Mjøllnir

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Rokcet Scientist

Mjøllnir

Post by Rokcet Scientist »

"Thor's Hammer" Found in Viking Graves
Norse warriors saw "thunderstones" as protection against lightning

Image
A "thunderstone" found in a Viking grave.

Long dismissed as accidental additions to Viking graves, prehistoric "thunderstones"—fist-size stone tools resembling the Norse god Thor's hammerhead—were actually purposely placed as good-luck talismans, archaeologists say.

Using fire-starting rock such as flint, Stone Age people originally created the stones to serve as axes. But the Vikings, whose Iron Age heyday lasted from about A.D. 800 to 1050, saw the primitive tools as lightning repellent.

Because the axes predate the Viking age by thousands of years, archaeologists have long seen the stones as random artifacts, perhaps stirred up from earlier, lower burials or dropped in centuries after the Viking era.

But now "we have made enough discoveries of Stone Age artifacts in younger graves to say that they make a clear pattern," archaeologist Eva Thäte, of the University of Chester in the U.K., said in a statement.

Vikings Superstitious?
To solve the thunderstone mystery, Thäte and fellow archaeologist Olle Hemdorff excavated Viking graves in Scandinavia and trawled through catalogs of grave goods from hundreds of Viking burials—all dating to the Iron Age (about 600 A.D. to 1000 A.D.).

For example, in Scandinavia the researchers found about ten Viking burials that held thunderstones up to 5,000 years older than the graves themselves—including a thunderstone in a previously untouched, fifth-century A.D. stone coffin.

In addition, what might be called miniature thunderstones—small, rounded-off flint "eggs"—have been found in Viking graves in Iceland, where flint doesn't occur naturally.

"These people must have gone to all the effort of bringing these goods over from Norway, on an exceedingly dangerous boat journey," Hemdorff, of the University of Stavanger in Norway, told National Geographic News.

"There is no rational explanation as to why they should appear in the graves—the pebbles were far too small to be useful in any way," Hemdorff said. "It shows that these stones had very special significance and suggests that these people were highly superstitious."

Mighty Thor Connection
The prehistoric stones' "special significance" to Vikings may have derived from legends of Thor, the Norse thunder god said to create lightning with his battle hammer, Mjöllnir.

To the Vikings, "three things seem to be important when choosing thunderstones," Hemdorff said.

"The form had to be similar to an ax or a hammer—that is, a ground stone or flint. The stone had to have 'flaming' properties, which flint and quartz have. And all the stones were damaged with the edge chipped off—'proof' that they fell from the sky," he added.

"Thor's mission was to protect gods and people against evil and chaos," he said in a statement. "It was therefore believed that Thor's rocks protected houses and people."

Now the new grave survey suggests the rocks were believed to protect souls too, the archaeologists say.

Far-Flung Phenomenon?
Similar discoveries in United Kingdom graves suggest that Vikings weren't the only ancient Europeans who saw millennia-old tools as accoutrements for the afterlife.

"In southeast Britain the Lexden Tumulus—a wealthy late Iron Age burial dating to just before the Roman conquest—included within it not only rich contemporary imports from the classical world but also a Bronze [ax] dating to the Bronze age," said John Creighton, an Iron Age expert from the University of Reading in the U.K.

When such out-of-date artifacts are found randomly at archaeological sites, "it is easy to explain them away as residual objects," Creighton said. But when they're found "sealed in graves, as they occasionally are, they are clearly treasured objects."

Archaeologist Tim Champion thinks Iron Age people ritually buried prehistoric tools to commemorate more than just deaths.

In southern England grinding stones and Stone Age stone axes have been found in Iron Age ritual pits that aren't associated with burial but instead may have been used, for example, to mark the end of an occupation of a site, said Champion, of the University of Southampton in the U.K.

"They are a real oddity and were certainly placed there deliberately, but we're not sure why," he said. "I suspect that these people were not so very different from us, and they would have had superstitious folk beliefs."
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Josip199
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Re: Mjøllnir

Post by Josip199 »

Good Info about Hammer of Thor.
Would be more than happy to share the information about Thor the God of Thunder

Thor is one of the most important gods in the Norse pantheon. He’s normally depicted as a middle-aged man with a red-beard wielding his famous weapon, a magical hammer known as Mjollnir. Unsurprisingly, Thor is a warrior who possesses great strength. He is also associated with thunder.

Want to Know more about Thor - The Norse God of Thunder Click Here

It will be great if someone would share their sources that will tell us more about "the most important gods in the Norse pantheon"
kbs2244
Posts: 2472
Joined: Wed Jul 12, 2006 12:47 pm

Re: Mjøllnir

Post by kbs2244 »

Wow !!
A blast from the past!!

Good post

"Mini" hammers??
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circumspice
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Re: Mjøllnir

Post by circumspice »

Every link josip199 has posted so far comes from the Ancient Origins website.

'nuff said. :roll: :lol:
"Nothing discloses real character like the use of power. It is easy for the weak to be gentle. Most people can bear adversity. But if you wish to know what a man really is, give him power. This is the supreme test." ~ Robert G. Ingersoll

"Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer, and, without sneering, teach the rest to sneer." ~ Alexander Pope
Simon21
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Joined: Fri Jan 03, 2014 4:40 am

Re: Mjøllnir

Post by Simon21 »

One lives and learns. I was under the impression that "thunder stones" were smooth stones used in the outback and by early explorers after "thundering" when there was not any convenient paper to be had. Usually river rocks.
E.P. Grondine

Re: Mjøllnir

Post by E.P. Grondine »

circumspice wrote:Every link josip199 has posted so far comes from the Ancient Origins website.

'nuff said. :roll: :lol:
Any idea why the Archaeology News Network blog is down, spice?
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