Berserker
Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Use dmy dates Template:Multiple image In the Old Norse written corpus, berserkers (Template:Langx) were those who were said to have fought in a trance-like fury, a characteristic which later gave rise to the modern English adjective berserk Template:Gloss. Berserkers are attested to in numerous Old Norse sources.
EtymologyEdit
The Old Norse form of the word was {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (plural {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), a compound word of ber and serkr. The second part, serkr, means Template:Gloss (also found in Middle English, see Template:Wikt-lang). The first part, ber, on the other hand, can mean several things, but is assumed to have most likely meant Template:Gloss, with the full word, berserkr, meaning just Template:Gloss, as in Template:Gloss.<ref name=":2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Thirteenth-century historian Snorri Sturluson, an Icelander who lived around 200 years after berserkers were outlawed in Iceland (outlawed in 1015), on the other hand, interpreted the meaning as Template:Gloss, that is to say that the warriors went into battle without armour,<ref name="blaney1972" /> but that view has largely been abandoned, due to contradicting and lack of supporting evidence.<ref name=":2" />Template:Sfn
Early beginningsEdit
It is proposed by some authors that the northern warrior tradition originated from hunting magic.<ref name=jones1997/><ref name=hallowell1925/> Three main animal cults appear to have developed: the cult of the bear, the wolf, and the wild boar.<ref name=jones1997/>
Germanic mercenaries in the Roman armyEdit
The bas-relief carvings on Trajan's column in Rome, completed in 113 AD, depict scenes of Trajan's conquest of Dacia in 101–106 AD. The scenes show his Roman soldiers plus auxiliaries and allies from Rome's border regions, including tribal warriors from both sides of the Rhine. There are warriors depicted as barefoot, bare-chested, bearing weapons and helmets that are associated with the Germani.Template:Sfn
Scene 36 on the column shows some of these warriors standing together, with some wearing bearhoods and some wearing wolfhoods. This is the only potential record of Germanic bear-warriors and wolf-warriors fighting together until 872 AD, with Thórbiörn Hornklofi's description of the battle of Hafrsfjord, when they fought together for King Harald Fairhair of Norway.Template:Sfn
Migration Period depictionsEdit
In 1639 and 1734 respectively, two vastly decorated horns made of sheet gold, the Golden Horns of Gallehus, were discovered in Southern Jutland, Denmark. As part of its decoration, the first horn, the larger of the two, depicts two animal headed men facing each other, armed with what appears to be a sickle and a wood-splitting axe. Dated to the early 5th century, these depictions could represent something related to berserkers.
In the spring of 1870, four Vendel era cast-bronze dies, the Torslunda plates, were found by Erik Gustaf Pettersson and Anders Petter Nilsson in a cairn on the lands of the farm No 5 Björnhovda in Torslunda parish, Öland, Sweden, one of them showing what appears to be a berserker ritual.<ref name="MedievHistoriesOdin">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=stjerna1903/>
In 1887, the graves of two 7th century Alemanni men were found during construction work in the immediate vicinity of the St. Gallus Church in the Gutenstein district of the city of Sigmaringen, Germany. One of the graves contained, among other things, a silver sword scabbard, the Template:Interlanguage link. Highly ornate, it features a warrior figure with a wolf's head, holding a sword and a spear. It is thought this depicts an ulfheðinn (wolf warrior), as pre-Christian Central Europe was part of the same tradition as the Norse.Template:Sfn
Other animal headed figures have been found, such as an antlered figure on the Gundestrup cauldron, found on northern Jutland, Denmark, in 1891, which has been dated from 200 BC to 300 AD.
- Gallehus horns, animal head characters.jpg
Animal headed warriors on the Gallehus horns.Template:Sfn
- Torslundaplåtarna 1995 (618349 HST).jpg
An animal headed warrior and a one eyed character on one of the Torslunda plates.
- Wolfskrieger (cropped).jpg
A wolf headed warrior on the Template:Interlanguage link.
- Gundestrupkedlen- 00054 (cropped).jpg
An antlered figure on the Gundestrup cauldron.
