The Ornate 1,000-Year-Old Viking Necklace Of A Pagan ‘Sorceress’ goes on display

The Ornate 1,000-Year-Old Viking Necklace Of A Pagan ‘Sorceress’ goes on display

The Ornate 1,000-Year-Old Viking Necklace Of A Pagan ‘Sorceress’ goes on display

A magnificent piece of jewelry that the mighty Vikings produced a thousand years ago may have belonged to a mysterious pagan sorcerer. It is now exhibited in York, England in the Jorvik Visitor Centre.

The piece is a necklace, containing about 51 glass, jet and beads of amber, all of which have different colours. It resurfaced in the midst of archeological digs at the Peel Castle site more than three decades ago.

The Peel Castle was originally built by the Vikings during the 11th century A.D. on St. Patrick’s Isle of Man in the Irish Sea, but the necklace is older than this.

As reported by the BBC, this is the first time that the necklace has moved out of the island to exhibition highlight Viking women be displayed at the Jorvik visitor centre.

The center was “really thrilled” for loaning the piece from the Manx National Heritage (MNH) piece, said Beth Dawes, their marketing manager.

“It is absolutely beautiful. I’ve been saying that I would wear it myself,” commented Dawes, according to the BBC.

A Burning Wicker Wolf heralds the re-opening of the Jorvik Viking Centre. The centre was badly damaged during the 2015 flooding in the city and has since undergone extensive refurbishment work.

The delicate-looking necklace combines a unique mix of beads. It’s the diversity of beads that makes it so noticeable.

The gemstones used for it have been collected from England, Ireland, the region around the Baltic Sea but also places as remote as the Middle East indicating complex trade relations of the Middle Ages.

The piece also testifies to the surprisingly high-status women existed in that culture and era. Besides appealing to the eye, the centuries-old piece of jewelry has been further associated with spirituality.

In 1984, it resurfaced from a stone-lined burial site which suggested the woman who once pledged ownership on it may have been a pagan sorceress. Or, in the vocabulary of Norse religion–she likely was Völva, a female shaman, laid to rest with the assets of her occupation.

Finds from a vǫlva’s grave in Köpingsvik, Öland. There is an 82 cm long wand of iron with bronze details and a unique model of a house on the top. There is also a pitcher from Persia or Central Asia, and a West European bronze bowl. Dressed in a bear pelt, she had received a ship burial with both human and animal sacrifice. The finds are on display in the Swedish History Museum in Stockholm.

While her grave is dated to the mid-10th-century A.D., part of the beads on the necklace have been dated several centuries earlier than that. Within her site of burial, other grave artifacts found have included a tiny set of pestle and mortar and fossil ammonite charm.

The woman might have been “a shaman sort of person who would have told fortunes and been very involved in rituals and religion,” Dawes also said. As someone holding divine connections and healing knowledge within the community, the woman could have actually been compensated with stuff such as beads for her services.

The owner of this necklace is also referred to sometimes as ‘Pagan Lady’. Another mysterious aspect of her story is that besides the connection with paganism, her final resting place was a Christian cemetery.

Her burial looked quite wealthy for a female, which is what has persuaded archaeologists and other experts that she was an eminent woman, a woman of importance, especially in terms of spirituality and religion amongst her people.

The rare find of the necklace has propelled plenty of discussions among experts about the role women had in Viking society already. Which only adds more value to it as one of the most authentic artifacts ever retrieved from the Isle of Man.

Isle of Man.

During Pagan Lady’s days, it was more or less only men who received burials denoting the high status. Earlier interpretations of the necklace said that the woman had received the piece as a gift from someone close to her. Like her spouse who may have been on the road quite often, as well as that she was “something of a domestic Goddess, someone who was in charge in the home,” according to BBC.

With further research of similar burial sites, it became clear that the woman must have been significant to her community. In general, Viking society was more advanced in terms of female empowerment. Other Middle Age societies would have lagged behind.

In York, the necklace was available to see until August 2019. It is there to also remind us that medieval cultures liked beautiful things too. As humans, we have indeed garnered a taste for fine things for a very long period of time now.

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