Forbidden History - Extra: The Birka Viking Warrior Woman
Episode Date: July 13, 2023Bonus Episode: In this episode of Forbidden Fruit, we explore another iconic female Viking discovery, the Birka Warrior. From its excavation in 1878, to the 2017 DNA uncovering, revealing the remains ...to be those of a female, we take a deep dive into what factors made them believe the remains were of a male warrior for over 100 years. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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This program is presented solely for educational and entertainment purposes.
It contains mature adult themes.
Listener discretion is advised.
Welcome to Forbidden Fruit, the Forbidden History Podcast Extra.
In our last episode, we heard the incredible story of the Osberg Burial Ship
and theorized about the lives of the Viking royal women entombed there.
In this episode, we're going to do a little bit of the Osseburg burial ship and theorized about the lives of the Viking royal women entombed there.
In this episode, we're going to do a deep dive into another famous female Viking archaeological discovery.
First discovered in 1878 and perceived to be a standard Viking warrior grave,
modern science would reveal some provocative truths, changing our contemporary perceptions of Viking society forevermore.
This is the Birka Viking warrior woman.
It's 1878 on the sleepy island of Birka in Lake Malaren, Sweden.
Yalmar Stolpe, an entomologist-turned archaeologist,
is carrying out excavations at Birka,
an ancient Viking trading settlement that was significantly active
from the 8th to the 10th century.
Unbeknownst to Yalmar, him and his team are about to make a truly marvelous discovery.
Prominently placed on a mound near the town is a large block of granite.
It takes many days to dig through, but beneath is a lavish grave of a Viking warrior.
The Viking skeleton is found in a collapsed sitting position,
wearing garments of silk with silver thread decorations.
Buried inside the grave chamber alongside the Viking is a sword, an axe, a spear, a spear,
a bow and armor-piercing arrows, a battle knife, two shields, and the skeletal remains of two horses.
The complete arsenal of a professional warrior.
A full set of Nafetafel, the board game often referred to as Viking chess, is also found in the grave,
indicating the prestige of a battle strategist.
Each object from the grave is logged and stored at the Swedish History Museum.
Birka's Viking Age Society was organized in a hierarchical structure,
with individuals of high status being buried with rich grave goods,
indicating their high positions.
Therefore, this grave is an astonishing find,
especially as Viking warrior graves rarely contain more.
than three weapons.
And to further emphasize the grave's superiority,
out of 1,100 Berka tombs identified,
it is just one of two
that contains a full set of weaponry.
The biological sex of the individual found
in the Birka Viking warrior grave
is assumed male.
In 1975,
osteo-archologist Birit Wilkins
is tasked with cataloging the contents
of many Viking graves, including the remains of the warrior.
After completing her examination, Barrett notes that the bones of the warrior
belong to someone of average height, with thin forearms, and a pelvic bone shape that suggests
it belonged to a female.
Unfortunately, the skull bone, which bodes certain gender-specific characteristics, is missing
from the remains, which could confirm the female Viking warrior theory.
The Viking warrior's identity remains male in the Swedish History Museum records.
In 2014, Stockholm University bioarchologist Anna Kielstrom questions the original interpretations
of the Birka burial and also conducts an osteological analysis of the Viking warrior.
Anna's 2014 analysis also closely examines the warrior's pelvic bones, as well as the jawbone,
which reveals dimensions and markers of a biological female.
This discovery provides strong evidence that the individual was indeed a woman, confirming Barrett-Vulkin's hunch and contradicting previous assumptions.
Anna presents her analysis at a scientific conference in 2014 and publishes it in 2016,
but it doesn't make much of an impact on the general public.
Some archaeologists even push back, arguing that the excavation of the gravesite
occurred so long ago that perhaps the bones had been mixed up,
or mislabeled in Beret-Volkens' 1975 cataloging,
And surely there are many other reasons why a female body would be laid in a warrior's tomb.
Little did they know, Yalmar Stolphe, the original excavator, was a very particular archaeologist,
recording everything he found with scientific rigor and carefulness.
Despite the slight backlash, the research continues with strong results.
