Blood for the Gods
The Vikings and Human Sacrifice: Myth or Reality?
At the heart of Viking culture was a deep religiosity, permeated by symbols, rituals and sacrifices. The relationship between men and gods was direct and concrete: gods such as Odin, Freya or Thor were not abstract celestial entities, but beings with whom one could deal, even bargain, offering gifts and blood in exchange - Image generated with AI
When we talk about Viking warriors, our imagination is filled with highly stereotypical and recognisable images: brutal Nordic raiders, covered in animal skins, crude and violent. Yet the reality appears very different from that portrayed in TV series, films and pop culture in general.
At the heart of Viking culture was a deep religiosity, permeated by symbols, rituals and sacrifices. The relationship between men and gods was as interesting as it was complex. Deities such as Odin, Freya and Thor were not simply metaphysical entities but, in the Viking conception, were beings of flesh and blood with whom one could negotiate and even make transactions (such as commercial ones) in the form of sacrifices.
These sacrifices usually consisted of animals, whose blood was offered to the gods in exchange for gifts and their support, but some archaeological finds suggest that on certain occasions human beings were also sacrificed. Anthropologist Neil Price describes these complex practices as exceptional cases, certainly not habitual, but there is no complete historical certainty about Viking human sacrifices. The main problem lies in the discovery of numerous decapitated bodies in sacred places of the Norse religion that can be linked to this practice, but it is difficult to determine whether they were actually sacrificed or simply individuals punished for committing crimes.
The sources describing Viking ritual sacrifices are mostly Christian or Muslim and describe them mainly with the aim of denigrating “pagan” peoples, to show their barbarity. They therefore remain sources of partial reliability. The first reported case of Viking human sacrifice is that described by the Arab chronicler Ahmad Ibn Fadlan in the 10th century, who travelled to the Volga region and described the Viking sacrifice of a slave girl who voluntarily wanted to accompany her master to Valhalla.
According to Neil Price, these rituals should not be viewed through the eyes of a modern observer; they were not simply acts of cruelty, but highly sacred moments in which death took on a cosmic and spiritual meaning. If we also consider the story of Odin himself, father of the gods, we can understand the symbolism of the gesture. Odin hanged himself from the world tree to obtain supreme wisdom. In the Viking world, death was not the end of everything, and blood was a profound symbol of union between gods and men, in a disturbing spirituality that transformed violence into sacred language.
Rudolf Simek, Dictionary of Northern Mythology, Cambridge,. Brewer, 1993.
Neil Price, Children of Ash and Elm: A History of the Vikings, London, Basic Books, 2020.
Toniatti Francesco
Master of Arts in International Relations - University of Leiden
Master of Arts in History and Oriental Studies - University of Bologna
Former History Teacher - International European School of Warsaw
19/04/2026
Francesco Toniatti