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Viking and medieval amulets in

Seandinavia
By Signe Horn Fuglesang

Fuglesang, S. H, 1989. Viking and medieval amulets in Seandinavia. Fornvännen


84, Stockholm.

Identification of Viking period and medieval amulets entails problems of source


criticism: the literary sources on medicine, leechcraft etc. are all late and depend
on West-European prototypes, and to distinguish between amulets, ornaments
and cult objects is difficult. Many types of amulets have been postulated for the
Viking period and the Middle Ages, but the theories sometimes seem exagger-
ated.

Signe Horn Fuglesang, Universitetet i Oslo, Inst. for kunsthislork og klassisk arkeobgi,
Postboks 1019 Blindem, Oslo 3, Norway.

The identification of Viking and medieval ments or cult objects on the other. In the Viking
amulets from Seandinavia entails several prob- period, miniatures of tools and weapons of sil-
lems of source criticism. For instance, poten- ver or bronze were frequently worn on a neck-
tially relevant plant and animal remains in the lace (Fig. 1.) They can easily have been orna-
archaeological material may have dissolved or ments. The interpretation of them as amulets
been overlooked, and consequently what sur- rests partly on the simultaneous occurrence of
vives may not be representative. All texts on identical models in iron (Arrhenius, 1961) part-
medicine and leechcraft are late (the earliest is ly on the interpretation of similar, earlier ob-
from the 13th century) and depend on West- jects from graves in England and on the Conti-
European prototypes (Sorensen, 1966). They nent (Meaney, 1981). The suggested association
may reflect contemporary Scandinavian practi- of some of these models with particular pagan
ces, but their value for our understanding of gods raises further questions. Apart from
earlier customs remains doubtful unless con- T h o r ' s hammer, which seems certain, none of
firmed by archaeological finds. In fact, all them is an obvious attribute and their identifi-
Scandinavian texts concerning amulets are late cation with Odin, Thor and Freyr rests mainly
and projecting their information backwards in on inference. Finally, it is noteworthy that none
time can easily result in a circular argument. of the Scandinavian Viking amulets depicts
For example, attention may be drawn to the animals of the species wich låter sour-
discrepancy between literature and actual re- ces associate with the pagan gods, e.g. T h o r ' s
mains in the case of runic inscriptions on goats, Odin's rävens or Freyr's boar.
weapons. The Sigrdnfumdl, written in the 13th Minbture objects are normally of metal; most of
century, contains a famous passage on how to them are miniatures of tools and weapons
incise " r u n e s of victory" on weapons. In actual which have a fairly long European tradition
fact only 20 of the 5.000 or so weapons sur- (Fig. 1) (Arrhenius, 1961; Näsman, 1972-73;
viving from the Viking and Medieval periods Schwarz-Mackensen, 1978; Meaney, 1981;
bear runic inscriptions, and none of them has Duczko, 1986). T h e miniatures of weapons
a magical content (Diiwel, 1981, esp. pp. 163- from the dwellings at Eketorp, Öland, probably
167). date from the 6th-7th century and conform to
It is also notoriously difficult to draw the line contemporaneous West-European types of mo-
between amulets on the one hand and orna- dels (Näsman, 1972-73). T h e Viking minia-

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OoÖ
Fig. 1. Pendant miniatures of bronze: horse, sword, spear, chair, from Sweden; provenance unknown.
Museum of National Antiquities, Stockholm. (Photo ATA, Stockholm. Drawing from Arrhenius 1961.)
— Miniatyrer av bronse: hest, sverd, spyd og stol fra Sverige, ukjent funsted.

