, and as
there was likelihood of getting much property, they decided to go
thither with their men. They went in the autumn to the king, who
received them well, for he thought that their following would be a great
help; he offered them pay for their service to defend his kingdom; they
made an agreement and became his men. England had been Christian for a
long time when this happened; the king was a good Christian, and was
called Æthelstan trufasti (constant in belief). He asked Thórólf and
Egil to be _prime-signed_, as was then very usual, both among traders
and those who went into the service of Christians; for those who were
prime-signed had full intercourse with both Christians and heathens, but
at the same time believed what they liked best. Thórólf and Egil did so
at his request. They had three hundred men in the service of the king”
(Egil’s Saga, c. 50).


The following shows the jealousy that existed between the two kings,
Æthelstan and Harald Fairhair of Norway.


“At this time Æthelstan, who was named the victorious and the faithful,
had taken the kingdom in England. He sent to Norway a messenger, who
went in before King Harald and handed him a sword with golden guards and
hilt, and its scabbard was ornamented with gold and silver, and set with
gems. The messenger turned the handle of the sword towards the king, and
said: ‘Here is a sword, that King Æthelstan said thou shouldst take.’
The king took hold of the hilt, and the messenger added: ‘Thou didst
take hold of this sword, as our king wanted thee to. Thou shalt now be
his _thegn_ (subject), because thou didst take it by the hilt.’ Harald
then saw that this had been done to deride him, for he did not want to
be the _thegn_ of any man. He nevertheless remembered his habit,
whenever he got angry, to first keep quiet and let his anger subside,
and then look at the matter calmly. He did thus, and brought the matter
before his friends; and they all thought it right to do as had been done
by. He thereupon allowed King Æthelstan’s men to depart unharmed.

“Hauk Hábrok (high breeches) was with King Harald. He was a good
messenger on all difficult errands, and dear to the king. The summer
after this King Harald entrusted his son Hakon to the hands of Hauk, and
sent him westward to England to King Æthelstan. Hauk found him in
London, at a great feast. He went into the hall with thirty men, and
said to them: ‘We will so arrange that the one who enters last shall go
out first, and we will all stand in a line before the king’s table, and
each one shall have his shield on his left side, and hide it under his
cloak.’ He took the boy Hakon on his arm, and they entered; he saluted
the king, who bid him welcome; then he seated the boy on King
Æthelstan’s knee. The king looked at him, and asked why he did this.
Hauk replied: ‘King Harald of Norway asks thee to foster for him this
child of his bondwoman.’ King Æthelstan at this became very angry,
seized a sword near him, and drew it as if he wanted to slay the boy.

“Hauk then said: ‘Thou hast now seated him on thy knee, king; and murder
him thou mayest if thou wilt; but by this thou wilt not exterminate all
King Harald’s sons.’ Hauk and his men walked out and went to their
ships, and when they were ready they set sail and returned to Norway.
King Harald was well pleased with the result of their errand, for it is
said that the man who fosters the child of another is of lower rank. By
these doings of the kings it could be seen that each wanted to be
greater than the other; but nevertheless each retained his rank, for
each was over-king over his kingdom until his dying day” (Olaf
Tryggvason’s Saga, pp. 16, 17).


The following Saga corroborates the story of Hakon being sent over to
England for his education, and indirectly shows the intercourse which
existed between England and Norway.


“King Æthelstan had Hakon baptized and taught the true creed, good
habits, and all kinds of courtesy. He loved him more than any one else,
kinsman or not, and every one who knew him liked him. He was afterwards
called Æthelstan’s foster-son. He was larger and stronger and handsomer
than other men, and the greatest man of _idróttir_, wise and eloquent,
and a good Christian” (Olaf Tryggvason’s Saga vol. i.; Fms.).


We see how insecure at the time of Æthelstan was the position of a king
or a sub-king, and how much they depended on the help of the powerful
and independent warriors by whom they were surrounded, and without whom
they could not have ruled.


“When Eirik (blood-axe), a Norwegian, saw that he could not resist the
host of (his brother) Hákon, he sailed westwards across the sea with
those who wished to follow him; he went first to the Orkneys, and took
many men with him thence. Then he sailed to England and made warfare in
Scotland wherever he landed; he also made warfare in the North of
England. Adalstein, king of the English, sent word to Eirik offering him
a realm in England, as his father King Harald had been a great friend of
his, and he wished to show that to his son. They made an agreement, so
that King Eirik got _Nordimbraland_ (Northumberland), in order to keep
it for King Adalstein, and defend it against the Danir and other
vikings. Eirik was to be baptized, and his wife and his children, and
all the men that had followed him there. Eirik agreed, was baptized, and
adopted the true belief. _Nordimbraland_ is one-fifth of England. He sat
in _Jórvik_ (York), where the sons of Ragnar Lodbrók are said to have
sat before. _Nordimbraland_ is for the most part inhabited by Northmen,
since the sons of Ragnar won it; the Danir and the Northmen often
attacked the land after they had lost it. Many of the names of the land
are in the _Norræna_ (Northern tongue): _Grimsbær_ (Grimsby), and
_Hauksfljót_ (Hauks-fleet), and many others” (Heimskringla, Hakon the
Good, c. 3).


“King Eirik blood-axe kept many Northmen, who had come westward with
him, and his friends continued to come from Norway. As he had little
land, he went on warfare during the summer, ravaged in Scotland and the
Hebrides, Ireland, and Bretland, and thus won property. Æthelstan died
on a sickbed (A.D. 940); he had been king fourteen winters, eight weeks
and three days. Thereupon his brother Edmund became King of England; he
did not like the Northmen, and was not fond of Eirik, and it was said
that he wished to place another king over Northumberland. When Eirik
heard this he went on a western viking expedition, taking with him
Arnkel and Erlend, the sons of Torf-Einar, from the Orkneys. Then he
sailed to the Hebrides, and there many vikings and host-kings joined
him. He went first to Ireland, then he crossed to Bretland, and
plundered there. After this he sailed south to England,[407] and ravaged
there, as in other places; but all the people fled wherever he went. As
he was a very valiant man and had a large host, he trusted so much to
this that he went far up into the land, and plundered and searched for
men. The king whom Edmund had set to defend the land there was named
Olaf; he gathered an overwhelming host, and went against Eirik. There
ensued a great battle.... Eirik and five kings with him fell; ... and
there was a great slaughter of Northmen; those who escaped went to
Northumberland, and told Gunnhild and her sons the tidings” (Hakon the
Good, c. 4).


“When (Eirik’s wife) Gunnhild and her sons became aware that Eirik had
fallen, and had first plundered in the realm of the Engla-king, they
knew they could not expect peace there, and at once made ready to leave
Northumberland with all the ships which Eirik had owned; and also took
with them all those who wished to follow them. They also carried away
what property had been gathered from taxes in England, as well as what
had been won in warfare. They sailed with their men north to the
Orkneys, and stayed there awhile. Thorfinn Hausakljuf (head-cleaver) was
then jarl. The sons of Eirik subdued the Orkneys and Shetlands, and took
taxes from them; they remained there during the winter, but went on
western viking expeditions in the summer in Scotland and Ireland” (Hakon
the Good, c. 5).[408]


The following account gives us an insight of the manners of the time
during Æthelstan:—


“Eirik saw no other choice than to leave the land (Norway), and departed
with Gunnhild his wife and their children. Arinbjörn hersir was a
foster-brother of King Eirik, and the foster-father of his children, and
dearest to him of all lendirmen.... They went first westward across the
sea to the Orkneys. Then he married his daughter Ragnhild to Arnfin
jarl, and went with his host south, past Scotland, and made war there,
and thence south to England, ravaging there. King Æthelstan heard this,
and gathered men and went against Eirik. When they met, words of
reconciliation were carried between them, and it was agreed upon that
King Æthelstan gave Eirik Northumberland (Northymbraland) to rule over;
and he was to be his land-defender against the Scotch and the Irish.
Æthelstan had made Scotland tributary after the fall of King Olaf, but
the people were constantly faithless to him” (Egil’s Saga, c. 62).


_Battle of Brunanburgh._—This battle is interesting and important in its
details. It illustrates in many instances the customs of the people at
the time of Athelstan, and shows that many customs were identical in
England and the North, and that these Northmen were continually coming
to England to help their friends or kinsmen.

Of Egil, the hero of this important battle, we read:


“When Egil grew up it could soon be seen that he would be ugly and like
his father, with black hair. When he was three winters he was tall and
strong as other boys of six or seven. He was early talkative and wise in
words, but was rather hard to deal with in games with other youths”
(Egil’s Saga, c. 31).


“Olaf Raudi (the red) was a powerful king of Scotland. His father was
Scotch, while his mother was Danish, descending from Ragnar Lodbrok.
Scotland was said to be a third of the size of England; Nordimbraland
(Northumberland) is called a fifth part of England, and is northernmost,
next to Scotland, on the east. The Danish kings had held it in former
times: Yorvik (York) was the head burg. This Æthelstan owned, and had
placed two jarls to rule it; one was named Alfgeir, the other Gudrek.
They were there to defend it, both against the attacks of the Scots and
those of the Danes or Northmen, who ravaged there much. They thought
they had great claims to it, for in Northumberland were only men whose
fathers or mothers were of Danish kin, and, in many cases, both. The
brothers Hring and Adils ruled Bretland (Wales), and paid a tribute to
Æthelstan. When they were in the king’s host, they and their men were to
stand foremost in the ranks, in front of the banners. They were among
the greatest of warriors, though not very young. Alfred the Great had
deprived all tributary kings of their title and power; they who had been
called kings or kings’ sons were called jarls; this continued while he
and his son Edward lived. Æthelstan came young to the kingship, and did
not inspire much dread. Many who were faithful before then became
faithless.

“Olaf, king of the Scots, gathered a large host, and went south to
England. When he reached Northumberland, he went with[409] war-shield
all over the land. But the jarls who ruled there heard of it, and
gathered men, and went against him. There ensued a great battle, which
ended in a victory for Olaf. Gudrek fell, and Alfgeir fled with most of
their men who got away from the battle. Alfgeir could stop nowhere, and
Olaf conquered the whole of Northumberland. Alfgeir went to Æthelstan
and told him of his defeat, but as soon as he heard that so numerous a
host had entered the country he summoned men, and sent word to his jarls
and chiefs. He at once departed with his host against the Scots. When it
was reported that Olaf, King of the Scots, had been victorious, had
conquered a large part of England, and had a far greater force than
Æthelstan, many chiefs went to him. Hring and Adils had gathered many
men, and went over to King Olaf, who then had a very large army.
Æthelstan then had a conference with his chiefs and counsellors to see
what was most expedient. He told the whole assembly distinctly what he
had heard about the Scottish king, and his great number of men. All
agreed that Alfgeir jarl had been most to blame, and it seemed to them
right to remove him from his place. It was agreed that the king should
go back to the southern part of England, and gather men northwards
throughout the whole land, for they saw that the great number needed
would gather too slowly if the king himself did not call them together.
He made Thorolf and Egil leaders of the host there; they were to lead
the men whom vikings had taken to the king, and Alfgeir had still the
command of his own men. The king also made those it pleased to him
chiefs of detachments (Sveit). When Egil came from the meeting, he was
asked what news he could tell about the king of the Scots. He sang....

“Then they sent men to Olaf with the message that Æthelstan would fence
a field with hazels to offer it as a battlefield to him on Vinheidi (=
Vin-heath), at Vinuskogar (= Vinu-forest); that he did not want them to
ravage in his land, and that the one who gained the battle should rule
over the realm, England; they were to meet in the course of one week,
and he who should arrive there first was to wait one week for the other.
It was customary then, after a battlefield had been enhazelled, to
consider it a disgrace for a king to plunder until after the battle.
Olaf therefore stopped his host, and did not ravage, but waited for the
appointed day; then he moved his force to Vinheidi. There was a town
north of the heath, where he took up his quarters; he had there the
greatest part of his host, for large provinces (herad) lay up to it, and
he thought it was easiest there to obtain necessary supplies for the
host. He sent some of his men to the heath where the battle was
appointed, to find a place for the tents and prepare everything in
advance. When they came to where the field was to be fenced, hazel poles
were put up all round to mark the place where the battle was to take
place. Care was taken that it should be even, as a large number of men
was to be arrayed there. The battle-place was a level heath; on one side
a river, and on the other a large forest. There was a very long distance
between the forest and the river, where it was shortest, and where the
tents of Æthelstan reached all the way from the one to the other. There
was no one in every third tent, and even few in those that were
occupied. When the men of Olaf came to the tents they had many men in
front of all the tents, but did not allow them to go in. The men of
Æthelstan said that all their tents were full, and that their whole host
had not room in them; the tents stood in so high a place that it was
impossible to look over them and see whether they were many or few in a
cut through, and they thought there must be a great host. They pitched
their tents north of the hazel poles, on a gentle <DW72>. The men of
Æthelstan said day after day that their king was coming or had arrived
to the town south of the heath, and men gathered to them both by day and
by night.

“When the appointed time was past they sent a message to Olaf that
Æthelstan was ready for the battle, with a very numerous host, but that
he did not wish such a great slaughter as was likely to take place, and
bade him rather go home to Scotland and he would allow him as a friendly
gift a shilling (skilling) in silver for every plough in all his
kingdom, and that they should become friends. When the messengers came
to Olaf he was preparing for battle, but on the announcement of their
errand he stopped his advance that day, and with his chiefs sat in
council. Different advices were given; some urged him much to accept
this offer, thinking it most honourable to go home, having received so
large a tribute from Æthelstan; others dissented, and said that he would
offer much more next time if this was not accepted. This was agreed
upon. Then the messengers asked Olaf to grant them time to see King
Æthelstan, and try if he would pay more to get peace. They asked for
truce; one day to ride home, another for deliberation, the third for
returning. This was granted; the messengers went home, and came back the
third day and told Olaf that Æthelstan would give all he offered before,
and besides to his host a shilling to every free-born man, and a mark to
every leader who had command over twelve men or more, one mark in gold
to every leader of hirdmen (courtiers), and five marks in gold to every
jarl.

“The king had this announced to his men, some of whom desired it, and
others opposed it. At last the king decided that he would accept these
conditions if King Æthelstan let him have the whole of Northumberland
with the taxes and tributes thereto belonging. The messengers asked for
a further delay of three days, and that Olaf would then send to hear
from Æthelstan if he would accept these terms; they said that they
thought King Æthelstan was very anxious to conclude the agreement. Olaf
consented, and sent his messengers, who found Æthelstan in the burgh
which was nearest south of the heath. They spoke of their errand, and
the offer of reconciliation; the men of Æthelstan told also what they
had offered to Olaf, and that it was the advice of wise men thus to
delay the battle, as the king had not arrived. Æthelstan quickly gave
decision, and said to the messengers: ‘Carry these my words to Olaf,
that I will allow him to go back to Scotland with his men if he pays
back all the property he took wrongly here in the land. Let us then make
peace between our countries, and let neither make war on the other. Olaf
shall become my man, and hold Scotland from me, and be my under-king. Go
back and tell him this.’ The messengers went back that evening, and came
to Olaf about midnight. They awoke him, and delivered their message. The
king immediately called the jarls and other chiefs, and had the
messengers tell the result of their errand and the words of Æthelstan.
As this was made known among the warriors, all said that they must make
ready for battle. The messengers also told that King Æthelstan had a
great many men, and that he had arrived to the burgh the same day as
they. Adils jarl said: ‘Now my words have proved true, king, that you
would experience the cunning of the English. We have remained here a
long time, and waited while they have gathered all their men, and their
king has probably not been anywhere near here when we came. They must
have gathered many men since that time. It is my advice that I and my
brother ride at once in advance of you this night with our men. It may
be that they have now no fear about themselves, as they have heard that
their king is near with a large host. Then we will attack them, and as
they flee they will lose many men, and be less bold afterwards in
fighting against us.’ The king thought this a good advice, and agreed to
make his army ready at dawn and meet him. They decided upon this and
then parted.

“Hring, and Adils his brother, made ready and went in the night south to
the heath. When it became light the sentinels of Thorolf saw the host;
there was blown a war-blast, and the men put on their armour; they began
to array them in battle order in two fylkings. Alfgeir commanded one of
them, and had a standard carried in front of him: in this one was the
force which had followed him, and also those who had gathered from the
herads (provinces). It was a much larger host than that which followed
Thorolf. Thorolf had a wide and thick shield, a very strong helmet on
his head, a sword which he called Lang (the long), a large and good
weapon. He also had a spear (=kesja) in his hand, of which the blade was
four feet long, the point four-edged, the upper part of the blade broad,
and the socket long and thick; the handle was no longer than one could
reach with the hand to the socket, but very thick; there was an iron peg
in the socket, and the whole handle was wound with iron. These spears
were called brynthvari. Egil had the same outfit as Thorolf. He had a
sword he called Nadr (=viper), which he had got in Kurland; it was an
excellent weapon. Neither of them had on a coat of mail. They set up
their standard, and Thorfinn the Hard carried it. All their men had
Northern shields, and their whole equipment was Norwegian. All Northmen
who were there were in their ranks. Thorolf and his men arrayed
themselves nearer to the forest, but the array of Alfgeir along the
river. Adils jarl and his brother saw that they could not come on
Thorolf and his men unawares. Then they began to array their men in
order of battle, and had also two fylkings and two standards. Adils
arrayed his men against Alfgeir, and Hring his against the vikings. Then
the battle began, and both sides went well forward. Adils pushed hard
forward until Alfgeir let his men retreat; the men of Adils then fought
more boldly, and it was not long before Alfgeir fled. He rode away
southward off the heath with a detachment of men, till he approached the
burgh in which the king was stopping. The jarl said: ‘I do not think it
is safe for us to go into the burgh. We got a great scolding last time
we went to the king, when we had been defeated by Olaf, and he will not
think that our honour has improved after this journey. We need not
expect any honour where he is.’ Then he rode southward day and night
until they came west to Jarsnes. There he got passage southward across
the sea, and went to Valland (France), where he had one half of his
kindred. He never since came back to England.

“Adils first pursued the fleeing men, but not far before he returned to
the battle and then made an attack. As Thorolf saw this, he sent Egil
against him, and ordered the standard to be carried thither; he bid his
men follow each other well, and stand closely together. ‘Let us move
toward the forest.’ said he, ‘that it may shelter our back, so that they
cannot attack us from all sides.’ They did so, and a sharp fight
followed. Egil advanced against Adils, and they had a hard encounter.
The difference in numbers was very great, but nevertheless more fell on
Adils’ side. Thorolf became so furious that he threw his shield on his
back, and taking the spear with both hands, rushed forward and struck or
thrust on both sides. Men turned away from him, but he killed many. Thus
he cleared his way to the standard of Hring, and nothing could stand
against him. He killed the men who bore it, and cut down the standard
pole. Then he thrust the spear into the breast of the jarl through the
coat of mail and his body, so that it came out between his shoulders; he
raised him on the spear over his head, and put the shaft down into the
ground. The jarl expired on the spear, in sight of foes and friends.
Then Thorolf drew his sword, and dealt blows on both hands. His men also
made an onset; many of the Britons and Scots fell, and some fled. When
Adils saw the death of his brother, and the great fall and flight of his
men finding himself severely pushed, he turned and fled, running into
the forest, as did his men. The entire host of the jarls began to flee.
Thorolf and Egil pursued them, and many more fell; the fugitives
scattered widely over the heath. Adils had dropped his standard, and
nobody knew him from his men. It then quickly began to get dark, and
Thorolf and Egil went back to their camp, and at the same time Æthelstan
came with his entire host. They pitched their tents and encamped.
Shortly afterwards Olaf came with his host, and did the same. Olaf was
told that both his jarls Hring and Adils had fallen, and a great number
of men with them.

“Æthelstan had been, the night before the battle, in the burgh mentioned
before, and there heard that a battle had been fought on the heath. He
at once made ready with the entire host, and went northwards up on the
heath. He then was told minutely how the battle had gone. Thorolf and
Egil went to meet him. He thanked them greatly for their valour and the
victory they had won, and promised them his full friendship. They all
rested there together during the night. Æthelstan awoke his host early
in the morning; he had a talk with his chiefs, and told how his host
should be arrayed. He placed his own fylking first, and put at its
breast those detachments which were the most dashing, with Egil as
leader. ‘Thorolf,’ said he, ‘shall lead his host and the other men I may
put there in another fylking. They shall go against those of the enemy’s
men who are scattered and outside the fylking, for the Scots are usually
not in serried ranks; they run to and fro, and come forward in various
places; they often become dangerous if not guarded against, but do not
stand firm on the field if they are faced.’ Egil answered: ‘I do not
want that Thorolf and I shall be separated in the battle, and it seems
best that we be placed where it is most needed and hard to stand.’
Thorolf said: ‘Let the king decide where he wishes to place us. Let us
assist him so well that he is pleased. I would rather be where thou art
placed, if thou hast no objection.’ Egil replied: ‘You must have your
will, kinsman, but this change I shall often regret.’ After this the men
went forward into the fylkings as the king had ordered, and the
standards were raised. The king’s fylking stood in the open field at the
river, while that of Thorolf was higher up along the forest. Olaf began
arraying his men, when he saw that Æthelstan had arrayed his. He had
also two lines, and he had his fylking and his standard, led by himself,
against Æthelstan. They were equal in point of numbers, but the other
line of Olaf went nearer to the forest, against that which Thorolf led.
The chiefs of this numerous host were Scotch jarls, and most of the men
Scots. The lines met each other, and soon a great battle ensued. Thorolf
made a hard onset, and had his standard carried along the forest,
intending to advance thus that he might attack the king’s array on the
flank. The men of Thorolf carried their shields in front, while the
forest protected them on their right side. Thorolf went so far forward
that few of his men were in front of him. But, when he expected it
least, Adils and his men rushed out of the forest; they pierced Thorolf
with many spears at the same time. He fell, but Thorfinn, who carried
the standard, retreated to where the warriors stood thicker. Adils
attacked, and there was a hard fight. The Scots raised a shout of
victory when they had killed the leader of their enemies. When Egil
heard that shout, and saw that the standard of Thorolf drew back, he
knew that Thorolf himself did not follow it. He rushed forward between
the arrays, and soon knew the tidings when he met his men. He urged the
warriors much to attack, and was foremost with the sword Nadr in his
hand. With this he strided forward slashing on both sides of himself,
and slew many a man. Thorfinn carried the standard after him, and the
men followed it. There ensued a most sharp fight. Egil went forward
until he met Adils; they exchanged but few blows before the latter fell,
and many around him. After his fall, the host which had followed him
fled. Egil and his men pursued, and killed all they got hold of, for it
was then useless to ask for life. The Scottish jarls did not stand long
when they saw that their companions fled, but at once took to their
heels. Egil then went to where Olaf’s array was, and attacked it in the
rear,[410] and made a great slaughter. The line began to waver, and was
all broken up; many of Olaf’s men fled, and the vikings raised a shout
of victory. When Æthelstan saw that the ranks of Olaf began to break up,
he urged his men, and had his standard carried forward. He made such a
fierce attack that the force of Olaf recoiled with a heavy loss. Olaf
fell there, and the greatest part of his host, for all who were caught
in the flight were slain. Æthelstan gained a very great victory.

“Æthelstan left the battlefield, while his men pursued the fugitives. He
rode back to the burgh, and there spent the night. Egil pursued for a
long time, and killed every one he could overtake. When he had slain as
many as he wanted, he went back to the battlefield, and found his
brother Thorolf there, dead. He took his body, washed it, and prepared
it as was customary; they dug a grave and put Thorolf therein, with all
his weapons and clothes. Egil fastened a gold ring on each of his
arms[411] before he left him. Then they piled stones upon him, and threw
earth over. Then Egil sang:

           The slayer of jarls who could not fear (Thorolf)
           Went valiantly forward;
           The strong-minded Thorolf fell
           In the great _din of Thund_ (= Odin) (= battle);
           The ground will be green near the Vina (= a river)
           Over my famous brother;
           But we must hide our grief;
           That is death-pain (= pain of Hel (= death)).

“Egil went with his men to Æthelstan, and at once went before him where
he sat drinking in loud merriment. The king saw that Egil had entered,
and said that place should be given to them on the lower bench, and that
Egil should sit there in the high-seat opposite to him. Egil sat down,
and flung his shield down before his feet. He had a helmet on his head,
and placed his sword on his knee. He at times drew half of the blade out
of the scabbard and then slammed it back again. He sat upright, with his
head bent forward. Egil had prominent features, a wide forehead, heavy
eyebrows; his nose was not long, but extremely big, the lips thick and
long, the chin and jaws wonderfully broad; he had a thick neck and large
shoulders, exceeding other men’s in size. He looked hard and fierce when
he was angry. He was well shaped, and taller than other men; his hair
was wolf-grey and abundant. and he became bald early. As he sat thus, as
before written, he made one of his eyebrows move down on his cheek and
the other up to the fringe of his hair. He was black-eyed and swarthy
(of a dark complexion). He would not drink the drink that was carried to
him, but moved his eyebrows one at a time, up and down. Æthelstan sat in
his high-seat with a sword on his knee. As they had sat thus for a
while, the king drew his sword from its scabbard, and took a large and
fine gold ring from his arm and hung it on the point of the sword blade,
rose, walked on the floor, and handed it to Egil across the fire. Egil
rose, drew his sword, and walked forward also. He stuck his sword into
the ring, drew it to him, and went back to his seat. The king sat down
in his high-seat. When Egil sat down he put the ring on his arm, and his
brows became smooth, and he laid down his sword and helmet, took a
deer-horn which was carried to him, and drank from it. He sang (on the
ring)....

