🔺4A Foreign accounts Flashcards

Hlutapróf 2

1
Q

The Viking Age. What was the time period what were main changes Viking activity caused in Scandinavia?

A

793-1066 CE.
The conversion to Christianity. New channels of communication with other parts of Europe, bringing knowledge of more developed forms of government, administration, and law.

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2
Q

Name 9 authors of Latin sources.

A

Caesar,
Tacitus,
Paulus Orosius,
Sidonius Apollinaris,
Jordanes,
Paulus Diaconus,
Alcuin of York,
Thietmar of Merseburg,
Adam of Bremen

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3
Q

Name 3 authors of Greek sources.

A

Strabo,
Procopius of Caesarea
Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus.

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4
Q

Name 2 authors of Arabic sources.

A

Ibn Rustah and Ibn Fadlan

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5
Q

Time period of Caesar?

A

100-44 BCE

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6
Q

Time period of Tacitus?

A

c. 56-c. 120 CE

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7
Q

Time period of Paulus Orosius?

A

c. 375/385-c. 420 CE

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8
Q

Time period of Sidonius Apollinaris?

A

431/2-c. 485 CE

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9
Q

Time period of Jordanes?

A

6th cent. CE

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10
Q

Time period of Paulus Diaconus?

A

720s-before 800 CE

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11
Q

Time period of Alcuin of York?

A

8th century CE

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12
Q

Time period of Thietmar of Merseburg?

A

975/6-1018 CE

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13
Q

Time period of Adam of Bremen?

A

c. 1050-1081/5 CE

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14
Q

Time period of Strabo?

A

c. 63 BCE-c. 64 CE

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15
Q

Time period of Procopius of Caesarea?

A

c. 500-565 CE

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16
Q

Time period of Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus?

A

c. 913-c. 959 CE

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17
Q

Time period of Ibn Rustah?

A

early 10th century CE

18
Q

Time period of Ibn Fadlan?

A

10th century CE

19
Q

Different perspectives. What is meant by “etic” in foreign accounts?

A

Outside looking in.

from the perspective of one who does not participate in the culture being studied

20
Q

Different perspectives. What is meant by “emic” in foreign accounts?

A

Inside looking out.

from the perspective of one who participates in the culture being studied

21
Q

Who was Strabo and what did he write?

A

He was a Greek historian and geographer. He wrote Geographica. Describes the tribes, background and landscape.

22
Q

What is The Gundestrup Cauldron?

A

A large bowl placed in a peat bog in NW Jylland. Silver plates with pictures broken up into 17 pieces. Shows sign of trade routes and commissions as it originates from Central or South-East Europe.

23
Q

What are the pictures on The Gundestrup Cauldron?

A
  1. Pictures of a large female figure, smaller female figures and details of birds, necklace and animals.
  2. Tree/Platform deviding the picture. Lurer and figures with animal helmets.
  3. Large female figure who is putting men into a cauldron.
24
Q

What did Ibn Rustah write?

A

Book of Precious Records. First hand accounts of an outsider. Wrote about a culture having “wizards” who make offerings of women, men and cattle by hanging them.

25
Q

What did Jordanes write?

A

Getica (The Origin and Deeds of the Goths). It concerns sacrifices and offerings. He wrote about Mars who had captives slain as his victims. To him they devoted the first share of the spoil, and in his honor, arms stripped from the foe were suspended from trees.

26
Q

What did Procopius of Caesaria write?

A

De Bellis (‘On the Wars’). He wrote about inhabitants of Thule, how those kind of people respect/believe in great numbers gods and demons, both of the heavens and of the air, of the earth and of the sea, and sundry other demons which are said to be in the waters of springs and rivers. A whole host of gods and demons, spirits in a sense.

The book also includes something about sacrificing to Týr whom they regard as the greatest god. Sacrifice by hanging to a tree or throwing among thorns.

27
Q

What did Paulus Orosius write?

A

Historiarum Adversum Paganos Libri VII.

It’s about fate of prisoners and booty after a battle in which a confederation of Gallic and German tribes defeated the Romans. Clothing was cut to pieces and strewn about, gold and silver were thrown into the river, the breastplates of the men were hacked to pieces, the horses themselves were drowned in whirlpools, and men, with nooses fastened around their necks, were hanged from trees

28
Q

What did Gaius Julias Caesar write?