tures which have been found tn situ in graves (ind. Bornholm). They date from the mid-
seem normally to have been suspended from a Viking period (c. 875/900-950/975), and have
necklace rather than a chatdaine. This facili- (been connected with the cult of Odin (Arrhe-
tates their distinction from toilet implements, nius, 1961, esp. p. 157; Drescher and Hauck,
but raises the possibility of their being orna- 1982, esp. pp. 289, 294 f).
ments. For instance, the Viking sieve spoon Pendant capsules of silver occur sporadically in
normally lacks a handle, and its position on a mid- and late-Viking contexts (Stenberger,
necklace suggests that its function was amuletic 1958, pp. 181-185; Duczko, 1978-79 and
or ornamental rather than practical. (Duczko 1985, pp. 61-66). They presumably contained
1985, pp. 47 f; Meaney 1981, p. 152. For a prac- fragrant herbs, and one from Birka grave 552
tical function of those on chatdaines see Gräs- has a runic inscription indicating that it was
lund, 1978-79, esp. p. 299.) Circular shield- used aginst vermin (Duczko, 1985).
shaped pendants of bronze or silver are found Votive rings are a group of amulets peculiar to
on necklaces from the lOth century. Since they East-Scandinavia, esp. to Uppland, Söderman-
are not usually associated with other miniature land and Västmanland in Sweden (Fig 2;
weapons, they may have been regarded as orna- Ström, 1974 and 1984). They are large rings
ments although their form and decoration coin- (diameter about 15 cm) made from an iron rod
cide strikingly with early Anglo-Saxon exam- with twisted locks of different types. When
ples (e.g. Arbman, 1940, Pl. 97:1-20; Duczko, found complete, they have suspended ham-
1985, p. 50; Meaney, 1981, Fig. V:o). In addi- mer-, spatula- and L-shaped miniatures, oc-
tion to those from Western Europé, Scandina- casionally with additional rings and spirals.
vian Viking miniatures include spade-like Ninety-five per cent of the approximately 450
objects, scythes, strike-a-lights and staffs (Arr- " T h o r ' s r i n g s " of this type come from the Mä-
henius, 1961). Their precise symbolic conno- lar region, and most of them date from the 9th
tations are unknown, although Odin, Thor and century. They could be worn around the neck,
the fertility god Freyr have been mentioned in as shown by some of the inhumation graves
this connection (Arrhenius, 1961; Andersen, at Birka, but since the overwhelming majori-
1971). Miniature chairs are apparently peculiar ty of such rings come from cremation graves
to Seandinavia. So far, 13 examples are known their use in the world of the living remains con-
from Sweden (ind. Gotland) and Denmark jectural. T h e association of such rings with the

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Viking and medieval amulets 17

Fig. 2. Votive ring from


Birka, grave 985, Uppland,
Sweden. Viking period.
Museum of National Anti-
quities, Stockholm. (Photo
ATA, Stockholm.) — Votiv-
ring fra Birka, grav 985.
Vikingtid.

cult of Thor seems reasonable, and their regio-


nal distribution is striking. But it should not
be overlooked that they bear a marked resem-
blance to small rings with miniatures of both
iron and other metals found in other areas of
Seandinavia (e.g. Arrhenius, 1961; Andersen,
1971; Muller-Wille, 1976).
Mimature hammers occur in pre-Viking times
both in Seandinavia and in England (Fig 3;
Schwarz-Mackensen, 1978, p. 85 with refs.;
Meaney, 1981, p. 151). But their number in-
creased markedly in Viking-Age Seandinavia.
T h e material is iron, bronze, occasionally
amber, and — from the lOth century onwards
— silver. They are predominantly, though not
exclusively, found in women's graves, while
most of the silver examples come from hoards of
the late lOth and the llth century (Stenberger,
1958, esp. pp. 167-171; Ström, 1984, esp. p.
136). T h e hammer-shaped pendant is normally
interpreted as the symbol of the god Thor, an
interpretation based on contemporaneous

Fig. 3. Pendant hammer of silver from Birka, grave


750. lOth century. Museum of National Antiquities,
Stockholm. (Photo ATA, Stockholm.) — Miniatyr-
hammer av solv fra Birka, grav 750. 900-tallet.

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18 S. Horn Fuglesang

Fig. 4. Casting mould of soapstone from Trendgår-


den, Jutland, Denmark. Danish National Museum,
Copenhagen. (Photo Danish National Museum,
Copenhagen.) — En stopeform av klebersten fra
Trendgården, Jylland.

