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The Viking Torture Method So Grisly Some Historians Don’t Believe It Actually Happened
All that's Interesting ^ | November 5, 2018 | William DeLong

Posted on 11/23/2018 8:05:31 PM PST by vannrox

Viking sagas describe the ritual execution of blood eagle, in which victims were kept alive while their backs were sliced open so that their ribs, lungs, and intestines could be pulled out into the shape of bloody wings.

Blood Eagle Execution

PinterestA blood eagle execution.

The Vikings didn’t come into towns walking on moonbeams and rainbows. If their sagas are to be believed, the Vikings cruelly tortured their enemies in the name of their god Odin as they conquered territory. If the suggestion of a blood eagle was even uttered, one left town and never looked back. Viking sagas define blood eagle as one of the most painful and terrifying torture methods ever created. The story describes:

“Earl Einar went to Halfdan and carved blood-eagle on his back in this wise, that he thrust a sword into his trunk by the backbone and cut all the ribs away, from the backbone down to the loins, and drew the lungs out there….”

The History Of Blood Eagle Executions

One of the earliest accounts of the use of the blood eagle is thought to have occurred in 867. It began a few years before, when Aella, king of Northumbria (present-day North Yorkshire, England), fell victim to a Viking attack. Aella killed the Viking leader Ragnar Lothbrok by throwing him into a pit of live snakes.

Ragnar Lothbrok Statue

In revenge, Lothbrok’s sons invaded England in 865. When the Danes captured York, and Lothbrok’s son who was also the most feared Viking of his day, Ivarr the Boneless, saw to it that Aella would be killed.

Of course, killing him wasn’t good enough. Ivarr’s father Ragnar had —allegedly — met a gruesome fate by a pit of snakes.

Ivarr the Boneless wanted to make an example out of Aella and to strike fear into the hearts of his enemies.

Thus, he committed the damned king to the blood eagle.

How It Worked

Modern scholars debate how Vikings performed this ritual torture and in fact whether they even performed the gruesome method at all. The process of the blood eagle is indeed so cruel and grisly that it would be difficult to believe that it could actually be carried out. Regardless of whether it is merely a work of literary fiction, there is no denying the fact that the ritual was stomach-churning.

The victim’s hands and legs were tied to prevent escape or sudden movements. Then, the person seeking vengeance stabbed the victim by his tailbone and up towards the rib cage. Each rib was then meticulously separated from the backbone with an ax, which left the victim’s internal organs on full display.

The victim is said to have remained alive throughout the entire procedure. What’s worse, the Vikings would then literally rub salt into the gaping wound in the form of a saline stimulant.

As if this wasn’t enough, after having all of the person’s ribs cut away and spread out like giant fingers, the torturer then pulled out the lungs of the victim to make it appear as if the person had a pair of wings spread out on his back.

Thus, the blood eagle was manifested in all its gory glory. The victim had become a slimy, bloody bird.

The Ritual Behind The Blood Eagle

King Aella was not the last royal to face the blood eagle. One scholar believes that at least four other notable figures in Northern European history suffered the same fate. King Edmund of England was also a victim of Ivarr the Boneless. Halfdan, son of King Haraldr of Norway, King Maelgualai of Munster and Archbishop Aelheah were all believed to victims of blood eagle torture because they were victims of the merciless and bloodlusty Ivarr the Boneless.

That means the torture method could have occurred in England, Ireland, and France. There were two main reasons Vikings used the blood eagle on their victims. First, they believed it was a sacrifice to Odin, father of the Norse pantheon of gods and the god of war.

Second, and more plausibly, was that the blood eagle was done as a punishment to honorless individuals. According to the Orkneyinga saga of the Vikings, Halfdan was defeated in battle at the hands of Earl Einar who then tortured him with a blood eagle as he conquered Halfdan’s kingdom. Similarly, Aella was tortured in vengeance.

Indeed, even the stories of the blood eagle — true or not — would have emptied out any village just by word of mouth before the Vikings could even make ground there. At the very least, the rumors of such torture would have established the Vikings as a divinely fearsome lot — and not to be trifled with.

Ritual Or Rumor?

Victims of the practice died in the 800s and 900s, maybe into the 1000s. Written accounts, often embellished and told for entertainment during long winter nights up north, didn’t come about until the 1100s and 1200s.

Writers of the Viking sagas heard stories and wrote them down. Perhaps they embellished the ferocity of Vikings to make them sound more heroic. Second, and more plausibly, was that the blood eagle was done as a punishment to honorless individuals. According to the Orkneyinga saga of the Vikings, Halfdan was defeated in battle at the hands of Earl Einar who then tortured him with a blood eagle as he conquered Halfdan’s kingdom. Similarly, Aella was tortured in vengeance.

