D.V. Puzanov

Udmurt Institute of History, Language, and Literature, UdmFRC, Ural Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences, Izhevsk, 426004 Russia

E-mail: puzanov_dv@udman.ru

Received September 27, 2021

 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Full text PDF

DOI: 10.26907/2541-7738.2021.6.168-178

For citation: Puzanov D.V. Were weapons of the Normans and Rus’ “alive”? Uchenye Zapiski Kazanskogo Universiteta. Seriya Gumanitarnye Nauki, 2021, vol. 163, no. 6, pp. 168–178. doi: 10.26907/2541-7738.2021.6.168-178. (In Russian)

Abstract

Weapons, according to the Northern Germans, could directly influence the world. Many researchers interpret it as evidence that the Normans identified their weapons with living beings. This article shows that the Northern Germans’ beliefs in actor weapons can be better understood through the lens of their deep conviction that any weapon has its “biography”, whereas trying to understand their views based on the idea of “partially animate” weapons is unhelpful. Provided that various material items accumulate their “biography”, one can potentially explain the grounds for the belief in such forms of the activity of weapons that are not related to the features of a living being. For example, an enchanted weapon affects the world by means similar to computer algorithms. The magical properties of a weapon could have been determined by the person who made it. Having been considered as special items, weapons were used to cast spells during the conclusion of international treaties. The historical sources focused on the idea of “weapons coming to life” only reveal that some mythological creatures (gods or magicians) have the power to invisibly control weapons. Therefore, these sources fail to confirm that the Normans and Rus’ believed in “animate” weapons.

Keywords: Rus’, Normans, weapons, swords, magic items, animals, international relations, oath