iconography and on låter but fairly reliable lite-


rary evidence. Its amuletic significance is taken
to be generally prophylactic. The proliferation
of silver hammers in the lOth and llth centuries Fig. 5. Pendant cross of silver from Birka, grave 480.
has occasionally been interpreted as a pagan lOth century. Museum of National Antiquities,
riposte to the Christian pendant cross with be- Stockholm. (Photo ATA, Stockholm.) — Hengekors
came current in the same period. The casting av solv fra Birka, grav 480. 900-tallet.
mould from Trendgården, Jutland, demonstra-
tes that cross and hammer were manufaclured
simultaneously (Fig. 4). anity (Gräslund, 1984, pp. 115-118). Normally,
Cross pendants have been found in all parts of1 neither hammers nor crosses found in hoards
Seandinavia (Fig. 5). Some, particularly bronze are hacked (Stenberger, 1958, pp. 168, 176).
crosses, are found in graves, but most of the sur- As mentioned, animals associated with speci-
viving piéces are of silver and have been recove- fic gods do not occur among the amulet minia-
red from hoards (Stenberger, 1958, pp. 171- tures. T h e bosses on some types of lOth century
181; Muller-Wille, 1976, pp. 37 f; Gräslund, brooches are occasionally shaped like semi-
1984 with refs.). Crosses in graves are at times naturalistic goats which may have had an amu-
associated with other types of amulet pendants, letic function through the animaFs association
in Birka grave 968, for instance, with a minia- with T h o r (Roesdahl, 1982, p. 162). However,
ture chair which is usually interpreted as a sym- other animal types used for bosses are without
bol of Odin, the figure of a small woman, pos- deistic connotations. O n the other hand, a
sibly a pagan "valkyrie", and a shidd-shaped small bronze frog crouching behind what has
pendant (Gräslund, 1984, p. 115). Another been interpreted as female genitals is clearly
grave contained both a cross and a T h o r ' s ham- amuletic (Fig. 6; Bröndsted, 1942). It was found
mer (Birka grave 750; Gräslund, 1984, esp. p. in a woman's grave in Jutland, Denmark.
118). Similarly, a grave in Taskula, Finland, had Figure representations, induding bracteates
a pendant cross and a miniature axe (Kivikoski, which may have been worn as amulets (Hauck,
1965, p. 32). Such combinations of pagan and 1985, vol. 1:1), are of more interest for the histo-
Christian amulets correspond to the occur- ry of religion. But two groups should be men-
rence of cross pendants in graves showing tioned. O n e is peculiar to Seandinavia, namely
pagan ritual, and probably reflect individual the small gold plaques with repoussé render-
vagaries in the period of transition to Christi- ings of a man, a woman or a couple. There

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Vikinp and medieval amulets 19

Fig. 6. Grave amulet of bronze: frog or töad crouching behind female genitals (?), from Sonderteglgård,
Jutland, Denmark. Viking period, probably lOth century. Danish National Museum, Copenhagen.
(Photo Danish National Museum, Copenhagen.) — Gravamulett av bronse: frosk sammenkropet bak en
vulva (?). Vikingtid, sannsynligvis 900-tallet.

seems to be both a regional and a chronological strengthens the theory that the gold plaques
distinction between the iconographies: a man served as votive gifts (Watt, 1987). The other
and woman rendered on separate sheets appear group is, in contrast, found only singly and
to be pre-Viking and mainly South-east Scandi- rardy, and consists of small bronze or bone sta-
navian (Fig. 7), while the couple is of Viking tuejttes of sitting men. Those that can be dated
date and has a pan-Scandinavian distribution are from the llth century. The ithyphallic figure
(Fig. 8; Stenberger, 1973). Although the identi- from Rällinge, Sweden, is sometimes taken to
fication of the figures with specific gods is un- be a model of the fertility god Freyr which
certain, the facing and sometimes embracing Adam of Bremen mentions as one of the cult
pair is probably a fertility symbol (Norden, statues in the Temple of Uppsala, while other
1938; Blindheim, 1959; Holmqvist, 1958; Li- statuettes of bearded men are interpreted va-
den, 1969). The piéces have no sign of fasten- riously as Thor or Odin (e.g. Drescher and
ing, and their diminutive size and fragility Hauck, 1982). They are sometimes taken to be
argue against a practical or ornamental func- amulets, on the strength of two saga texts of
tion. The earliest are pre-Viking (Stenberger, the 13th century which mention 9th- and lOth-
1973) and they seem to have continued through century worship of Freyr and Thor respectivdy
most of the Viking period. Some have been ( Vatnsdab saga, ch. 10 and Hallfredar saga, ch. 6;
found singly, but surprisingly often they occur cf. Turville-Petre, 1964, p. 248). There is little
together in large numbers, e.g. 26 at H d g ö , foundation for such theories, however, and the
Sweden, 19 at Maere, Norway (Gustafson, function of the statuettes remains uncertain.
1899; Holmqvist, 1958, Liden, 1969). T h e Those of bone may have been gaming piéces
latest, exciting discovery of hundreds of such (Roesdahl, 1982, p. 163).
piéces in one locality on the Island of Bornholm Beads have at times been interpreted as pos-