“Thereafter Egil drank his share, and talked to men. The king had two
chests brought in; two men carried each, and both were filled with
silver. He said: ‘These chests thou shalt have, Egil; and if thou goest
to Iceland, thou shalt give this property to thy father. I send it to
him as indemnity for his son. But some of it thou shalt divide among the
kinsmen of thyself and Thorolf, whom thou considerest the foremost. But
thou shalt receive indemnity for thy brother here; land or loose
property, whichever thou pleasest. If thou wilt stay with me long, I
will give thee the honour and rank thou mayest choose thyself.’ Egil
accepted the property, and thanked him for his gifts and friendly words.
Egil then began to be merrier, and sang:

           The towering peaks of the eyelids (= the eyebrows)
           Did droop on me for sorrow.
           Now I found the one who smoothed
           These wrinkles on my forehead.
           The king has lifted up the
           Rocks fencing the ground of the hood,[412]
           Of me with the arm-band (= goldring);
           The frown has left my eyes.

“Those wounded men who were fated to live were healed. Egil remained
with the king the winter after the fall of Thorolf, and was greatly
honoured by him. The men who had followed the brothers, and had escaped
from the battle, were there with Egil. Egil made a drapa (= laudatory
poem) on the king, who gave him two gold rings, each of which weighed
one mark, and a costly cloak which he himself had worn. When spring
began, Egil announced to the king that he intended to go away in the
summer to Norway to find out how the affairs of Asgerd, the wife of his
brother Thorolf, stood. ‘There is much property, but I do not know if
there are any children of theirs alive. If there are, then I have to
take care of them.[413] But all the inheritance is mine if Thorolf has
died childless.’ The king answered: ‘Thou mayest go if thou thinkest
thou hast a necessary errand, but I like it best that thou remainest
here on such conditions as thou demandest thyself.’ Egil thanked him. ‘I
shall go first where it is my duty to go, but it is likely that I return
if I can to claim these promises.’ The king told him to do so. Egil made
ready, and with one longship and a hundred men, sailed for Norway.”


The widow of Thorolf Skallagrimsson, brother of Egil, who fell in the
battle of Brunanburgh, was named Asgerd. Egil told her of the killing of
his brother.


“Egil grew melancholy in the autumn, and drank little, but sat often
drooping his head in his cloak. Arinbjörn (his friend) once went to him
and asked what caused his sadness, ‘though thou hast lost thy brother it
is manly to bear it well, for man must live after man.’”


“Egil sang a stanza, in which he expressed obscurely the name of Asgerd,
and then asked Arinbjörn’s help to a marriage with her. Then he was
married to her, and was merry the remaining part of the winter” (Egil’s
Saga, chs. 51–56).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1361.—Fire-Steel. ⅔ size. In a grave, Götland.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1362.—Key of bronze. ⅔ size. Norway; found with buckles, pearls,
    etc.
]

-----

Footnote 399:

  Hild is here an abbreviation for Ragnhild.

Footnote 400:

  Hrolf.

Footnote 401:

  The higher class of landowners.

Footnote 402:

  Ygg (Odin). A wolf of Ygg means a champion.

Footnote 403:

  If he becomes a viking he will not spare Harald’s men.

Footnote 404:

  The name Longsword is usually given to Hrolf’s son William
  (Löngumspada).

Footnote 405:

  Then Hákon the Great was the son of the daughter’s daughter of Harald
  Fairhair.

Footnote 406:

  Northmandi; _th_ is here in the place of the soft Icelandic _d_ or ð.

Footnote 407:

  This shows that Bretland must have been Wales.

Footnote 408:

  Cf. also Egil’s Saga, c. 62.

Footnote 409:

  = Ravaged.

Footnote 410:

  In open shields, or the hollow of the shields; the rear.

Footnote 411:

  Hönd = hand or arm.

Footnote 412:

  Ground of the hood = forehead; its rocks = the eyebrows.

Footnote 413:

  Brother inheriting brother.




                              CHAPTER XXX.
              SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS.
                             (_Continued._)

  Harald founds Jomsborg—Svein—His vow to drive Æthelred from
    England—Creation of the _Thingamannalid_—Svein’s death—Massacre of
    Northmen in London—Olaf comes to the help of Æthelred the
    Second—Attacks the Danes at Southwark—Captures Canterbury—Defends
    the shores of England, and sails up the New River—His other
    expeditions.


“Harald Gormsson (c. 940–986) was made king in Denmark after his father;
he was a powerful king and a great warrior, and conquered Holstein in
Saxland, and possessed a great Earldom in Vindland. There he founded
_Jomsborg_, and placed in it a large garrison, which was under his laws
and pay, and which subjugated the country. During the summer they went
on expeditions, remaining at home in the winters, and they were called
Jomsvikings” (Knytlinga, c. 1).


“Svein (c. 986–1014 A.D.) took possession of the Danish kingdom after
his father (Harald Gormsson); he was called Svein Tjúguskegg
(fork-beard), and was a powerful king. In his days jarl Sigvaldi and
other Jomsvikings went to Norway and fought against Hakon jarl in Mœri
in Hjörungavag; there fell Bui the Stout, but Sigvaldi fled. After that
the power in Norway was lost to the Danish kings, and a little later
Olaf Tryggvason came to Norway and got the rule.

“King Svein was married to Gunnhild, daughter of Burislaf, King of the
Vends, and their sons were Knut (the Great) and Harald. Svein was
afterwards married to Sigrid-Storráda (the Proud), daughter of
Sköglar-Tosti, and mother of the Swedish king Olaf. She had before been
married to King Eirik Sigrsæli (the Victorious) of Sweden.

“The daughter of King Svein and Sigrid was Ástrid, married to jarl Ulf,
son of Thorgils Sprakalegg (woman’s leg), who had two sons, Svein and
Björn. Gyda, a daughter of King Svein Tjúguskegg, was married to jarl
Eirik Hakonsson of Norway; their son was jarl Hakon, whom St. Olaf took
prisoner in Saudung’s Sound.[414]

“King Svein was at the fall of Olaf Tryggvason with King Olaf the
Swedish, his stepson, and with jarl Eirik, his son-in-law. They fought
at Svold, and after the fall of Olaf Tryggvason, King Svein of Denmark,
King Olaf of Sweden, and jarl Eirik of Norway divided Norway between
themselves” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 5).


In the chapter on inheritance we have seen that King Svein made the vow
to drive Æthelred from England.


“King Svein was a great warrior and a most powerful king; he made
warfare far and wide, both in the east and in Saxland. At last he went
with his host west to England, ravaged in many places there, and fought
many battles; Adalrad Yatgeirsson was then king there. Svein and he
fought many battles, and were alternately victorious. Svein won the
greatest part of England; he lived there for many winters, and ravaged
and burnt widely in the land; they called him the foe of the English. In
that war King Æthelred fled from Svein out of the land” (Knytlinga Saga,
c. 6).


“King Svein stayed at home in Denmark; his son Knut was brought up
there; Thorkel the high fostered him. Svein made warfare in the land of
King Æthelred, and drove him out of the land south across the sea; he
put _Thingamannalid_[415] in two places. The one in London (Lundunaborg)
was ruled by Eilif Thorgilsson, the brother of Ulf (jarl); he had sixty
ships in the Temps (Thames). The other Thingamannalid was north in
Slesvik, over which Heming jarl, the brother of Thorkel the high, was
ruler also with sixty ships.

“The Thingamen established a law that no report should be spread, and no
one should stay away a whole night; they attended the Bura-church, in
which was a large bell, that was to be rung every night when only a
third of the night was left; then every one was to go to church, but
without weapons; such laws as these they had in Slesvik.

“He who had the command in the town (Lundunaborg) was Alrek Strjóna, a
brother of Emma, the daughter of Richard (Rikgard of Normandy), the
father of Vilhjalm (William); King Æthelred was married to her. Ulfkel
Snilling[416] ruled over the northern part of England; he was married to
Ulfhild, the daughter of King Æthelred. King Svein died in England, and
the Danes took his body to Denmark, and buried him in Hróiskelda near
his father....” (Jomsvikinga Saga, cc. 50, 51).


“Svein was found one night dead in his bed, and the English say that
King Edmund the Saint killed him, in the manner in which the holy
Mercurius killed Julianus the Apostate” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 6).


“After the death of Svein the Danish kings retained that part of England
which they had won. War then began anew, for when King Svein was dead,
King Æthelred, with the assistance of Olaf the Saint (of Norway),
returned to the country and regained his realm. At that time the Danes
established the host of the Thingamen in England; they were paid
warriors, and very valiant. They fought many battles against the English
on behalf of the Danes” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 7).


“Knut was then ten winters old. The power of the Thingamen was great.
There was a fair there (London) twice in every twelvemonth, one about
midsummer and the other about midwinter. The English (Enskir) thought it
would be the easiest to slay the Thingamen while Knut was young and
Svein dead. Each winter about Yule, waggons went into the town with
goods which they were wont to bring to the market. So it was this
winter, and they were all tented over; this was according to the
treacherous advice and will of Ulfkel Snilling[417] and the sons of
Æthelred. The seventh day of Yule Thord (a man of the Thingamannalid)
went out of the town to the house of his mistress. She asked him to stay
there that night. ‘Why dost thou ask for that which is liable to
punishment?’ ‘I ask it,’ said she, ‘because I think it important.’ He
answered: ‘I will stay here if thou tellest me why thou askest this.’
‘Because I know that the death of all the Thingamen is planned.’ ‘How
canst thou know it,’ he added, ‘when we do not know it?’ ‘Because men
drove waggons to the town, and pretended that they contained goods; but
in each waggon there were many men and no goods, and they have done the
same thing north,[418] in Slesvik. When a third part of the night has
passed bells will be rung in the town; then warriors and also the
townsmen will make themselves ready about midnight. When a third of the
night is left, the bell of Bura church will be rung. You will go unarmed
to the church, which will then be surrounded.’

“‘It is likely,’ said Thord, ‘that thou hast many friends, and I will
tell Eilif, though it will be thought a rumour. But this farm thou shalt
own.’ Thord went into the town; he met his companion, Audun; they went
and told it to Eilif. He bade the men be on their guard. Some believed
it, others said it was only an alarm. They heard the bell-ringing as
usual, and many thought the priest was ringing. Those who believed Thord
went armed, and all the others unarmed. When they came into the
churchyard there was a great crowd. They could not get their weapons,
for they could not reach their houses. Eilif asked for their advice, but
they could give none; he added, ‘It does not seem to me good advice to
run into the church if it gives no shelter and we show fear. I think it
will be better to jump on the shoulders of those who stand outside the
churchyard wall, and thus try to escape to the ships.’ And they did so.
Most of those who were slain fell at the ships. Eilif escaped with three
ships, but none escaped from Slesvik, and Heming fell there. Eilif went
to Denmark. Some time after this Jatmund (Edmund) was made king over
England. He ruled nine months. During that time he fought five battles
against Knut Sveinsson. Alrek Strjona, whom some called Eirek, a brother
of Emma, who had been married to Æthelred, the king of the English, was
the foster-father of Edmund. At that time Thorkel the High was the most
powerful man in Denmark. They had a Thing in the spring after the
slaying of the Thingamen; Eilif urged to go and take revenge, but
Thorkel answered: ‘We have a young king, and it is not proper to make
warfare without the king partaking in it, but after three years I think
he will be valiant enough, and it will take the English by surprise.’
Eilif answered: ‘It is not sure that those will remember it for three
winters, who now do not care for it at all.’ He went to Mikligard
(Constantinople), and became chief of the Væringjar, and at last fell
there. After three winters, Knut, Thorkel, and Eirik went with eight
hundred ships to England. Thorkel had thirty ships, and slew Ulfkel
Snilling, and thus avenged the death of his brother Heming, and married
Ulfhild, the daughter of King Æthelred, who had been married to Ulfkel.
With Ulfkel was slain every man on sixty ships, and Knut captured
Lundunaborg. Thorkel went along the coast, and found Queen Emma on board
a ship. He took her ashore and urged Knut to ask her in marriage; and
the king married her. She gave birth to a son in the winter, who was
named Harald, a natural son of Knut; Hörda-Knut was their son. The son
of Knut and Alfifa was named Svein; his daughter Gunnhild was married to
the Emperor (of Germany) Heinrek Konradsson; Knut went to Rome with him”
(Jomsvikinga Saga, cc. 51, 52).


King Olaf Haraldsson, surnamed Digri (the Stout), known also under the
name of St. Olaf, was a great warrior, and made wars in the Baltic, in
Friesland, England, France, and other countries. Fifteen of these
expeditions are described in his Saga.

The Northmen under Olaf came to help Æthelred against the Danes.


“King Olaf then sailed westwards to England. It was reported that Svein
Tjúguskegg, Danish king at this time, was in England with the Danish
host, and had stayed there awhile and ravaged the land of King Æthelred.
The Danes had spread far and wide over the country, and King Æthelred
had fled from the land and gone to Valland. The same autumn that Olaf
came to England it happened that King Svein Haraldsson died suddenly
during the night in his bed; and it was said by the English that Edmund
the saint had slain him, in the same manner as the holy Mercury slew
Julian the Nithing (Apostate). When Æthelred heard of this in
Flæmingjaland (Flandres), he at once returned to England. When he came
back, he sent word to all who wanted to get property to come and win the
land; and a mass of men joined him. Then Olaf came to his assistance
with a large following of Northmen. They first sailed for London
(Lundúnir), and entered the Thames, while the Danes held the burg. On
the other side of the river there was a large trading-town, which is
called Sudvirki (Southwark); there the Danes had made great
fortifications, dug large ditches, and built inside them walls of wood,
stones, and turf, and there had a large force. Æthelred caused a fierce
attack to be made on it; but the Danes defended it, and the king could
not capture it. There were such broad bridges across the river between
the city and Southwark, that waggons could pass each other (on them). On
the bridges were bulwarks, which reached higher than the middle of a
man, and beneath the bridges piles were driven into the bottom of the
river. When the attack was made the whole host stood on the bridges, and
defended them” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 11).


“Olaf was leader of the host when they went to Kantarabyrgi (=
Canterbury), and they fought there until they took it, slew many, and
burned the town. Then Olaf had to defend the shores of England, and
coursed along them with warships, and sailed up into Nyjamoda (=
Newmouth). There was a host of Thingamen. He fought a battle, and got
the victory. Then he went far and wide about the country, and received
taxes from the people, making warfare if they paid not. At that time he
stayed there three winters” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 14).


“Olaf had large hurdles made of withies and soft wood, so cut as to make
a wicker-house, and thus covered his ships, so that the hurdles reached
out over their sides; he had posts put beneath them so high that it was
easy to fight beneath them, and the covering was proof against stones
thrown down on it. When the host was ready they rowed up the river; as
they came near the bridges they were shot at, and such large stones
thrown down on them that neither their helmets nor shields could
withstand them; and the ships themselves were greatly damaged, and many
retreated. But Olaf and the Northmen with him rowed up under the
bridges, and tied ropes round the supporting posts, and rowed their
ships down stream as hard as they could. The posts were dragged along
the bottom until they were loosened from under the bridges. As an armed
host stood thickly on the bridges, and there was a great weight of
stones and weapons upon them, and the posts beneath were broken, the
bridges fell with many of the men into the river; the others fled into
the city, or into Southwark. After this they attacked Southwark, and
captured it. When the townsmen saw that the river Temps (Thames) was
taken, so that they could not hinder ships from going up into the
country, they became afraid, gave up the town, and received King
Æthelred.

“King Olaf stayed during the winter with King Æthelred; then they fought
a great battle on Hringmara-heath in Ulfkelsland, owned by Ulfkel
Snilling, and the kings gained the victory. Then a great part of the
land was subdued by Æthelred, but the Danes and the _Thingamenn_ held
many towns, and a large part of the country” (St. Olaf’s Saga, cc. 12,
13).


“The third spring King Ethelred died, and his sons Edmund and Edward
received the kingship. Then Olaf went southward across the sea, fought
in Hringsfjord, and took and destroyed the castle at Holar, held by
vikings” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 15).


            _The Eleventh, Twelfth, and Thirteenth Battles._


“Then Olaf went with his men westward to Grislupollar, and there
defeated the vikings before Vilhjalmsbær (Williamsby). After that he
fought west in Fetlafjord. Thence he went south to Seljopollar, and
there took a large and old town called Gunnvaldsborg, with the jarl,
Geirfinn, who ruled it. He laid taxes on the town and on the jarl for
his ransom, twelve thousand gold shillings (gull skillingar). The money
demanded was paid by the town” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 16).


            _The Fourteenth Battle and Dream of King Olaf._


“Thereafter Olaf went with his men westward to the Karlsa,[419]
plundered, and fought a battle there. While he lay in the Karlsa, and
waited there for fair wind, wishing to sail to Norvasund (= Straits of
Gibraltar) and thence to Jorsalaheim (Jerusalem), he had a remarkable
dream, that a handsome and nobly-looking but awe-striking man came and
spoke to him. He asked him to give up the intention to go into far
countries (= to the Holy Land). ‘Go back to thy odals, for thou wilt be
king over Norway for ever.’[420] He understood by this dream that he and
his kinsmen would rule over the land for a long time” (St. Olaf’s Saga,
c. 17).


                        _The Fifteenth Battle._


“On account of this vision he changed his journey, and steered his ships
up to Peituland (Poitou), plundered here, and burnt a town called
Varrandi” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 18).


[Illustration:

  Fig. 1363.—Coin coined in Sigtuna. King Anund Jakob, c. 1020, A.D.
    1050.
]

[Illustration:

  Fig. 1364.—A Kufic coin, Gotland, Sweden.
]

-----

Footnote 414:

  This Hakon was a grandson of the great Hakon jarl.

Footnote 415:

  The _Thingamen_ seems to have been a kind of standing army, like the
  Væringians in Constantinople.

Footnote 416:

  Snilling = master of speech.

Footnote 417:

  He was married to Æthelred’s daughter (see preceding page).

Footnote 418:

  In the north of England.

Footnote 419:

  Karlsa, or Karl’s river, said to be Garonne.

Footnote 420:

  After his death he was the saint or patron of Norway.




                             CHAPTER XXXI.
              SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS.
                             (_Continued._)

  Knut the Mighty—His appearance—His liberality—His battles in
    England—Besieges London—His numerous expeditions—The successors of
    Knut.


Knut the Mighty (1014–1035), or the Great, is, with Charlemagne, one of
the greatest geniuses of that epoch; he ruled his three kingdoms with
great ability, and died young (at thirty-seven). The appearance of this
great and powerful king is thus described:—


“Knut was very tall and strong, and a very handsome man, except that his
nose was thin, prominent, low, and somewhat crooked; he had a fair
complexion, with fair and long hair; he had finer and keener eyes than
any man. He was liberal, a great warrior, very valiant and victorious, a
man of great luck, in everything connected with power. He was not very
wise, neither were King Svein, Harald, nor Gorm” (Knytlinga Saga, c.
20).


“King Knut was the most liberal of kings in the Northern lands; for it
is truly said that he surpassed other kings no less in the property he
gave in friendly gifts every year than in taking much more in taxes and
dues from three great lands than any other king who ruled one realm; and
moreover England is richest in movable property of all the Northern
lands” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 19).


King Knut sent messengers to Olaf the Stout (Olaf Haraldson) of Norway
to claim obedience from him.


“Sigvat went to the messengers of Knut, and asked for news. They told
him what he desired, their talk with King Olaf, and the result of their
errand. They said, ‘The king had taken the matter angrily; and we do not
know in whom he trust when he refuses to become the man of Knut, and go
to him; that would be best, for Knut is so mild, that never do the
chiefs do so much against him that he does not forgive at once, when
they come to him and yield to him. It was only a short time ago that two
kings north from Fifi (Fife) in Scotland came to him, and he forgot his
wrath and gave them all the lands they had owned before, and also great
friendly gifts’” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 140).


“Knut fought many battles in England against the sons of Æthelred, King
of the English, and they were defeated by each other in turns. He came
to England during the summer when Æthelred died, and then married Queen
Emma; their children were Harald, Hordaknut, and Gunnhild. Knut made an
agreement with Edmund, that each of them should have half of England. In
the same month Heidrek Strjona slew Edmund, and thereafter King Knut
drove away all the sons of Æthelred” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 24).


“A long time after this Knut was at a feast with Thorkel the High, saw
Ulfhild, and thought Thorkel had cheated him in the sharing of the women
(taken the finer one), and therefore had him slain. Knut and Edmund
fought some battles against each other, after which both the Danes and
the English asked them to come to terms, and this they did; the one who
lived longer was to have the land of the other. One month afterwards
Edmund was slain by his foster-father Alrek Strjona, and then Knut got
the whole of England, and ruled it for twenty-four winters”[421]
(Jomsvikinga Saga, c. 52).


“That summer the sons of King Æthelred went from England to Ruda (Rouen)
in Valland,[422] to their uncles, when Olaf Haraldsson came from viking
expeditions in the west; they were all in Normandy that winter, and
entered into an agreement that Olaf should have Northumberland if they
got England from the Danes. In the autumn Olaf sent his foster-father
Hrani to England to get men there, and the sons of Æthelred sent with
him tokens to their friends and kinsmen, and Olaf gave him much loose
property wherewith to win men over. Hrani stayed during the winter in
England, and obtained the confidence of many powerful men, among them
those who preferred having their countrymen to rule over them; but the
power of the Danes in England had then become so great, that all the
people were subject to them” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 25).


“In the spring Olaf and the sons of King Æthelred went to England, and
arrived at a place called Jungufurda, where they went on shore. There
were many who had promised to help them; they took the town with great
slaughter. When the men of Knut became aware of this, they gathered such
a numerous host that the sons of Æthelred could not resist them, and
they saw it was best to return to Rouen; but Olaf parted with them and
would not go to Valland. He sailed northwards along England all the way
to Northumberland; he landed in the harbour called Valdi, and there he
defeated the townspeople and traders, and got a great deal of property”
(St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 26).


“Knut, the son of King Svein Tjuguskegg, was ten winters old when his
father died; then he was made king over Denmark, for his brother Harald
was dead. The Danish chiefs who remained in England, and held the land
which King Svein had won, sent word to Denmark that King Knut must come
west to England with the Danish host to help them. As King Knut was then
a child, and not used to command in war, his friends advised him to send
a host to England, and place a chief over it, and not go himself until
he stood better on his legs; he was three winters in Denmark after he
became king. Then he summoned together a host,[423] and sent word to
Norway, to his brother-in-law Eirik jarl, to gather a host and go to
England with him; for Eirik jarl was very famous for his bravery and
skill in warfare, as he had gained the victory in two of the most famous
battles in Northern lands, one when King Svein Tjuguskegg and Olaf the
Swedish king and Eirik jarl fought against Olaf Tryggvason at Svold, the
other when Hakon jarl and Eirik fought against the Jómsvikings in
Hjörungavag. King Knut went with a very numerous host west to England.
Many chiefs went with him; Ulf jarl Sprakaleggsson, his brother-in-law,
who was then married to his sister Astrid, Svein’s daughter, also Heming
and Thorkel the High, the sons of Strutharald jarl, and many other
chiefs. Knut came to England, and landed at a place called Fljót
(Fleet); he ravaged the land, slew the people, and burned their houses.
The people of the land gathered a host and went against the Danes. Knut
fought his first battle in England at Lindisey (Lindsey), and many fell
there; he then took Hemingaborg in England, and there also slew many.
Thereafter he fought great battles in Nordimbraland at Tesa (Tees).
There he slew many, while some fled and perished in swamps or ditches;
he then went farther south, and underlaid himself the land wherever he
went”[424] (Knytlinga Saga, c. 8).


“King Knut fought another battle at a town called Brandfurda (Branford);
it was a great battle, and he got the victory; the sons of Æthelred
fled, and lost many men, and the Danes took the town. He fought a third
great battle against the sons of Æthelred at a place called Essandune,
north of the Danaskogar (Danish forests). He fought a fourth against
King Jatmund (Edmund) and his brothers at Northvik (Norwich), and there
was a great fall of men; the king got the victory, and the sons of
Æthelred fled” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 12).


“King Knut then went with all his host to Temps-a (the Thames river),
for he heard that Jatmund and his brothers had fled to Lundunaborg
(London); when he came to the mouth of the Temps Eirik jarl Hakonsson,
his brother-in-law, sailed in from the sea; they met there, and sailed
up the river with the host. In the river Temps was built a large castle
(tower), and a host put there to defend it so that a ship host might not
go up the river. Knut at once sailed up the river to the castle, and
fought against them; but the English went with a ship-host from London
down the river, and engaged in battle with the Danes” (Knytlinga Saga,
c. 13).


