By Sarah Dahl
Yule
When looking at the Viking pagan religion, we have to
go back at least 1000 years, which makes it dificult to exactly verify most
conclusions today’s researchers reach. What is clear about the Christian and
pagan religion, the Germanic and the Anglo-Saxon as well as the Norse
traditions is: they had very similar, if not the same, roots and stem from
times we have very little sources about. Some claim that a common root turned
into several different customs, and what we today (in the western, Christian
countries) celebrate is remnants stemming from the early medieval and even
earlier times. After all, Santa Claus is just the Allfather Odin disguised with
a silly red hat (Odin meaning “Jólnir”, “the Yule One”), and New Year’s
Resolutions are just a diminished form of the Yule Oath a Viking would have
sworn on his horn of ale.
We are talking about the ancient Scandinavian
festivities that are called Jól in Iceland; Jul in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark;
and Yule in some English-speaking societies.
A Christian King merges the dates
Let me start by sorting what we do know, but which
also is down to interpretation of sources (and other researchers have drawn
different conclusions). There’s consensus that the pagan Yule celebrations were
moved to the time of the Christian Christmas celebrations by the Norwegian King
Hákon the Good. It was his first step of gently introducing Christian
traditions and blending them with the old pagan rituals (instead of forcing
Christianity onto the Vikings, which they’d sure have resisted). So since the
early 10th century, the Jólablót is held on December 25, and he made
it a law that “everyone was to have ale for the celebration with a measure of
grain, or else pay fines, and had to keep the holiday while the ale lasted”
(Wouldn’t we like laws of this kind these days, too?)
This holiday began at winter solstice and lasted until
Jólablót, the Yule sacrifices, around the 12th of January, so three
weeks. In the last three days up to the sacrifices there was drinking,
feasting, games and song, topped off by the sacrifices to the gods and other
powers of winter. But lets start with the roots of the festivities.
The power of the sun
Winter solstice was the shortest day and marked the
darkest and most dangerous point of the year: would the sun return, and would
it – and with it the world – once again be reborn? It was a fearful wait in
almost total darkness, day and night. What if the sun would not succeed and
rebirth itself? During these three weeks, the Vikings must have anxiously
waited for proof that the days indeed did become longer and brighter again –
their lives depended on it. A new cycle of life only started if the sun was
victorious and rebirthed itself from the dark belly of the wolf (death) that
had swallowed her. So the Yule weeks were not at all mindless drinking and
frolicking; they were a fragile, strict time with many rituals that had to be
followed to enable the return of the sun, and therefore: of life.
Because imagine winter from a Viking perspective: it
was a fierce time of death and cold, when darkness ruled and the boundaries
between the world of the living and the dead blurred. It was the time when the
souls of the dead and other creatures like elves and trolls roamed the world of
the living, with unclear intentions. It was of vital importance to give
offerings by gifting food and drink, to placate the powers that were
potentially threatening and dangerous, so that they’d rather be helpful and
kind.
The mighty Thor and his goats
And who was the most potent of the gods to protect
people from the roaming forces on earth during these fragile times? Thor, of
course, the god of thunder with his mighty hammer. He ensured safe growth,
protection and return of the sun. He was worshipped in ways we can only deduct
from saga snippets and traditions. His symbol was the goat, which became an
established symbol for Yule. The Yule-Goat was slaughtered as a sacrifice
during Yule, because: Thor himself had magical goats, and he could slaughter
them if food was needed, and simply revive them the next day with a blow of his
hammer. It was the resurrection of that which nourishes – just like the sun
everyone was waiting for.
Maybe then, like it was a custom not so long ago,
goat-masked men roamed the neighbourhoods, singing and dancing, receiving
people’s offerings to the mighty Thor?
Although, these Vikings’ Chrismas carols must have
been very different to what we are used to, and surely they were much … let’s
say straighforward. But they carried the same essence: rejuvenation,
nourishment, renewed strength for a new world, a new year, a new cycle.
And talking of nourishment and birth: Yule was
different to Christmas in that it also was the time when the female powers
(dísir) were celebrated.
The Night of the Mothers
During Yule, the ancestral mothers and other female
powers of different realms were worshipped. For one, females were life-giving
just like the sun, associated with birth and midwifery in times when everyone
just waited for the imminent birth of the sun, of light, and new life.
And in a practical sense, the feasting was only
possible through countless women providing food and drink they had made. They
literally stood for abundance and provision-giving. Even the Anglo-Saxon
heathens celebrated The Night of the Mothers at New Year in the 7th
century, which corresponds with Yule and the continental Germanic Mother Cult.
I blame Christianity for diminishing the female role (of the Sun goddess, Sól,
the Mothers, and goddesses), and turning the once central importance of women,
living and dead, into a mere sidenote.