Indeed, even the stories of the blood eagle — true or not — would have emptied out any village just by word of mouth before the Vikings could even make ground there. At the very least, the rumors of such torture would have established the Vikings as a divinely fearsome lot — and not to be trifled with. Ritual Or Rumor?

Victims of the practice died in the 800s and 900s, maybe into the 1000s. Written accounts, often embellished and told for entertainment during long winter nights up north, didn’t come about until the 1100s and 1200s.

Writers of the Viking sagas heard stories and wrote them down. Perhaps they embellished the ferocity of Vikings to make them sound more heroic. Top articles 1/5 READ MORE 31 Vintage Crime Scenes Brought To Life In Stunningly Gruesome Color Painting Of Lothbrok

Wikimedia Commons A depiction of messengers of King Aella bringing news to the sons of Ragnar Lothbrok. Clearly, that didn’t do any good.

However, there may be merit to the blood eagle story. The poets who wrote them down were very specific in the method used. Surely, someone actually tried this torture method because of the gory details that someone described. One Danish historian, Saxo Grammaticus, relays the ritual as merely the means of carving an eagle into a victim’s back and other details were added later and, “combined in inventive sequences designed for maximum horror.”

Either the blood eagle was an actual thing, or it was a propaganda tool. But either way, it was terrifying. Other Viking Torture Methods

The Vikings employed other torture methods aside from the blood eagle.

One was known as Hung meat, which was just as nasty as it sounds. Vikings pierced the heels of victims, threaded ropes through the holes, and then strung them upside-down. Not only was piercing the heels horrendously painful, but the blood ran down to their hearts.

The fatal walk was another gruesome testament to torture. A victim’s abdomen was sliced open and a bit of intestine was pulled out. Then the torturer held the victim’s intestines as the victim walked around a tree. Eventually, the entirety of the victim’s intestinal tract would wrap around the tree.

Whether it was a blood eagle, hung meat, or a fatal walk, the Vikings knew how to make examples out of their enemies.

If these torture methods are true, they harken back to a bloody time in humanity’s past. If they are false, then the Vikings knew how to spread fear into the hearts of others without really having to do much.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: ancientnavigation; bloodeagle; godsgravesglyphs; greatheathenarmy; history; ivarrtheboneless; ivartheboneless; method; middleages; navigation; nothanks; renaissance; thebloodeagle; thevikings; torture; viking; vikings
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To: vannrox

The ‘fatal walk’ was described in The Frontiersman by Allen Eckert as the grisly end of Simon Kenton’s enemy, Jacob Greathouse and his wife, at the hands of Indians for Greathouse’s ill treatment of random squaws and papooses.

Didn’t Hannibal Lector perform a ‘blood eagle’ on one of the prison guards in the fictional ‘Silence of the Lambs’?


41 posted on 11/24/2018 1:12:34 AM PST by ArtDodger
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To: vannrox

How to SPATCHCOCK an adversary

Do you then shove oranges and onions up their anus when you grill them?


42 posted on 11/24/2018 1:24:45 AM PST by wardaddy (I don’t care that you’re not a racist......when the shooting starts it won’t matter what yo)
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To: vannrox

Blood eagle is for pussies

A real man took the walk.....

Valhalla Rising.


43 posted on 11/24/2018 1:25:44 AM PST by wardaddy (I don’t care that you’re not a racist......when the shooting starts it won’t matter what yo)
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To: vannrox

Comanches were more dedicated and it gave the women something to do besides buffalo hides and being slapped around

A good time had by all

Tie the man or woman down.

Mutilate genitals and breasts too if a woman...

A light unlethal scalping of man or woman

Embers shoved up the vagina and or rectum

Tongue cut out

Shoulders and torso peeled

The the real fun starts

A small fire under hands and feet one at a time to burn them into tallow charcoal slowly and excruciatingly painful

Then if you’re tough you get speared or throat cut ...mercy

If not evisceration .....

We’re talking days maybe a week as they work to keep you alive

Of yes....women were raped and sodomized repeatedly for days prior till they were handed over to be tortured by the women

I’ll take the Vikings ...

Read Texas Rangers memoirs....it’s why they were not big on prisoners ...the Rangers thst is

Comanches loved prisoners...like free HBO


44 posted on 11/24/2018 1:34:53 AM PST by wardaddy (I don’t care that you’re not a racist......when the shooting starts it won’t matter what yo)
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To: Widget Jr

Not a bed time story ... the Vikings were really cruel they had to be less and they would not have been feared - then there is the continues modern Islamic practice Seen in ‘modern’ Syria of staking an individual down, opening the stomach, inserting burning coals and adding more fuel ... or castration of young boys using random piece of glass without anesthetic same for girls in the total removal of the labia by the same methods.

