The Scotsman

New research finds Viking women had higher status in Scotland

More Norse females were given high-status burials north of the Border than elsewhere in the UK and Ireland, finds Alison Campsie

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Viking women may have enjoyed a higher status in Scotland than in other countries colonised by the Norse seafarers, new research has found. More Viking women were seemingly afforded high-status burials in Scotland when compared to other settlement­s in Britain and Ireland. Also, proportion­ately more women were laid to rest with grave goods, or burial objects, in Viking Scotland, indicating that they had played a more “significan­t role” in society than first thought. The ritual furnishing­s were at least as common in Scotland as in Norway – and perhaps even more prevalent, according to Dr Stephen Harrison, an expert in Viking graves at Glasgow University. The findings “potentiall­y” indicate that Viking women enjoyed leadership roles in Scotland, which was settled in parts by the Vikings between the 8th and 15th centuries, he added. Dr Harrison said: “In the past it has been seen that males are buried with the objects where they have acquired through their raiding or trading and women have been buried with objects given to them by their men folk. “Looking at Scottish burials, I have been exploring this idea that women had a far more significan­t role in early Viking settlement­s that we have previously thought.” Dr Harrison’s research looked at around 140 Viking graves which contain burial objects in two main areas of Scotland. These span Caithness, Orkney and Shetland in the north and in the Hebrides to the west. Males were typically buried with weapons and smithing tools while women were often laid to rest with oval brooches – which they wore in pairs on their shoulders – and tools relating to textile weaving and cloth making. Around 100 graves in Scotland contain at least one of these “gendered” objects. About 60 of these are male graves, and 40 female. Dr Harrison said: “If you were a man, you were much more likely to be buried with grave goods. “But in Scotland, the proportion of women with grave goods was much higher. “It’s difficult to get exact figures for Norway, but the evidence suggests that the proportion of women’s furnished graves in Scotland was at least as high as Norway, and may have been higher.” Viking graves are associated with higher-status members of the settlement, it is now believed, with others buried without grave goods. For every three male graves in Scotland there are two female ones, Dr Harrison said. This represents a far higher proportion than the Isle of Man, for example, where there are 25 male graves for one female grave. Dr Harrison said there were a number of sites in Scotland where the woman’s grave was the most “extensivel­y furnished”. Sometimes, there is only one grave – and it belongs to a woman, he added. Dr Harrison said: “These cases would suggest that, in Scotland, for some reason, a woman’s grave can be seen as particular­ly significan­t. “We have to be realistic. All of the sources tell us that Viking society was patriarcha­l but we do know that, in certain circumstan­ces, that women have power and inherit power.” Major finds of Viking graves in Scotland were recorded at Scar, Orkney where a man, elderly woman and

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 ??  ?? 0 Clockwise from main: Grave goods found at Ballinaby, Islay; Whalebone plaque found in Scar, Orkney; Oval brooches found on Lewis. Pictures: National Museums of Scotland
0 Clockwise from main: Grave goods found at Ballinaby, Islay; Whalebone plaque found in Scar, Orkney; Oval brooches found on Lewis. Pictures: National Museums of Scotland

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