TypesEdit
Berserkers – bear warriorsTemplate:AnchorEdit
It is proposed by some authors that the berserkers drew their power from the bear and were devoted to the bear cult, which was once widespread across the northern hemisphere.<ref name=hallowell1925/><ref name=nioradze1925/> The berserkers maintained their religious observances despite their fighting prowess, as the Svarfdæla saga tells of a challenge to single-combat that was postponed by a berserker until three days after Yule.<ref name=jones1997/> The bodies of dead berserkers were laid out in bearskins prior to their funeral rites.<ref name=danielli1945/> The bear-warrior symbolism survives to this day in the form of the bearskin caps worn by the guards of the Danish monarchs.<ref name=jones1997/>
In battle, the berserkers were subject to fits of frenzy. They would howl like wild beasts, foam at the mouth, and gnaw the rims of their shields. According to belief, during these fits, they were immune to steel and fire, and made great havoc in the ranks of the enemy. When this fever abated, they were weak and tame. Accounts can be found in the sagas.<ref name=cleasby1874/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
To "go berserk" was to "hamask", which translates as "change form", in this case, as with the sense "enter a state of wild fury". Some scholars have interpreted those who could transform as a berserker as "hamrammr" or "shapestrong" – literally able to shapeshift into a bear's form.<ref name="Davidson" />Template:Rp For example, the band of men who go with Skallagrim in Egil's Saga to see King Harald about his brother Thorolf's murder are described as "the hardest of men, with a touch of the uncanny about a number of them ... they [were] built and shaped more like trolls than human beings." This has sometimes been interpreted as the band of men being "hamrammr", though there is no major consensus.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Another example of "hamrammr" comes from the Saga of Hrólf Kraki. One tale within tells the story of Bödvar Bjarki, a berserker who is able to shapeshift into a bear and uses this ability to fight for king Hrólfr Kraki. "Men saw that a great bear went before King Hrolf's men, keeping always near the king. He slew more men with his fore paws than any five of the king's champions."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Ulfheðnar – wolf warriorsTemplate:AnchorEdit
Wolf warriors appear among the legends of the Indo-Europeans, Turks, Mongols, and Native American cultures.Template:Sfn The Germanic wolf-warriors have left their trace through shields and standards that were captured by the Romans and displayed in the armilustrium in Rome.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Frenzy warriors wearing the skins of wolves called ulfheðnar ("wolf-skin-ers" or possibly "wolf-heathens"; singular ulfheðinn), are mentioned in the Vatnsdæla saga, the Haraldskvæði and the Grettis saga and are consistently referred to in the sagas as a group of berserkers, always presented as the elite following of the first Norwegian king Harald Fairhair. They were said to wear the pelt of a wolf over their chainmail when they entered battle. Unlike berserkers, direct references to ulfheðnar are scant.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn
Egil's Saga features a man called Kveldulf (Evening-Wolf) who is said to have transformed into a wolf at night. This Kveldulf is described as a berserker, as opposed to an ulfheðinn.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Ulfheðnar are sometimes described as Odin's special warriors: "[Odin's] men went without their mailcoats and were mad as hounds or wolves, bit their shields...they slew men, but neither fire nor iron had effect upon them. This is called 'going berserk'."<ref name="Davidson">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Rp
The helm-plate press from Torslunda depicts a scene of a one-eyed warrior with bird-horned helm, assumed to be Odin, next to a wolf-headed warrior armed with a spear and sword as distinguishing features, assumed to be a berserker with a wolf pelt: "a wolf-skinned warrior with the apparently one-eyed dancer in the bird-horned helm, which is generally interpreted as showing a scene indicative of a relationship between berserkgang ... and the god Odin".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn
"Jǫfurr" – proposed boar warriorsTemplate:AnchorEdit
In Norse poetry, the word jǫfurr, which originally meant "wild boar", is used metaphorically for "a prince, monarch or warrior", which probably stems from the custom of wearing boar's heads as helmets or boar crested helmets in battle.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Swine played a central role in Germanic paganism, featuring in both mythology and religious practice, particularly in association with the Vanir, Freyr and Freyja. It has been proposed that similar to berserkers, warriors could ritually transform into boars so as to gain strength, bravery and protection in battle. It has been theorised that this process was linked to the wearing of boar helmets as a ritual costume.<ref name=beck1965>Beck, H. 1965 Das Ebersignum im Germanischen. Ein Beitrag zur germanischen TierSymbolik. Berlin: W. de Gruyter.</ref><ref name="Kovářová">Template:Cite journal</ref>
AttestationsEdit
