Shetlanders set Viking longboat ablaze during Up Helly Aa festival

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Thousands of people descended on Shetland dressed in Norse attire for the world-famous Up Helly Aa fire festival.

The spectacle, which attracts visitors from around the globe, takes place in Lerwick on the last Tuesday of January each year.

People dressed as Vikings marched through the streets of the town to recreate its ancient Viking past, in a tradition dating back to the 19th century.

Viking invasion! Thousands descend on Shetland from around the world dressed in Norse garb to burn longboat in annual Up Helly Aa fire festival


World-famous Up Helly Ae fire festival takes place in Lerwick, Shetland on last Tuesday of January each year

Thousands dressed in Norse attire march through streets of the town to recreate its ancient Viking past

The procession is led by the Guizer Jarl, or chief guizer, and it culminates in a replica longboat being set alight

'Vikings' with flaming torches took to the streets and set a longboat alight in a nighttime ceremony tonight


By Joel Adams and Faith Ridler For Mailonline
30 January 2019



Thousands of people descended on Shetland dressed in Norse attire for the world-famous Up Helly Aa fire festival.

The spectacle, which attracts visitors from around the globe, takes place in Lerwick on the last Tuesday of January each year.

Today people dressed as Vikings marched through the streets of the town to recreate its ancient Viking past, in a tradition dating back to the 19th century.

And tonight hundreds with flaming torches took to the streets before immolating a hand-made longboat in a night-time ceremony.

Fearsome-looking 'Vikings' marched through the frozen streets of Lerwick tonight carrying burning brands and battle flags

The procession included around 1,000 locals dressed in the garb of their Norse ancestors who ruled the Orkneys and Shetlands for 500 years

Guizer Jarl John Nicolson and his squad march through Lerwick ahead of the Galley being set on fire during the Up Helly Aa Viking festival

The men held their burning brands aloft in the cold night sky as their carried their shields and their galley through the town

The torches were lit from a modern signal flare giving the beginning of the night an eerie red glow as the procession set off

The ceremony culminated in the evening with a galley being set alight and fireworks high above the gathered crowds celebrating the annual tradition.

John Nicolson, chief guizer this year, led the men through the streets of the Shetland port towards the replica longboat.

This year, it was decorated in the distinctive green and white hoops of Celtic at Mr Nicolson's behest, and without qualm from his brother David - the former Guizer Jarl and Rangers fan joked he would 'take great delight in seeing it burn'.

The heat of the fire carried sparks high into the air as the burning torches began to be thrown onto the pyre

The galley is set on fire on Shetland during the Up Helly Aa Viking festival. Originating in the 1880s, the festival celebrates Shetland's Norse heritage

With almost all the torches hurled into the galley the flames reached up to engulf the mast and furled green and white sail

Guizer Jarl John Nicolson (pictured in white) and his squad of Vikings march through Lerwick as snow falls on the Shetland Isles during the Up Helly Aa Viking festival

The spectacle, which attracts visitors from around the globe, takes place in Lerwick on the last Tuesday of January each year

This neo-Norseman combined old and ancient technology to take a mobile phone picture of his Viking helmet

People dressed as Vikings marched through the streets of the town to recreate its ancient Viking past, in a tradition dating back to the 19th century

Three young people hold banners as they march in the snow with Guizer Jarl, John Nicholson, in the lead of the parade

Each of the apparent vikings wore green tunics and helmets and held a shield decorated with the silver image of a dragon

Dozens of adults and children paraded through the town in matching green helmets, tunics and carrying axes this afternoon.

Each of the apparent Vikings also held a green and brown shield bearing the image of a dragon in silver.

The procession is led by the Guizer Jarl, or chief guizer, and it culminates in a replica longboat being set alight.

Volunteers are responsible for the building of the galley boat and the production of more than 1,000 torches.

The procession is led by the Guizer Jarl, or chief guizer (pictured John Nicholson), and it culminates in a replica longboat being set alight

Time for a cuppa: Being a modern-day Viking is clearly thirsty work as these three show by stopping for a chat and a drink

Pictured: A shield used as part of the viking costume worn by participants in the Up Helly Aa festival in Lerwick, Shetland

Up Helly Aa celebrates the influence of the Scandinavian Vikings in the Shetland Islands and culminates with up to 1,000 'guizers' throwing flaming torches into their Viking longboat and setting it alight later in the evening


Those taking part in the festival spend the night visiting a host of celebrations in halls around the town.

Shetland and neighbouring Orkney were ruled by the Norse for about 500 years until they became part of Scotland in 1468.

The festival stems from the 1880s when a group of young local men wanted to put new ideas into Shetland's Christmas celebrations.

Hundreds of onlookers watch on as participants dressed in Norse attire chant on top of the green and white long boat which will be set alight later tonight

The festival stems from the 1870s when a group of young local men wanted to put new ideas into Shetland's Christmas celebrations (pictured, Up Helly Aa participants)

This year's longboat is decorated in the distinctive green and white hoops of (Glasgow) Celtic at the behest of Guizer Jarl John Nicolson (pictured in white), a supporter of the football club

Grinning participants march through the town in line as they hold wooden axes in the air before the Up Helly Aa festival

Shields on the side of the 2019 Up Helly Aa galley, which is painted in green and white hoops inspired by the colours of Scottish champions Celtic


At the time, squads of young men would drag barrels of burning tar through town on sledges, making mischief.

But as the event became more raucous year on year concerns over public safety grew.

This led to a change in the celebrations, and saw town chiefs draw inspiration from the islands' Viking history.

The honorary role of the 'Jarl' was introduced to the festival in the early twentieth century.

How the Vikings found a home on the Shetland Islands

Viking invasions of the Shetland Islands, in the North Atlantic, began in around 800 AD and, before long, Shetland became the northernmost third of a Norse earldom.

It is believed the Norse first arrived in the two islands when Harald Fairhair, the first King of Norway, took control of the Scandinavian country in around 872 AD.

When he seized control of the land, many of his enemies fled - some to Orkney and some to Shetland.

But these Vikings then continued to raid north, prompting Harald himself to raise a large fleet and sail to the islands just a few years later.

He took control in around 875 AD - and handed leadership of the two islands to Rognvald Eysteinsson as an earldom in reparation for his two sons being killed in battle in Scotland.

Norse control at one point extended as far as the Scottish west coast and the Hebrides, but it was confined to Orkney and Shetland during the battle at Largs in 1263.

King Harald of Norway's fleet gathered at 'Breideyarsund' - believed to be the Bressay Sound - before the battle.

It's unclear what happened to the indigenous Pictish people who previously populated the isles - but direct Norse rule continued in Shetland until around 1468.

It ended as the result of a marriage treaty between James III of Scotland and Margaret, a Danish princess. Orkeny and Shetland were given back to Scotland when the Danish struggled to find the funds to pay for her dowry.

Shetland eventually became a part of Scotland in 1471.

The Orkneyinga saga, which tells a historical narrative of the Orkney and Shetland Islands, includes references to this lengthy period of Norse control.

Source: Shetland.org

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