Norse Mythology

Viking Life on the Ice: Skiing in the Viking Age

The Viking homelands are in the northern climes of Europe where ice and snow, not to mention freezing temperatures and food scarcity, are a fact of life for several months of the year.

Is it any wonder then that the innovative Vikings mastered the art of skiing ?

The Mythology of Ice

According to the Viking creation myth, in the beginning, there was a giant void called the Ginnungagap.

At the very top of the Ginnungagap described as in the south there was a realm of heat and fire called Muspelheim.

At the very bottom of the void described as in the north – there was a world of ice and mist called Niflheim.

Creation began when heat from Muspelheim and cold gases from Niflheim mixed in the void, forming the primordial goop from which all life came.

Life was then created, along a giant tree as a backbone called Yggdrasil.

Muspelheim was at the top of the tree and Niflheim at the bottom of the tree, and the other realms including Midgard, the world of men, Asgard, the realm of the Aesir gods, and Jotunheim, the realm of the giants were somewhere in the middle.

The Vikings probably believed that the cold that changed their landscape each year came up from Niflheim.

They probably also believed that Jotunheim was closer to Niflheim than their own realm because it is described as a cold, desolate, and often icy landscape.

Skadi

Skadi from “Asgard Stories: Tales of Norse Mythology” by Foster and Cummings, 1901.

They associated two gods with winter and snow.

The first was Skadi, the daughter of the giantess Thjazi.

She traveled to Asgard to get vengeance for the Aesir gods killing her father.

They agree to pay a price for his death, which included allowing her to marry one of the gods.

Much to her disappointment, she was matched with the god Njord, a deity of the sea and wind associated with trading.

The two tried to find a way to live together, spending time in their respective homes.

But Skadi could not stand the sound and spell of Njord’s seaside fishing village, and he could not stand her icy realm of snow and glaciers.

In the end, the two separated, but Skadi was still accepted among the Aesir gods.

She was even involved in the operation that saw Loki imprisoned for his role in the death of Balder.

When describing Skadi in his 13th-century Prose Edda, Snorri Sturluson says that she : “lived in a forbidding land of glaciers and snow peaks. She travels much on skis, carries a bow, and shoots wild animals. She is called Ski God or Sky Lady.”

This description is important because the Vikings did most of their hunting in the winter, and the coats of animals were thicker, richer, and more valuable in the colder months, plus they were easier to hunt due to food scarcity.

The description of her hunting on skis with bow and arrow probably reflects the Viking practice.

Rock painting of a skier shooting a bow from Alta in Finnmark in Norway, c. 1000-500 BCE.

Ullr

Nks 1867 Edda Opslag 92-93 HŒndskrift afdelingen Det kongelige Bibliotek.

Ullr is the other god of winter that Snorri Sturluson described in the Prose Edda as: “so skillful a bowman and skier that no one can compete with him… he is also a good person to pray to when in single combat.”

Ullr was the son of Sif, the wife of Thor, but was not Thor’s son.

Little else is known about him except that he was a god commonly associated with oaths.

This is perhaps because oaths between chiefs and warriors were often sworn at Yule, in the dead of winter.

Given his icy characteristics, it is possible that he is half-giant, like many of the Aesir gods, but the details of his parentage simply do not survive.

The Earliest Skis

Skiing scene rock wall painting from Zalavrouga in Russia.

Skiing seems to be an ancient art that developed independently in different icy regions of the world.

The very earliest archaeological evidence for skis comes from Russia and can be dates as far back as 6300 BCE.

When Europeans met the Inuit people of Canada, Alaska, and Greenland, they found that they also had independent knowledge of skiing.

Looking at Scandinavia, the word used by the Sami people, non-Viking peoples living in Finland, for “to ski”, “cuoigat”, can be dated on linguistic grounds to between 6,000-8,000 years ago, suggesting that they needed a term for the act very early in their history.

On the archaeological side, hundreds of skis and ski fragments have been found in peat bogs across Russia and Scandinavia.

The early Russian skis come from one such peat bog, and the earliest examples from Scandinavia, specifically Sweden, can be dated to 2700 BCE.

It is interesting that they were found in peat bogs. While it is possible that they were simple lost here as the composition of the area changed with the freezing and thawing of the bogs, the Vikings and the people occupied the region before them were also in the habit of placing objects in peat bogs as offerings to the gods.

Ski Designs

Drawing of skis found in a Swedish bog at Gosta Berg, c. 4500 years.

While ski designs vary across time and space, we can make a few generalizations about the kind of skis preferred by the Vikings.

The skis found across Scandinavia have been divided into different types, and Type C was the most common in the Viking Age.

Skis were made by hand from wood and had flat surfaces that reduced friction against the snow allowing for fast and silent movement.

This would have been essential to move between the animal traps set by Viking hunters in the winter months. Unlike examples from other parts of the world.

They were not covered in fur or hides.

They were usually about six feet long, tapered at the back, and curved at the front. They had a slightly convex underside, gradually coming to a point.

The footrest was raised and inset from the side edges and is slightly concave so that footwear such as moccasin would fit in.

There was a horizontal hole beneath the footrest for the toe strap.

The skis were also often decorated with braided patterns that were popular in Birka and in central and south Sweden in the Viking Age.

The historian Saxo Grammaticus described the Vikings as using skis for reconnaissance missions in the 13th century.

From this and other written sources, it seems likely that the Vikings used just one ski pole to propel themselves, probably to leave the other arm free for other activities.

What About Skating?

Modern recreation of a Viking skates.

The Vikings were accustomed to using their waterways as transport links.

It was much easier to sail a small boat down a waterway than try and move through dense forests or open wilderness.

This does not seem to have changed in the winter months, during which the Vikings would skate along the same waterways.

Skates have been found all over the Viking World from Dublin to Hedeby to Birka to York, where more than 40 sets of skates have been recovered.

Viking skates in York Museum.

They made skates from bones, most often horse bones but also cattle bones. Holes were bored through the bones and securely strapped in a figure 8 shape to Viking shoes.

They most likely used a pole to help control their movement along the ice.

Icey Adaptation

Drawing of Vikings skating from HISTORIA DE GENTIBVS SEPTENTRIONALIBVS “Description of the Northern Peoples” by Olaus Magnus (1555).

While we might think of skiing and winter sports as a modern invention, for the people living in colder climes where snow and ice were a fact of life, developing tools such as skis and skates was an essential adaptation.

The Vikings were known to be inventive, from the style of their ships to the construction of their hillforts.

It is no surprise that they invented skis that would look familiar to modern cross-country skiers.


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