Berserkers appear prominently in a multitude of other sagas and poems. Many earlier sagas portrayed berserkers as bodyguards, elite soldiers, and champions of kings.<ref name=":1" /> This image would change as time passed and sagas would begin to describe berserkers as boasters rather than heroes, and as ravenous men who loot, plunder, and kill indiscriminately.Template:Sfn<ref name=":1" /> Within the sagas, Berserkers can be narrowed down to four different types. The King's Berserkr, the Hall-Challenging Berserkr, the Hólmgangumaðr, and the Viking Berserkr.<ref name=":1" /> Later, by Christian interpreters, the berserker was viewed as a "heathen devil".<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The earliest surviving reference to the term "berserker" is in Haraldskvæði, a skaldic poem composed by Thórbiörn Hornklofi in the late 9th century in honor of King Harald Fairhair, as ulfheðnar ("men clad in wolf skins"). This translation from the Haraldskvæði saga describes Harald's berserkers:<ref name=page1995/>
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<poem>I'll ask of the berserks, you tasters of blood,
Those intrepid heroes, how are they treated, Those who wade out into battle? Wolf-skinned they are called. In battle They bear bloody shields. Red with blood are their spears when they come to fight. They form a closed group. The prince in his wisdom puts trust in such men Who hack through enemy shields.</poem>{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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The "tasters of blood" (a kenning) in this passage are thought to be ravens, which feasted on the slain.<ref name=page1995/>
The Icelandic historian and poet Snorri Sturluson (1179–1241) wrote the following description of berserkers in his Ynglinga saga:
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His (Odin's) men rushed forwards without armour, were as mad as dogs or wolves, bit their shields, and were strong as bears or wild oxen, and killed people at a blow, but neither fire nor iron told upon them. This was called Berserkergang.<ref>Laing, Samuel (1889). The Heimskringla or the Sagas of the Norse Kings. London: John. C. Nimo. p. 276</ref>{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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King Harald Fairhair's use of berserkers as "shock troops" broadened his sphere of influence. Template:Citation needed Other Scandinavian kings used berserkers as part of their army of hirdmen and sometimes ranked them as equivalent to a royal bodyguard.<ref name=":1">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It may be that some of those warriors only adopted the organization or rituals of berserk Männerbünde, or used the name as a deterrent or claim of their ferocity.
Emphasis has been placed on the frenzied nature of the berserkers, hence the modern sense of the word "berserk". However, the sources describe several other characteristics that have been ignored or neglected by modern commentators. Snorri's assertion that "neither fire nor iron told upon them" is reiterated time after time. The sources frequently state that neither edged weapons nor fire affected the berserks, although they were not immune to clubs or other blunt instruments. For example:
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These men asked Halfdan to attack Hardbeen and his champions man by man; and he not only promised to fight, but assured himself the victory with most confident words. When Hardbeen heard this, a demoniacal frenzy suddenly took him; he furiously bit and devoured the edges of his shield; he kept gulping down fiery coals; he snatched live embers in his mouth and let them pass down into his entrails; he rushed through the perils of crackling fires; and at last, when he had raved through every sort of madness, he turned his sword with raging hand against the hearts of six of his champions. It is doubtful whether this madness came from thirst for battle or natural ferocity. Then with the remaining band of his champions he attacked Halfdan, who crushed him with a hammer of wondrous size, so that he lost both victory and life; paying the penalty both to Halfdan, whom he had challenged, and to the kings whose offspring he had violently ravished...<ref>Elton, Oliver (1905) The Nine Books of the Danish History of Saxo Grammaticus. New York: Norroena Society. See Medieval and Classical Literature Library Release #28a Template:Webarchive for full text.</ref>{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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Similarly, Hrolf Kraki's champions refuse to retreat "from fire or iron". Another frequent motif refers to berserkers blunting their enemy's blades with spells or a glance from their evil eyes. This appears as early as Beowulf where it is a characteristic attributed to Grendel. Both the fire eating and the immunity to edged weapons are reminiscent of tricks popularly ascribed to fakirs. In 1015, Jarl Eiríkr Hákonarson of Norway outlawed berserkers. Grágás, the medieval Icelandic law code, sentenced berserker warriors to outlawry. By the 12th century, organised berserker war-bands had disappeared.
Template:Multiple image The Lewis Chessmen, found on the Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland, and thought to be of Norse manufacture, include berserkers depicted biting their shields.