“Knut went with all his host up to London, and surrounded it with his
camp (war-booths); then they attacked the town and the townsmen defended
it. Thus it is told in the poem (flokk) which was made then by the
warriors.

            The Hlokk[425] of horns sees every morning
            On the banks of the Temps (Thames)
            Blood-dyed body-hurters (weapons).
            The corpse-gull (bird of prey) must not starve.
            (She sees) how the victory-yearning Dane-king
            Violently attacks the burgh-men.
            The blood-ice (weapons) sounds
            On British[426] (brezk) brynjas.

“King Knut fought many battles there, but could not take the town”
(Knytlinga Saga, c. 14).


“Eirik jarl went with a part of the host up into the land, and the
Thingamenn followed him against an English host which was commanded by
Ulfkel Snilling, a great chief; a battle was fought, and Eirik gained
the victory, and Ulfkel fled. Eirik jarl fought another battle at
Hringmaraheidi (heath) against the English and obtained the victory”
(Knytlinga Saga, c. 15).


“Æthelred the King of the English died the same autumn or summer that
Knut came with his host to England; he had then been King of England
thirty-eight winters. Queen Emma after his death at once made herself
ready to leave the land; she intended to go west to Valland (France) to
her brothers, Vilhjalm (William) and Robert, who were jarls there. Their
father was Rikard (Richard), jarl of Rouen, son of Richard, son of
William longspear; he was the son of Göngu-Hrolf, who won Normandy, and
was the son of Rögnvald, jarl of Mœri. The men of King Knut became aware
of the journey of Queen Emma; when she and her men were ready to sail,
his men came and took the ship with all that was in it, and took her to
him; King Knut’s chiefs advised him to marry Queen Emma, and he did so”
(Knytlinga Saga, c. 9).


“After the death of Æthelred, his and Queen Emma’s sons were taken as
kings; Jatmund (Edmund) the Strong was the eldest; Jatgeir (Edgar) the
second; Jatvig (Edwig) the third; and Jatvard (Edward) the Good, the
fourth. Edmund gathered a large host and went against Knut; they met at
a place called Skorstein, and fought the most famous battle which had
taken place at that time; very many of both hosts fell. Edmund rode
forward into the midst of the Danish host, and came so near his
stepfather King Knut, that he touched him with a sword-blow. Knut thrust
his shield in front of the neck of the horse on which he sat; the blow
hit the shield a little below its handle, and was so heavy that the
shield was cleft asunder, and the horse was cut at the shoulders in
front of the saddle. The Danes then attacked him so violently that he
went back to his men, but not before he had killed many Danes, being
very slightly wounded himself. When the king had ridden forward away
from his men they thought he had fallen, as they did not see him, and
the host fled, for some saw him riding away from the Danes. All who saw
this fled, but the king shouted loudly and bid them return to the fight,
but no one seemed to hear it; the entire host fled, and there ensued a
great fall of men; the Danes pursued the fleeing till night” (Knytlinga
Saga, c. 10).


“Ulf jarl was then, as often, one of the foremost of the men of King
Knut, and pursued the fugitives farthest; he entered a wood so thick
that he did not get out of it until dawn. Then he saw in some fields in
front of him sheep which a well-grown boy was driving. Ulf jarl went to
him, greeted him, and asked his name. He answered: ‘I am called Gudini
(Godwin); but art thou one of Knut’s men?’ Ulf jarl replied: ‘I am
certainly one of his warriors; but how far is it hence to our ships?’ ‘I
do not know,’ said the boy, ‘how you Danes can expect help from us, and
you have not deserved it.’ Ulf jarl answered: ‘I will however ask of
thee to help me to find our ships.’ The boy said: ‘Thou hast gone
straight away from them, and far inland across wild forests. The men of
Knut are not very much liked by the people here, and for good reason,
for the slaughter yesterday at Skorstein is known in the neighbourhood,
and neither thou nor any other of his men will be spared if the bœndr
find you; and if any one help you the same fate awaits him; but I think
thou art a good man, and not the one thou pretendest to be.’ Ulf jarl
took a gold ring off his hand and said: ‘I will give thee this ring if
thou wilt guide me to our men.’ Godwin looked at him for a while, and
said slowly: ‘I will not take the ring, but I will try to guide thee to
thy men, and will rather have the reward thou thinkest right if I can
give thee some help; but if I cannot I deserve no reward; now thou shalt
first go home with me to my father.’ They did so. When they came to the
farm (bœr) they went to a little room and Gudini (Godwin) had a table
set there, and good drink was given. Ulf jarl saw that it was a good
farm. The bondi and the housewife came to them; they were both handsome
and well dressed; they received the guest well, and he remained there
that day in the best entertainment. Toward night two good horses were
prepared with the best riding gear. They then said to Ulf: ‘Now,
farewell; I give into thy hands my only son; I ask of thee if thou
shouldst come to the king, and thy words might have some influence to
get him into his service, for he cannot stay with me hereafter, if our
countrymen hear that he has guided thee away, in whatever way I may
escape myself.’ Ulf jarl promised to get Godwin into the host. Godwin
was very handsome and talked well. The bondi’s name was Ulfnadr.

“Ulf jarl and Godwin rode all that night, and in the morning, when it
was light, they came to the ships, and Knut’s men were ashore. When they
saw the jarl and recognised him, they welcomed him as one who had
escaped from death, for he was so popular that every one loved him.
Godwin then for the first time knew whom he had followed. The jarl
seated Godwin in the high-seat at his side, and treated him in
everything like himself or his son, and in short gave him in marriage
his sister Gyda; and with the aid and advice of Ulf jarl, King Knut gave
him a jarldom for the sake of Ulf jarl, his brother-in-law. The sons of
Godwin and Gyda were: Harald the English king, and Tosti jarl, called
wooden spear; Maurukari jarl (Morcar); Valthjof (Waltheof) jarl, and
Svein jarl; from them have sprung many chiefs in England, Denmark,
Sweden, and Gardariki (Russia). They are king’s families in the Danish
realm. The daughter of King Harald, son of Godwin, was called Gyda; she
was married to King Valdamar (Vladimir) in Holmgard (Novgorod); their
son was King Harald; he had two daughters, of whom will be told later”
(Knytlinga Saga, c. 11).


“Knut besieged Lundunaborg (London), and Edmund with his brothers
defended it; then Knut was married to Queen Emma, their mother, and at
last hostages were given and a truce was established to talk about full
reconciliation; and peace was made on the terms that the realm should be
divided between them in halves, each to have one half while he lived,
but if either of them died childless, the survivor should have the right
to take the whole realm; this was confirmed with oaths. Heidrek Strjóna
was a powerful man who got property from King Knut in order to betray
King Edmund and murder him, and that was the manner of his death, though
Heidrek was the foster-father of Edmund, who believed in him as in
himself. Then King Knut drove away from England all the sons of King
Æthelred; many battles were fought in consequence, but they did not get
many men to help against Knut after Edmund had been slain. The sons of
King Æthelred then stayed west in Valland in Normandi for a long time
with their uncles (Rodbert) Robert and Vilhjalm (William), as is told in
the Saga of Olaf helgi (the saint). Eirik jarl Hakonsson died in
England, when he was ready for a journey to Rome.... Knut and Queen Emma
had three children; Harald was the oldest, and then Hörda-Knut; their
daughter was Gunnhild, who later was married to the Emperor Heinrek,
(Henry), the Mild, who was the third of his kinsmen of that name. Svein
was the third son of King Knut; his mother was Alfifa the Wealthy,
daughter of Alfrun jarl” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 16).


“When Knut came back to England (from Rome) he fell sick, first from
what is called jaundice; he was sick a long while during the summer, and
died in the autumn, on the 13th November, in Morst (Shaftesbury), a
large town, and there he is buried. He was then thirty-seven years old;
he had been king over Denmark twenty-seven years, over England
twenty-four, and over Norway seven years. It is acknowledged by all that
King Knut was the most powerful and wide-reigning of kings in Northern
lands” (Knytlinga Saga, c. 18).


“Knut the Great, whom some call Knut the Old, was king over England and
Denmark. He was the son of Svein Tjuguskegg, Harald’s son. Their kindred
had ruled Denmark for a long time. Harald Gormsson, the grandfather of
Knut, got possession of Norway after the fall of Harald Gunnhild’s son,
received taxes from it, and placed Hakon jarl the great to defend the
land. Svein, King of the Danes, son of Harald, also ruled over Norway,
and put Eirik jarl Hakonsson to defend it. He ruled with his brother,
Svein Hakonsson, until Eirik went west to England, owing to the message
of Knut the Great, his brother-in-law, and left Hakon, his son, to rule
Norway.

“Hakon then went to his uncle, Knut, and had been with him to the time
when Knut had won England after a long struggle, and the people of the
land yielded to him. When he thought he had fully established his rule
over the land he remembered that he owned a country which was not in his
possession, and that was Norway. He claimed the whole of Norway as
inheritance, but his nephew Hakon claimed part of it, and said that he
had lost it. One reason why Knut and Hakon had not made good their claim
upon Norway was, that when King Olaf Haraldsson came the people rose,
and would not hear of any one else but Olaf as king over the whole land;
but later, when they thought they were oppressed because of his
overbearing, some left the country. Many chiefs or sons of powerful
bœndr had come to Knut under the pretence of various errands; every one
who attached himself to him received his hands full of money. There
could also be seen far greater splendour than in any other place, both
in the mass of men who continually stayed there, and in the outfitting
of the rooms in which he lived himself. Knut received taxes and dues
from the wealthiest folk-lands in the North; but as much as he surpassed
other kings in receiving more than they, as far did he surpass any other
king in giving away gifts. In all his kingdom there was such peace that
none dared to break it, and the people lived quietly under the old laws
of the land. For this he got great fame through all lands. Many who came
from Norway complained of their loss of freedom, and told Hakon jarl;
and some informed Knut himself that the men of Norway were ready to
return to him and the jarl, and through them regain their liberty. This
pleased the jarl, who told it to the king, and asked him to see if King
Olaf would give up the kingdom, or make some settlement with them. Many
pleaded the same with the jarl. Knut sent men eastward from England to
Norway, very finely fitted out; they brought a letter and the seal of
the King of the English. In the spring they went to Olaf Haraldsson at
Tunsberg. When he was told that the messengers of Knut had come he grew
angry, and said that Knut was not likely to send men thither with
messages that would be of use to him or his people; and for some days he
would not let the messengers see himself. When they got leave to speak,
they appeared before him and delivered the letter of Knut. They stated
their errand—that Knut claimed all Norway, and that his forefathers had
had it before him; but as he wished to have peace in every land, he
would not wage war upon Norway, if they could settle the matter in any
other way; that if Olaf Haraldsson wanted to be king over Norway he
should go to Knut, and take the land as a fief from him, become his man,
and pay him such taxes as the jarl paid before. Thereupon they delivered
the letter, which expressed the same thing. Olaf answered: ‘I have heard
in old Sagas that Gorm, King of the Danes, was thought to be a great
folk-king, and ruled only over Denmark; but these later Danish kings do
not think that enough. Knut now rules over Denmark and England, and has
subdued a great part of Scotland, and now he claims his inheritance from
me. He ought at last to show moderation in his greediness, or does he
wish to rule all Northern lands alone, or to eat alone all the cabbage
in England? He is more likely to do that than I to bring him my head, or
pay him any homage. Tell him my words: that I will defend Norway _with
point and edge_ while my life lasts, and pay no taxes from my kingdom.’
After this decision the messengers of Knut made ready to go away, ill
pleased with the result of their errand.... The messengers of Knut
returned with a fair wind across the sea. They went to Knut and told him
the answer to their message, and the last words of Olaf. Knut answered:
‘King Olaf is mistaken if he thinks I want to eat alone all the cabbage
in England; he shall feel that I have more things within my ribs than
cabbage; for henceforth evil shall come to him from under every rib.’

“Olaf summoned his lendirmen, and assembled a great many that summer,
for it was reported that Knut would come from England. People heard
report from trading ships from the west that Knut was gathering a great
host in England; some asserted and others denied that a host would come
in the latter part of the summer. Olaf stayed in Vik, and sent spies to
find out if Knut was coming to Denmark. In the autumn he sent men
eastwards to Sweden to Önund, his brother-in-law, and told him about the
message of Knut and the claim he laid to Norway; and hinted that he
thought if Knut subjugated Norway, Önund would have short shrift in
Swedish realm, and that it would be a good plan if they allied
themselves against him.

“Knut went that autumn to Denmark, and remained there during the winter,
with many men. He was told that messengers had been sent from the King
of Norway to the King of Sweden, and back again, and that some great
events were about to happen. Knut sent men in the winter to Sweden to
Önund with rich presents and friendly words, and said that it would be
to his advantage not to interfere in the quarrels between him and Olaf
the Stout, for his country should be at peace with him. When the
messengers came to Önund they presented the gifts of Knut, with his
offers of friendship. Önund did not receive their message well, and they
thought that he was much inclined to friendship with Olaf. They went
back and told Knut this, and that he could expect no friendship from
Önund” (St. Olaf’s Saga, cc. 139–142).


The great chief Erling Skjalgsson and all his sons were with Knut the
Great when he fought against St. Olaf and Önund, King of Sweden, in the
river Helga.


“In the autumn he went back to Norway with his men, and at parting got
large gifts from King Knut. Messengers of Knut went with him to Norway,
having a great deal of loose property with them; in the winter they went
about the land, and paid the money which Knut had promised the people
that autumn. They travelled under the protection of Erling Skjalgsson.
Many men became the friends of Knut, and promised to fight against Olaf;
some did it openly, and many others secretly” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 171).


“Knut got together his host, and went to Limafjord (Limfjorden) and
sailed to Norway; he hurried onward, and did not stop at the land east
of Vik. He sailed past the Vestfold to Agdir, where he summoned a
Thing.... He was there chosen king over the whole land; he then filled
the stewardships (offices) with new men, and took hostages from the
land; no man spoke against him. Olaf was in Tunsberg when the host of
Knut went past the Fold. Knut went northwards along the shore, and there
came to him men from the herads, and all paid homage to him; he stayed
in Eikundasund for some while. There Erling Skjalgsson came to him with
many men, and he and Knut renewed their friendship; Knut amongst other
things promised him that he should rule all the land between Stad and
Rygjarbit. Knut then sailed northward to Nidaros in Thrandheim
(Throndhjem). He summoned men from eight _fylki_ to a Thing, at which he
was chosen king over the whole of Norway.

“When Knut had subdued all Norway, he summoned his own men and the
Northmen to a Thing. He declared that he would give his kinsman Hakon
rule over all the land which he had won in that expedition; he also led
his son Hörda-Knut into the high-seat, and gave him the name of king,
and also presented him with the realm of Denmark. He took hostages from
all lendirmen and great bœndr, and their sons and brothers or other near
kinsmen, or those who were dearest to them, as he thought best, and thus
he strengthened the faithfulness of the people” (St. Olaf’s Saga, cc.
180, 181).


“Hörda-Knut, son of Knut the Old, succeeded to the kingship in Denmark
after his father, and Harald, the other son, ruled over England. At this
time Edward the Good, the son of Æthelred, and brother of Harald and
Hörda-Knut, came to England, and, as was fit, was well liked there. Two
years after the death of Knut the Old his daughter, Queen Gunnhild of
Saxland, died; she had married the Emperor Henry (of Germany).

“Three years later Harald Knutsson, King of England, died, and was
buried at Morst (Shaftesbury), at the side of his father.

“Then his brother, Hörda-Knut, got both the realms of England and
Denmark; and Magnus, St. Olaf’s son, the sworn brother[427] of
Hörda-Knut, ruled over Norway, as is written in the lives of the
Norwegian kings. Two winters after the death of Harald, Hörda-Knut died,
and was also buried at Morst with his father.

“After the death of Hörda-Knut the line of the old Danish kings became
extinct. Edward, Æthelred’s son, was taken king over England” (Knytlinga
Saga, c. 21).


“Svein, son of King Knut and Alfifa, daughter of Alfrun jarl, had been
put to rule Vinland in Jomsborg. Then his father sent word to him that
he must go to Denmark, and thence to Norway and rule it, with the name
of king. Svein had many men with him from Denmark, Harald jarl and many
other powerful chiefs. His mother went with him, and he was taken as
king at every law-thing” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 252).


“Svein, son of Knut the Great, ruled Norway for some winters; he was a
child, and his mother Alfifa ruled for the most part, and was greatly
disliked by the people. The Thrœndir (men of Thrandheim) were blamed
because they had slain Olaf Haraldson the Saint. The chief Kalf Arnason,
who had been the leader in the battle against Olaf, had been promised by
Knut jarldom over the whole of Norway, and felt disappointed” (St.
Olaf’s Saga, c. 261).


“As soon as the spring came Kalf Arnason made his own ship ready, and
sailed westward to England, for he had heard that King Knut had gone
early in the season from Denmark westward to England. Kalf Arnason went
to Knut at once when he reached England, and was received by him very
well, and had a talk with him. It ended by Knut asking Kalf to head the
rising against Olaf the Stout in Norway, if he came back to the land;
and then said: ‘I will give thee jarldom, and let thee rule Norway.
Hakon, my kinsman, shall come to me, which is best for him, for his mind
is thus that I do not think he will shoot a spear against Olaf, should
they meet.’ Kalf listened, and agreed to take the honour, and the plan
was arranged by them. Kalf made ready to go home, and at parting Knut
gave him costly gifts” (St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 194).


The following passage is of interest in connection with the early
history of England and its conquest by William the Norman:—


“When Magnus the Good (son of St. Olaf) had got the Danish realm, he
sent messengers westward to England. They went to King Edward (Játvard)
and delivered the letters and the seal of the king. In the letters this
followed after the greeting of King Magnus: ‘It is likely that you have
heard of the treaty made between me and Hörda-Knut, that the one who
lived after the other was dead without sons, should possess the lands
and the tegns (subjects) of the other. Now it has happened, as I know
you have heard, that I have inherited the Danish realm after Hörda-Knut.
He owned, when he died, England no less than Denmark; now I claim
England to be mine, according to a lawful agreement. I want thee to give
up thy realm to me, or else I will take it with the help of a host both
from Denmark and Norway. He who gets the victory will then rule the
lands.’

“When Edward had read these letters, he answered: ‘It is known to all
people in this land that my father, King Æthelred (Adalrad), was
rightfully born to this realm, both of yore and of late. We, his sons,
were four. After he was dead, my brother Edmund got the realm and the
kingship, for he was the oldest of the brothers. I was well satisfied
while he lived. After him, Knut, my stepfather, ruled; it was not easy
to claim it while he lived. After him my brother Harald was king while
he lived; when he died, my brother, Hörda-Knut, ruled over the Danish
realm, and it was thought the only right division between us brothers
that he should be king both over Denmark and England, and that I had no
realm to rule. When he died, it was the will of all the people to make
me king over England. While I had no king’s name I served my chiefs
(höfding) not prouder than those who were not born to rule. Now I have
been consecrated as king, and have got the kingship as fully as my
father had it before me. That name I will not give up while I live. If
Magnus comes hither with his host, I will not gather a host against him;
he can then take England, and first put me to death. Tell him these
words of mine.’

“The messengers went back to Magnus, and told him all. He answered
slowly: ‘I think it is most just and best to let Edward have his realm
in peace for me, and keep this which God has given me’” (Magnus the
Good’s Saga, cc. 38, 39).


-----

Footnote 421:

  Cf. also Knytlinga Saga, c. 7 to 9; St. Olaf, c. 23.

Footnote 422:

  This shows that Valland was in the west of France.

Footnote 423:

  Knut the Great’s English campaigns are told by three poets, Sighvat,
  Ottar the Black, and Thórd Kolbeinsson.

Footnote 424:

  Knut (Canute) reigned from A.D. 1014–1035, and was succeeded by his
  son Harald.

Footnote 425:

  Hlokk of horns = valkyrja of horns = woman.

Footnote 426:

  British here means English; otherwise usually Welsh.

Footnote 427:

  Sworn brother = foster-brother.




                             CHAPTER XXXII.
              SOME EXPEDITIONS AND DEEDS OF GREAT VIKINGS.
                             (_Continued._)

  Harald Hardradi—His influence on English history—His appearance and
    character—Numerous expeditions—His bravery—His career in England
    and Normandy—Jealousy between him and Godwin—His invasion of
    England—The battle of Stamford Bridge—The battle of Hastings.


Among the great heroes of the North, and one who had a special influence
on the English history of his period—for without his invasion of England
William the Conqueror would probably not have been victorious at the
battle of Hastings—was Harald Sigurdsson, surnamed Harald Hardradi,
whose life is a fine illustration of the life of a Viking. His forces,
added to those of Harald, son of Godwin, would have proved very
formidable. Here is a description of the appearance of this hero.


“It was said by all that Harald surpassed other men in wisdom and
sagacity (counsel-skill), whether a thing was to be done quick or in a
long time, for himself or for others. He was more weapon-bold than any
man, as has been told. (Thjódólf, in a stanza on him, says that ‘the
mind rules one half of the victory.’) He was a handsome and
majestic-looking man with hair (auburn), an auburn beard and long
moustaches; one eyebrow a little higher up than the other; large arms
and legs and well shaped. His measure in height three ells. He was cruel
towards his foes, and punished all offences severely. He was very eager
for rule, and all prosperous things. He gave his friends great gifts
when he liked them well. He was fifty when he fell. We have no
noteworthy tellings about his youth before he was at Stiklastadir,
fifteen winters old, in the battle with his brother Olaf. He lived
thirty-five winters afterwards; all that time uproar and war were his
pastime. He never fled from a battle, but often he took precautions when
he had to do with an overwhelming force. All men who followed him in
battle and warfare said that when he was in a great danger which came
quickly upon him he would take the expedient which afterwards was seen
by all to be the best” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, Heimskringla, c. 104).


We cannot follow him through the numerous expeditions which he undertook
and which are described in his Saga.

We find that Harald swept all over the shores of the Mediterranean, went
to Serkland (land of the Saracens), Africa, Sicily, Italy, Greece,
Constantinople, Jerusalem, and Bulgaria. He was present, often as
leader, in about eighty battles. There are many examples of his strategy
and consummate generalship.

His life ended at the famous battle of Stamford Bridge, the account of
which is a masterpiece of description.

From his youth up he was valiant. He joined in the battle of
Stiklastadir, to help his half-brother, King Olaf the Stout, when he was
fifteen years old. His mother’s name was Asta (descended from Ragnar
Lodbrok).


“When the array stood with its standards ready to fight, the king said:
‘I do not think it right for my brother Harald to be in the battle, for
he is a child.’ Harald answered: ‘I shall certainly be in the battle,
but if I am so weak that I cannot wield the sword, I know what to do; my
hand shall be tied to the hilt; no man shall have a better will than I
to do harm to the bœndr. I want to follow my companions.’ It is told
that Harald sang this stanza:—

                ‘I shall be daring enough
                To defend the wing in which I stand.

                       *       *       *       *       *

                       *       *       *       *       *

                The young battle-glad poet
                Will not draw back from the spears
                Where the blows rain down;
                When hardest the fight.’

“Harald had his way and was in the battle, and won great renown. He was
then fifteen winters old, as has been told. The skald Thjódólf mentions
it in the poem he made about King Harald, called _sexstefja_
(six-stave); among them is the following:—

      I heard that the strong war-storm
      Burst upon the king (Harald) close to Haug,
      But the burner of the Bulgarians (Bolgara brennir = Harald)
      Supported his brother (St. Ólaf) well.
      The king did part against his will
      Fifteen winters old
      From the dead Olaf
      And hid his helmet-seat (head).

“Harald got severely wounded in the battle, and Rögnvald Brúsason took
him to a bondi in the night after the battle. The bondi lived in an
out-of-the-way place, and kept him secretly, and cured him completely”
(Fms. Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 1).


Prof. Wassiliewsky has published a treatise, in Moscow, in which he
gives extracts from a Greek work of the eleventh century. We here give
part of them:—


“_Araltes_ (Harald) was a son of the king in Varangia; he had a brother
Julavos (St. Ólaf) who inherited the realm after his father’s death, and
made his brother Araltes the highest man next after himself. Araltes was
young, and admired the Roman power. He came and bowed knee before the
late Emperor Michael Paflagon; he had with him a host of five hundred
valiant men. The Emperor received him befittingly, and sent him to
Sicily into the war. Araltes went there and performed deeds of high
renown; and when Sicily was subdued he came back to the Emperor with his
host. Thereafter it happened that Delianos made a revolt in Bulgaria,
and Araltes with his men, together with the Emperor and his host, went
there; and he performed against the enemies feats worthy of his birth
and valour. When the Emperor had subdued Bulgaria he went home. I was
there too, and fought for the Emperor as well as I could. On the way
home, in Mosynupolis, the Emperor, in reward for his feats, made him
_Spatharokandidatos_ (a title). After Michael’s death, in the time of
the Emperor Monomachos, Araltes wanted to go home to his country, but
was not allowed to do so, and he was hindered from going. Nevertheless
he got away secretly, and became king in his own country, instead of his
brother Julavos (Olaf). Even as king he preserved his loyalty and love
towards the Romans” (Gustav Storm: Norsk Historisk Tidsskrift, 1884).