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^ Sf r\ ^ \ ^
Fig. 7. Plaques of gold from Eketorp, Öland, Sweden. Migration period. Museum of National Antiquities,
Stockholm. (Photo ATA, Stockholm.) — "Gullgubber" fra Eketorp, Öland. Folkevandringstid.

sible amulets, with special emphasis on those ger, 1958, pp. 222 f.). Rock crystal seems to have
made of jet, amber and rock crystal (Meaney, been used mainly for ornamental beads, several
1981). There are some Viking finds which occurring together with other types of beads on
might support this view. For instance, jet beads necklaces. Pendants of rock crystal are very
recorded from Norwegian graves seem to oc- rare, and have been found mainly on Gotland
cur singly (Petersen, 1940, pp. 207 f), and in a and in Finland (Stenberger, 1958, pp. 200-
woman's grave at Sunnmöre, Norway, a jet 203). Most of them date from the second half of
bead was associated with a snake of jet, a the llth century. The most impressive example,
woman-shaped bead of amber, and 66 glass the necklace from Lilla Rone, Gotland, con-
beads (Blindheim, 1958-59, p. 82). In Sweden, tains 14 crystal balls set in silver filigree and is
amber is frequently the material when a bead is clearly a very valuable ornament. Since rock-
found singly in a grave, and even on large neck- crystal pendants are r a r d y found singly and
laces there are examples of amber being used were apparently imported över a short period
for only one bead (Gräslund, 1972-73, pp. 173 only, they seem — like the beads — to have been
f). Against this must be held the great number ornaments rather than amulets. Pendants made
of finds where amber beads are clearly orna- from other imported precious and semi-pre-
mental, however. Moreover the indusion ofall cious stones, e.g. an amethyst found at Hedeby
types of beads in jewellery hoards indicates a (Arrhenius, 1978), may have been attributed
pecuniary rather than amuletic value (Stenber- with magic power, but such interpretations rest

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Viking and medieval amulets 21

Fig. 8. Plaques of gold from Hauge, Rogaland, Norway. Viking period, probably lOth century. Historisk
Museum, Bergen. (Photo Historisk Museum, Bergen.) — "Gullgubber" fra Hauge, Rogaland. Vikingtid,
sannsynligvis 900-tallet.

on the European lapidaries and not on the stance, a couple of men's graves contained a
circumstances of the Scandinavian finds. piece of amber together with a coin, a bead or
In addition to being used for beads, jet has such like in a purse (Gräslund, 1972-73, p.
been carved into finger- and arm-rings recov- 174). There are also some indications from Got-
ered from a few 9th century graves along the land that amber could be used for grave amulets
Norwegian coast (Petersen, 1940; Shetelig, (Trotzig, 1983, Fig. 10). Some men's graves
1944). Apart from an arm ring found at Birka, yielded small axe- and adze-heads, some wo-
jet does not seem to be recorded in other Scan- men's squarish piéces with a groove (probably a
dinavian areas, and there is nothing to suggest vulva, cf. Bronsted, 1944; Meaney, 1981, Fig.
that the material was regarded as inherently VLww). They were lying at the feet of the de-
amuletic. Three animal-shaped figures of jet ceased, and are consequently unlikely to have
and another three of amber, all likewise of the been worn. Some of them have been carved
9th century and from coastal Norway, are at from beads.
times interpreted as amulets (Shetelig, 1944). Charons obol is sporadically documented in
However, their very rarity and regional distri- Scandinavian graves from the Roman Iron Age
bution caution against this view. and the Migration period (Schetelig, 1907). A
Amber seems also to have been used mainly critical study shows that the best evidence for
for ornaments, but there is some evidence that the custom in the Viking period comes from
it could be used for amulets. At Birka, for in- eastern Sweden, while it seems to have been