References

  1. Dolgov V.V. Byt i nravy Drevnei Rusi. Miry povsednevnosti XI – XIII vv. [Everyday Life and Customs in Ancient Rus’. The Worlds of Daily Routine in the 11th–13th Centuries]. St. Petersburg, Izd. Olega Abyshko, 2017. 592 p. (In Russian)
  2. Engovatov N.V. Runestone findings in the USSR. In: Skandinavskii sbornik [Scandinavian Review]. Tallinn, Estgosizdat, 1963, no. 6, pp. 229–257. (In Russian)
  3. Riisoy A.I. Performing oaths in Eddic poetry: Viking Age fact or Medieval fiction? Journal of the North Atlantic, 2016, spec. vol. 8, pp. 141–156.
  4. Gubarev O.L. Once again about the oaths of the Rus’ and Slavs. Novogardia, 2019, no. 2, pp. 304–311. doi: 10.25797/NG.2019.2.2.018. Review of: Romanchuk А.А. The origin of the Rus’ “weapons and rings” oaths: Slavic, Germanic, and Celtic parallels. Revista arheologică, serie nouă, 2018, vol. 2018, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 93–107. (In Russian)
  5. Gubarev O.L. About the oaths performed by the Rus’ and Slavs. Stratum plus, 2013, no. 5, pp. 239–245. (In Russian)
  6. Vvedenskii A.M. The treaties between Rus’ and Greeks in the 10th century: Sviatoslav I Igorevich’oath: Problems with interpretation of the verbal expression “koloti yako zoloto”. In: Trudy Otdela drevnerusskoi literatury [Proceedings of the Old Russian Literature Department]. St. Petersburg, Dmitrii Bulanin, 2006, vol. 57, pp. 916–926. (In Russian)
  7. Kuleshov V.S. Gold bracelets of the Rus’ people in the 9th–11th centuries: Texts, things, and functions. In: V kamne i v bronze: Sb. st. v chest’ A. Peskovoi [In Stone and Bronze: Collection of Articles in Honor of A. Peskova]. St. Petersburg, OOO “Nevskaya Kn. Tip.”, 2017, pp. 253–258. Trudy Instituta Istorii Material’noi Kul’tury, vol. 48. (In Russian)
  8. Fetisov A.A. Ritual content of the oath by weapons in the Russian-Byzantine treaties of the 10th century: A comparative typological analysis. In: Slavyanskii al’manakh 2001 g. [Slavic Almanac of 2001]. Moscow, Indrik, 2002, pp. 36–46. (In Russian)
  9. Stefanovich P.S. Oath based on the Russian-Byzantine treaties of the 10th century. In: Drevneishie gosudarstva Vostochnoi Evropy: Materialy i issledovaniya. 2004 god: Politicheskie instituty Drevnei Rusi [The Ancient States of Eastern Europe: Materials and Studies. 2004: Political Institutions of Ancient Rus’]. Gimon T.V., Mel’nikova E.A. (Eds.). Moscow, Vost. Lit., 2006, pp. 383–403. (In Russian)
  10. Mel’nikova E.A. Skandinavskie runicheskie nadpisi: Novye nakhodki i interpretatsii. Teksty, perevod, kommentarii [Scandinavian Runic Inscriptions: New Finds and Interpretations. Texts, Translation, Commentary]. Moscow, Vost. Lit., 2001. 496 p. (In Russian)
  11. Pronin N.A. The role of the sword in the sociocultural discourse of the Scandinavians during the 8th–11th centuries: Based on written sources. Evropa v Srednie veka i Novoe vremya: Obshchestvo. Vlast’. Kul’tura: Materialy VIII Vseros., s mezhdunar. uchastiem, nauch. konf. molodykh uchenykh [Europe in the Middle Ages and Modern Times: Society. Power. Culture: Proc. VIII All-Russ., with Int. Participation, Sci. Conf. for Young Scientists]. Izhevsk, Inst. Komp’yut. Issled., 2021, pp. 178–183. (In Russian)
  12. Hedeager L. Iron Age Myth and Materiality. An Archaeology of Scandinavia AD 400–1000. London, New York, Routledge, 2011. xxx, 286 p.
  13. Mauss M. The gift: Forms and functions of exchange in archaic societies. In: Gofman A.B. Obshchestva. Obmen. Lichnost’: Trudy po sotsial’noi antropologii [Society. Exchange. Personality: Proceedings on Social Anthropology]. Moscow, KDU, 2011, pp. 134–285. (In Russian)
  14. Descola Ph. Po tu storonu prirody i kul’tury [Beyond Nature and Culture]. Moscow, NLO, 2012. 584 p. (In Russian)
  15. Matyushina I.G. The saga of Asmund the Champion-Killer. Commentaries. In: Juxon T.N., Mel’nikova E.A. (Eds.) Samye zabavnye lzhivye sagi: Sb. st. v chest’ G.V. Glazyrinoi [The Funniest Lying Sagas: A Collection of Articles in Honor of G.V. Glazyrina]. Moscow, Izd. Univ. Dmitriya Pozharskogo, 2012, pp. 225–234. (In Russian)
  16. Mel’nikova E.A. Hostages and oaths. The procedure for concluding treaties with the Normans. In: Uspenskii F.B. (Ed.) Imenoslov. Istoriya yazyka. Istoriya kul’tury [Litany. History of Language. History of Culture]. Moscow, Izd. Univ. Dmitriya Pozharskogo, 2012, pp. 114–183. (In Russian)
  17. Russel B. Portraits from Memory and Other Essays. New York, Simon & Schuster, 1956. 247 p.
  18. Tyunen S.V. On the homeland of fire in Karelian-Finnish conspiracies. In: Fol’kloristika Karelii: Sb. st. [Folkloristics of Karelia: Collection of Articles]. Petrozavodsk, KNTs Ross. Akad. Nauk, 1995, no. 9, pp. 109–117. (In Russian)
  19. Lotman Yu.M. Vnutri myslyashchikh mirov. Chelovek – tekst – semiosfera – istoriya [Inside the Thinking Worlds. Human – Text – Semiosphere – History]. Moscow, Yaz. Russ. Kul’t., 1996. 464 p. (In Russian)

The content is available under the license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.