We will now give some extracts from the Sagas which contain an account
of Harald’s remarkable career, and which relate to the English and
Norman history of that period.


“Edward, Æthelred’s son, was king in England after Hörda-Knut; he was
called Edward the Good, and so he was. His mother was Queen Emma, the
daughter of Rikard jarl of Rouen; her brother was Rodbjart (Robert), the
father of William the Bastard, who was then duke (_hertogi_)[428] in
Rouen in Normandy. Edward was married to Gyda, the daughter of Godwin
jarl, son of Ulfnadr. Gyda’s youngest brother, Harald, Godwin’s son, was
raised in the hird of Edward. The king loved him very greatly, and
looked on him as his son, for he had no children” (Harald Hardradi’s
Saga, c. 77).


The death of King Edward the Confessor is here referred to:—


“One summer Harald Godwinson had to go to Bretland (Wales), and went
there by ship; when they got out they had head winds, and drifted out to
sea. They landed in Northmandi after having experienced a dangerous
storm. They sailed up to the burgh of Rouen (Rúda), and met William
(Vilhjálm) jarl, who gladly received them; Harald stayed there a long
time, in the autumn, well entertained, for it kept on stormy, and they
could not get to sea. Towards winter the jarl invited Harald to stay
there during the winter. Harald sat in a high-seat on one side of the
jarl, and on the other side sat the jarl’s wife; she was a very handsome
woman; these three often conversed, drinking and amusing themselves. The
jarl usually went to sleep early, but Harald sat up long in the evenings
talking to his wife. This went on for a long time. One evening she said:
‘The jarl has asked me what we have been talking about so often, and now
he is angry.’ Harald answered: ‘As soon as possible we will let him know
all our conversation.’ The next day Harald wished to speak to the jarl,
and they went into the speaking (málrúm) room, where were also the
jarl’s wife and the councillors. Harald said: ‘I must say, jarl, that
there are more reasons for my coming hither than I have as yet told you.
I want to ask thy daughter for my wife; I have often spoken of this to
her mother, and she has promised to help me in this matter with you.’
When Harald had said this, all present thought it well fit, and
recommended it to the jarl; at last the maiden was betrothed to Harald,
but as she was young the wedding was to be delayed for some winters. In
the spring Harald made his ship ready and went away; he and the jarl
parted with much love. Harald went to England to King Edward (Jatvard)
and never came back to Valland to celebrate his wedding. Edward was king
over England for twenty-three winters, and died in London the fifth of
January (1066); he was buried in St. Paul’s Church, and the English call
him a saint” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, cc. 78, 79).


“The sons of Earl Godwin were then the most powerful men in England.
Tosti had been made chief over the king’s host, and was the defender of
the land and ruler over all the other jarls, when Edward began to grow
old. His brother Harald was always in the hird, and was nearest
attendant on the king, and had charge of all his money. It is said that
when the king was about to die Harald and a few others were with him; he
bent down over him, and said: ‘I call you all to witness that the king
just now gave me the kingship, and the rule over all England.’ Then the
dead king was carried away from his bed. The same day there was a
meeting of the chiefs, who decided whom they would take to be king. Then
Harald called forth his witnesses to prove that King Edward gave him the
realm on his dying day. The meeting ended by Harald being taken as king,
and consecrated the thirteenth day (of Yule = 6th of January, 1066) in
St. Paul’s Church, and the chiefs and the people made homage to him.
When his brother Tosti heard this he was displeased, and thought he had
as much right to be king. ‘I want,’ said he, ‘the chiefs of the land to
choose the man whom they think most fit to be king.’ Harald heard these
words, and said he would not give up the kingship, for he had been
placed on the king’s high-seat in Edward’s place, and had been anointed
and consecrated. The greatest part of the people favoured him, and he
had all the treasures of the king” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 80).


When Harald, son of Godwin, had got the kingship in England his brother
Tosti did not like being his underman:


“So he went away with his men southwards across the sea to Flanders.
There he stayed for a little while, and went to Frisland, and thence to
Denmark to see his kinsman King Svein. Ulf jarl, Svein’s father, and
Gyda, Tosti jarl’s mother, were brother and sister. Tosti asked Svein
for help and support, but Svein asked him to stay there, and said that
he should have a jarlship in Denmark, over which he might rule as an
honoured chief. Tosti answered: ‘I long to go back to England, to my
homestead; but if I get no support from you, I will rather give you all
the help I can give in England, if you will go there with the Danish
host to win the land, as your uncle Knut the Great did.’ The king
answered: ‘I am much weaker than my kinsman Knut, so that I can scarcely
defend Danaveldi against the Northmen (Norwegians) and Harald
(Hardradi). Knut the Old got Denmark by inheritance, and England by
warfare and battle, though it was not unlikely for a while that he would
lose his life; he obtained Norway without fight. Now I had rather act
moderately according to my strength, than follow the deeds of my kinsman
Knut.’ Tosti said: ‘My errand has been less successful than I thought
you would let it be, seeing that I am your kinsman. Maybe I shall search
for friendship where it is far more undeserved; and I may find a chief
who is less afraid to plan great things than thou, king.’ Then they
parted, and not on very friendly terms” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 81).


“Tosti then changed his journey and went to Norway to Harald Hardradi,
who was in Vik. Tosti told the king his errand, and all about his
journey since he had left England, and asked him to help him to get his
realm there. The king answered that the Northmen were not willing to go
to England and make warfare under an English chief. ‘It is said that the
English are not to be much trusted.’ Tosti asked: ‘Is it true, what I
heard in England, that thy kinsman Magnus sent men to King Edward with
the message that he owned England as well as Denmark, and had inherited
them after Hörda-Knut, as they had sworn.’ The King answered: ‘Why had
he it not if he were its owner?’ Tosti said: ‘Why hast thou not Denmark,
as Magnus before thee?’ The king answered: ‘The Danes need not boast to
us Northmen; many marks have we left on those kinsmen of thine (often
have we defeated them)’. Tosti continued: ‘If thou wilt not tell me I
will tell thee; Magnus got Denmark because the chiefs in the land helped
him, and thou didst not get it because all the people were against thee;
Magnus did not fight for England, because all the people of the land
wanted to have Edward for king. If thou wouldst get England, I can
contrive that the greater part of the chiefs there will be thy friends
and helpers; I lack nothing but the name of king to equal my brother
Harald. All know that a greater warrior than thou has never been born in
the Northern lands, and it seems to me strange that thou didst fight
fifteen years for Denmark and wilt not try for England, which is easy
for thee to get.’ Harald thought carefully about the jarl’s words, and
saw that there was much truth in them, and moreover was willing to get
the realm. He and the jarl spoke often together; they decided that they
would go in the summer to England, and win it. Harald sent word over the
whole of Norway, and made a half levy. This was very much talked about,
and there were guesses as to the result of the expedition. Some reckoned
up the great deeds of Harald, and said it would not be impossible to
him; but others thought that England would be difficult to win, that
there was an immense mass of people there, and the warriors called
_Thingamannalid_ so valiant, that one was better than two of Harald’s
best men. Tosti jarl sailed in the spring westward to Flæmingjaland
(Flanders) to meet the men who had followed him from England; and those
who gathered to him from England and Flæmingjaland” (Harald Hardradi’s
Saga, c. 82).


The following tells of his preparations against England, his invading
fleet amounting to over 240 warships, and describes the Battle of
Stamford Bridge (Stafnfurdubryggia):—


“The host of Harald gathered in Solundir. When he was ready to leave
Nidaros he first went to the shrine of St. Olaf, opened it, and cut his
hair and nails; then he shut the shrine and threw the keys out on the
Nid (a river), and went southward with his host. So many men had
gathered to him that it is said he had nearly 240 ships, besides
store-ships and small skutas” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 83).


“When King Harald was ready for the expedition to England and a fair
wind rose, he sailed out to sea with all his fleet; he reached Shetland,
and lay a short while there, and then sailed southward to the Orkneys,
whence he took many men, and the jarls Pál and Erlend, the sons of
Thorfinn jarl, but he left there Queen Ellisif, and their daughters
Maria and Ingigerd. Then he sailed southward past Scotland till he came
off England, to a place called Kliflönd (Cleveland); then he went
ashore, and ravaged and subdued the land, meeting with no resistance.
Thereupon he sailed to Skardaborg (Scarborough) and fought against the
townsmen; he went up on a high rock near the town, and set fire to a
large pile which he made. They took large poles and lifted it up and
threw it down into the town; soon one house after the other began to
burn, and the whole town was destroyed. The Northmen slew many people,
and took all the property they could get. There was no other choice for
the English who wanted to save their lives but to ask peace and become
King Harald’s men; thus he subdued the land wherever he went. Then he
sailed with all his host southward along the shore, and landed at
Hellornes, where a gathered host came against him; he fought a battle,
and got the victory. Then he went up the Humra (Humber) to Usa (Ouse),
and there he landed; the sons of Godwin, Morcar and Waltheof, Earl of
Huntingdon, were at Jórvík (York) with an overwhelming host, which had
been gathering all summer. When the host of the jarls came down, Harald
went ashore and began to array[429] his men: one wing[430] stood on the
river bank, and the other higher up, near a ditch which was deep, broad,
and full of water. The jarls let their arrays[431] go down along the
river, and most of their men; the standard of Harald was near the river;
there the ranks were thick; but they were thinnest at the ditch, and
least to be depended upon. Thither Morcar came down with his standard.
The wing of the Northmen by the ditch retreated, and the English
followed them, thinking they were going to flee; but when Harald saw
that his men retired along the ditch, he ordered a war-blast to be
blown, and urged them on; he had the standard _land-waster_ (landeyda)
carried forward, and made so hard an attack that all were driven back.
There was great slaughter in the jarls’ host. Waltheof had had his
standard brought along the river downward against the array of Harald,
but when the king hardened the attack the jarl and his men fled along
the river upward; only those who followed him escaped, but so many had
fallen that large streams of blood in many places flowed over the
plains. When the jarl had fled Harald surrounded Morcar and the men who
had advanced along the ditch with him; the English fell by hundreds.
Many jumped into the ditch, and the slain lay there so thick that the
Northmen walked across it with dry feet on human bodies; there Morcar
perished.

“Tosti jarl had come northward from Flæmingjaland (Flanders) to meet
King Harald when he arrived in England; he was in all the battles which
we have related. It all happened as he had told the king, for many
friends and kinsmen of Tosti jarl joined them in England, which was a
great support to Harald. After this battle the people of the nearest
districts submitted to King Harald, while some fled. Then he set off to
take the town of York, and went with the entire host to
Stafnfurdubryggja (Stamford Bridge);[432] but as he had won so great a
victory over great chiefs and an overwhelming host, they had all become
frightened and despaired of resistance. The townsmen resolved to send
word to Harald and offer to surrender themselves and the town; it was
agreed that the next Sunday the king should hold a Thing and speak to
the townsmen; so on this Sunday Harald went up to the town with his
host, and had a meeting outside of it at which all the people promised
to obey and serve him; they gave him as hostages sons of high-born men
whom Tosti jarl pointed out, for he knew all in the town. The king and
his men went down to the ships in the evening, having won an easy
victory, and they were very merry. It was agreed that on the second day
of the week there should be a Thing, at which Harald was to appoint
chiefs and give rights and grants. The same evening, after sunset,
Harald, son of Godwin, came from the south with an overwhelming host; he
was led into the town with the consent and goodwill of all the townsmen;
then all the roads and the gates were occupied so that the Northmen
should not get any news; the host was in the town during the night.

“On Monday, when King Harald Sigurdarson and his men had had their day
meal, he sounded the horns to go ashore; he made his host ready, and
selected those who should remain or go ashore;[433] he let two men from
each detachment[434] go, and one remain. Tosti jarl prepared himself and
his host to go ashore with the king; but Olaf, the king’s son, and
Eystein Orri (black cock) were left behind to guard the ships; also the
son of Thorberg Arnason, who was then the most renowned and dearest of
all lendirmen in Norway to the king—Harald had promised him his daughter
Maria—the jarls of the Orkneys, Pál and Erlend, remained behind. The
weather was exceedingly fine, and the sun so hot that the men left their
armour behind, and went up with shields, helmets, spears, and swords;
many carried bows and arrows, and they were in high spirits. When they
came near the town they saw great clouds of dust, and a large host on
horseback, with fine shields and shining brynjas. The king stopped, and,
calling Tosti jarl, asked what men those were who were coming against
them. The jarl said: ‘They are most likely foes, though it may be that
they are some of our kinsmen who come to seek friendship and mercy from
us, and give us in return their faith and trust.’ The king said that
they would stop there and find out about this host; they did so, and the
nearer the host approached the more numerous it seemed. It was so well
armed, and the weapons glittered so, that it was as if one looked at
broken shining ice. Then Tosti jarl said: ‘Herra (lord), let us take a
good expedient. It cannot be doubted that these are foes, and the king
himself probably leads them.’ The king asked: ‘What is your advice?’
Tosti answered: ‘The first is to go back as soon as we can to the ships
to fetch the rest of our men and our coats of mail (brynjas), then let
us fight as well as we can; or otherwise let us go on board the ships,
and then the horsemen cannot reach us.’ The king said: ‘I will follow
another plan. I will put three brave men on the swiftest horses, and let
them ride to our men as fast as they can, and tell them what has
happened; their aid will soon come, for the English will have a hard
fight before we are defeated.’ The jarl said: ‘You shall have your will,
lord, in this as in other things; but I am not more eager to flee than
any other man, though I said what I thought advisable.’ Harald put up
his standard, the land-waster, and arrayed his host, and made the line
(fylking) long, but not thick; then he bent the wings (arms) backwards,
so that they met each other; it was a wide thick circle, equal on all
sides; it had shield against shield on all sides, and shields above
also.[435] The array was thus formed because the king knew that the
horsemen were wont to rush up in small squads (ridil) and draw back at
once; the king’s guard, very picked men, was inside the circle, the
archers also, and Tosti with his men. Then the king ordered the jarl to
go forward where it was most needed. ‘Those who stand outermost in the
array,’ he said, ‘shall put the handles of their spears down on the
ground, and the points against the breasts of the horsemen if they
attack; those who stand next shall direct their spear points against the
breasts of their horses; keep the spears thus everywhere that they
cannot advance; let us stand firm and take care not to break this
array.’

“Harald, son of Godwin, had come thither with an overwhelming host both
of horsemen and footmen; it is told that King Harald had not the half of
his men. Harald Sigurdarson, on a black horse with a white spot on its
forehead, rode about his army and examined how it was arranged; his
horse stumbled, and he fell forward off it; as he rose, he said: ‘A fall
bodes a lucky journey.’

“King Harald Gudinason said to the Northmen who were with him: ‘Do you
know the tall man with the blue kirtle (kyrtil) and the fine helmet who
fell off his horse?’ ‘It is the king of the Northmen,’ they said. The
king added: ‘He is a tall and noble-looking man, but nevertheless it is
likely that his luck is now gone.’ Then twenty English horsemen[436]
rode forth, fully armoured, as were also their horses; when they came to
the array of the Northmen, one of them asked: ‘Where is Tosti jarl in
the host?’ Tosti answered: ‘It is not to be concealed that you may find
him here.’ The horseman said: ‘Harald thy brother sends thee greeting,
and the message that thou shalt have peace, and get Northumberland, and
rather than that thou shouldst not join him he will give thee one-third
of all his realm.’ The jarl replied: ‘Then something else is offered
than the enmity and disgrace of last winter; if this had been offered
then, many who now are dead would be alive, and the realm of the King of
England would stand more firm. Now if I accept these terms, what will my
brother Harald offer to the King of Norway for his trouble?’ The
horseman answered: ‘He has said what he will grant King Harald
Sigurdarson: it is a space of seven feet, and it is so long because he
is taller than most other men.’ The jarl answered: ‘Go and tell my
brother, King Harald, to prepare for battle; it shall not be said among
Northmen that Tosti jarl left Harald, King of Norway, and went into the
host of his foes when he made warfare in England; rather will we all
resolve to die with honour, or win England with a victory.’ As the
horsemen rode back to their host, King Harald asked the jarl: ‘Who was
that eloquent man?’ ‘It was my brother, Harald, son of Godwin.’ The king
said: ‘Too long was this hidden from us, for they had come so near our
host that this Harald would not have been able to tell of the death of
our men.’[437] The jarl said: ‘It is true, lord, that he acted
incautiously, and I saw that it might have been as you said; but when he
came to offer me peace and great power, I should have been his slayer if
I had betrayed who he was; I acted thus because I will rather suffer
death from my brother, than be his slayer, if I may choose.’ The king
said to his men: ‘This man (Harald) was little and nimble, and stood
proudly in the stirrups.’ Then King Harald Hardradi went into the ring
(circle) of the shieldburgh and sang this stanza:—

                    ‘Forth we go
                    In the array;
                    Armour-less
                    Under the blue edge;
                    The helmets shine,
                    I have not mine (brynja, namely)
                    Now lies our war-dress
                    Down on the ships.’

“Emma was his brynja called; it was so long that it reached to the
middle of his leg, and so strong that never had a weapon stuck in it.
The king said: ‘This song was badly composed, and I will sing a better
one.’ He sang:—

            ‘Not that we crouch
            From the clash of weapons
            In the bight of the shield;
            Thus bade to fight the word-true Hild.
            The woman (Hild) asked me early
            To carry the helmet-stem (= the head)
            High in the din of metals (= fight)
            Where the ice of Hlokk (sword) met with heads.’

“Then Thjodolf skald sang—

          ‘Not shall I though the king
          Himself sink to the ground—
          It goes as God will—leave
          The heirs of the king.
          The sun shines not on sightlier
          Heirs of a king
          Than these two.
          The hawks (= sons) of Harald are ready for revenge.’

“It is said by people that Tosti’s advice, given first when they saw the
land-host, was the best and wisest, namely, that they should go back to
the ships; but since a death-fated man cannot be saved, they suffered
from the stubbornness of the king, who could not bear that this
cautiousness should be regarded as fear or flight by his foes.

“They began the battle. The English horsemen made an attack on the
Northmen; the resistance was very hard, for the spears of the latter
were so placed that the horsemen could not reach them with their
weapons. Then they rode around the array, but as soon as they came near,
the archers of the Northmen shot at them as fast as they were able. The
English saw that they could effect nothing, and rode back. The Northmen
thought they were going to flee, and followed in pursuit; but as soon as
the English saw that they had broken their shieldburgh they rode at them
from all sides, shooting arrows and spears at them. When Harald
Sigurdarson saw that his men were falling, he rushed into the fray where
it was hottest. Many men fell on both sides. Harald, King of Norway,
fought with the greatest bravery, and became so eager and furious that
he rushed forward out of the array, dealing blows on all sides; neither
helmet nor coat of mail could withstand him; he went through the ranks
of his foes as if he were walking through air, for all who came near him
fell back. Then, as the English almost fled, Harald Sigurdarson was hit
with an arrow in the throat, so that a stream of blood gushed from his
mouth; this was his death-wound; he fell there with all the men who had
gone forward around him, except those who retreated and kept their
standard. There was yet a stubborn fight, because the Northmen were very
eager, and each urged the other on. When Tosti jarl became aware that
the king had fallen he went to where he saw the standard aloft, and
under the king’s standard he urged the men on strongly; a little after
both hosts rested themselves, and there was a long delay in the battle.

“Both sides made ready for battle again, but before the arrays met,
Harald, son of Godwin, offered peace to Tösti jarl, his brother, and all
Northmen who were left alive; but the Northmen shouted all at once, and
said that sooner would every one of them fall than accept truce from the
English. Then the Northmen raised a war-cry, and the battle began a
second time. Tosti jarl was then chief of the host; he fought valiantly
and followed up the standards, and ere the fight ended fell there with
great bravery and renown. At that moment Eystein Orri came from the
ships with the men who followed him; they were in full war-dress, and
Eystein at once took the standard of Harald, the “landeyda.” Then there
was a third and very severe battle; many of the English fell and they
almost fled; this was called Orrahrid (the tempest of Orri). Eystein and
his men had hurried so much from the ships that they were almost
disabled by weariness (exhaustion) before they began the fight; but
afterwards they were so eager that they did not spare themselves while
they were able, and at last took off their coats of mail (ring-brynjas);
then the English could easily find places for wounding them. Some died
unwounded from over-exertion, and nearly all the highborn Northmen fell
there; this was late in the day. It happened as it always does, where
many people gather, that all were not equally brave; many tried to
escape in various ways. It went as fate would; some were destined to a
longer life and escaped. It was dark in the evening when the
manslaughter was over. Styrkar, the stallari (marshal) of King Harald,
was a famous man; he got a horse in the evening, and rode away, but it
was blowing a strong and cold gale; he had no other clothes than a shirt
(skyrta), a helmet, and a drawn sword in his hand; he soon cooled when
the weariness left him. A waggoner (vagn-karl) who had on a lined jacket
(kösung) met him. Styrkar asked: ‘Wilt thou sell the jacket, bondi?’ He
answered: ‘Not to thee; thou must be a Northman; I know thy speech.’
Styrkar said: ‘If I am a Northman, what will thou then?’ ‘I will slay
thee,’ replied the bondi, ‘but now it is so bad that I have not got a
weapon that I can use.’ Styrkar added: ‘If thou canst not slay me,
bondi, I will try to slay thee.’ He raised his sword and smote his neck
so that his head dropped down; Styrkar then took the skin-jacket and put
it on, jumped on his horse, and rode down to the shore. Arnor jarla
skald sang about this battle, now told of, which was the last that
Harald and his men fought, in the erfidrapa (funeral song) which he made
about the king. Arnor says: ‘It is doubtful if any other king under the
sun has fought with such a valour and bravery as Harald.’

“It was on the second day of the week (Monday) that King Harald
fell,[438] two nights before _Mikjalsmessa_ (Michaelmas)” (Fornmanna
Sögur, cc. 115–119).


Here is a short account of the battle of Hastings. William the Conqueror
is called _Vilhjalm Jarl_.


“Vilhjalm (William) bastard, jarl of Rouen, heard of the death of
Játvard (Edward) his kinsman, and that Harald, son of Godwin, had been
made King of England, and been consecrated. He thought he had more right
to the kingdom of England than Harald, on account of his relationship to
Edward, and he also wanted to pay Harald for the disgrace of having
broken his betrothal with his (Vilhjalm’s) daughter. William gathered a
host in Normandy (Northmandi), with very many men and ships. When he
rode from the town to his ships, and had mounted his horse, his wife
went to him and wanted to speak to him; he struck at her with his heel
and thrust the spur deeply into her breast, and she fell dead, and then
he rode on to his ship, and went with his host to England. Bishop Otto,
his brother, was with him. When the jarl reached England he plundered
and subdued the land wherever he went.

“He was taller and stronger than others, and a good rider; a very great
warrior, but rather cruel; very wise, but, it was said, not trustworthy.
Harald, son of Godwin, allowed Olaf, the son of Harald Sigurdsson, and
those there with him who had survived the battle, to go, and King Harald
then turned southward with his host to England, for he had heard that
William the Bastard was in the south of England subduing the land. There
were with Harald his brothers, Svein, Gyrd, and Valthjóf. Harald and
William met in the south of England at _Helsingjaport_ (port of
Hastings); there was a great battle, where fell Harald and Gyrd his
brother, with a great part of their men. That was nineteen nights after
the fall of Harald Sigurdsson. Valthjóf, Harald’s brother, escaped by
flight, and late in the evening met a detachment of William’s men, who
when they saw the Valthjóf men fled into an oak forest; they were one
hundred men. Valthjóf set the forest on fire, and burnt it up
altogether.

“William had had himself proclaimed King of England. He sent word to
Valthjóf that they should be reconciled, and gave him truce to meet him.
The jarl went with few men; when he came on the heath north of
_Kastalabryggja_ (Castlebridge) two king’s stewards met him with a
detachment, took him and fettered him, and he was slain; the English
call him a saint. William was king over England for twenty-one years,
and his kin ever since” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, Hkr. cc. 99–101).


The battle of Hastings was fought on October 14th, 1066. Gyrd played an
important part in the conflict.


“Then said Gyrd jarl to his brother King Harald: ‘I fear that thou wilt
not succeed in the fight against William, for thou hast sworn not to
defend England against him.’ The king replied: ‘It may be, brother, that
it will suit thee better to fight against William than me; but I have
not been wont to lie in my room when other men have fought, and William
shall not hear that I dare not behold him.’ After this King Harald had
his standard raised, and began the battle against William. The fight was
most violent, and it was long thought uncertain which of them would get
the victory; but as the battle continued the fall of men turned on the
hands of the English (Enskir menn). William had before the attack let
the relics of Otmar be tied to his standard; on these Harald had taken
his oath. But when the battle began to turn against King Harald, he
asked: ‘What is tied to William’s standard?’ And when he was told, he
said: ‘It may be that we need not then expect victory in this battle.’
And thus it ended that King Harald and his brother Gyrd fell, and a
large part of their men, but all who were alive fled” (Fornmanna Sögur,
vi, c. 121).


-----

Footnote 428:

  Her = host, togi = leader.

Footnote 429:

  Fylkja; the array itself is called Fylking.

Footnote 430:

  Fylkingar-arm.