A

De Bello Gallico (e. Commentaries on the Gallic War)

Includes: To Mars (=Týr), when they have determined on a decisive battle, they dedicate as a rule whatever spoil they may take. After a victory, they sacrifice such living things as they have taken. People fight and whoever is taken as a prisoner is being sacrificed to Mars.

29
Q

What did Publius Cornelius Tacitus write?

A

Annales (e. Annals).

Hermunduri and Chatti fought a great battle. In the event of victory, had vowed their enemies to Mars [=Týr] and Mercury [=Óðinn], a vow which consigns horses, men, everything indeed on the vanquished side to destruction.

(So here we have two germanic tribes that say if one of them wins, everything they loot from the battle field, they sacrifice in honor of Mars and Mercury)

30
Q

Who do we understand as Mars?

A

Týr

31
Q

Who do we understand as Mercury?

A

Óðinn

32
Q

Publius Cornelius Tacitus did not only write Annales, but something else too. What is his other work/book called? And what does it say?

A

Germania.

It says that Mercury is the deity whom they chiefly worship. They sacrifice living beings to him. Mercury is getting human sacrifices. Hercules and Týr are getting animals but no humans. Suevi sacrifice to a female deity. Whoever Isis is, she is meant to be a light ship. Like a rowing ship for rivers and such.

33
Q

What did Ibn Fadlan write?

A

Risāla (e. Journal, Account).

Someone getting gifts. Betakes himself to a long upright piece of wood that has a face like a man’s and is surrounded by little figures, behind which are long stakes in the ground. The one giving his gifts lays down what he has brought with him.

34
Q

What did Sidonius Apollinaris write?

A

Sidonius Apollinaris (e. Correspondence of letters)

Saxons when sailing abandon every tenth captive to the slow agony of a watery end, casting lots. These men are bound by vows which have to be paid in victims. A religious act, an absolving sacrifice, by the Saxons.

35
Q

What did Thietmar of Merseburg write?

A

Chronicon Thietmari (e. Chronicle)

The centre of the kingdom is a place called Lederun.. Every nine years, in the month of January, after the day on which we celebrate the appearance of the Lord, they all convene here and offer their gods a burnt offering of 99 human beings and as many horses, along with dogs and cocks

36
Q

What did Adam von Bremen write?

A

Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum (e. History of the Archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen)

Wrote about Þórr main god, with Óðinn (Wotan) and Freyr (Fricco). A famous temple called Uppsala entirely decked out in gold and in there the people worship the statues of three gods. The people also worship heroes made gods, whom they endow with immortality.

37
Q

In the context of sacred Groves, which author and work say: [The Suebi], moreover, do not consider it consistent with the grandeur of celestial beings to confine the gods within walls, or to liken them to the form of any human countenance. They consecrate woods and groves, and they apply the names of deities to the abstraction which they see only in spiritual worship.

A

Germania by Tacitus

38
Q

What does Tacitus say about Nerthus in his work Germania?

A

they universally join in the worship of Nerthus; that is to say, the Mother Earth.
the divinity herself (guðdómleiki), are purified in a secret lake. Slaves perform the rite, who are instantly swallowed up by its waters.

39
Q

Wagons (vagnar) in Dejbjerg, Jylland.. What time period, sacrificed into what, and made by what people?

A

2nd cent. BCE. 2 wagons dismantled & sacrificed into peat bog. Made by Celtic people further south & sent up North.

40
Q

Wagons (vagnar) in Rappendam, N. Sjæland. What time period, parts of what, and what type of body was found there?

A

2nd-1st cent. BCE. Parts of an undercarriage and solid disc wheels. Skeleton of a woman.

41
Q

Wagons (vagnar) in Oseberg, Vestfold, NOR. What bodies and type of goods were found there?

A

2 female bodies were found. Grave goods were found consisting of various animals, rattle, a bucket made form yew, precious metals & garments, a sleigh, a small longship, and a wagon.

42
Q

Research has been done into the legends of gold wagons (rich wagons) buried in lakes/marshes which survived into modern times. What does the gold wagons suggest?

A

Suggests how long folklore can last.