You need to pay a visit to a walk-through “Ripley’s Believe It Or Not” exposition on torture and the instruments used, and the results obtained by the showing - if you can find one in this day and age of dumb down to lowest common denominator, wherein, if it is not seen on TV, it never happened.

Recently, I told the true story of the Tiananmen Massacre: how the Chinese made 8000 plus people disappear from the official body count and the lady, hearing the tale, like the unbelieving historians, was horrified beyond words and refused to believe that it actually happened.


45 posted on 11/24/2018 2:19:56 AM PST by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
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To: vannrox

today’s Sweden lets rapists go of 11 year old


46 posted on 11/24/2018 2:32:24 AM PST by ronnie raygun
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To: IronJack

https://youtu.be/Ukto6Of_eOU


47 posted on 11/24/2018 2:43:08 AM PST by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
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To: ArtDodger

The Eckert series of books on the early frontier are fascinating. The genocide commuted by both “sides” was astound.


48 posted on 11/24/2018 2:44:54 AM PST by magyars4
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To: MadMax, the Grinning Reaper

The settlers were no slackers, either. This is the mild stuff:

The pillory and the stocks became common in England during mid 14th century to stop farmers from increasing the prices over their vegetables during the Black Death. Later, they were used to control vagabonds, beggars and drunks. Often the pillory or stocks were just a part of a series of punishments, sometimes combined with branding, flogging or limbs cut off. Most European countries abolished pillories by the middle of the 19th century, as did most American states. The stocks, however, were never formally abolished[3]. Offenders were sentenced to the pillory for treason, sedition, arson, blasphemy, witchcraft, perjury, wife beating, adultery, forgery, coin clipping, dice cogging, slandering, conjuring, fortune-telling and drunkenness, among other offenses.
The pillory (also known as “stretch-neck”) stood in the main squares of English settlements in North America. The punishment could be standing for hours (for how many depended on the crime) with both arms and head imprisoned or/and have one ear nailed to the wood[4].


http://jamestown-series.wikia.com/wiki/Pillory_of_Jamestown


49 posted on 11/24/2018 2:59:29 AM PST by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge.)
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Comment #50 Removed by Moderator

To: vannrox

Chief Red Bull, He’ll give you wings.


51 posted on 11/24/2018 3:51:33 AM PST by shoff (Vote Democrat it beats thinking!)
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To: Main Street

Bookmark


52 posted on 11/24/2018 3:55:37 AM PST by silverleaf (A man who kneels for the national anthem doesn't stand for much of anything)
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To: vannrox

this is not something that should be known to people

Weak minded people can have their heads turned.


53 posted on 11/24/2018 4:01:06 AM PST by Chickensoup (Never count on anyone, ever.)
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To: vannrox

Yeah and today the ancestor Vikings are pussy’s


54 posted on 11/24/2018 4:17:05 AM PST by Joe Boucher (Criminals at F.B.I., Justice Dept, I.R.S and No one taken out in cuffs? Federal gub mint is crappola)
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To: Libloather

Wasn’t Sessions known as Jeff the Backboneless?


55 posted on 11/24/2018 5:09:41 AM PST by TonyM (Score Event)
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To: PIF

“Ripley’s,, “
Instruments of Torture.

The Iron Maiden would be
My choice,
The Rack and The Pear
Run a close second.


56 posted on 11/24/2018 6:13:04 AM PST by Big Red Badger (Despised by the Despicable!)
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To: max americana

They did it twice. Once in Lattica and the second in Mercia.

How I remember this crap is beyond me.


57 posted on 11/24/2018 6:15:24 AM PST by Vermont Lt
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To: PIF

museumofman.org/torture
.
This was a temporary exhibit
in San Diego,,,

Yes I went thru it twice.


58 posted on 11/24/2018 6:24:14 AM PST by Big Red Badger (Despised by the Despicable!)
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To: Greetings_Puny_Humans

Breathing is a purely mechanical process. Open the pleural cavity and contraction of the diaphragm no longer inflates the lungs. Unconsciousness comes within minutes and death by hypoxia shortly after.

The Vikings, being the barbarians they were, may have delighted in hacking the corpse into a grisly sculpture, but the victim was dead long before the task was complete.


59 posted on 11/24/2018 6:29:03 AM PST by IronJack
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To: vannrox

I always thought this stuff sounded a bit like propaganda. Sort of like how people think homosexuality was more prevalent in ancient Rome than it really was, because accusations of sexual deviancy were a common political insult.


60 posted on 11/24/2018 6:31:08 AM PST by The Pack Knight
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