Footnote 431:

  Fylking.

Footnote 432:

  In Heimskringla the corresponding passage has Stanfurdubryggja.

Footnote 433:

  All through the Sagas we see that it seemed the custom that one-third
  of the men should remain on board of the ships to protect them.

Footnote 434:

  Sveit.

Footnote 435:

  It was a shieldburgh, with walls and roof of shields.

Footnote 436:

  In Snorri the twenty horsemen are described thus: “Twenty horsemen of
  the Thingmannalid rode up in front of the array of the Northmen. They
  were armoured all over and also their horses. Then a horseman said:
  ‘Is Tosti jarl here in the host?’” (Snorri Sturluson, Harald
  Hardradi’s Saga, c. 9.)

  From this we see that the English, like their kinsmen, had horsemen;
  and the finds of spurs, &c., prove this.

Footnote 437:

  Meaning that if he had been known he would have been slain.

Footnote 438:

  “One winter after the fall of King Harald (Hardradi) his body was
  brought from England north to Nidarós (Throndhjem) and buried in Maria
  Church, which he had built” (Harald Hardradi’s Saga, c. 104).




                            CHAPTER XXXIII.
    THE DISCOVERY AND SETTLEMENT OF ICELAND, GREENLAND, AND AMERICA.

  Causes leading to the discovery of Iceland—Naddod’s expedition—The
    expedition of Gardar Svavarson—Those of Floki, Ingolf, and
    Leif—Iceland so named by Floki—Settlers in Iceland—Discovery of
    Greenland—Thorvald and Eirek the Red—Discovery of America—Bjarni’s
    voyage—Leif’s voyage—Thorvald’s voyage—Attacked by plague—Thorfinn
    Karlsefni’s voyage—Description of the inhabitants.


From the Sagas and ancient records which relate to the earlier events of
the North, we find that the people spread westward and southward to the
Mediterranean. Later we see this maritime race seeking out new lands,
and crossing the broad Atlantic and discovering a New World.

The policy of the Norwegian King Harald Fairhair, which led to the
subjection of many lesser chieftains about the middle of the ninth
century, gave rise to an emigration of the more high-spirited chiefs in
search of other lands, and resulted in the discovery of Iceland, called
in some Sagas Snowland, and afterwards of Greenland and Vinland, or
America. The hero of the discovery of Iceland was a sea-rover called
Naddod, about the year 861.


“Owing to his (Harald Fairhair) oppression, many people fled from the
country, and many uninhabited lands were then settled—Jamtaland,
Helsingjaland, and the western lands, Sudreyjar (the Hebrides),
Dyflinnar Skiri (the shire of Dublin in Ireland), Katanes (Caithness) in
Scotland, and Hjaltland (the Shetlands), Normandi in Valland, Fœreyjar
(the Faroes). At that time Iceland was discovered” (Egil’s Saga, c. 4).


                  DISCOVERY AND SETTLEMENT OF ICELAND.

Iceland was discovered by Naddod about 861, and he was followed by Floki
about 867. Later Ingolf and Leif, powerful men from Norway, settled
there permanently. Their example was followed by many others afterwards.


“It is said that some men were going from Norway to the _Fœreyjar_
(Faroes), Some say it was Naddod Viking. They were driven westward into
the sea, and there found a large land. They went up on a high mountain
in the eastern fjords, and looked far and wide for smoke or some token
that the land was inhabited. They saw none. They went back to the Faroes
in the autumn, and when they set sail much snow fell on the mountains,
and therefore they called the country _Snœland_ (Snow land). They
praised the land much. The place where they landed is now called
Reydarfjall in the Austfjords” (Landnáma, i. c. 1).


Naddod’s example was soon followed by others, amongst whom was Gardar
Svavarson, a Swede, who called the island Gardarshólmi.


“A man called Gardar Svavarson, of Swedish kin, went in search of
Snowland at the advice of a foreknowing (foresighted) mother. He landed
east of the eastern Horn. There was a harbour. Gardar sailed round the
land, and saw it was an island. He stayed over the winter at Húsauik, in
Skjálfandi, and built a house there. In the spring, when he was ready to
sail, a man called Náttfari with a thrall and a bondmaid were driven off
in a boat. They settled in Náttfaravik. Gardar went to Norway, and
praised the land greatly. He was the father of Uni, the father of Hróar
Tungugodi. Thereafter the land was called Gardarshólmi (Gardar’s
island); there was at that time forest from mountain to shore”
(Landnáma, c. 1).


The name _Iceland_ was first given to the island by Flóki,[439] but
neither he, Naddod, nor Gardar, settled there. The first settlers were
the foster brothers Ingólf and Leif, who with their followers landed
about the year 870.


“The foster brothers made ready a large ship which they owned, and went
in search of the land which Hrafna-Flóki (Raven-Flóki) had discovered,
and which was then called Iceland. They found the land and stayed in
Austfjords, in the southern Alptafjord. The south of the land seemed to
them better than the north. They stayed one winter there, and then went
back to Norway.

“Thereafter Ingólf prepared for a voyage to Iceland, while Leif went on
warfare in the west. He made war in Ireland, and there found a large
underground house; he went down into it, and it was dark until light
shone from a sword in the hand of a man. Leif killed the man, and took
the sword and much property. Thereafter he was called Hjörleif
(Sword-Leif). He made war widely in Ireland, and got much property. He
took ten thralls; their names were Dufthak, Geirrod, Skjaldbjörn,
Haldór, Drafdrit; more names are not given. Then he went to Norway and
met his foster brother there. He had before married Helga, Ingólf’s
sister. This winter Ingólf made a great sacrifice, and asked what his
luck and fate would be, but Hjörleif was never willing to sacrifice. The
answer pointed out Iceland to Ingólf. After this both made a ship ready
for the voyage. Hjörleif had his booty on board, and Ingólf their foster
brotherhood property. When ready they sailed out to sea.

“In the summer when Ingólf and Leif went to settle in Iceland Harald
Fairhair had been twelve years king over Norway; 6,073 winters had
elapsed since the beginning of this world, and since the incarnation of
our Lord 874 years. They sailed together until they saw Iceland, then
they and their ships parted. When Ingólf saw Iceland he threw overboard
his high-seat pillars for luck. He said that he would settle where the
pillars landed. He landed at a place now called Ingólfshöfdi (Ingólf’s
cape). But Hjörleif was driven westward along the land, and suffered
from want of water. The Irish thralls there kneaded together meal and
butter, saying these caused no thirst. They called the mixture
_minnthak_, and when it had been made there came a heavy rain, and they
took water into their tents. When the _minnthak_ began to get mouldy
they threw it overboard, and it came ashore at a place now called
Minnthakseyr. Hjörleif landed at Hjörleifshöfdi (Hjörleif’s cape), where
there was a fjord. Hjörleif had two houses (skáli) made there; the walls
of one are 18 fathoms, and those of the other 19 fathoms high. Hjörleif
remained there that winter. In the spring he wanted to sow (corn); he
had one ox, and let the thralls drag the plough. When Hjörleif was in
his house Dufthak (one of the thralls) suggested that they should kill
the ox, and say that a bear of the forest had slain it, and then they
would slay Hjörleif if he searched for the bear. Then they told Hjörleif
this. When they each went different ways in search of the bear in the
forest, the thralls attacked them singly and murdered all the ten. They
ran away with their women and loose property and the boat. The thralls
went to the islands which they saw south-west off the land, and stayed
there a while. Ingólf sent his thralls, Vífil and Karli, westward along
the shore to search for his high-seat pillars. When they came to
Hjörleifshöfdi they found Hjörleif dead; they then returned and told
Ingólf these tidings. He was very angry at the slaying of Hjörleif”
(Landnáma, i. cc. 4–6).


“Iceland was first settled from Norway in the days of Harald Fairhair,
son of Halfdan the black....

“Ingolf was the name of a Northman, of whom it is truly said that he
went first from Norway to Iceland, when Harald Fairhair was sixteen
years old, and a second time a few winters later. He settled south in
Reykjarvik. In that time was Iceland covered with wood between the
mountains and the fjord.

“Then were there Christian men, whom the Northmen call _Papa_, but
afterwards they went away because they would not remain with the
heathens, and left behind them Irish books, and croziers and bells, from
which it could be seen that they were Irishmen” (Islendingabok, c. i.).


“At the time when Iceland was discovered and settled from Norway,
Adrianus was Pope at Rome, and John, who was the eighth of that name, in
the apostolic seat; Louis (Hlödver), son of Louis, Emperor north of the
mountains (i.e. the Alps), and Leo, as well as his son Alexander, of
Mikligard. Harald Fairhair was King of Norway; Eirik Eymundsson of
Sweden and his son Bjorn; Gorm the old in Denmark; Aelfred (Elfrad) the
powerful in England, as well as his son Edward (Jatvard); Kjarval in
Dublin (Dyflin); and Sigurd the powerful, jarl of the Orkneys” (Landnama
c. i. part i.).


From many places in Landnama we find that people from England, Ireland,
Scotland, and Flanders, and from different countries of the North,
settled in Iceland.


“Fridleif was from Gautland on his father’s side, while his mother,
Bryngerd, was Flemish.... Fridleif settled in Iceland. Thord Knapp was a
Swede, son of Bjorn of Haug. He went with another man, named Nafarhelgi,
to Iceland” (Landnama, c. xi. part iii.).


“Örlyg was fostered by the holy bishop Patrek (Patrick) in the Hebrides.
He desired to go to Iceland, and asked the bishop to help him. He gave
him timber for a church, and also a _plenarium_, an iron bell, and
consecrated earth, that he might put it under the corner-stave. (This
shows they had stave churches in those days). The Bishop Patrick: ‘Thou
must land at a place where thou seest two mountains run out into the
sea, and a valley in each mountain. Thou shalt settle at the foot of the
most southerly mountain; there thou shalt build a church, and dwell
there’” (Landnama, c. xii. part 1).


                        DISCOVERY OF GREENLAND.

About one hundred years later the descendants of these roving Vikings,
animated by the same restless spirit and love of freedom so
characteristic of their race, set out in search of new lands, and
discovered and settled Greenland in A.D. 985. The heroes of this new
settlement were a Norwegian chief Thorvald and his son Eirek the Red.


“Thorvald and his son Eirek the Red went from Jadar (Jœderen, in Norway)
to Iceland, outlawed on account of manslaughter. Iceland was then to a
great extent settled. They first lived at Drangar, in Hornstrandir.
Thorvald died there. Eirek then married Thorhild, daughter of Jorund and
Thorbjörg Knarrarbringa, who was then married to Thorbjörn of Haukadal.
Eirek thereupon moved south and lived at Eireksstadir, near Vatnshorn.
The son of Eirek and Thorhild was called Leif. After Eirek had slain
Eyjulf Saur and Holmgöngu-Hrafn he was outlawed from Haukadal. He moved
westward to Breidifjord, and lived at Eireksstadir in Öxney (Ox-island).
He lent Thorgest his _seat-pillars_, and did not get them back when he
asked for them. Hence arose quarrels and battles between him and
Thorgest, as is told in the Saga of Eirek.[440] Styr Thorgrimsson,
Eyjulf of Sviney, the sons of Thorbrand of Alftafjord and Thorbjörn
Vifilsson, supported Eirek. But the family of Thorgest was supported by
the sons of Thord Gellir and Thorgeir of Hitardal. Eirek was outlawed at
the Thornes-thing. Thereupon he made his ship ready for sea in Eirek’s
bay. When he was ready Styr and the others followed him out past the
island to bid him farewell. Eirek told them that he intended to search
for the land which Gunnbjörn,[441] son of Ulf Kráka (crow), saw when he
was driven westward across the sea and found Gunnbjarnarsker
(Gunnbjörn’s rock). He (Eirek) said he would come back to his friends if
he found this land. Eirek sailed from Snœfellsjökul. He found the land,
and came to it at a place which he called Midjökul (Mid-glacier), and
which is now[442] called Bláserk (Blue shirt). He sailed thence
southward along the coast to see if the land could be settled on. He
stayed the first winter in Eireksey (Eirek’s island), near the middle of
what later was called the eastern settlement. Next spring he went to
Eireksfjord, and there took up his abode. In the summer he went to the
western part of the country, and in many places gave names to it. The
following winter he stayed at Hólmar, near Hrafnsgnípa, and the third
summer he went north to Snœfell all the way to Hrafnsfjord. Then he said
he had got into the inmost part of Eireksfjord. He went home (in
Greenland), and stayed the third winter in Eireksey at the mouth of
Eireksfjord. The next summer he went to Iceland, and landed with his
ship in Breidifjord. He called the land which he had found _Grœnland_,
for he said it would make men’s minds long to go there if it had a fine
name. Eirek stayed in Iceland that winter, and the next summer he went
to settle on the land. He lived at Brattahlid in Eireksfjord. Wise men
say that during the summer when Eirek the Red went to settle in
Greenland, thirty-five ships from Breidifjord and Borgartjord went
there, fourteen got there, while some were driven back and others were
lost. This was fifteen winters before Christianity was enacted as law in
Iceland”[443] (Flateyjarbók, i. 429).


“On this voyage Eirek discovered Greenland, and remained there three
winters, and then went to Iceland, where he remained one winter before
he returned to settle in Greenland, (Grænland), and that was fourteen
winters before Christianity was established by law in Iceland”
(Eyrbyggja Saga, c. 24).


                         DISCOVERY OF AMERICA.

Between the years 985 and 1011 these enterprising mariners, in the
course of their expeditions from the remote and rough coasts of the
North, discovered the great continent of America, with the inhabitants
of which they seem to have had some struggles; but such was the
transient nature of their expeditions that the benefit of this discovery
was for a time lost both to them and to the rest of the civilised world;
yet a remarkable destiny has willed that their descendants, in whose
veins the blood of the old Norsemen still runs, should people the
country.

Five distinct expeditions are related in the Sagas, the most famous one
being that of Thorfinn Karlsefni, who about 1007 determined to settle a
colony in the new land, and who on his return to Norway sold some of the
wood which he had brought home for a large sum to a merchant from
Bremen.


                            _First Journey._


“Herjúlf was the son of Bárd, the son of Herjúlf, who was a kinsman of
Ingólf, the settler. Ingólf gave Herjúlf land between Vog and Reykjanes.
Herjúlf first lived at Drepstokk. His wife was Thorgerd, and their son
Bjarni was a most promising man. When quite young he longed to go
abroad. He acquired much property and honour, and alternately spent a
winter abroad and a winter with his father. He soon had a trading ship,
and the last winter he was in Norway Herjúlf determined to go to
Greenland with Eirek, and made ready. Herjúlf had on board a man from
the Hebrides, a Christian, who composed the Hafgerdinga drápa.[444]
Herjúlf lived at Herjúlfsnes. He was a man of high birth. Eirek the Red
lived in Brattahlid; he was held in the greatest honour there, and all
obeyed him. His children were Leif, Thorvald, Thorstein, and Freydís,
who was married to Thorvard, who lived at Gardar, where now is a
bishop’s see. She was very overbearing, and Thorvard was weak minded.
She was married to him chiefly for the sake of his property. The people
of Greenland were heathen at that time. Bjarni landed with his ships at
Eyrar the summer after his father had sailed (in the spring).

“Bjarni thought this important news (the departure of his father), and
did not wish to unload his ship. Then his sailors asked what he meant to
do, and he answered he wanted to continue his custom of staying over
winter with his father. ‘I will sail to Greenland on my ship if you will
follow me,’ said he to his men. All answered they would do as he liked.
He said, ‘Our voyage will be considered unwise, as none of us have been
before in the Greenland Sea.’ Nevertheless, when they were ready, they
set out to sea, and after three days’ sailing land was out of sight, and
the fair winds ceased, and northern winds with fog blew continually, so
that for many days they did not know in what direction they were
sailing. Then the sun came into sight, and they could distinguish the
quarters of heaven. They hoisted sail and sailed all day before they saw
land. They wondered what land this could be, and Bjarni said he did not
think it was Greenland. The men asked if he wished to sail towards it,
and he answered that he wanted to go near it; this they did, and soon
saw that it had no mountains, but low hills, and was forest-clad. They
kept the land on their left, but the corners of the sail were towards
the land. Then they sailed for two days before they saw other land. They
asked Bjarni if he did not think this was Greenland. He answered: ‘No,
it is very unlike, I thought, for very large glaciers are said to be in
Greenland.’ They soon approached the land, and saw that it was flat and
covered with woods. Then the fair wind fell, and the sailors said they
thought it best to land as they lacked both wood and water, but Bjarni
did not want to land, and said they had enough left; at this the men
grumbled somewhat. He told them to set sail, which they did, and turned
the prow seaward, and sailed in that direction with a southwesterly wind
for three days, and then more land came in view which rose high with
mountains and a glacier. They asked Bjarni if he would like to go ashore
there, but he answered he would not do so as the land had an
inhospitable look. They did not furl their sail, but sailed along the
shore, and saw it was an island. They once more turned the prow of the
ship from the shore, and set to sea with the same fair wind, but the
gale increased, and Bjarni told them to take in a reef, and not sail so
fast, for the ship and its rigging could not stand it. They sailed four
days, until they saw land for the fourth time. They asked Bjarni if he
thought this Greenland. He answered: ‘This most resembles Greenland from
what I have been told, and here we will land. They landed in the evening
at a cape where a boat was lying. Herjúlf, Bjarni’s father, lived on the
cape, and it is called Herjúlfsnes after him. Bjarni now stayed with his
father, left off sea-journeys, and dwelt there during his father’s
lifetime, and after his death” (Flateyjarbók, i. 430–32).


                         DISCOVERY OF VINLAND.


“Now it is related that Bjarni Herjúlfsson came from Greenland to Eirek
Jarl (son of the great Hákon, 1000–1015) who received him well. Bjarni
described his voyage and the lands that he had seen. People thought he
had shown a lack of interest as he had nothing to tell about them, and
he was somewhat blamed for it. He became the Jarl’s hirdman, and went to
Greenland the following summer. Now there was much talk about land
discoveries. Leif, son of Eirek the Red, of Brattahlid, went to Bjarni
Herjúlfsson and bought his ship, and gathered together thirty-five
sailors. He asked his father Eirek to lead the expedition as before.
Eirek declined it, saying he was too old, and was less able to bear
hardship than formerly. Leif answered that even were this so he would
still have with him more luck than the rest of his kinsmen. Eirek
yielded, and when ready they rode from home. Not far from the ship
Eirek’s horse stumbled,[445] and he fell and hurt his foot. Then he
said: ‘It cannot be my fate to be the discoverer of any other lands than
the one on which we now live. I will follow you no further.’ Eirek went
home to Brattahlid and Leif with his thirty-five companions went on
board. There was a man from the south with them called Tyrker. When they
had made their ship ready they set out to sea. The first land they found
was that which Bjarni had found last. They sailed towards it, cast
anchor, put out a boat and went ashore, but saw no grass. The whole
interior consisted of glaciers, and the land between them and the sea
was like a plain of ice, and this seemed to them barren of good things.
Leif said: ‘Now we have not acted with this land like Bjarni, who did
not come ashore. I will give a name to the land and call it
Helluland.[446] Then they went on board and sailed out to sea, and found
another land. They approached it, cast anchor, pushed off a boat, and
went ashore. This land was flat and forest-clad, and the beach was low,
and covered with white sand in many places. Leif said: ‘This land shall
be named after its properties, and be called Markland (Woodland). They
then went on board again as quickly as they could. They sailed thence
out to sea with a north-east wind for two days before they saw land.
They sailed towards it, and came to an island lying north of it, and
went ashore in fine weather and looked round. They found dew on the
grass, and touched it with their hands, and put it into their mouths,
and it seemed to them they had never tasted anything so sweet as this
dew. Then they went on board and sailed into the channel, which was
between the island and the cape, which ran north from the mainland. They
passed the cape sailing in a westerly direction. There the water was
very shallow, and their ship went aground, and at ebb-tide the sea was
far out from the ship. But they were so anxious to get ashore that they
could not wait till the high-water reached their ship, and ran out on
the beach where a river flowed from a lake. When the high-water set
their ship afloat they took their boat and rowed to the ship, and towed
it up the river into the lake. There they cast anchor, and took their
leather-bags (hudfat) ashore, and there built booths. They resolved to
stay there over winter, and built large houses. There was no lack of
salmon in the river and lake, and they were larger than any they had
seen before. The land was so fertile that it seemed to them that no
barns would be needed to keep fodder for the cattle during the winter.
There was no frost there during the winter, and the grass lost little of
its freshness. The length of night and day was more equal than in
Greenland or Iceland. The sun set there at eykt[447] and rose at
dagmál[448] on the shortest day. When they had finished building their
houses, Leif said to his men: ‘I will divide you into two parties, as I
wish to explore the land. One half shall stay in the _skali_ (house),
and the other explore the country, but not go so far that they cannot
get home in the evenings, and not separate from each other. They did
this for some time. Leif sometimes went with them, but at other times
remained in the _skali_. He was a large and strong man, of imposing
looks, and wise and moderate in everything.

“One evening it happened that they missed one of their men, Tyrker, the
southerner. Leif was much grieved at this, for Tyrker had long been with
him, and his foster father had been very fond of Leif in his childhood.
He upbraided his men harshly, and made ready to go and search for him
with twelve men. A short way from the house Tyrker met them, and was
welcomed back. Leif soon saw that his foster father was in high spirits.
He had a projecting forehead, unsteady eyes, a tiny face, and was little
and wretched, but skilled in all kinds of handicraft. Leif said to him:
‘Why art thou so late, foster father, and why hast thou parted from thy
followers?’ He then spoke for a long time in Thyrska, and rolled his
eyes in many directions and made wry faces. They did not understand what
he said. After a while he spoke in the northern tongue (Norrœna), and
said: ‘I did not go much farther than you, but I can tell some news. I
found a vine and grapes.’ ‘Is this true, foster-father?’ Leif asked.
‘Certainly it is,’ he answered, ‘for I was born where there was neither
lack of vine nor grapes.’ They slept there that night, and in the
morning Leif said to his sailors: ‘Now we will do two kinds of work, one
day you shall gather grapes or cut vines, the other you shall fell trees
so that I may load my ship.’ This they did, and their boat is said to
have been filled with grapes, and a ship’s load of timber was cut. When
spring came they made ready and left, and Leif named the land after its
fruits, and called it _Vinland_. They sailed out to sea and got fair
winds till they saw Greenland and its glaciers. Then a man said to Leif:
‘Why dost thou steer the ship so close to the wind?’ Leif answered: ‘I
am attending to my steering, but I am also looking at something else; do
you see anything remarkable?’ They answered they did not. Leif said: ‘I
do not know whether it is a ship or a rock which I see.’ Then they saw
it, and said it was a rock. His sight was so much better than theirs
that he saw men on the rock. He said: ‘Now I want to keep closer to the
wind, so that we may get to them, and we must give them help if they
need it. If they are not peaceful they are in our power, but we are not
in theirs.’ They approached the rock, cast anchor, lowered their sail,
and set out a little boat which they had with them. Then Tyrker asked
these men who their leader was. The leader answered that his name was
Thórir, and he was a Norwegian, but what, he said, is thy name? Leif
told his name. ‘Art thou the son of Eirek, the Red, of Brattahlid?’ Leif
answered: ‘I am. Now I offer to you all to come on board my ship with as
much cargo as it can hold.’ They accepted the offer, and sailed to
Brattahlid, in Eiriksfjord, with the cargo, where they unloaded the
ship. Leif invited Thórir to stay with him, and also his wife Gudrid and
three other men, and for his own sailors and those of Thórir he got
quarters. Leif took fifteen men from the rock, and was afterwards called
Leif the Lucky. He was now rich and respected; that winter a disease
came among the men of Thórir, and he and the greater part of his men,
and also Eirek, the Red, died. There was much talk about Leif’s Vinland
journey, and his brother Thorvald thought the land had been explored too
little. Leif then said to him: ‘Thou shalt go with my ship, brother, if
thou likest, to Vinland, but it shall first fetch the timber of Thórir
from the rock. This was done” (Flateyjarbók, i. 538).


