By Taryn Plumb | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT
JULY
31, 2014
Mark Lorenz for The Boston Globe
Rurik
is master of the ax, taught among the Danes.
Olaf
is a beast with a sword, powerful and unpredictable.
Rauda
Bjorn and Tofa are both delicate with handiwork but swift with
weaponry.
“Leg-biter”
is what they call Aelfi: as the second-in-command, she wrangles the
men.
Jarl,
the leader, earned the nickname “Schildknacker” (“cracker of
shields”) while battling the Saxons.
This
band of Viking warriors called the Draugar
Vinlands —
explorers, duelers, and conquerors — is so meticulously dedicated
to accuracy, its members seem like imports from the first millennium
(until one sneaks out a smartphone after a bout of fighting, that
is).
“I
wanted to make sure I filled the ranks with people not only
interested in and passionate about the combat, but the history, the
culture,” said Marc Svirtunas, 47, of Exeter, N.H., who formed the
group last summer, and is the “Schildknacker” Jarl Ingvar.
Now
a dedicated core of seven — an eighth, Siggur, was “lost at sea,”
the fate of many a Viking — meets on Saturdays in a cordoned-off
area of Stratham Hill Park in Stratham, N.H., to drill and spar.
Preferring to call themselves “living history combatants” rather
than reenactors, they focus on the eighth, ninth, and 10th centuries,
when the Vikings were at their peak.
“I’ve
always been really interested in history,” said one member, Max
Niketic (the ax-throwing Rurik of Burka) of Newburyport, noting the
particular appeal of Viking culture, ships, and armor. “It’s all
fascinating.”
Using
blunted versions of replica weapons, the Draugar Vinlands’ strokes
and fighting techniques are based on ancient treatises and texts.
They don period-accurate chain mail and helmets, and drink from
vessels that resemble auroch (an extinct species of wild cattle)
horns.
But
unlike the dozens of Viking video games, movies, or the current TV
series on
the History Channel, this group doesn’t fantasize the ancient
culture: The members live it, from researching clothing down to the
belts (exact replicas of items dug up at such archeological sites as
Birka in Sweden), to reading the sagas and legends, to speaking
German (which evolved from the Vikings’ true tongue, Old Norse), to
learning the meanings — and ultimately making their own etchings
and stitchings on their clothing and leather wear — of runes, the
Viking alphabet.
Similarly,
their Viking personas have intricate back stories stretching across
real Scandinavian sites and landmarks. For example, Svirtunas’ Jarl
(a title that denotes “old successful warrior”) took his sword,
“Draugr,” from the burial mound of a Saxon king, while Rauda
Bjorn (Newburyport resident Dillon Mroz) “comes to us from
Trøndelag,” in central Norway, according to the group’s website,
which notes that his family’s good fortune went down with his
father’s knarr (vessel) “on the shores of the isle of Frøya.”
Draugar
Vinlands translates to “Ghosts of Vinland,” borrowing the name
that the Vikings gave to a part of North America — perhaps
including what is now New England — reached by Norse explorers more
than 1,000 years ago.
After
discovering Viking lore in high school, “I fell head over heels,
immersed myself in it,” said Mroz, 21, standing in the shade at
Stratham Hill Park as the group gathered on a recent humid Saturday.
A
history major at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, Mroz is of
Norwegian ancestry, evidenced by his long red hair and his
self-described “surprisingly red” beard (thus his nickname Rauda,
or “Red’’ ). Like his comrades, he was dressed for the day in
traditional warm-weather Viking attire: a light linen kyrtle (tunic)
that he stitched himself; drawstring linen trousers with winnegas
(legwraps); a hood; leather turn-shoes; and a chain-mail shirt.
“I
really like the mythology. It’s very complex,” he said,
explaining that Norse gods are not completely immortal and
all-knowing, as is the case with most other polytheistic or
monotheistic religions.
Fellow
warrior Joey O’Neil, 21, of Waltham (also known as Ragnar the
spear-thrower), said he’s also fascinated by the mythology —
particularly Odin, the major god — and is likewise intrigued by the
“thought of going into battle with a bunch of your brothers.”
Just
then, the Jarl’s “stallari” (deputy in the field) called for
attention.
“Hey,
hey, guys, line up!” instructed Aelfi, 25-year-old Abbey Miller of
Lexington.
Dressed
in a long wool tunic, her brown hair in a simple braid, she led them
in a series of warm-up exercises. Then they paired off to sharpen
their battle skills. Delicately leaned against a nearby fence were
real — and very sharp — spears and swords, alongside numerous
helmets and wooden shields, 2½ to 3 feet in diameter and colored
with period-correct milk paint.