Some sources claim that it was on the first night,
Mothers’ Night, that the goddess Frigga and the dísir (female ancestral
spirits) were honoured. Only they could ensure the rebirth of the world from
the darkness of winter.
Bloody sacrifices and holy oaths
So with offerings and gatherings the days of Yule
slowly moved towards the hopefully successful rebirth of the sun to its former
glory around the 12th of January. A great three-day banquet and the
big Yule sacrifices would be prepared, for when around mid-January the new year
began.
When then the time came to make the big sacrifices,
some sources tell of gruesome events around the heathen temples: farmers from
near and far came with food in abundance. All took part in the drinking of ale,
animals were killed, and their blood collected to sprinkle with it the
pedestals, walls, and men in the temple. The meat was cooked and served at the
huge banquet. Surely a sacrificial beaker was carried around the fires. The
host, a chieftain, would bless the meat and toasts would be made. In King
Hákon’s time those were: 1. to Odin for victory and power, 2. to the gods
Njördr and Freyr for good harvests and peace, 3. to the King, and lastly to the
dead kinsfolk. These were all especially serious and meaningful oaths, sworn to
the cup or horn while drinking and feasting at the Yule banquet with all the
friends, family, and wider community from near and far.
And now do you suddenly see where our New Year’s
Resolutions come from?
It wasn’t just “Santa Odin” we are still using in our
traditions today. ;-) Our Resolutions are also just a diminished form of the
bloody Viking Yule Oath – and we should maybe take them bloody serious again!
;-)
So
raise your horns: Skål to Odin, the sun, and our ancestors!
Happy Yule and Merry
Christmas!
Sources:
freya.theladyofthelabyrinth.com (excellent source for all things Viking!)
Valkyria.com (a beautiful Norse
lady’s blog about living the Viking life and mythology)
Theasatrucommunity.org
wikipedia: Yule (all accessed on 4th
Dec. 2017)
Sarah Dahl
Sarah Dahl lives on the edge of the rural German Eifel
and writes historical fiction primarily set in the Viking age. She also works
as an editor, translates, and coaches new writers in German and English. She is
interested in everyday life in bygone centuries and the human stories that may
have occurred behind the hard, historical facts.
You can connect with Sarah…
and the fourth Tale is "Bonds – Under the
Armour"
In a world of crackling fires and rough landscapes, long winters and bloody raids, the immediacy of life and death ignites undeniable passion. Warriors and monks, healers and housewives -- all follow the call of their hearts and bodies to indulge in pleasure that may forever change their lives.
Fabulous post! So very interesting!!
ReplyDeleteTHANK YOU, Mary Anne, for having me, I feel honoured and it's SO exciting :-) Wishing you and your loved ones a merry Yule, too <3
DeleteBrilliant blog post! I had no idea about the our New Years resolutions. Think I might even find a special cup and ressurect the tradition. Might actually stck to it then!
ReplyDeleteHaha, YES! I'll also think differently about them now, and take them "bloody" serious again - and celebrate for as long as the ale lasts :-) MERRY YULE to you and here's to the new Resolutions: Skal!
DeleteGreat post. I love the way mothers were celebrated. Better than in Ireland where they just got a day off.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I love that part most, too. So sad that the honouring of the female and all that it gives to the world has been lost over the years. The Vikings were in a way much more advanced than later cultures. Happy Yule to you, and skal to the women :-)
DeleteI never knew that about New Year Resolutions! And nor have I ever heard of The Night Of The Mothers. Oh, you have wet my appetite for the viking era!
ReplyDeleteHi Beatrice, that's just great :-) Glad you enjoy the post and maybe you want to dive into one of the short stories in my Viking sensual romance collection (link above) as they are short and great for in between the season's chaos haha! Skal to relaxing festivities!
DeleteNice article, and enlightening (hee hee) on this Solstice. The Night of the Mothers. So nice of those guys to honor women. I agree with you that Christians are to blame for diminishing the role of women, and this continues for many (most?) Christians. Not (IMO) one of the best things about Christianity. Happy Yule!
ReplyDeleteHappy Yule to you too! Totally agree with you, and it's another thing I find so fascinating about the Viking culture: this level of equality and respect for most men and women. Makes for interesting material to play with :-)
DeleteI never knew about the Night of the Mothers. It's amazing how the same themes are carried down through the centuries in different celebrations.
ReplyDeleteYes, I wasn't aware of all the details that have the same root and then changed over the years to what we have now (left of them, one must admit with a sad heart). Happy Christmas/Yule to you and thank you for your feedback :-)
DeleteI love the Vikings! This post was really interesting. Thank you so much. I will be sure to check out your books!!
ReplyDelete