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History and Classics PhD thesis collection >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6434
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| Title: | Warriors and warfare: ideal and reality in early insular texts |
| Authors: | Wallace, Brian |
| Supervisor(s): | Fraser, James Brown, Tom |
| Issue Date: | 28-Jun-2012 |
| Publisher: | The University of Edinburgh |
| Abstract: | This thesis investigates several key aspects of warfare and its participants in
the Viking Age insular world via a comparison of the image which warriors occupy
in heroic literature to their concomitant depiction in sources which are primarily nonliterary
in character, such as histories, annalistic records, and law codes. Through this
method, the thesis seeks to add to the scholarship regarding organized violence in
this era in two principle manners. First, this study will depart from nearly all
previous studies of warriors by moving beyond a single cultural milieu and treating
them in a ‘pan-insular’ context. Second and perhaps more importantly, in choosing to
address the heroic literature as a genre distinct from other contemporary texts, this
thesis will allow progress beyond the bulk of pre-existing ‘warfare scholarship’ for
this era, which tends to utilize any and all manner of sources as a reflection of
historical reality. In considering the context of heroic poetry and sagas, the thesis will
allow one to make conclusion regarding its likely authorship and intended audience,
as well as the goals of the former and expectations of the latter.
Studies of warfare are always of particular relevance, due to their intersection
with many areas of history long studied, such as constitutional and legal history, as
well as those which have only recently received their due attention, such as questions
of group cohesion, violence, and community. This thesis was largely inspired by the
attempt by Stephen S. Evans to study the institution of the war-band in a crosscultural
reference in his 1997 book Lords of Battle. Evans provided a good analysis
of this body in its fifth- through eighth-century Anglo-Saxon and British
manifestation but failed to achieve his primary stated goal – a comparison of the
image and reality of the war-band. His decision to limit his research to the Anglo-
Saxon and Welsh cultural spheres in the era predating the first Viking invasions led
him to omit much relevant Irish and Insular Norse material, as well as a great deal of
later heroic literature. It was with these two shortcomings in mind that I set out to
write a more thorough treatment of the war-band. Yet, what began initially as an
attempt to remedy the shortcomings of Lords of Battle soon grew into a slightly more
wide-ranging study that has moved beyond focussing solely upon the war-band to
look at attitudes about warfare and its participants amongst contemporary audiences
and authors during the Viking age insular world. |
| Keywords: | warfare Vikings heroic literature organized violence heroic poetry sagas |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1842/6434 |
| Appears in Collections: | History and Classics PhD thesis collection
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