TheoriesEdit
Scholar Hilda Ellis-Davidson draws a parallel between berserkers and the mention by the Byzantine emperor Constantine VII (CE 905–959) in his book De cerimoniis aulae byzantinae ("Book of Ceremonies of the Byzantine court") of a "Gothic Dance" performed by members of his Varangian Guard, Norse warriors in the service of the Byzantine Empire, who took part wearing animal skins and masks: she believes this may have been connected with berserker rites.<ref name=DAVIDSON>Ellis-Davidson, Hilda R. (1967) Pagan Scandinavia, p. 100. Frederick A. Praeger Publishers ASIN B0000CNQ6I</ref>
The rage the berserker experienced was referred to as berserkergang ('berserk fit/frenzy' or 'berserk movement'). This condition has been described as follows:
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Some scholars propose that certain examples of berserker rage had been induced voluntarily by the consumption of drugs such as hallucinogenic mushrooms,<ref name=Fabing /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> massive amounts of alcohol,<ref>Wernick, Robert (1979) The Vikings. Alexandria VA: Time-Life Books. p. 285</ref> or a mixture only known as 'butotens.'<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> This is much debated<ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref> but the theory is further supported by the discovery of seeds belonging to black henbane (Hyoscyamus niger) in a Viking grave that was unearthed near Fyrkat, Denmark in 1977.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> An analysis of the symptoms caused by Hyoscyamus niger revealed that they are also similar to the symptoms ascribed to the berserker state, which suggest it may have been used to generate their warlike mood.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Other explanations for the berserker's madness that have been put forward include self-induced hysteria, epilepsy, or mental illness, among other causes.<ref>Foote, Peter G. and Wilson, David M. (1970) The Viking Achievement. London: Sidgewick & Jackson. p. 285.</ref>
One theory of the berserkers suggests that the physical manifestations of the berserker alongside their rage was a form of self-induced hysteria. Initiated before battle through a ritualistic performance meant for effect, which included actions such as shield-biting and animalistic howling.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Jonathan Shay makes an explicit connection between the berserker rage of soldiers and the hyperarousal of posttraumatic stress disorder.<ref>Shay, J. (2000). "Killing rage: physis or nomos—or both" pp. 31–56 in War and Violence in Ancient Greece. Duckworth and the Classical Press of Wales. Template:ISBN</ref> In Achilles in Vietnam, he writes:
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If a soldier survives the berserk state, it imparts emotional deadness and vulnerability to explosive rage to his psychology and permanent hyperarousal to his physiology — hallmarks of post-traumatic stress disorder in combat veterans. My clinical experience with Vietnam combat veterans prompts me to place the berserk state at the heart of their most severe psychological and psychophysiological injuries.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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It has been suggested that the berserkers' behavior inspired the legend of the werewolf.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
In popular cultureEdit
- J. R. R. Tolkien draws heavily on Norse mythology in his Middle Earth tales, including The Hobbit. There, the berserker Beorn can transfigure into a massive bear, dangerous to both friend and foe.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- In The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt, berserkers appear as humans that have transformed into bears.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- In Assassin's Creed Valhalla, berserkers are mentioned throughout the game and the pre-order bonus quest "The Way of the Berserker" is centered around a berserker named Bjorn.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- A "berserker" class appears in Path of Exile.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Gears of War features an enemy known as the Locust. Within the Locust caste are drones, with the females named berserkers.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Primary source inline
- Thor Odinson has been depicted with a berserker rage like state called "Warrior's Madness" which enhances his strength, speed, durability and stamina for months though Thor has very little control in this state. A 'Berserker staff' is featured in the Marvel TV show Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- Template:AnchorFalling Skies is a science fiction series produced by Steven Spielberg where a post-massacre remnant society of humans offers armed resistance to an alien invasion. A small faction of mercenary fighters within the human cohort that is at the center of the series' action is known as The Berzerkers.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- In the 2022 film The Northman, the main character Amleth (Alexander Skarsgård) is raised as part of a group of berserkers. A berserker ritual is also featured in the film.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Speculative recreations galleryEdit
- Ulfhednar.jpg
Speculative úlfheðinn (wolf warrior).
- Sorcerers-1905.jpg
Sorcerers by Nicholas K. Roerich, which depicts ulfheðnar performing a ritual.
- MPS Hohenwestedt 27.jpg
Speculative ceremonial dress by a modern berserker reenactor.
See alsoEdit
- Barbarian
- Kóryos, theoretical Proto-Indo-European brotherhood of warriors, wearing animal skins to assume the nature of wolves or dogs
- Furor Teutonicus
ReferencesEdit
BibliographyEdit
- Template:Cite book
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- Merkelbach, Rebecca. 2018. Eigi í mannligu eðli: Shape, Monstrosity and Berserkism in the Sagas of Icelanders. Shapeshifters in Medieval North Atlantic Literature, Santiago Francisco Barreiro and Luciana Mabel Cordo Russo, eds., 83–106. Amsterdam University Press.
External linksEdit
Template:Sister project Template:Sister project
- Vandle helmet with bronze plates depicting wild Boar warriors, the Svinfylking 8th Century CE. Valsgarde, Sweden
- Berserkene – hva gikk det av dem? (Jon Geir Høyersten: Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association)
- Berserkergang (Viking Answer Lady)
- Template:Cite EB1911
- Berserkers-wolf-people
Template:Viking Template:Germanic peoples Template:Authority control