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22 S. Horn Fuglesang

rare in Denmark and the evidence from Nor- amulets peculiar to Viking-Age Finland, while
way and Finland is incondusive (Gräslund, graves on the island of Äland from the 7th cen-
1965-1966; Skaarup, 1976, pp. 192 f; Muller- tury onwards often contain a clay miniature of
Wille, 1976, pp. 42 f). Graves of the 13th and an animaPs paw, a type of amulet which has
14th centuries have documented Charon's obol parallels in Russia (Kivikoski, 1965). The bear
from Sweden, Scania and Norway. In Swedish tooth miniature may have had a general apotro-
folklore, the custom can be followed again from paic function, while that of the a n i m a f s paw is
the 18th to the 20th century, and a continuity uncertain (Kivikoski, 1965). Evidence for
from the Middle Ages seems likely (Gräslund, herbs, animal parts and gems as amulets is on
1965-66). the whole mostly literary and from låter in the
A different category of grave amulet is the Middle Ages. King Magnus Eriksson (1316-
Stone-Age axe-heads which have at times been 1374), for instance, owned a " s t o n e " taken
found in medieval Danish and Swedish graves from a toad's head. It was bdieved to sweat in
(Moltke, 1938, pp. 144-147 with refs.; Alm- the vicinity of poison. Snake's tongues were
qvist, 1974). Many of them bear runic inscrip- charms against black magic and disease. In
tions, mostly unintelligible, and their amuletic 1272, King Magnus Lagaboter of Norway sent
function is probably similar to that of fossils and two snake's tongues to Bishop Ami on Iceland,
"snake stones" (Almqvist, 1974). and part of a snake's tongue is listed in the royal
Possible amulets of natural origin are r a r d y re- inventory at Bohus Castle in 1340. Sapphire
corded from Viking graves, but one at Ramme, was likewise bdieved to cure illness, as eviden-
Jutland, contained an echinite and two small ced by the inscription on a medieval finger ring
stones together with an amber ring and eight from Visby: " m y power works against the poi-
beads of glass and amber (Bröndsted, 1936, p. son of disease". T h e plants which seem to have
111), while a more definitdy amuletic purpose been amuletic, as opposed to medical, include
may be ascribed to the assemblage of owl garlic, grains of barley, Ckuta and Daphne (Bo,
pdlets, henbane seeds and fragmentary pig's Swartling and Kivikoski, 1956). T h e oldest
jaw found in a woman's grave at Fyrkat, Jut- Scandinavian law texts contain brief passages
land (Roesdahl, 1977, pp. 143, 150 and 1982, on sorcery, but the Icelandic Grågås seems to be
p. 162). An amulet bag occurs in Birka grave 97 alone in specifying an implement: a " s t o n e "
(Arbman, 1940, p. 64), and further amulet bags which in medieval Norse terminology could
with inter alb human hair and "snake stones" mean either mineral or animal origin for the
have occasionally come to light in Finnish magic piece (Steffensen, 1966-69, pp. 192-
graves of the Viking period (Kivikoski, 1965, 194).
p. 31). O n the other hand, fossils have been An apotropaic function of the allium species is
found spread över most of the town site at suggested by inter alb the runic bukaR inscrip-
Hedeby, and there is nothing to indicate that tions on some bracteates of the Migration
they were used as amulets. This evidence cau- period from Denmark (Baeksted, 1952, p. 126;
tions against general interpretations of fossils as Heizmann, 1986, with refs.). A magical func-
amulets in Viking Seandinavia (Metzger- tion of leek and/or onion would be intimatdy
Krahé, 1978), It is also uncertain whether the related to, and probably derived from, the
stones listed from Icelandic pagan graves can be plants' use in Classical and Medieval medicine
interpreted as amulets (Steffensen, 1966-69, (Heizmann, 1986). However, critical modem
pp. 192-194; Meaney, 1981, pp. 102 f.) Bear studies contradict interpretations of allium as
daws in Scandinavian graves come generally an ingredient in a phallic cult, since the only
from the pelts on which the deceased had been reference for such usage is the very late and
placed; only a very few examples from Sweden novdistic story of the völsa, a horse phallus, in-
can be shown to have served as amulets (Petré, cluded in the Flateyjar Book written in the late
1980). A bear tooth was found in a child's grave, 14th century (Heizmann, 1986; Klaus Diiwel,
Birka no. 890 (Gräslund, 1972-73, p. 170). Habilschrift, Universität Göttingen, unpub-
Bronze miniatures of bear teeth form a group of lished MS., esp. pp. 200-209, with refs.)