                            _Third Voyage._


“Now Thorvald made ready (in Greenland, where his father Eirek lived),
with the help of his brother Leif, for this voyage with thirty men. They
prepared their ship and sailed to sea, and nothing is told of their
journey till they came to Vinland, to the booths of Leif.... They sat
quiet that winter and caught fish for food. In the spring Thorvald told
them to make the ship ready, and sent the boat with some men to go west
and explore the land during the summer. The country seemed to them fair
and covered with forests; there was a short space between the forest and
the sea, and the sands were white. There were shallows and many small
islets. They found no abodes of men or animals, except in a westerly
island, where they found a corn barn of wood. They found no other traces
of men, and went back and came to the booths of Leif in the autumn. The
next summer Thorvald went with his ship north-east along the coast. A
strong gale burst on them off a cape, where they were driven ashore, and
the keel of the ship was broken. They stayed there long and repaired it.
Thorvald said to his followers: ‘I want you to raise the keel upright
here on the ness, and call it Kjalarnes (Keel cape). This they did. Then
they sailed thence in an easterly direction off the land, into the fjord
mouths nearest the cape, which projected there, and which was covered
with trees. They cast anchor and took their gangways ashore, and
Thorvald walked up with all his followers. He said: ‘This is a fine
country, and here I should like to raise my bœr.’ Then they walked down
to the ship, and saw three marks on the sand inside the cape, where they
found three _skin-boats_ (canoes) with three men under each. They
divided their men and took them all, except one who escaped with his
boat. They killed the other eight, and then again went to the cape and
looked round, and saw some eminences in the inner part of the fjord,
which they thought were houses. Thereupon such drowsiness came over them
that they could not keep awake, and all fell asleep. Then they heard a
voice shouting which roused them all, saying: ‘Wake Thorvald and all thy
men if thou wishest to save thy life. Go on board thy ship with all thy
men, and leave the land as quickly as you can.’ Innumerable skin-boats
came out along the fjord and attacked them. Thorvald said: ‘Let me put
war hurdles on the sides, and defend ourselves as best we can, but kill
few of them.’ This they did, and the Skrœlingjar[449] shot at them for a
while, and then fled, each one as quickly as he could. Thorvald asked
his men if they were wounded. They said they were not. ‘I have got a
wound under my arm,’ he said, ‘an arrow flew between the gunwale and the
shield under my arm, and here is the arrow; this will cause my death. I
advise you to prepare to go back as soon as you can, but you shall take
me to the cape, which appeared to me to be the most habitable. It may be
that truth has come out of my mouth, and that I shall live there for a
while. You shall bury me there, and put crosses at my head and feet, and
henceforward call it Krossanes’ (Cross Cape). Greenland was then
Christian, though Eirek, the Red, died before the introduction of
Christianity. Thorvald died, and they carried out his wish, and then
went to their other companions,[450] and told each other the tidings
they knew. They lived there that winter, and took grapes and vines on
board with them. In the spring they made ready for Greenland, and landed
in Eireksfjord, and had great tidings to tell Leif” (Flateyjarbók, i.
541).


“Thorstein, son of Eirek, the Red, desired to go to Vinland to fetch the
body of his brother Thorvald. He made the same ship ready, and took on
board picked men as to strength and size, twenty-five men, and his wife,
Gudrid. They sailed to sea when ready, and the land disappeared. They
were thrown hither and thither all the summer, and knew not where they
were. When a week had passed of the winter they landed in Lysufjord, in
the western settlement of Greenland. Thorstein searched for houses, and
got lodgings for all his men, while he and his wife had no lodgings.
They two remained on board for some nights. Christianity was then still
young in Greenland.”


Thorstein the Black, a heathen man, offered them lodgings.


“Early in the winter a disease came among the men of Thorstein, and many
of them died. He had coffins made for the corpses, and had them brought
on board and prepared, ‘for I want to take them all to Eireksfjord in
the summer,’ said he. After a short time the disease came into the house
of Thorstein the Black, and first his wife Grimhild fell sick. She was
very large and strong, like men, but nevertheless the disease laid her
up. Soon after Thorstein Eireksson fell sick, and they were in their
beds, and Grimhild died. When she was dead, Thorstein the Black walked
out of the room to fetch a board, and lay the body on it. Gudrid said:
‘Do not be long away, my good Thorstein.’ He answered he would not.
Thorstein Eireksson said: ‘Strange does our housewife look now, for she
rises on her elbow, draws up her feet, and searches for her shoes with
her hand.’ Then Thorstein came in, Grimhild lay down, and every timber
of the room creaked. Thorstein made a coffin for the body, took it away,
and prepared it. He was large and strong, but needed it to take it away.
Thorstein Eireksson’s illness grew worse, and he died. His wife, Gudrid,
did not like it well. They were all in one room. Gudrid sat on a chair
in front of the bench on which lay her husband, Thorstein. Thorstein the
Black took her off the chair in his arms, and sat on another bench with
her opposite Thorstein’s body. He talked much, and consoled her, and
promised to go with her to Eireksfjord with the bodies of her husband
and his men, and to have more people stay there for her entertainment
and consolement. She thanked him. Then Thorstein Eireksson rose and
said: ‘Where is Gudrid?’ Three times he said this, but she was silent,
and said to Thorstein: ‘Shall I answer or not.’ He said, ‘Do not.’ He
walked across the floor and sat on the chair with Gudrid on his knee. He
said: ‘What dost thou want, namesake?’ Thorstein answered after a while:
‘I long to tell her fate.’”


The dead man proceeds to tell that he is in heaven himself, and that she
will be married in Iceland. Thereupon these two who were alive,
Thorstein the Black and Gudrid, went home to Eirek the Red.[451]


                            _Fourth Voyage._


“This summer a ship came from Norway to Greenland. Thorfinn Karlsefni
steered it. He was the son of Thórd Hesthöfdi (horse-head), son of
Snorri, son of Thórd. Thorfinn was very wealthy, and during the winter
stayed in Brattahlid (West Greenland) with Leif Eireksson. He soon fell
in love with Gudrid (widow of Thorstein Eireksson), and asked her in
marriage, but she referred the answer to Leif. Then she was betrothed to
him, and their wedding took place that winter. The voyages to Vinland
were talked over as they had been before, and both Gudrid and others
strongly urged Karlsefni to go. He resolved to go, and manned the ship
with sixty men and five women. Karlsefni and his men made an agreement
that they would divide equally all goods which they might acquire. They
took all kinds of cattle with them, for they intended, if possible, to
settle in the land. Karlsefni asked Leif for his houses in Vinland, and
Leif answered he would lend him the houses, but not give them. Thereupon
they sailed out to sea, arrived safely at Leif’s booths, and carried
their _skin-bags_ ashore. They soon found good and plentiful provisions,
for a large and fine whale had been driven ashore. They went there and
cut up the whale, and there was no lack of food. The cattle walked up on
land, and the male cattle soon became wild, and caused a deal of
trouble. They had taken with them a bull. Karlsefni had trees felled and
cut for his ship, and spread them on a rock to dry them. They used all
the produce of the land, grapes, and all kinds of fish and good things.
After this first winter the summer came, and they became aware of the
presence of the _Skrœlingjar_. A large host of men came out of the
forest, near the place where their cattle were. The bull began to bellow
out ... very loudly, and the Skrœlingjar got scared and fled with their
burdens, which consisted of grey fur and sable, and all kinds of skins.
They went to Karlsefni’s house, and wanted to get in. Karlsefni had the
door guarded. Neither understood the other’s speech. The Skrœlingjar
took down their burdens and untied them, and offered to exchange them,
chiefly for weapons. Karlsefni forbade his men to sell weapons; but
tried a new way, and told the women to carry the produce of the cattle
out to them. As soon as they saw it they wanted to buy it and nothing
else. The end of the bargaining of the Skrœlingjar was that they carried
the produce away in their stomachs, and Karlsefni and his companions
kept their loads and skins. Then they went away. Karlsefni now had a
strong palisade-wall made round his house, and they made themselves
comfortable inside. About this time Gudrid, his wife, bore a boy, who
was called Snorri. At the beginning of the second winter the Skrœlingjar
came to them in much larger numbers than before, and with the same
goods. Karlsefni said to the women: ‘Now you shall carry out the same
food which was so abundant the last time, and nothing else.’ When the
Skrœlingjar saw this, they threw their loads in over the wall. Gudrid
sat in the door with the cradle of her son Snorri. A shadow appeared on
the wall, and a woman entered in a black kirtle, rather short, with a
lace round her head, with light brown hair, and a pale face. Gudrid had
never seen such large eyes in a human head. She walked to her seat and
said: ‘What is thy name?’ ‘I am called Gudrid, but what is thy name?’
said Gudrid. ‘I am called Gudrid,’ she answered. Gudrid, housewife,
stretched out her hand to seat her at her side, but at the same moment
she heard a loud crack, and the woman disappeared, and a Skrœlingi was
slain by one of Karlsefni’s men, for he wanted to take their weapons.
The Skrœlingjar hurried away, leaving their clothes and weapons there.
No one except Gudrid had seen this woman. Karlsefni said: ‘Now we must
make our plans, for I think they will visit us a third time with war and
many men. Now let ten men go out on this ness and show themselves there,
and the rest of our men shall go into the forest and make a clearing for
our cattle, in order to attack the foe when they come out of the forest.
We will also take our bull and let it walk in front of us.’ On one side
of this place to which they were going was a lake, and on the other a
forest. They followed Karlsefni’s advice. The Skrœlingjar came to the
place which Karlsefni intended for battle. A fight ensued, and many of
the Skrœlingjar fell. There was a large and fine man in the Skrœlingjar
host, and Karlsefni thought him to be their chief. One of the
Skrœlingjar took an axe, looked at it for awhile, aimed a blow at one of
his own companions, and struck him so that he fell dead at once. The
large man took the axe, looked at it for a while, and then threw it into
the sea as far as he could. Then each fled into the forest as quickly as
he could, and thus the fight ended. Karlsefni stayed there all that
winter. In the spring he declared he would not stay there any longer,
but wanted to go to Greenland. They made themselves ready, and took with
them many good things, vines, grapes, and skins. They set sail, and
landed with their ship safe in Eireksfjord, and stayed there during the
winter” (Flateyjarbók, i.).


In another account we read:


“At Brattahlid in Greenland (about 1006–1007) there was great talk about
going to look for Vinland the good, for it was said that good choice of
land was to be had there. It went so far that two Icelanders, Karlsefni
and Snorri prepared their vessel to seek for it in the spring. With them
went two men before mentioned, Bjarni and Thorhall, in their own
ship.... They had altogether one hundred and sixty men when they sailed
from Greenland. They sailed southwards for two days and then saw land,
put out their boat, and examined the country. They found there large
slabs (hella), many of them twenty-four feet wide; there were also a
great many foxes. They gave it the name of Helluland (Slab-land). Thence
they sailed for two days, and turning from south to south-east, found a
wooded country in which there were many animals. To the south-east of it
there lay an island, where they killed a bear, and therefore called it
Bjarney (Bear Island), and the land itself Markland (Forestland) (Nova
Scotia?)” (Thorfinn Karlsefni’s Saga, c. vii.).


“One of the men who went with Thorfinn Karlsefni to Vinland was called
Thorhall the Hunter. He had long been with Eirek (the Red, who
discovered Greenland), and was his hunter in the summer and his bailiff
(= bryti) in the winter” (See Volva. Thorfinn Karlsefni’s Saga, 408;
Grönland’s Historiske Mindesmœrker, i.).


The fifth voyage to America, mentioned in the Sagas, is of least
interest: Freydis, a sister of Leif, persuaded two brothers, Helgi and
Finnbogi, to go over with her; when they reached America a quarrel broke
out among them, and after the brothers had been killed by Freydis’ men,
she returned to Greenland without having explored the country.

-----

Footnote 439:

  For the story of Flóki taking three ravens with him in order to guide
  him on his expedition to Iceland.

Footnote 440:

  A lost Saga.

Footnote 441:

  There is no account of Gunnbjorn’s journey.

Footnote 442:

  Fourteenth century.

Footnote 443:

  The laws were, according to Landnáma, enacted A.D. 1000.

Footnote 444:

  Hafgerding = the walls of the ocean, monster waves on the ocean.

Footnote 445:

  Cf. Harald Hardrádi at Stamfordbridge.

Footnote 446:

  Hella = a plain of ice, a cover of ice.

Footnote 447:

  _Eykt_—the word is found in the early Christian laws—Kristinrett of
  Thorlak and Ketil, two bishops in Iceland—where it is defined as the
  time of the day when the sun has passed two parts of the south-west
  and the other third is left.

Footnote 448:

  _Dagmál_, the early meal in Iceland, which is now from 8.30 A.M. to
  9.00 A.M.

Footnote 449:

  Probably Indians, as Esquimaux did not live so far south.

Footnote 450:

  I.e., who had been left at the booths.

Footnote 451:

  Evidently the Christian writer, abhorring the heathen people,
  attributed the plague to them and also the unnatural talk of the dead,
  which was, perhaps, invented by him.




                             CHAPTER XXXIV.
                       THE ORKNEYS AND HEBRIDES.

  Early expeditions—The Vikings and the Kings of Scotland—The Vikings
    in Wales.


We gather from the Sagas that, even for a long time before Harald
Harfagr, the Orkneys and Hebrides were a great rendezvous for Vikings;
and in the Orkneyinga Saga we read:


“Thus it is said that in the days of Harald Harfagr the Orkneys were
settled; but ere that time there was a Viking rendezvous.”


Their geographical position, the prevailing winds during a great part of
the year in the North Sea, favourable for vessels going westward from
Norway or the Baltic, made these islands of special importance. There
met many a Viking fleet, unknown to the enemy, previous to a concerted
attack on Scotland, Northumberland, England, or Ireland.


“King Harald (Fairhair) heard that far and wide, in the middle of the
land, ravaged the Vikings, who, during the winters, stayed west of the
sea. He had a levy out every summer, and searched islands and
outskerries; but as soon as the Vikings became aware of his host, they
all fled, and mostly out to sea. The king got tired of this, and one
summer (about 880) sailed with his host westward. He first came to
Shetland (Hjaltland), and there slew all the Vikings who did not flee.
Then he sailed southward to the Orkneys, and cleared them of Vikings.
After this he went as far as the Hebrides (Sudreyjar) and ravaged there,
killing many Vikings who before had ruled over warriors. He fought there
many battles, and was always victorious. Then he ravaged in Scotland,
and had a battle there. When he went westward to the Isle of Man, the
people had heard what ravages he had before made there, and they fled
into Scotland; the country was deserted, and all movable property had
been removed, so that the king and his men got no booty there.

“In these battles fell Ivar, son of Rögnvald Jarl of Mœri; as indemnity,
King Harald gave to Rögnvald Jarl, when he sailed home, the Orkneys and
Shetlands; but Rögnvald gave his brother Sigurd both, and remained
behind in the west. When the king sailed eastward he created Sigurd a
Jarl. Then joined in companionship with him Thorstein the Red,[452] son
of Olaf the White and Aud the Wise. They ravaged in Scotland, and took
possession of Katanes (Caithness) and Sudrland (Sutherland) as far as
Ekkjalsbakki. Sigurd slew the Scotch Jarl, Melbrigdi, and tied his head
to his saddle-straps; the tooth which projected from the Jarl’s head
wounded the calf of Sigurd’s leg, which swelled, and he died therefrom;
he is mounded at Ekkjalsbakki. After this ruled his son, Guthorm, one
winter; he died childless; and there settled in the country many
Vikings, Danes, and Northmen” (Harald Fairhair’s Saga, c. 22).


In the following extract we find Irish and Norwegians fighting against
Einar Jarl of the Orkneys:—


“The same summer (1018) Eyvind Urarborn went westward on a Viking
expedition, and in the autumn came to Konofogor, a king in Ireland. In
the autumn the Irish king and Einar Jarl of the Orkneys met in
Ulfreksfjord, and there ensued a great battle. King Konofogor had many
more warriors and obtained the victory. Einar Jarl fled with one ship,
and in the autumn returned to the Orkneys, after having lost most of his
men and all their booty. The Jarl liked this journey little, and laid
the blame of his defeat on the Northmen, who were with the Irish king”
(St. Olaf’s Saga, c. 87).


The following extract shows, among other things, the relations which
existed between the Vikings and the old kings of Scotland:—


“Thorfinn now became a great chief, and got much land from his
grandfather, King Malcolm of Scotland. The latter, however, died, and
Karl Hundason became king. He thought himself entitled also to
possession of Caithness, and demanded taxes from it as from other parts
of his realm; but Thorfinn thought his was the least inheritance he
ought to get after his grandfather, especially as it had been given to
him, and therefore he refused to pay any tax. King Karl then made his
nephew, Moddan, Jarl of Caithness; he gathered many men in Sutherland
(Sudrland). When this news reached Thorfinn, he gathered warriors in
Caithness, and Thorkel came to his assistance with a large force from
the Orkneys. The Scots now found that Thorfinn had more men than they,
and retreated; whereupon Thorfinn Jarl subjugated Sutherland and Ross,
and ravaged widely in Scotland, and returned to _Dungalsbæ_ (Duncansby)
in Caithness. Moddan returned to King Karl in Berwick, who became very
angry when informed of the treatment his nephew had received.

“He embarked with eleven fully-equipped longships, while Moddan was to
march overland to Caithness, where the two forces should meet, thus
getting Thorfinn between two fires. The king did not stop until he
neared Caithness. When Thorfinn became aware of his presence, he with
his five ships stood out into the Pentland Firth, intending to sail to
the Orkneys. Thorfinn thereupon sailed along the islands, bound for
Sandvik, and reached Dyrnes (Dearness), where he sent word to Thorkel to
gather men. As he was lying in under Dyrnes, in the morning when it
became light he beheld Karl not far off. He held a consultation with
Thorkel about what had best be done, and he advised to abandon the ships
and go ashore, and thus escape; but Thorfinn decided to fight with the
force he had, and urged his men to behave manfully. They thereupon rowed
against the king’s fleet, and attacked it fiercely. The battle was long
and hard; and when Thorfinn saw the king’s own ship, he urged his men to
board it; at which he ordered his whole fleet to be cut loose, and his
men to take the oars and row away. Thorfinn himself reached the stem of
the king’s ship, and ordered his standard to be carried upon it, and
many brave men followed him up. The king jumped on another vessel with
such of his men as were still standing—for most of them had fallen. He
rode away, and all the Scots fled.

“King Karl sailed to Breidafjord (Broadfirth), where he went ashore and
gathered a fresh host.

“After the battle Thorfinn also retired, and met Thorkel, who had
gathered a strong force, with which they sailed southward to Breidafjord
(Broadfirth), and began to plunder there. Then they heard that Moddan,
with a large force, was at Thorsa (Thurso) in Caithness, and had besides
sent to Ireland for warriors. Thorfinn and Thorkel consulted, and agreed
that the latter should proceed to Caithness with some of the host, while
the former should remain with the remainder, and ravage in Scotland.
Thorkel thereupon marched secretly, for all the people of Caithness were
true and devoted to them, and no news spread before he reached Thorsa at
night and the house of Moddan Jarl, which he set on fire. As he ran out
he was killed by Thorkel. Thereupon he rejoined the Jarl, who thanked
him greatly for his work.

“King Karl gathered men all over Scotland, and also had the force which
came from Ireland to help Moddan Jarl. At Torfnes, south of the
Breidafjord, the two armies met; and, although the Scots were far more
numerous, they were badly defeated, and the king fled, or, as some say,
was slain.

“The Jarl then subjugated Scotland as far south as Fife (Fifi). He sent
Thorkel away with some of his men. When the Scots found this out, they
went to attack him, who, however, gathered the men he had, and defeated
them; whereupon, to avenge their treachery, he ravaged the country,
killing all men he could find.

“The Jarl then sailed northward to Caithness, and there passed the
winter” (Orkneyinga Saga).


Hence we find the Northern chiefs ruling over Wales.


“It is said that Palnatoki one summer, as usual, was on Viking
expeditions, and had twelve well-manned ships. At this time Jarl Stefnir
ruled over Bretland (Wales); he had a daughter called Olöf, who was a
wise and well-liked woman, and a very good match. It is said that
Palnatoki landed his ships there, and wanted to make warfare in the land
of Stefnir Jarl. When this was heard of, Olöf, with Bjorn Brezki (the
Britisher), who was her foster-brother and often gave her advice, took
the resolve to invite Palnatoki home to a feast, with great honours, and
he should have there peaceland, and not ravage.

“Palnatoki and his men accepted this, and went to the feast; and at it
Palnatoki asked in marriage the Jarl’s daughter; he got her easily, and
the woman was promised to him, and then betrothed; the betrothal lasted
no longer than that their wedding took place at this feast; and
moreover, the name of Jarl was given to Palnatoki, and one half of the
realm of Stefnir Jarl if he would settle there; and after his death he
should have all, for Olöf was his only heir. Palnatoki stayed in
Bretland the rest of the summer, and also during the winter. In the
spring he announced that he wanted to go home to Denmark; but before he
went, he said to Bjorn the British: ‘Now I want thee, Bjorn, to stay
here with my father-in-law, Stefnir, and rule the land with him on my
behalf; for he begins to grow very old, and it is not unlikely that I
may not soon come back; and if I do not return, and the Jarl dies, I
want thee to take care of the whole realm till I come back.’ After this
Palnatoki went away with his wife Olöf; he had a good voyage, and came
home to Fjon (Fyen) in Denmark, and stayed at home for a while, and was
thought the next best man in Denmark, and the most powerful and wisest
next to the king.

“It is now told that the next summer after the arvel-feast after King
Harald, Olöf, the wife of Palnatoki, fell sick and died. After her
death, Palnatoki did not like to live in Bretland, and placed Bjorn the
British to take care of that realm. He then made thirty ships ready, and
intended to go on Viking expeditions and warfare. He left the land as
soon as he was ready to go, and that summer made warfare in Scotland and
England, and won for himself much property and fame in his expeditions.
He continued this for twelve summers, and got well off both in property
and honour” (Jomsvikinga Saga).


-----

Footnote 452:

  Thorstein the Red was slain by the Scots about 888.




                              APPENDIX. I.
                 THE TESTIMONY OF THE FRANKISH ANNALS.

From the Frankish annals of the time of Charlemagne and his sons, we
know that before the period of Harold Fairhair (b. 850; d. 933), and
consequently before the conquest by Gangu Hrolf of the country called
Normandy, the Sueones (Swedes) and Danes, who were also called Northmen
by the Chroniclers, attacked and overran the ancient Gaul in every
direction. They captured Paris and many other important cities, and also
devastated a great part of the present Germany, and extended their
expeditions to the Alps. From a passage in Eginhard we find that the
Norwegians are also mentioned; while the Frankish coins found in the
present Norway show that its inhabitants had intercourse with the empire
of Charlemagne, as they had previously had with Rome.

The Frankish, English, Irish, and Arabian records afford us even a
fuller and clearer insight than do the Sagas into the maritime power and
great activity of the seafaring tribes of the North, and of their
migrations during the ninth and tenth centuries. This maritime power, as
we have seen, was already very formidable during the Roman domination of
Gaul and Britain. If we have a break in the continuity of these maritime
expeditions between the fall of the Roman Empire and the time of
Charlemagne, it is on account of the lack of records, owing to the chaos
that followed the fall and disintegration of the Roman dominion.

The Sagas supply us to some extent with the needed information; they
mention how chiefs like Ivar Vidfamme, Harald Hildetonn, Sigurd Hring,
Ragnar Lodbrok, and others engaged extensively in Western and Eastern
expeditions, and claimed part of England as belonging to them. From the
foreign annals we realize more fully what was implied in the Sagas by
the simple phrase that particular chiefs had been, or were, engaged in
Eastern and Western expeditions: viz., armaments on the most formidable
scale were organized for the subjection of different countries—armaments
and expeditions which could only have been possible for a people in an
advanced state of civilisation. Of these expeditions the Frankish annals
give us the most graphic and detailed accounts.

The particulars concerning the sieges of towns given in the Sagas are
very meagre and very rare. We only know that the catapult, called
_val-slöngva_ (war-sling), or _manga_ (“mangonel”), seems to have been
used for sieges, &c.

That these were well known to the Northmen at an early time, we have
ample proofs.

Great strength of arm was requisite for their use, as several stones at
a time were often shot from one catapult.

The Frankish annals, describing one of the sieges of Paris by the
Northmen, show us how these machines were used by them. We have minute
and graphic descriptions of their mode of warfare, and especially the
methods they adopted in besieging towns—subjects that are very little
noticed in the Sagas, which generally give only results, and
consequently are not of much value to the student of history.

We will proceed to quote a few extracts from the writings of Eginhard,
the historian of Charlemagne, which bear testimony to the formidable
power of the Northmen in his time.

                  *       *       *       *       *

In 777 Charlemagne had summoned an assembly of chiefs at Paderborn.


“All came before him except Witekind, a Westphalian chief, who, feeling
himself guilty of many crimes, and fearing in consequence to present
himself, had fled to Siegfried, king of the Danes.”

788. “An arm of the sea of unknown length [the Baltic], but exceeding
nowhere a hundred thousand paces in width, and in many places much
narrower, extends from the western ocean towards the east. Many nations
inhabit its shores; the Danes and the Sueones, whom we call Northmen,
occupy the northern shore and all the islands; on the southern shore are
Sclavonians, the Aistes and other people.”

800. “Spring having returned, the king (Charlemagne) quitted
Aix-la-Chapelle, about the middle of March, traversed the shore of the
Gallic ocean, constructed a fleet on the same ocean, then desolated by
the piracies of the Northmen, and placed garrisons along the shores.”

804. “At this time Godfrey, king of the Danes, came with a fleet and all
the horsemen of his kingdom, to a place called Schlesvig, on the borders
of his realm and that of Saxony.”

808. “A last war was undertaken against the Northmen, whom we call
Danes, and their king, Godfrey, was so inflated with proud hopes, that
he promised himself the empire of all Germany. Frisia and Saxony he
looked upon as provinces belonging to himself.

“Wishing to assemble a fleet to fight the Northmen, Charlemagne had
ships built on all the rivers of Gaul and Germany which flow into the
Northern ocean; and, as the Northmen devastated in their continual
voyages the coasts of both these countries, he erected solid structures
at the entrances of all the harbours and navigable mouths of rivers
which could receive vessels, and thus blocked the route of the enemy.”