Their
fenced-off drilling grounds have a historical feel: tiered benches on
the hillside overlooking the field are slanted and swayed, overgrown
with weeds and grass.
Mroz
and Niketic squared off, tapping their shields with wooden practice
swords when ready. They circled, shields held aloft slightly to one
side, then struck: up, down, wheeling, doubling back. As the action
moved across the grass, swords clunked shields, made contact with
legs, helmeted heads, midsections.
In
her role as second-in-command, Miller said, “I try to instill the
idea of low blows and creative fighting,” explaining that
traditional stories describe leg injuries as a common cause of death.
“Their
level of enthusiasm is unmatched,” said Svirtunas, who takes his
role as Jarl quite seriously, including providing his warriors with
provisions after fighting. “You can’t teach enthusiasm and
passion.”
Most
of the members met by chance — either at Renaissance fairs, or
performances by Viking metal bands, an offshoot of black metal whose
themes often focus on the times, legends, and beliefs of the Norse
seafarers.
Svirtunas
became particularly intrigued after seeing “The
13th Warrior,” a
1999 film starring Antonio Banderas as Ahmad ibn Fadlan, a
10th-century Arab traveler known for his accounts of Vikings.
“I
started reading the history and thought, wouldn’t it be nice to
really do it right,” Svirtunas recalled, referring not just to
combat but to authentic clothing and even mannerisms. “To really
get a feel for what it was like to live back then, to fight back
then.”
The
group stresses that life as a Viking was not the cliche typically
played out in most films or television shows, which depict dirty,
vulgar, thunderous, horned-helmet-clad savages who wantonly killed
and looted.
Vikings
were expert fighters, but, as history teaches, the Draugar
Vinlands members
say, they had a purpose: To gain dominance, land and wealth, or
honor. Many invaded England after the fall of the Roman Empire to
settle and farm because their own climate in Scandinavia was too
harsh.
Niketic,
22, who graduated from Randolph College in Lynchburg, Va., with a
degree in history, said the Vikings’ shallow-draft boats, which
could sail up rivers or close to shore where other vessels would get
stuck, enabled them to invade deeper into a territory.
“No
one had ships like the Vikings,” he said.
Mroz
pointed out they bathed once a week, making them the “cleanest
people of the time” (and a lure for women of other cultures).
Miller said they were also “decent” to their women, who were just as brave as the men, sometimes donning armor and fighting alongside them, while Roman wives of the time were essentially slaves.
“It’s strange to call them barbarians, because they had many things that out-civilized the civilized world,” said Niketic. “They thought the Romans were barbarians.”
Miller said they were also “decent” to their women, who were just as brave as the men, sometimes donning armor and fighting alongside them, while Roman wives of the time were essentially slaves.
“It’s strange to call them barbarians, because they had many things that out-civilized the civilized world,” said Niketic. “They thought the Romans were barbarians.”
Mark Lorenz for The Boston Globe
JULY 31, 2014
Of
all the tribes through time, the Vikings are among the most feared,
revered, and mysterious.
They
raided for food and bounty from the eighth to the 11th centuries.
Because their history was mostly oral, what we know of them comes
principally from other cultures, whose portrayals weren’t always
accurate or flattering.
Here
are some essential (and perhaps surprising) details about the people
known for their warring ways, ingenuity in shipbuilding, and restless
nature, as told by Draugar Vinlands member Dillon Mroz in a
presentation he gave in Newbury:
■Vikings
were largely farmers, although their native Scandinavia was harsh and
cold, so most harvesting was done on the coast.
■The
first documented raid was in 793 on Lindisfarne, an island off the
northeast coast of England.
■Their
travels brought them across Europe, and west to Iceland and
Greenland, and perhaps the North American mainland.
■Crimes
among themselves were determined on levels: Murder was involved only
if the killer didn’t tell anyone (otherwise it was manslaughter);
robbing a person was looked on more harshly than robbing a house.
■Punishments
included running a gantlet (two rows of people pelting the guilty
with any number of items, including stones), beheading, and paying
compensation.
■Vikings
were polytheistic and believed in a “multiverse.” Their primary
god was Odin, while the most popular one was the hammer-wielding
Thor, who controlled the elements and protected mankind.
■Death
was observed with funeral pyres, although some respected or wealthy
individuals were buried in a longship along with their possessions
and slaves.
©
2014 BOSTON GLOBE MEDIA PARTNERS, LLC
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