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Viking and medieval amulets 23

Rings can be interpreted as amuletic only by


association or inscription. No Scandinavian
amulet ring known so far seems to be earlier
than the 13th century (Moltke, 1938; Liestöl,
1980, pp. 68 f).
Runes were not inherently magical — first and
foremost they were the practical script of a pre-
parchment society. But they were also used to
write magical formulae, from the Migration
period into the late Middle Ages. T h e Scandi-
navian examples of runic amulets (as opposed
to magic inscriptions on inter alm runestones,
bracteates etc.) are sporadic. T h e earliest re-
covered so far is a copper sheet with what is
interpreted as an invocation against disease,
found on Gotland in a grave from c. A. U 700
(Gustavson and Brink, 1981). A few, similar in-
vocations on metal sheets come from Viking
graves in Sweden (Norden, 1943). But the great
number of runic amulets are post-Viking.
Many of the inscriptions are corrupt or pure
gibberish. But when they can be read, they nor-
mally use Christian formulae and invocations,
mostly in Latin (i. a. Pater Noster, Christus regnat,
the names of the evangdists or archangds, e t c ) .
Some of them include pan-European magical
phrases, frequently agb (for the Hebraic Allah
Gibbor Leobm Adonaj, i.e. " T h o u art strong in
eternity, L o r d " ) . The majority of amulets have Fig. 9. Runic amulet of lead sheet from Osen, Sogn
similarly generalized prophylactic inscriptions, og Fjordane, Norway. I3th century (?). Historisk
in some cases specifying the person to be pro- Museum, Bergen. (Photo Historisk Museum, Ber-
tected, notably on the lead sheets from Odense, gen.) — Runeamulett, blyblikk fra Osen, Sogn og
Fjordane. 1200-tallet (?). Hoyde ca. 6 cm.
Denmark and Boge, Gotland (Moltke, 1938,
pp. 120-122; Gustavson, 1984). But some in-
scriptions were directed against specific illness-
es, notably the invocation of the Seven Sleepers tion, e. g. the more than fifty wooden crosses
of Ephesus known from a lead sheet found at from the Norse graves at Herjolfsnes, Green-
Alvastra, Sweden, and a small piece of wood land (Nörlund, 1924). Others, such as the
from the wharf in Bergen, Norway. T h e Seven Odense sheet, were deposited in churchyard
Sleepers of Ephesus were assumed to protect soil or a grave, possibly to transfer illness from
against fever, particularly malaria (Gustavson, the living to the dead (Moltke, 1938 with refs.;
1984, p. 67; Moller-Christensen, 1959 with Gustavson, 1984). Some have come to light un-
refs; Liest»!, 1980, pp. 73-77.). Runic amulets der church floors, inserted between the planks,
occur normally as lead, sometimes copper, probably to protect the living (e. g. Liestöl,
sheets which have been folded or cut into the 1978; Olsen ed., 1940 ff, vol. 4, No. 348, pp.
shape of a cross (Fig. 9), but they were also 140-143). Others again have been found in
made as runic sticks or from bone. Their func- towns under circumstances which indicate that
tion varied. Some have been interred with the they had been accidentally löst and hence pre-
dead, presumably to protect them. Unin- sumably worn by their owners (e. g. Liestöl,
scribed crosses must have had the same func- 1980, No. 637, pp. 73-77, from Bergen; Gus-