810. “The emperor, then at Aix-la-Chapelle, planned an expedition
against King Godfrey. He suddenly received tidings that a fleet of two
hundred ships, coming from the country of the Northmen, had landed in
Frisia, and ravaged all the islands adjacent to this shore; that this
army had gone inland, and that three battles had taken place between it
and the Frisians; that the Danish conquerors had imposed a tribute on
the conquered; that, under the name of a tax, a hundred pounds of silver
had been paid by the Frisians; and that King Godfrey was on his return
home. These reports proving true, the emperor was so vexed that he sent
messengers in every direction to collect an army, left his palace at
once, and joined his fleet. He passed the Rhine at Lippenheim, and
resolved to await there the troops which had not yet arrived. His army
assembled, the Emperor went as quickly as possible to the river Aller,
pitched his tents near the confluence of this river with the Weser and
awaited the result of the threats of Godfrey; for this king, puffed up
with the vain hope of victory, boasted that he would try his strength
with the army of the emperor.

“After he had remained here some time he heard, among other things, that
the fleet which had devastated Frisia, had returned to Denmark; that
King Godfrey had been slain by one of his servants; that a fort near the
Elbe, named Hobbuck (supposed to be Hamburg), in which were Odo, the
emperor’s envoy, and a garrison of eastern Saxons, had been taken by the
Wiltzes.... Hemming, son of the brother of Godfrey, king of the Danes,
succeeded him, and made peace with the emperor.”


From the following we find that the Norwegians and Danes are confounded
with each other, as were at times all the tribes of the North. Danish
princes are said to live on the shores opposite Britain (Norway).


813. “The emperor sent noble Franks and Saxons into the country of the
Northmen, beyond the Elbe, to make peace with the Danes, according to
the wish of their kings, and to give back their brother. The Danish
nobles came to the place appointed, in number equal to that of the
Franks (they were sixteen on each side); peace was confirmed by oaths,
and the Franks gave up to the Danes the brother of their kings. These
princes were not then in their own country, but had gone to Westerfulde
with an army. This country, the most distant of their kingdom, is
situated to the north-west, and looks to the north of Britain.”


Charlemagne died in 814 and was succeeded by his son Louis le
Debonnaire. During the early years of his reign, he appears to have kept
on friendly terms with the Northmen, who were suffering from internal
dissensions, owing to the succession being disputed between Heriold, and
the sons of King Godfrey. Louis espoused the cause of Heriold, and we
read that in


828. “Lothaire returned to his father at Aix-la-Chapelle. As they
proceeded to occupy the frontier of the Northmen, both in order to renew
the alliance between these peoples and the Franks, and to protect the
interests of Heriold, and when almost all the counts of Saxony had
united for this purpose with the commanders of the marches, Heriold, too
eager to hasten the conclusion of the matter, broke the peace pledged
and guaranteed by hostages, and ravaged and burned some farms of the
Northmen. Hearing this the sons of Godfrey quickly collected troops,
marched to the frontier, crossed the Eider river, and falling upon our
men, camped upon the bank, who were not expecting such an attack, took
the entrenchments, put the defenders to flight, pillaged everything, and
returned to camp with all their force.”

829. “He received the information that the Northmen contemplated the
seizure of the part of Saxony beyond the Elbe, and that, with this
design, their army had already approached our frontiers. Greatly
troubled at this, he sent into all the countries of the Franks to order
the people in mass, to march toward Saxony with all haste, and announced
that he, in person, would cross the Rhine at Nuitz in the middle of
July.”


From the annals of Bertin we take the following extract:—


841. “The Danish pirates, from the shores of the North, made an
irruption into the territory of Rouen, and, carrying everywhere the fury
of pillage, fire and sword, gave up the city, the monks, and the rest of
the people to carnage and captivity, devastated all the monasteries and
other places near the Seine, and left them filled with terror, after
having received much silver.... To Harold who, for his cause and to the
prejudice of his father, had brought with the other Danes much evil to
the maritime districts, Lothair gave for his services Walcheren and the
neighbouring region—a disgraceful forfeit.”

842. “At this time a fleet of Northmen came suddenly, at break of day,
into the district of Amiens, plundering, capturing, and killing persons
of both sexes, leaving nothing but buildings ransomed by silver.”

843. “The Northern pirates arrived in the city of Nantes, after having
killed the bishop and many of the priests, and laymen, and others,
without distinction of sex, and, having pillaged the city, ravaged the
lower parts of Aquitaine; finally, reaching a certain island, causing
earth to be brought thither, they built houses to pass the winter, and
there established themselves as in a permanent abode....”

844. “The Northmen, having advanced by the Garonne as far as Toulouse,
plundered with impunity the region on every side; a detachment proceeded
thence into Galicia, and there perished—some from the bowmen
(arbalêtriers) sent against them, and some in a storm at sea; but
others, penetrating farther into Spain, had long and severe battles with
the Saracens; but at length were vanquished, and retreated.”

845. “The Northmen, with a hundred vessels, on March 20th, entered the
Seine, ravaging here and there, and arrived, without resistance, at
Paris. Charles had intended to go against them; but foreseeing that
there was no hope of his men gaining the advantage, he let them alone;
and, by a gift of seven thousand livres, prevented their advance, and
persuaded them to return....

“The Danes, who the year before had laid waste Aquitaine, quietly
established themselves therein....”

846. “Eurich, king of the Northmen, advanced against Louis in Germany,
with six hundred vessels, along the river Elbe. The Saxons went to meet
them, engaged them in battle, and by the aid of our Lord Jesus Christ,
gained the victory; in their retreat the Northmen attacked and captured
a city of the Esclavons....

“The Northmen again descended the Seine, and, returning to the sea,
pillaged, devastated, and burned all the districts of the shore.... When
they had plundered and burned a monastery named St. Bertin, and were
returning to their ships laden with spoils, they were so smitten by
Divine justice, or blinded by darkness and madness, that only a small
number escaped to announce to the others the ways of Almighty God.”

846. “The Danish pirates come into Frisia and levy at will
contributions, and, victorious in battles, remain masters of almost all
the province....”

847. “The Danes come into the lower parts of Gaul inhabited by the
Bretons, and gain a victory over them in three battles. Noménoe,
vanquished, flees with his men, and then, by presents sent, leads them
to leave his country....”

859. “The Danish pirates having made a long circuit by sea, for they had
sailed between Spain and Africa, enter the Rhone, plunder many cities
and monasteries, and establish themselves in the island called
Camargue.”

860. “Those of these Danes who had established themselves on the Rhone
came, ravaging on their way to the city of Valentia; then, having
plundered all the neighbouring regions, returned to the island where
they had taken up their abode.”

“The Danes on the Rhone go towards Italy, take and plunder Pisa and
other cities....”


We might give many more extracts from the Annals of St. Bertin and the
Annals of Metz; but the above will suffice to show that in the latter
part of the 9th century these Northmen were carrying their incursions,
with hundreds of ships and thousands of men, all over Europe, ascending
its great rivers, ravaging its coasts, marching through and then
settling in its countries, and levying tribute from the people.

In the Narrative of Abbon, we have a striking and graphic description,
by an eye-witness, of one of the Sieges of Paris by the Northmen, which
lasted from November 885 to May 887. The special value of the narrative
to us lies in the minute description which it contains of the methods
adopted by the Vikings in attacking a town or fortress. Abbon begins by
describing the arrival of the fleet of the Northmen in the river.


“Thy (Paris’s) blood was poured out by these barbarians, who came on
board of seven hundred sailing vessels, and innumerable smaller ships
commonly called barques. The deep-water bed of the Seine was so covered
by them that its waters could not be seen for a space of more than six
miles: one asked with astonishment in what cave the river had hidden
itself; it could not be seen; the pine, the oak, and the alder entirely
concealed its surface.”

“The Danes then make, astonishing to see, three huge machines, mounted
on sixteen wheels—monsters made of immense oak trees bound together;
upon each was placed a battering ram, covered with a high roof—in the
interior and on the sides of which could be placed and concealed, they
said, sixty men armed with their helmets. The besiegers had already
finished one of these machines of suitable form and size; a second was
soon made, and they were at work on a third; but from the tower they
shot accurately, with the whole force of the bowstring and javelin
against the workers on them. Thus they were the first to receive the
death they were preparing for us; and when one of these cruel machines
was destroyed, the other soon followed.

“From the hide torn from the neck and back of young bulls, the Danes
then made a thousand large bucklers, which a Latin writer would call
_pluteos_[453] or _crates_,[454] each one of which would cover four or
six men even. During the night, the enemy gave themselves no rest, and
not a moment of sleep; they sharpened, repaired, and forged swift
missiles, strengthened their old shields, and made new ones.... (At
sunrise) suddenly the Danes, the progeny of Satan, armed with their
formidable missiles, rushed furiously from their camp, and like light
bees, ran toward the tower. Born for our misfortune, they advanced with
their backs bent under the bows; the missiles quiver on their shoulders,
their swords cover the ground, their shields hide from sight the waters
of the Seine; thousands of leaden balls, scattered like a thick hail in
the air, fall upon the city, and powerful catapults thunder upon the
forts which defend the bridge. Mars, reawaking his fury, extends in
every direction his fierce empire. The citizens are terrified, the
trumpets give forth violent bursts, and fear seizes on those who guard
the towers. Still there were seen many great and bold men; above all,
the prelate Gozlio shone conspicuous; then his nephew, the brave Abbé
Ebble; admirable also were Robert, Eudes, Ragenaire, Ulton, Herilang;
all these were counts; but the most noble of all was Eudes, who laid low
as many Danes as he threw javelins....”

_January 29, 886._—“The fierce Dane divided his army into three bodies,
ranged in the form of a wedge. The largest he opposed to the tower, and
the two others, borne on painted ships, he directed against the bridge;
thinking that, if he could gain possession of the bridge, the tower
would soon be in his power.... The tower, reddened with blood, groans
under the blows which strike it.... At its base are seen at a distance
only the painted shields which cover the ground and hide it from sight;
in every direction can be seen only the fatal stones and cruel missiles
which fly in the air like dense swarms of bees; the sky itself between
the tower and the clouds is obscured by them. Loud cries are heard, and
everywhere reigns the greatest fear, amid terrible noises. Some attack,
others resist: and the Northmen, clashing their arms, add to the already
cruel horrors of battle. No child of earth has ever laid eyes upon so
many warriors on foot, armed with swords, moving in a single body, under
a painted testudo[455] of such immense size. The Danes made of this
testudo a roof which sheltered them but none dared to raise his head
above its protection, though beneath it their weapons caused a frightful
slaughter.... The fierce nation approached the desolated tower, under
the cover of their large bucklers made of wood and the skins of freshly
killed bulls; some pass the night under arms, others sleep, others scour
the roads, shooting their feathered arrows, from which is dropped
poison.”


[A two days’ attack followed, but without success; they tried in vain to
fill up the moat around the walls, throwing into it earth, trees,
leaves, grass, shrubs, slaughtered animals, and even human beings, their
captives.]


“Their ill-omened ranks tried in vain to fill up even a single ditch, or
to prostrate the tower by their battering rams. Furious at being unable
to get at us in open field, the Northmen take three of their highest
vessels, quickly fill them with whole trees with all their leaves on,
and set fire to them.”

_January 31, 886._—“The east wind gently moves these ships vomiting
flame, and with ropes they drag them along the banks to destroy the
bridge and burn the tower; from the wood which fills them burst out
burning flames.”


[Then the whole populace call upon their patron saint, St. Germain, and
implore him to save them. The enemy’s vessels get aground upon a large
mass of stones heaped up to render the bridge firm; no harm is done to
it, and the besieged rush out, and sink the vessels in the river Seine.
Thus ended the combat for that day, and the night was quietly passed.]

_February 1, 886._—“Next day the Danes secretly carry to their camp the
large bucklers which formed their testudo; they abandon two of their
rams, vulgarly called _carcamuses_, which they feared to carry away; and
our men took possession of them, and joyfully broke them in pieces.
Sigefroy, the king, by whom it was feared the gates of our tower would
have been burst in, then led away all his Danes.

“The third day of this battle was that of the ‘Purification of the
Virgin.’ Nevertheless, the fatal cohorts of the Northmen went on board
their vessels, swifter than birds, and directed their course to the
eastern lands, then subject to the rule of Sad Austrasia, and which had
hitherto not suffered from the enemy’s ravages.”

[Destroying in their course the deserted cottages of the famous Robert,
whom they slew, and in their turn defeated with great loss, they bravely
escaped to their ships without booty; they met with no greater success
at the church of St. Germain, miraculously defended by the Saint.]


_February 6, 886._—“Alas! during the silence of night the middle of the
bridge fell in, carried away by the force of the furious waters. It was
not so with the tower, which, built on land belonging to the happy
Saint, remained standing on its foundations. Both were on the right side
of the city.

“At sunrise the cruel Danes awoke, boarded their vessels, filled them
with arms and shields, crossed the Seine, surrounded the unfortunate
tower, and assailed it repeatedly with showers of missiles. At last,
after a desperate fight, in which the besieged behaved nobly, the
infamous besiegers, seeing that nothing could bend these brave hearts,
brought before the gates of the unhappy tower a car filled with grains,
and set it on fire. Another fierce struggle takes place; the Danes allow
the flames to do their work, and retire; from want of vessels for
drawing water the tower was destroyed, and the besieged retired to the
end of the bridge which was still standing, and maintained the fight
till sundown.”


-----

Footnote 453:

  _Plutei_: machines covered with _claies_ and skins of oxen, used to
  protect sappers.

Footnote 454:

  _Crates_: large bucklers made of osiers.

Footnote 455:

  The _testudo_ of the Roman armies, in which the warriors’ shields are
  interlocked like the scales of a tortoise, forming a protecting roof
  for the undermining or attacking of walls.




                              APPENDIX II
                  FACSIMILES OF OLD NORSE MANUSCRIPTS.


[Illustration:

  (Knytlinga Saga.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Landnama, part iv.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Viga-Styr’s Saga, ch. 35.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Hardar Saga Grimkelssonar, ch. 11.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Hardar Saga Grimkelssonar, ch. 3.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Chronological fragment, 12th century.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Earlier Edda, complete page.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Later Edda.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Egil’s Saga.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Heimskringla.—Two columns.)
]

[Illustration:

  (List of priests from the 12th century. Two columns.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Njal’s Saga.—Two columns.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Part of manuscript of Gragas.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Gunnlaug Ormstunga’s Saga, ch. 4.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Hænsa-Thóris Saga, ch. 5.)
]

[Illustration:

  (Saga of Víga-Styr and Heidarvíg.)
]




                             APPENDIX III.
                   ROMAN COINS FOUND IN SCANDINAVIA.


The following is a list of coins found at Hagestadborg, Scania (550);
and at Sindarfe, Gotland (1500).

 Nero (54–68 A.D.)                                               2     2
 Vitellius (69)                                                  0     1
 Vespasianus (69–79)                                             1    16
 Titus (79–81)                                                   0     5
 Domitianus (81–96)                                              2    10
 Nerva (96–98)                                                   1     7
 Trajanus (98–117)                                              26   150
 Hadrianus (117–138)                                            33   225
 Sabina, wife of Hadrianus                                       6    11
 Ælius Cæsar (†138)                                              2     6
 Antoninus Pius (138–161)                                      136   321
 Faustina, wife of Antoninus Pius                               38   130
 Marcus Aurelius (161–180)                                     145   280
 Faustina the younger, wife of Marcus
   Aurelius                                                     52    97
 Lucius Verus (161–169)                                         21    16
 Lucilla, wife of Lucius Verus                                  11    22
 Commodus (180–192)                                             60    91
 Crispina, wife of Commodus                                      7    11
 Pertinax (193)                                                  0    10
 Septimius Severus (193–211)                                     6    13
 Julia Domna, wife of Septimius Severus                          1     0
 Barbaric imitations                                             0     4
 Uncertain (worn)                                                0    72
                                                               ——— —————
                 Total                                         550 1,500
                                                               ——— —————

   _Roman coins from Augustus up to the death of Alexander Severus._
                          (29 B.C.-A.D. 235.)

                          _Found up to 1869._


  _Gotland_:

 Augustus (29 B.C.-A.D. 14)                               (Silver)     1
 Nero (54–68)                                             (Silver)     2
 Galba (68–69)                                            (Silver)     3
 Otho (69)                                                (Silver)     2
 Vespasianus (69–79)                                      (Silver)    23
 Titus (79–81) (1 gold, 4 silver)                                      5
 Domitianus (81–96)                                                    7
 Nerva (96–98)                                                         5
 Trajanus (98–117)                                                   157
 Hadrianus (117–138)                                                 175
 Sabina, wife of Hadrianus                                            14
 Ælius Cæsar (†138)                                                    1
 Antoninus Pius (138–161)                                            263
 Faustina, wife of Antoninus Pius                                     96
 Marcus Aurelius (161–180)                                           251
 Faustina, wife of Marcus Aurelius                                    87
 L. Verus (161–165)                                                   19
 Lucilla, wife of L. Verus                                            18
 Commodus (180–192)                                                   86
 Crispina, wife of Commodus                                           11
 Pertinax (193)                                                        1
 Manlia Scantilla, wife of Didius Julianus                             1
 Clodius Albinus (†197)                                                1
 Septimius Severus (193–211)                                           4
 Julia Soæmias, mother of Elagabalus                                   1
 Alexander Severus (222–235)                                           1
 Effaced and uncertain                                               184
                                                                   —————
   1 of gold, 1,422 of silver, total                               1,423
                                                                   —————


  _Öland_:

 Vespasianus (69–79)                                      (Silver)     2
 Trajanus (98–117)                                        (Silver)     2
 Hadrianus (117–138)                                      (Silver)     4
 Antoninus Pius (138–161)                                 (Silver)    19
 Faustina, wife of Antoninus Pius              (1 brass, 6 silver)     7
 Marcus Aurelius (161–180)                                (Silver)    19
 Faustina, wife of Marcus Aurelius                        (Silver)     5
 L. Verus (161–169)                                       (Silver)     3
 Lucilla, his wife                                        (Silver)     4
 Commodus (180–192)                                       (Silver)     9
 Julia Mæsa, grandmother of Elagabalus                                 1
 Alexander Severus(222–235)                               (Silver)     1
 Effaced or uncertain                                     (Silver)     6
                                                                      ——
    81 of silver, 1 of brass, total                                   82
                                                                      ——


  _Recapitulation._—_Entire Sweden_:

 Mainland                                                   (Gold)     1
 (Gold)                                                   (Silver)    15
 (Gold)                                                    (brass)    21
 Götland                                                    (Gold)     1
 (Gold)                                                   (Silver) 1,422
 Öland                                                    (Silver)    81
 (Gold)                                                    (brass)     1
                                                                   —————
  2 gold, 1518 of silver, 22 of brass                              1,542
                                                                   —————


  _Zealand_:

 Vespasianus (69–79)                                      (Silver)     3
 Trajanus (98–117)                                         (Brass)     1
 Hadrianus (117–138)                                      (Silver)     6
 Sabina, wife of Hadrianus                                (Silver)     1
 Antoninus Pius (138–161)                                 (Silver)    16
 Faustina senior, wife of Antoninus
   Pius                                                   (Silver)     2
 M. Aurelius (161–180)                                    (Silver)     5
 Faustina junior, wife of M. Aurelius                     (Silver)     4
 L. Verus (161–169)                                       (Silver)     2
 Commodus (180–192)                                       (Silver)     3
 Crispina, wife of Commodus                               (Silver)     3
 Septimius Severus (193–211)                              (Silver)     1
 Macrinus (217–218)                                       (Silver)     1
 Effaced or uncertain                                     (Silver)   728
                                                                     ———
     475 silver and 1 brass, total                                   476
                                                                     ———


  _Fyen_:

 Tiberius (14–37)                                  (Solidus, gold)     1
 Nerva (96–98)                                            (Silver)     1
 Trajanus (98–117).                                       (Silver)     1
 Lucius Verus (161–169)                                   (Silver)     1
 Geta (211–212)                                             (Gold)     1
                                                                       —
   2 of gold, and 3 of silver, total                                   5
                                                                       —

        The proportion of effaced or uncertain coins is enormous.


  _Bornholm_:

 Nero (54–68)                                             (Silver)     1
 Domitianus (81–96)                                       (Silver)     1
 Trajanus (98–117)                                        (Silver)    13
 Hadrianus (117–138)                                      (Silver)    20
 Sabina, wife of Hadrianus                                (Silver)     2
 Antoninus Pius (138–161)                                 (Silver)    49
 Faustina senior, wife of Antoninus
   Pius                                                   (Silver)     8
 M. Aurelius (161–180)                                    (Silver)    73
 Faustina junior, wife of Marcus
   Aurelius                                               (Silver)    11
 L. Verus (161–169)                                       (Silver)    10
 Lucilla, wife of L. Verus                                (Silver)     3
 Commodus (180–192)                                       (Silver)    34
 Crispina, wife of Conmmodus                              (Silver)     3
 Septimius Severus (193–211)                              (Silver)     1
 Effaced or uncertain                                     (Silver)     7
                                                                     ———
                 Total                                               236
                                                                     ———


  _Jutland_:

 Nero (54–68)                                             (Silver)     1
 Vitellius (69)                                           (Silver)     2
 Vespasianus (69–79)                                      (Silver)     4
 Domitianus (81–96)                                       (Silver)     1
 Trajanus (98–117)                                        (Silver)     8
 Hadrianus (117–138)                                      (Silver)     7
 Ælius Cæsar (†138)                                       (Silver)     1
 Antoninus Pius (138–161)               (1 large brass, 16 silver)    17
 Faustina senior, wife of Antoninus
   Pius                                                   (Silver)     5
 M. Aurelius (161–180)                                    (Silver)    10
 Faustina junior, wife of M. Aurelius                     (Silver)     3
 L. Verus (161–169)                                       (Silver)     2
 Lucilla, wife of L. Verus                                (Silver)     2
 Commodus (180–192)                                       (Silver)     8
 Septimius Severus (193–211)                              (Silver)     1
 Macrinus (217–218)                                       (Silver)     1
                                                                      ——
      72 silver and 1 brass, total                                    73
                                                                      ——


                           _Recapitulation._

 Bornholm                                                 (Silver)   236
 Zealand                                                  (Silver)   475
 Zealand                                                   (brass)     1
 Fyen                                                       (Gold)     2
 Fyen                                                     (Silver)     3
 Jutland                                                  (Silver)    72
 Jutland                                                   (brass)     1
                                                                     ———
 2 gold, 786 silver, 2 of brass, total                               790
                                                                     ———


     _Roman Coins from Claudius to the death of Alexander Severus._
                          (29 B.C.-A.D. 235.)

 Claudius (41–54), Scania                        (1 gold, 1 brass)     2
 Vespasianus (69–79), Scania and
   Smäland                                                 (brass)     2
 Trajanus (98–117), Halland                               (Silver)     1
 Hadrianus (117–138), Scania (brass),
   Upland (Silver),                            (1 brass, 1 silver)     2
 Antoninus Pius (138–161), Scania, near
   Lund                                        (2 brass, 1 silver)     3
 Marcus Aurelius (161–180), Scania                        (Silver)     2
 Lucilla, wife of L. Verus, Halland                       (Silver)     1
 Commodus (180–192), 1 Westergotland, 1
   Scania                                                 (Silver)     2
 Septimius Severus (193–211), Halland                     (Silver)     1
 Julia Domna, wife of Septimius
   Severus, Scania                                        (Silver)     1
 Caracalla (211–217), Halland                             (Silver)     1
 Elagabalus (218–222), Halland                            (Silver)     1
 Alexander Severus (222–235), Scania                 (large brass)     1
 Effaced or uncertain, Scania                 (14 brass, 3 silver)    17
                                                                      ——
   1 gold, 15 silver, 21 brass, total                                 37
                                                                      ——


    _Roman coins from the death of Alexander Severus to the death of
                 Theodosius the Great._ (A.D. 235–395.)

                           Found up to 1869.


