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Viking Age Nordic Religions: Exploring Ancient Beliefs in the Middle Ages - Perfect for History Buffs & Medieval Studies
$20.08
$26.78
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Viking Age Nordic Religions: Exploring Ancient Beliefs in the Middle Ages - Perfect for History Buffs & Medieval Studies
Viking Age Nordic Religions: Exploring Ancient Beliefs in the Middle Ages - Perfect for History Buffs & Medieval Studies
Viking Age Nordic Religions: Exploring Ancient Beliefs in the Middle Ages - Perfect for History Buffs & Medieval Studies
$20.08
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Description
The popular image of the Viking as a horn-helmeted berserker plying the ocean in a dragon-headed long boat is firmly fixed in history. Imagining Viking "conquerors" as much more numerous, technologically superior, and somehow inherently more warlike than their neighbors has overshadowed the cooperation and cultural exchange which characterized much of the Viking Age. In actuality, the Norse explorers and traders were players in a complex exchange of technology, customs, and religious beliefs between the ancient pre-Christian societies of northern Europe and the Christian-dominated nations surrounding the Mediterranean.DuBois examines Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, and Mediterranean traditions to locate significant Nordic parallels in conceptions of supernatural beings, cults of the dead, beliefs in ghosts, and magical practices. These beliefs were actively held alongside Christianity for many years, and were finally incorporated into the vernacular religious practice. The Icelandic sagas reflect this complex process in their inclusion of both Christian and pagan details.This work differs from previous examinations in its inclusion of the Christian thirteenth century as part of the evolution of Nordic religions from localized pagan cults to adherents of a larger Roman faith.Thomas DuBois unravels for the first time the history of the Nordic religions in the Viking Age and shows how these ancient beliefs and their oral traditions incorporated both a myriad of local beliefs and aspects of foreign religions, most notably Christianity.
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5
The book is a fresh perspective on early medieval religions in northern Europe, and the author made good use of a wide range of data. A small criticism is that he misuses "Nordic". More important criticism are that the book gives a large amount of information, the analysis is logical throughout, but the case of mutual influence of Northern European cultures is not so convincing in the latter half or third of the book, where Mr. DuBois tries to convince us that seith and Sami shamanism have a lot in common. The argument is very informative even where I see the opposite implication in the data. The book is written as a corrective to the common tendency to analyze data on early medieval northern European religions as if they were all "pure" and isolated. In fact, it is interesting that people would (by conscious will) maintain very distinct ethnic identities with as much intercultural contact as this book shows -- but that is a topic for another study.

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