turnftinnrn 84(1989)
24 S. Horn Fuglesang

t a v s o n a n d B r i n k , 1980, p p . 199-201 from Bo, O., Swartling, I. and Kivikoski, E. 1956. " A m u -
Stockholm). letter". Kulturhistoriskt lexikon för nordisk medeltid 1.
Drescher, H. and Hauck, K. 1982. Götterthrone des
Finally, a r u n i c lead cross from S u n n f j o r d , heidnischen Nordens. Fruhmiltelalterlkhe Studkn 16.
N o r w a y , m a y have b e e n p l a c e d u n d e r t h e floor Duczko, W. 1978-79. Vikingatida silversmycken i
of a d w e l l i n g , a g a i n p r e s u m a b l y for g e n e r a l Mora-skatten. Den ickemonetära delen av en ny-
p r o t e c t i o n ( K n u d s e n a n d D y v i k , 1980). upptäckt silverskatt från Dalarna. Tor 18.
— 1985. Thefiligree andgranulatkm work ojlhe Viking peri-
od. Birka V. Stockholm.
Conclusbn
Diiwel, K. 1981. Runeninschriften auf Waffen. Arbei-
T h e a b o v e s u r v e y suggests t h a t d e s p i t e c e r t a i n ten zur Frunmilteblterforschung 3. Wörler und Sachen
o v e r l a p s , t h e r e is a fairly clear d e m a r k a t i o n as im Lkhte der Bezekhnungsforschung. R. Schmidt-
r e g a r d s t h e u s e of a m u l e t s b e t w e e n t h e V i k i n g Wiegand ed. Berlin/New York.
Ejerfeldt, L. 1966. " M a g i " . Kulturhistoriskt lexukonför
p e r i o d a n d t h e late M i d d l e Ages. I n t h e V i k i n g
nordisk medeltid 11.
p e r i o d , t h e e m p h a s i s is o n m i n i a t u r e s w h i l e Gjerlow, L. 1957. "Blykors (ogblyplater)". Kulturhis-
a m u l e t s of n a t u r a l o r i g i n a n d r u n i c a m u l e t s a r e toriskt lexikon för nordisk medeltid 2.
relatively few a n d often of q u e s t i o n a b l e i n t e r - Gräslund, A.-S. 1965-66. Charonsmynt i vikingati-
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holm.

,»4(1»»»)
26 S. Horn Fuglesang

Sammandrag

Identifikasjonen av skandinaviske amuletter selshjelp?) er derimot en halvnaturalistisk frosk


byr på en rekke kildekritiske problem: i arkeolo- sammenkropet bak en vulva (?) (fig. 6).
gisk materiale kan organiske gjenstander vaere Figurfremstillinger er normalt ikke amuletiske.
formullet eller översett; alle teksterom medisin, " G u l l g u b b e n e " som er spesielle for Skandina-
magi etc. er sene (eldste: 1200-tallet) og bygget via, er sannsynligvis votivgaver (fig. 7, 8). Små
på europeiske forbilder; diktning kan vaere di- statuetter av bein eller bronse er tidvis tolket
rekte misvisende, som Sigrdrifumål om "seierru- som amuletter og kopier etter gudebilder. Det
n e r ' ' på vapen (c. 5 000 vapen bevart, 20 av dem er ingen bevis for slike teorier.
har runeinnskrifter, ingen innskrift kan tolkes Perkr, spesielt av rav, jet og bergkrystall, tol-
magisk, cf. Diiwel, 1981); skillet mellom amu- kes tidvis som amuletter og noen funn bestyrker
lett, kultobjekt og ornament er vanskelig å pre- dette synet. Men i långt de fleste funn er perle-
sisere; Tors hammer er det eneste gudeattributt ne smykker. Det samme gjelder sannsynligvis
som kan identiiiseres. henger av bergkrystall. Henger av andre im-
Minbtyrer av vapen, redskap o. lign. er identi- porterte halveddsteiner kan ha vasrt tillagt
fisert som amuletter dels p.g.a. overcnsstem- amulettfunksjon, men slik tolkning er basert på
m d s e r med europeiske paralleller, dels fordi de europeiske lapidariene, ikke de skandinavis-
smykkefunksjonen kan utdukkes siden det fö- ke funnomstendigheter.
rekommer eksemplarer også i jern (fig. 1). Charons mynt er sporadisk belagt i skandinavis-
Gjenstandsgruppene omfatter vapen, skjold, ke gräver. De fleste funn fra vikingtid er fra Sve-
spade, sigd, stav, ildstål, silskje, stol. Symbol- rige, fra 12- og 1300-tall også i Skåne og Norge.
funksjon er ukjent. Dateringene dekker mero- Steinalders ekser er funnet i noen svenske og
vingertid og vikingtid. danske gräver fra midddalder. Mange av dem
Votivringer av jern er spesielle forOstskandina- har ulesdig runeinnskrift, og amulettfunksjo-
via, 95 % av de bevarte c. 450 eksemplarene er nen tilsvarer sannsynligvis fossiler og "orm-
funnet i Mälarområdet (fig. 2). Når de er in- steiner".
takte, har de fleste påhengt hammer-, spatula- Naluramuletter er meget sjeldne i vikingtid,
og L-formete miniatyrer. Sammenheng med men det er ekscmpler i kvinnegraver på Jyl-
Torskult er sannsynlig. land, og "pjotreposer" er belagt i Birka og i
Minbtyrhamre kjennes for vikingtid i både Finland. Bjornekfor i gräver stämmer oftest fra
England og Skandinavia, men de fleste er fra fellen på likleiet, men et par ekscmpler fra Sve-
vikingtid (fig. 3). Materialet er jern, bronse, rige er sannsynlige amuletter. Bronseminiaty-
f.o.m. 900-tallet solv, i noen tilfelle rav. De fleste rer av bjornetenner er spesielle for Finland i vi-
av jern og bronse er funnet i kvinnegraver, solv- kingtid, mens gräver på Äland ofte har leirmi-
eksemplarene vesentlig i skattefunn nedlagt niatyr av en dyrepote. Bjornetannminiatyren
sent 900- og 1000-tall. Hammeren tolkes nor- kan ha vaert alment apotropaisk, dyrepotens
malt som Torssymbol, og amulettfunksjonen betydning er ukjent. Belegg for amuletter av ur-
som generell profylaktisk. Ökningen av solv- ter, d y r e d d e r og steiner er ievrig vesentlig litte-
hamre på 900- og 1000-tallet antas å vasre reak- raere og fra hoymidddalderen. Kong Magnus
sjon på bruk av kors (fig. 4). Eriksson (1316-1374) eiet en " s t e i n " fra et
Hengekors er funnet i alle deler av Skandinavia paddehode, den svettet når den kom naer gift.
(fig. 5). Noen, vesentlig av bronse, er funnet i Ormetunge vernet mot sykdom og svart magi;
gräver, de fleste av solv er fra skattefunn. Vän- kong Magnus Lagaboter sendte to av dem til
ligvis er hverken hamre eller kors i skattefunn biskop Ami på Island i 1272, o g e n e r nevnt i in-
hakket. ventariet fra Båhus i 1340. De eldste skandina-
Dyrefigurer er normalt ikke brukt som amulet- viske lover har korte bestemmdser om straff for
ter, og det er ikke bevart ekscmpler på guders trolldom, men bare Grågås spesifiserer et trylle-
attributdyr. En sannsynlig amulett (ved fod- middel, nemlig en "stein", som finnes brukt