  _Norway_:

  Valens (364–378)                                           (Gold) 1
  Valentinianus I. (364–375), Lister and Mandal, near Bergen (Gold) 1
  Gratianus (367–383) (in a grave)                           (Gold) 1
                                                                    —
                            Total                            (Gold) 3
                                                                    —


  _Sweden_:

 Gordianus (238–244), Gotland                             (Silver)     1
 Gallienus (253–268), Scania                               (brass)     1
 Probus (276–282), 1 Södermanland, 1
   Scania                                                   (Gold)     2
 Licinius (307–323), Scania                                (brass)     1
 Constantinus Magnus (306–337),
 1 Södermanland, 3 Scania, 1 Öland               (2 gold, 3 brass)     5
 Constantinus II. (337–340), Gotland                       (brass)     2
 Constantius II. (337–361), 3 Scania, 1
   Gotland                                                 (brass)     4
 Constans (337–350), Scania                                (brass)     1
 Effaced or uncertain, 1 Upland, 4
   Scania                                                  (brass)     5
                                                                      ——
    4 gold, 1 silver, and 17 brass,                          total    22
                                                                      ——


  _Denmark_:

 Decius (249–251), Fyen                                     (Gold)     1
 Aurelianus (270–275), Fyen                                 (Gold)     2
 Tacitus (275–276), Fyen                                    (Gold)     1
 Probus (276–282), Fyen                                     (Gold)     4
 Carus (282–283), Fyen                                      (Gold)     1
 Numerianus (283–284), Fyen                                 (Gold)     1
 Carinus (283–284), Fyen                                    (Gold)     1
 Diocletianus (284–305), Fyen                               (Gold)     5
 Maximianus (286–305), Fyen                                 (Gold)     5
 Constantius Chlorus (305–306), Fyen                        (Gold)     2
 Helena, wife of Constantius, Fyen                          (Gold)     1
 Licinius (307–323), Fyen                                   (Gold)     2
 Constantinus Magnus (306–337), Jutland
   2, Fyen 16                                   (17 gold, 1 brass)    18
 Constantinus II. (337–340), Fyen 2,
   Zealand 1                                                (Gold)     3
 Constantius II. (337–361), Denmark,
   locality unknown; 2 in Fyen, 1
   Jutland                                       (3 gold, 1 brass)     4
 Constans (337–350), Fyen                                   (Gold)     2
 Valentinianus I. (364–375), Zealand 1,
   Jutland 1                                                (Gold)     2
 Other gold coins                                                      5
                                                                      ——
                                                (58 gold, 2 brass)    58
                                                                      ——


 _Roman and Byzantine coins from the death of Theodosius the Great to the
                     death of Anastasius._ (395–518.)

                            Found up to 1869.


  _Swedish Mainland_:

 Honorius (395–423), Småland                                           1
 Valentinianus III. (425–455), Smäland, Kalmar län                     1
 Anthemius (467–472), Scania                                           1
 Julius Nepos (474–475), 1 Kalmar län, 1 Blekinge                      2
 Romulus Augustulus (475–476), Småland                                 1
 Theodosius II. (408–450), Medelpad 1, Upland 4, Småland 1, 2 in
   Kalmar län, 2 in Blekinge, 3 Scania                                13
 Marcianus (450–457), Upland                                           1
 Leo I. (457–474), 3 in Upland, 1 on Hoen                              4
 Zeno (474–491), 1 in Medelpad, 11 in Upland, 1 in Södermanland, 2
   in Scania                                                          15
 Anastasius (491–518), 2 in Upland, 1 in Kalmar län, 1 in Scania       4
 Unknown, Upland                                                       1
                                                                      ——
                       Total      (all gold)                          45
                                                                      ——


  _Öland_:

 Honorius (395–423)                                                    5
 Valentinianus III. (425–455)                                         13
 Majorianus (457–461)                                                  1
 Libius Severus (461–465)                                              9
 Anthemius (407–472)                                                   3
 Romulus Augustulus (475–476)                                          1
 Arcadius (395–408)                                                    2
 Theodosius II. (408–450)                                             20
 Ælia Eudoxia, wife of Theodosius II                                   2
 Marcianus (450–457)                                                   4
 Ælia Pulcheria, wife of Marcianus                                     2
 Leo I. (457–474)                                                     19
 Leo II. and Zeno (474)                                                1
 Zeno (474–491)                                                        5
 Basiliscus (476–477)                                                  1
 Unknown                                                              11
                                                                      ——
                       Total      (all gold)                          99
                                                                      ——


  _Gotland_:

 Honorius (395–423)                                                    4
 Majorianus (457–461)                                                  1
 Libius Severus (461–465)                                              1
 Procopius Anthemius (467–472)                                         2
 Theodosius II. (408–450)                                              3
 Marcianus (450–457)                                                   1
 Leo I. (457–474)                                                     10
 Leo II. and Zeno (474)                                                1
 Zeno (474–491)                                                       15
 Ælia Ariadne, wife of Zeno                                            1
 Basiliscus (476–477)                                                  1
 Anastasius (491–518)                                                 17
                                                                      ——
                       Total      (all gold)                          57
                                                                      ——


                           _Recapitulation._

 Sweden, Mainland                                                     45
 Sweden, Oland                                                        99
 Sweden, Gotland                                                      57
                                                                      ——
                          All gold, total                            201
                                                                      ——


  _Bornholm_:

 Honorius (395–423)                                                    3
 Placidius Valentinianus (425–455)                                     8
 Honoria, sister of Valentinianus                                      1
 Libius Severus (461–465)                                              1
 Anthemius (467–472)                                                   2
 Julius Nepos (474–475)                                                1
 Theodosius II. (408–450)                                             16
 Marcianus (450–457)                                                   1
 Leo I. (457–474)                                                     12
 Leo II. and Zeno (474)                                                3
 Zeno (474–491)                                                       13
 Basiliscus (476–477)                                                  1
 Basiliscus and Marcus                                                 1
 Anastasius (491–518)                                                  5
                                                                      ——
                  67 of gold, 1 of silver, total                      68
                                                                      ——

 Valentinianus (425–455), Fyen                                         2
 Majorianus (457–461), Fyen                                            1
 Theodosius II. (408–450), 1 Zealand, 1 Fyen                           2
 Marcianus (450–457), Fyen                                             1
 Leo I. (457–474), 1 Jutland, 5 Fyen                                   6
 Zeno (474–491), 1 Fyen                                                1
 Anastasius (491–518), 2 Fyen                                          2
 Unknown, 1 Jutland, 1 Fyen                                            2
                                                                      ——
                          All gold, total                             17
                                                                      ——


                           _Recapitulation._

 Bornholm                                                   (Gold)    67
 Bornholm                                                 (Silver)     1
 Rest of Denmark                                            (Gold)    17
                                                                      ——
      84 gold, and 1 silver, total                                    85
                                                                      ——


         _Byzantine coins from the time between_ A.D. 518–850.


  _Norway_:

 Tiberius Constantinus (578–582)                                 1 gold.
 Mauricius Tiberius (582–602)                                    1
 Constantinus V. Copronymus(771–775)                             1
 Michael III. (842–867)                                          1
                                                                 —
                            Total                                4 gold.

 _Sweden_ (1 Södermanland, 1 Gotland):
 Justinianus I. (527–565)                                        2 gold.

 _Denmark_ (Bornholm):
 Justinus I. (518–527)                                           1 gold.

In Sweden more than 250 Roman and Byzantine gold coins have been found,
and year after year new ones are brought to light.

The whole number of Roman and Byzantine coins of the period before A.D.
850 found up to June, 1872, was—

 ─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬──────────┬───────────┬──────────┬───────
          │From the │Augustus-│Alexander │Theodosius-│  After   │Total.
          │  time   │Alexander│ Severus- │Anastasius │Anastasius│
          │ before  │ Severus │Theodosius│(395–518). │(518–850).│
          │Augustus.│   (29   │(235–395).│           │          │
          │         │B.C.-235 │          │           │          │
          │         │ A.D.).  │          │           │          │
 ─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────┼───────
 Mainland │        3│       12│         4│         37│         1│     57
 Scania   │         │      584│        14│         19│          │    617
 Öland    │         │       88│         2│        106│          │    196
 Gotland  │        9│    3,234│         4│         64│         1│  3,312
 ─────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────┼───────────┼──────────┼───────
          │       12│    3,918│        24│        226│         2│  4,182
 Among    │         │         │          │           │          │
   these  │         │         │          │           │          │
   coins  │         │         │          │           │          │
   are—   │         │         │          │           │          │
 Of gold  │         │        2│         6│        226│         2│    236
 Of silver│       12│    3,894│         1│           │          │  3,907
 Of copper│         │       22│        17│           │          │     39
 ─────────┴─────────┴─────────┴──────────┴───────────┴──────────┴───────




                                 INDEX.


                                   A.

 Abbon, ii. 540

 Accounts, Greek and Roman, i. 7

 Ægir, i. 403

 Æthelred, King, ii. 487–492

 Æthelstan, King, ii. 465–478

 Africa, i. 3

 Alfar, the, i. 409

 Alfred, King, the Powerful, ii. 465

 Altars, i. 356

 America, Discovery of, ii. 519 _seq._

 Ammianus Marcellinus, i. 12

 Amulets, i. 377

 Angeln, i. 19

 Antiquities, Abstract of, i. 1 _seq._

 Antiquities, Greek and Roman, i. 259–275

 Apples of youth, i. 49

 Archæological track, i. 26

 Arms and Armour, ii. 65

 Arvel, the, Inheritance Feast, ii. 47

 Asar, the, i. 23, 28, 30, 48

 Asbjörn, i. 465

 Asgard, i. 44

 Austrriki, i. 22


                                   B.

 Baldr, The Good, i. 33 _seq._

 Battles,
   Sea—Helga, i. 184
     Svold, ii. 188–197
     Jomsvikings, ii. 197–208
   Land—Brávöll, ii. 436
     Dúnheidi, ii. 441
     Brunanburgh, ii. 469
     Stamford, ii. 505
     Hastings, ii. 512

 Bayeux tapestry, i. 15; ii. 157, 160, 275, 304

 Bergelmir, _before_ the Creation, i. 36

 Berserker, i. 56; ii. 423 _seq._

 Bertin, ii. 539

 Betrothals, ii. 7, 16

 Bifrost, Bridge of, i. 35

 Björn (Brezki), the Britisher, ii. 206–208, 534

 Björn, son of Hring, i. 431

 Black Sea and Sea of Azof, i. 25, 28

 Boats, ii. 144

 Bog-finds, i. 193

 Bohuslän, i. 71 _passim_

 Bononia, i. 11

 (Borislav) Búrislaf, ii. 160

 Bracteates, ii. 332 _seq._

 Britain, Settlement by Northmen, i. 17

 Bronze Age, i. 84–124

 Burials, i. 324–342


                                   C.

 Cæsar, Julius, i. 8, 14

 Cairns, _vide_ Graves.

 Carausius, i. 11

 Champions and Berserks, ii. 423 _seq._

 Chariots and Cars, i. 294–6

 Charlemagne, ii. 537

 Children, Birth and bringing up of, ii. 30

 Christianity, Struggle with Paganism, i. 464 _seq._

 Chronicles, Various, i. 13, 20

 Cimbric Chersonesus, i. 10

 Civilisation of the North, i. 1 _seq._

 Classes, Ancestry of, i. 487

 Classes, Divisions of, i. 486 _seq._

 Claudianus, i. 12

 Coins found, i. 260–263, 271

 Coins chronologically arranged, vol. ii. Appendix III.

 Conduct of life, the, ii. 401 _seq._

 Cosmogony, i. 27 _seq._

 Creation, i. 29 _seq._

 Cromlechs, i. 71


                                   D.

 Debts and Debtors, ii. 235 _seq._

 Denmark, Kings of, Appendix III.

 Derision, Penalty of, i. 589–591

 Disir, The, ii. 411

 Divorce, ii. 25

 Dom rings, i. 369, 533, 564

 Dress of men, ii. 285 _seq._

 Dress of women, ii. 301 _seq._

 Dreams, i. 456–463

 Duelling, i. 563–567

 Dvergar, the, i. 39

 Dwellings, ii. 242


                                   E.

 Edda, Earlier—Extracts from, _passim_

 Edda, Later—Extracts from, i. 30–68

 Edmund, King, the Holy, ii. 457

 Edward the Confessor, ii. 496, 501

 Egil, i. 419, ii. 469 _seq_

 Egil i., his sorrow, ii. 414; song, ii. 416

 Eginhard, i. 23; ii. 537

 Eïrik Blood-axe and England, ii. 467

 Eïrik, the Red, ii. 518

 Ella, King, ii. 452–456

 Emma, Queen, ii. 487–490

 Engelhólm, i. 19

 England—Origin of name, settlement, i. 19

 Epithets of Odin, i. 56;
   Valkyrias, i. 389

 Epithets of the sea, i. 403–404

 Epithets of swords, ii. 79

 Epithets of spears, ii. 88

 Epithets of axes, ii. 89

 Epithets of arrows, ii. 91

 Epithets of shields, ii. 95

 Epithets of coats of mail, ii. 99

 Epithets of warships, ii. 136

 Epithets of battles, ii. 448

 Epithets of warriors, blood, raven and eagle, the wolf, horses, fire,
    ii. 449

 Eumenius, i. 10, 11

 Eutropius, i. 11

 Exercises, bodily, idróttir, ii. 369 _seq._

 Exercises, mental idróttir, ii. 389 _seq._


                                   F.

 Facsimile of Old Norse MSS., ii. 544–550

 Fafnir, i. 435

 Feasts and entertainments, ii. 274 _seq._

 Fenrir, i. 41–43

 Finds, chief:—
     Bavenhöi, i. 251, 280
     Blekinge, i. 170, 173
     Bohüslän, (ancient Vikin), i. 74, _passim_
     Bröttby, i. 273
     Gökstad, i. 335
     Hjortehammar, i. 306
     Karleby, i. 75
     Kivik, i. 88
     Moklebust Eids, i. 339
     Nydam, i. 219 _seq._
     Thorsbjerg, i. 194 _seq._
     Treenhöi, i. 89–91
     Uby, i. 78, 79
     Valloby, i. 249
     Varpelev, i. 255
     Vimose, i. 108, 207
   Bornholm, i. 128, _passim_
   Burgundy, i. 158
   England—Taplow, i. 319
   Fyen, i. 123–127
   Fyen, Bangstrup, i. 245
   Fyen, Broholm, i. 87, _passim_
   Fyen, Kragehul, i. 216
   Fyen, Mollegaard, i. 128
   Jutland, i. 241, 248
   Ukraine, i. 245
   Wallachia, i. 159
   Zealand (Nordrup), ii. 225

 Finds, ii. _passim._

 France (Valland), ii. 464, 536 _seq._

 Frankish Annals, ii. 536

 Franks—Franci, Frakki, i. 10 _seq._

 Frey, worship of, i. 351

 Freyja, i. 64

 Frigg, i. 28, 57

 Frostathing, the, i. 465

 Fylgjas, the, i. 413


                                   G.

 Games, ii. 352, 357

 Gardariki, i. 26, 51, 53

 Gautaland, i. 60, 423

 Genealogies of the Norse chiefs, i. 66; ii. 479

 Genealogies of the jarls of Normandy, ii. 464

 _Get_-ae (Goths, Jutes) Thysa-Massa, i. 26, 343

 Geography, old Norse, i. 52

 Germany, i. 3 _passim_

 Gildas, settlement of Britain, i. 25

 Ginnungagap, i. 29

 Glass, i. 276–284

 Glass, Earliest finds of, i. 126, 255

 Godi, temple-priest, and Godiship, i. 525–531

 Godwin—Gudini, ii. 491

 Göngu Hrolf, ii. 462–464

 Gorm, King, i. 456

 Graves, _vide_ Stone, Iron, Bronze Ages

 Graves, Remarkable, i. 247, 258

 Graves, Various, i. 299, 318–335

 Greece, i. 3

 Greek and Roman antiquities, i. 259

 Greenland, Discovery of, ii. 518

 Grimnismal, i. 27

 Ground-finds, i. 235–246

 Gudrun—Song I., ii. 417

 Gudrun—Song II., ii. 420

 Gyda, ii. 492

 Gyrd, ii. 512, 513


                                   H.

 Hákon Jarl, i. 367, 467

 Hákon the Good, i. 424, 464–9, 475; ii. 43, 466

 Halfdan, i. 462

 Halls and buildings, ii. 241

 Harald Gormsson, i. 473; ii. 479

 Harald Gudinason (Godwin’s son), ii. 502 _seq._

 Harald Hardradi, ii. 499 _seq._

 Harald Harfagr, i. 361, 448; ii. 514, 531

 Harald Hilditönn, i. 22, 326; ii. 436–441

 Harald Knutsson and Hörda-Knut, ii. 496

 Harbours, ii. 169, 177

 Hávamál, the, ii. 401 _seq._

 Hengist and Horsa, i. 20, 25

 Heid the Sybil, i. 29

 Heimdall, i. 35

 Hel, i. 29, 32

 Herodotus, i. 26

 High-seat pillars, i. 361

 Horses and Harness, i. 285–291

 Hospitality, i. 433; ii. 283

 Houses, ii. 242

 Hraesvelg, i. 38

 Hrimthursar, i. 28, _passim._

 Hrolf Kraki, i. 354


                                   I.

 Iceland, Discovery of, ii. 514–516

 Idavöll, i. 45

 Idols, i. 375, 379

 Idols, power of, i. 469–472

 Idróttir (_vide_ Exercises), list of, ii. 45

 Indemnity, i. 544 _seq._

 Insurance companies, ii. 233

 Ireland, ii. 514, 516–518

 Iron age, i. 125 _seq._

 Ivar’s dream, i. 459

 Ivar the Boneless, ii. 453–459

 Ivar Vidfadmi, i. 22, 23, 68

 Ividi, i. 29


                                   J.

 Jarl, Attributes of, i. 487 _seq._

 Jerusalem, i. 52; ii. 500

 Jomsborg, ii. 109, 162, 479

 Jorsala, i. 52

 Jomsvikings, ii. 197–208

 Jörmungand, i. 42

 Jötun, &c., i. 28 _seq._

 Julian, Emperor, i. 12, 14

 Jutes (Jotnar, Jötunheim, &c.), i. 26


                                   K.

 Ketilbjörn, i. 358

 King, Meanings and Grades of, i. 497 _seq._

 Kissing, Laws on, ii. 24

 Kjökkenmöddinger, i. 70

 Klakkharald, i. 455, 456

 Knut, the Mighty, the Old, i. 480, 486 _seq._


                                   L.

 Land, Division, Law, Rights of, i. 487 _seq._

 Landvoettir, the, i. 418

 Language, Norse, i. 20

 Laws of the early English tribes, i. 532 _seq._

 Loki, i. 32 _seq._

 London, ii. 481, 484, 489, 492

 Louis le Débonnaire, ii. 538


                                   M.

 Magnus, the Good, i. 186; ii. 497

 Man, Creation of, i. 45

 Manni, i. 23

 Manuscripts, Old Norse—facsimiles, ii. 544–550

 Marriage, ii. 1 _seq._

 Mediterranean, i. 3, _passim_

 Midgard, i. 44

 Mimin’s well, i. 32

 Mistletoe, i. 33

 Mounds, _vide_ Graves.

 Muspelheim, i. 30

 Mystic signs and numbers, ii. 341


                                   N.

 Nanna, the Goddess, i. 332

 Niflheim, i. 29, _passim_

 Nine Worlds, the, i. 29

 Njörd, i. 146;
   worship of, i. 354

 Nordimbraland, i. 20, _passim_

 Normandy, ii. 463, _passim_

 Nornir, the, i. 385–389

 Norway, Kings of, Appendix III.

 Norsemen, Mythology of, i. 27, 44


                                   O.

 Oaths, i. 553–559

 Occupations of men, ii. 344–351

 Occupations of women, ii. 362–367

 Ocular delusion, i. 444

 Odals, _vide_ Land

 Odin, i. 28 _seq._

 Odin of the North, i. 51

 Odin’s religion, i. 343

 Odin’s successors, i. 362

 Olaf, King and Saint, i. 467–476, 500, 540–543

 Olaf, King and Saint, ii. 37, 179, 481, 492

 Olaf of Sweden, i. 540; ii. 480

 Olaf Raudi, of Scotland, ii. 469 _seq._

 Olaf Tryggvason, i. 351, 357, 377, 467, 473, 476, 506–7

 Olaf Tryggvason, ii. 182, 480

 Omens, i. 450–455

 Öngulsey, i. 19

 Ordeal, i. 559–562

 Orkneys and Hebrides, ii. 531

 Outlawry, i. 578–583


                                   P.

 Paganism and Christianity, i. 464

 Pálnatóki, Jarl, ii. 160, 534

 Palestine, i. 3

 Paris, siege of, ii. 540–543

 Pillars, High-seat, ii. 516

 Plan of Holmganga ground, i. 565

 Pottery—Stone Age, i. 82, 83

 Pottery—Bronze Age, i. 94, 95

 Pottery—Iron Age, i. 137 _seq._

 Precedence, ii. 251

 Ptolemy, i. 10

 Punishments, i. 368, 372, 476, 518

 Punishments, ii. 236 _seq._, 243, 247


                                   R.

 Ragnar Lodbrók, ii. 435, 450–453

 Ragnar his sons, ii. 453–459

 Ragnarök, i. 43

 Ran, goddess, i. 403

 Religion, i. 343 _seq._

 Revenge, i. 584–589

 Robbery, ii. 236 _seq._

 Rock-tracings, ii. 116 _seq._

 Rooms, names of, ii. 259

 Runes, i. 154–192

 Runes magical, i. 278, 439

 Rune-song of Odin, i. 160–163

 Russia, i. 4, _passim_


                                   S.

 Sacrifices (three principal), i. 344–347

 Sacrifices human, i. 364–374, 448

 Sacrifices before a duel, i. 565

 Sagas fully described, Appendix III.

 Sax, the, i. 15

 Saxonicum litus.—Town or Army-list, i. 18

 Saxons a misnomer, i. 18–24

 Scaldship, ii. 389 _seq._

 Scepticism among the heathen, i. 354

 Scotland, ii. 532, _passim_

 Sculpture, i. 297

 Sea-god and his Wife, i. 403–408

 Serkland, Saracens, ii. 500

 Shape-changing, i. 430

 Ships, Levy of, ii. 187

 Ships, Construction of, i. 162–172

 Sicily, i. 3

 Sigurd, Hring, ii. 433–441

 SILENCE OF CENTURIES!, i. 21

 Slavery—freed slaves, i. 502–514

 Sorcery, i. 401

 Sorrow and mourning, ii. 414 _seq._

 Spain, i. 3

 Sports, ii. 351, 357, 361

 Stone Age, i. 69, 83

 _Sue_-ones, i. 7 _seq._

 Suicides, i. 423

 Suitors, bridal, ii. 2 _seq._

 Superstitions, i. 430 _seq._

 Svein, Tjuguskegg, King, ii. 479

 _Sri_-ár, _Sri_-thjod, _Swe_-den, i. 7

 Sweden, Kings of, Appendix III.


                                   T.

 Tacitus, i. 7, 15

 Taxes, i. 187

 Temples, i. 356–361

 Thing, the, and its offshoots, i. 515 _seq._

 Thor, i. 47

 Thor, Worship of, i. 353

 Thraldom, i. 502

 Time, Divisions of, i. 37

 Titles, i. 486 _seq._

 Traders and trading-ships, ii. 249 _seq._

 Turf-Einar, i. 372; ii. 262, 263

 Tyr, i. 35, 47

 Tyrkir (men), i. 20


                                   U.

 Ulf Jarl, ii. 490

 Utgard, i. 44


                                   V.

 Vafthrudnismál, i. 27

 Val and its derivatives, i. 389

 Valhalla, i. 420–429

 Valkyrias, the, i. 387–393

 Valland, France, ii. 463

 Vanir, Their land and river, i. 52

 Veneti, i. 8

 Vends—Wends, ii. 160, 188

 Vikar, Legend of King, i. 421

 Viken, or Vikin, i. 19, 299, 473; ii. 117, 462

 Vili and Ve, Odin’s brothers, i. 30

 Vindland, ii. 188, 479

 Vinland, America, ii. 519 _seq._

 Visma, shieldmaiden, ii. 441

 Völuspa, the, i. 27

 Volvas, the, i. 394


                                   W.

 Waggons, i. 294–299

 Wales—Bretland, i. 19; ii. 534

 Wall-ornamentation, ii. 247

 War customs, ii. 102 _seq._

 War ships, ii. 136 _seq._

 Warfare, Mode of Naval, ii. 181 _seq._

 Weapons, ii. 65 _seq._

 Weather vanes, ii. 156

 Weregild, i. 544

 Wodin (see Odin), i. 28 _seq._

 Wood-carving, ii. 244

 William the Norman, ii. 512, 513

 Witchcraft, ii. 439–449

 Witikind, i. 18; ii. 537

 Women, position of, ii. 1 _seq._

 Women, rights of, ii. 24

 Women, restrictions of extravagance of, ii. 28

 Worlds, the Nine, i. 29

 Worship of men, animals, groves, i. 379–383


                                   Y.

 Yggdrasil, i. 41 _seq._, 385

 Ymir, creation from, i. 30

 Yngvi, i. 64, 497

 Yule sacrifice, i. 345


                                   Z.

 Zosimus, i. 10

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES


 1. Added footnote reference numbers to footnotes on pp. 62,
 2. Added missing footnote anchor after “pay the penalty” for first
      footnote on p. 406.
 3. Changed “1” to “I” and moved it adjacent to “APPENDIX” on p. 536 to
      be consistent with “APPENDIX III.”.
 4. Added “APPENDIX II.” heading on p. 544 to be consistent with
      “APPENDIX III.”
 5. Chenged “550 1,500” to “Total 550 1,500” on p. 551 to be consistent
      with other tables.
 6. Changed “Derision, Penalty of, ii.” to “Derision, Penalty of, i.” on
      p. 558.
 7. Silently corrected typographical errors.
 8. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
 9. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Viking Age. Volume 2 (of 2), by 
Paul B. Du Chaillu

*** 