Berserkers (or berserks) were Norse warriors who are primarily reported in the
Old Norse literature to have fought in a nearly uncontrollable, trance-like
fury, a characteristic which later gave rise to the English word berserk. They were fearsome Viking warriors
who fought friend and foe whilst in a heightened state of uncontrollable fury –
a form of madness known as barsarkargang (going berserk). Berserkers are attested to in numerous Old Norse
sources. Most historians believe that
berserkers worked themselves into a rage before battle, but some think that
they might have consumed drugged foods.
Berserkers
appear prominently in a multitude of other sagas and poems, many of which
describe berserkers as ravenous men who loot, plunder and kill
indiscriminately. Later, by Christian
interpreters, the berserk was even viewed as a 'heathen devil'. Snorri Sturluson in Ynglinga
Saga, recalling numerous elements of ancient lore, describes Odin's
warriors in this way:
'His men went to battle without armor and acted like
mad dogs or wolves. They bit into their shields and were as strong as bears or
bulls. They killed men, but neither fire nor iron harmed them. This madness is
called berserker-fury.'
In medieval Norse and
Germanic history and folklore, the berserkers were described as members of an
unruly warrior gang that worshipped Odin, the supreme Norse deity, and were
commissioned to royal and noble courts as bodyguards and ‘shock troops’, who
would strike fear into all who encountered them. Adding to their ferocity, and in order to
intimidate the enemy, they would wear bear and wolf pelts when they fought,
giving them the name Berserker, meaning 'bear coat' in Old Norse.
The fury of the berserkers would start with chills
and teeth chattering and give way to a purpling of the face, as they literally
became ‘hot-headed’, and culminating in a great, uncontrollable rage
accompanied by grunts and howls. They
would bite into their shields and gnaw at their skin before launching into
battle, indiscriminately injuring, maiming and killing anything in their path.
Dating back as far as the ninth century, the
berserker Norse Warriors were said to be able to do things that normal humans
could not. According to ancient legend,
the berserkers were indestructible, and no weapon could break them from their
trance. They were described as being
immune to fire and to the strike of a sword, continuing on their rampage
despite injury.
Once
the effects of berserkergang had worn off the berserker would lose all his
strength and be vulnerable to capture or assassination. After the heat of battle passed, a period of intense
exhaustion would follow, a time of vulnerability for the berserkers. As you might guess, despite their prowess in
war, the berserks were not loved, for they might turn on friends as well as
foes in 'battle madness.'
While some researchers believe the Berserkers
simply worked themselves up into a self-induced hysteria before fighting,
others maintain that it was sorcery, the consumption of drugs or alcohol, or
even mental illness, such as mania or post-traumatic stress, which accounted
for their behavior. Some botanists have
claimed that berserker behavior could have been caused by the ingestion of the
plant known as bog myrtle or mushrooms, one of the main spices in Scandinavian
alcoholic beverages.
Other more esoteric theories surround supernatural
beliefs. For instance, some scholars
have claimed that the Vikings believed in spirit possession and that berserkers
were possessed by the animal spirits of wolves or bears. According to some theorists, berserkers
learned to cultivate the ability to allow animal spirits to take over their
body during a fight (an example of animal totems) that also involved drinking
the blood of the animal that they wished to be possessed by.
"Going
berserk" is used colloquially to describe a person who is acting in a wild
rage or in an uncontrolled and irrational manner. "Berserker" is also a well known
character archetype and status in video games and other media.
This page has Berserkir confused with Ulfhedinn. Both are more elite than the Vikingar, however, the Ulfhednar outrank the Berserkir by far.
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