Fornvännen »4 ( V I » ' »
Viking and medieval amulets 27

som term for amuletter av både mineralsk og grav på Gotland; innskriften er tolket som en
animalsk opprinndse. En apotropaisk funksjon formel mot sykdom. I Sverige er funnet noen få,
for allium er sannsynlig bl. a. utfra bukaR-mn- lignende stykker fra vikingtid. Men hoved-
skriften på danske gullbrakteater fra folkevand- mengden av runeamuletter er fra senere i mid-
ringstid; trolig er amulettfunksjonen avledet av delalderen. Mange av innskriftene er imitasjo-
plantens bruk i klassisk og middelaldersk medi- ner av runer. Men når de er lesdige, inneholder
sin. Derimot går möderne kritiske studier mot de normalt kristne formler og påkalldser, oftest
tolkninger av allium som ledd i en fallisk kult, på latin. De fleste innskriftene er alment profy-
siden det eneste belegget er den sene og fantasi- laktiske, men noen er rettet mot spesielle syk-
fulle historien om valsa i Fbteyjarbök. dommer, oftest feber. Runeamuletter er oftest
Runer var ikke i seg selv magiske, de var forst av blyblikk, tidvis av kopper, som er sammen-
og fremst en skrift til praktisk bruk. Men de ble foldet eller skåret til et kors (fig. 9), men rune-
også brukt til magiske formler, fra folkevand- pinner av tre eller bein förekommer også. Bru-
ringstid til sen midddalder. Ekscmpler på ru- ken varierte, og må tolkes utfra de enkelte funn-
neamuletter (i motsetning til magiske rune- omstendigheter: i grav, under kirkegulv, under
innskrifter) er sporadiske. Det eldste funnet til husgulv, i byhus.
nå er et kopperblikk fra ca. 700 e. Kr., fra en

Fornvannrn »4 ( I 'I»»)

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