Lady with a Mead Cup: Ritual, Prophecy, and Lordship in the European Warband from La Tène to the Viking AgeLady with a Mead Cup is a broad-ranging, innovative and strikingly original study of the early medieval barbarian cup-offering ritual and its social, institutional and religious significance. Medievalists are familiar with the image of a queen offering a drink to a king or chieftain and to his retainers, the Wealhtheow scene in Beowulf being perhaps the most famous instance. Drawing on archaeology, anthropology and philology, as well as medieval history, Professor Enright has produced the first work in English on the warband and on the significance of barbarian drinking rituals. Lady with a Mead Cup will be of interest to students of Germanic or Celtic culture and kingship, anthropology and Dark Age religion. |
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Page vii
... Warlord 195 4 Governmental Forms 214 5 Mercury , Wodan and the One - Eyed Warlord 217 6 Rosmerta and Veleda 240 7 Mercury , Rosmerta and a Concept of Rhineland Kingship 249 8 The Inauguration of the Warlord 260 VI Conclusion 283 288 ...
... Warlord 195 4 Governmental Forms 214 5 Mercury , Wodan and the One - Eyed Warlord 217 6 Rosmerta and Veleda 240 7 Mercury , Rosmerta and a Concept of Rhineland Kingship 249 8 The Inauguration of the Warlord 260 VI Conclusion 283 288 ...
Page 169
... warlord / consort behavior pattern described by the Beowulf poet originates in the Germanic past and is parallelled in surprising ways by Tacitus ' descriptions of similar duos contained in the Germania and Historia . A comparison of ...
... warlord / consort behavior pattern described by the Beowulf poet originates in the Germanic past and is parallelled in surprising ways by Tacitus ' descriptions of similar duos contained in the Germania and Historia . A comparison of ...
Page 217
... WARLORD Like Schlesinger , Wenskus also suggests that a major socio - political transforma- tion like that which produced the warband and warband kingship is unlikely to have occurred without affecting religious views and practices . It ...
... WARLORD Like Schlesinger , Wenskus also suggests that a major socio - political transforma- tion like that which produced the warband and warband kingship is unlikely to have occurred without affecting religious views and practices . It ...
Contents
Ritual Group Cohesion and Hierarchy in the Germanic Warband | 1 |
Warlords Hetzerinnen and Sibyls | 38 |
The Liquor Ritual and the Basis of the Lordly Power to Command | 69 |
Copyright | |
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Agilulf Anglo-Saxon appears archaeological Ariovistus Arvernus associated Authari Batavian Beowulf Birkhan bracteates Britain Bructeri burial Caesar Celtiberians Celtic Celts century BC Christian cited Civilis comitatus concept context cult culture demonstrated depicted described discussion drink druids early medieval Early Middle Ages evidence example feast female Flosi followers Gaul Gaulish Germanen Germania Germanische goddess graves Hallstatt Hrothgar Hrothgar's husband Ibid Idem important indicate influence inscriptions institutional interpretation Irish Iron Age Karl Kelten king kingship La Tène culture leader linked liquor lord Lübsow magic marriage Medb Mercury Odin offering Old English pagan pattern period poet political present probably prophecy prophetess prophetic queen reference religion religious Rhineland rite ritual role Roman Rosmerta royal ruler saga scholars seems Sertorius significant society sources Stammesbildung status suggests symbolic Tacitus Táin Bó Cúailnge Tène tradition Treveri tribal tribes Unferth Veleda Vries warband warlord warriors Wealhtheow weapons weaving Wenskus wife Wodan woman women