In response to the criticism, a team of research,
Researchers, led by Uppsala University archaeologist, Charlotte Hildensternayonsen,
decide to conduct DNA testing on the bones.
They extract two types of DNA, the nuclear DNA, which reveals the biological sex and
the mitochondrial DNA.
The latter kind is passed down from mother to child and determines whether the bones
belong to one or multiple people.
The results come back clear.
The mitochondrial DNA from the various bones all match, meaning the remains match one person.
And know why chromosomes are detected in the bones, meaning these are the remains of a female.
The examination uncovers that she was between 30 and 40 years old when she died,
and that she ate well all her life.
This suggests she came from a rich family, or her.
or maybe even a royal one, much like the assumptions of the Viking women of Ossiburg.
By the minerals found in her inner teeth, researchers could determine that she most likely
came from southern Sweden or Norway, and that before her molars had finished forming,
she most likely traveled west, potentially as far as the British Isles.
Within her lifetime, she also likely traveled as far east as Kiev in Ukraine.
Viking society was characterized by a mobile lifestyle,
and children would have accompanied their parents on journeys.
Much like today, though, traveling in the Viking age was dependent on social status,
so this again reiterates that the Birka Viking warrior most likely came from a well-off family.
The weapons and artifacts, including the clothing, found within her grave,
also link this female warrior to the Vikings Eastway.
This was the trade route between Sweden and the Silk Road
and offered the Vikings access to the Baltic Sea,
Eastern Europe, the Byzantine Empire, and the Islamic world.
The burial site, Birka, was a thriving trading hub
full of Byzantine and Arab silver.
This was from the sale of items such as furs, honey, and slaves.
sent down the Nipar and Volga rivers.
The items found within the female Vikings' grave
could suggest she had connections to affluent figures in world trade,
or perhaps she just had high taste for luxury goods.
The gaming pieces found buried with her suggest strategic thinking.
Anna Kielstrom proposes that because she was buried with these pieces,
the female warrior may have been a battle.
strategist. This leads to speculation that she might have been some sort of officer who could lead
troops into battle. Once analyzed, the weapons found in the grave indicate use from a trained warrior.
They weren't just for show. While wealthy women of this time were often buried with their
jewelry, the female Viking warrior was buried with her weapons, tools of violence.
Many Viking sagas in Scandinavian folklore actually tell tales of shield maidens, fighting alongside male warriors.
If this is the case, why then, when the discovery was uncovered, was the Berka female warrior immediately assumed to be male?
As the grave was discovered in the late 19th century during the Victorian era,
it's very likely that archaeologists of this time were influenced by Victorian ideals.
The notion that a woman's proper and only place was the home,
and that men were expected to be out working all day,
was very likely imposed on the understanding of Viking society.
Assumptions were made about how Viking women lived,
based purely on the social constructs of the Victorian era.
The traditional view of Viking-age society
was essentially male-dominated,
with men doing the hunting, fighting, trading, and farming,
while the women did the cooking, caring for the home, and raising children.
While these traditional views also expressed
that women of the Viking Age did enjoy an unusual degree of freedom for their day,
in the form of owning property, requesting a divorce,
and reclaiming of their dowries if their marriage ended,
they didn't express the idea that a woman,
could be a fighting warrior.
In an article released prior to the 2014 and 2017 uncoverings,
Marianne Mowen, from the University of Oslo,
cautioned that, assuming Viking men were ranked above women,
is to impose modern values on the past, which would be misleading.
Later re-evaluation of the Birka warrior
not only challenged the traditional view of gender roles in Viking society,
it also highlighted the importance of re-examining archaeological findings.
The results called for caution against making assumptions and generalization
regarding social orders in historic societies.
The recognition of the Birka find as a prominent female Viking warrior
contributed to broader discussions on gender, power, and societal roles during the Viking Age.
While not all archaeologists agree on the interpretation of these complex burial findings,
there's no denying that this study reminds us how multifaceted human societies can be when we study them for who they really are,
rather than who we believe them to be.
This is an audio production by Like a Shot Entertainment, presented by Bridget Lapin,
Executive producers, Danny O'Brien and Henry Scott.
Story producer Maddie Bowers.
Assistant producer, Alice Chudder.
Thank you for listening.
