Why did Vikings have 'Allah' embroidered into funeral clothes?

Blackleaf

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Researchers in Sweden have found Arabic characters woven into burial costumes from Viking boat graves. The discovery raises new questions about the influence of Islam in Scandinavia, writes journalist Tharik Hussain.

Why did Vikings have 'Allah' embroidered into funeral clothes?


BBC News
12 October 2017


One of the excavated fragments made from fine silk and silver thread discovered at the two Swedish sites, Birka and Gamla Uppsala


Researchers in Sweden have found Arabic characters woven into burial costumes from Viking boat graves. The discovery raises new questions about the influence of Islam in Scandinavia, writes journalist Tharik Hussain.

They were kept in storage for more than 100 years, dismissed as typical examples of Viking Age funeral clothes.

But a new investigation into the garments - found in 9th and 10th Century graves - has thrown up groundbreaking insights into contact between the Viking and Muslim worlds.

Patterns woven with silk and silver thread have been found to spell the words "Allah" and "Ali".

The breakthrough was made by textile archaeologist Annika Larsson of Uppsala University while re-examining the remnants of burial costumes from male and female boat and chamber graves originally excavated in Birka and Gamla Uppsala in Sweden in the late 19th and mid-20th centuries.

She became interested in the forgotten fragments after realising the material had come from central Asia, Persia and China.

Larsson says the tiny geometric designs - no more than 1.5cm (0.6in) high - resembled nothing she had come across in Scandinavia before.

"I couldn't quite make sense of them and then I remembered where I had seen similar designs - in Spain, on Moorish textiles."

Unlocking a puzzle

Larsson then realised she was not looking at Viking patterns at all but ancient Arabic Kufic script.

There were two words that kept recurring. One of them she identified with the help of an Iranian colleague. It was the name "Ali" - the fourth caliph of Islam.

But the word next to Ali was more difficult to decipher.

To unlock the puzzle, she enlarged the letters and examined them from all angles, including from behind.

"I suddenly saw that the word 'Allah' [God] had been written in mirrored lettering," she says.


Enlarging the patterns and looking at the reflection in a mirror revealed the word 'Allah' (God) in Arabic

Larsson has so far found the names on at least 10 of the nearly 100 pieces she is working through, and they always appear together.

The new find now raises fascinating questions about the grave's occupants.

"The possibility that some of those in the graves were Muslim cannot be completely ruled out," she says.

"We know from other Viking tomb excavations that DNA analysis has shown some of the people buried in them originated from places like Persia, where Islam was very dominant.

"However, it is more likely these findings show that Viking age burial customs were influenced by Islamic ideas such as eternal life in paradise after death."


A museum display gives a sense of what the Viking woman's boat grave in Gamla Uppsala may have looked like - similar to the tombs the fragments were found in

Her team is now working with the university's department for immunology, genetics and pathology to establish the geographic origins of the bodies dressed in the funeral clothes.

Historic first

Contact between the Viking and Muslim worlds has long been established by historic accounts and the discovery of Islamic coins across the northern hemisphere.

Two years ago, researchers re-examined a silver ring from a female tomb at Birka and found the phrase "for Allah" inscribed on the stone.

Again the text was Kufic, developed in the Iraqi town of Kufah in the 7th Century - one of the first Arabic scripts used to write down the Koran.

What makes Larsson's discovery so interesting is that it is the first time historic items mentioning Ali have ever been unearthed in Scandinavia.


A Viking ring with a Kufic inscription saying "for Allah" was found inside a 9th Century woman's grave in Birka two years ago

"The name Ali is repeated again and again beside Allah," she says.

"I know Ali is highly revered by the largest Muslim minority group, the Shia, and have wondered if there is a connection."

Ali was the cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad, having married his daughter Fatima. He also became the fourth leader of the Muslim community after Muhammad died.

Although both Sunnis and Shia revere Ali as an important companion of Muhammad, he has elevated status amongst the Shia, who see him as the Prophet's spiritual heir.

"The use of Ali does suggest a Shia connection," says Amir De Martino, programme leader of Islamic studies at the Islamic College in London.

"But without the phrase 'waly Allah' accompanying the name - meaning 'friend of Allah' - this would not be from mainstream Shia culture and might just have been copied wrongly from something that was," adds De Martino, who is also the chief editor of Islam Today, a British Shia magazine.

"The pattern suggests Ali is being equated with Allah, and therefore there is a slim possibility it has some connection to very early, extreme, mystical fringe movements who believed in this

"But more likely it is a wrongly copied pattern."


Inscriptions on the ceiling of an Alevi mausoleum in Bulgaria feature - on the right - the names Allah, Muhammad and Ali written in legible, simple Arabic while on the left there is a blue mystic pattern with the three names interlocked


The names Allah and Ali are often represented in enigmatic patterns inside the tombs and books of mystical Shia sects such as the Alevis and Bektashis to this day, but always they are accompanied by the name Muhammad. These can sometimes include mirrored script.

But unlike Larsson's find, these examples usually include both the name depicted the correct way around and the reflection.

For Larsson though, her discovery offers much promise for the future.

"Now that I am looking at Viking patterns differently, I am convinced I will find more Islamic inscriptions in the remaining fragments from these excavations, and other Viking era textiles.

"Who knows? Maybe they appear in non-textile artefacts too."

Tharik Hussain is a London-based freelance journalist, travel writer and broadcaster who specialises in Muslim heritage.

Why did Vikings have 'Allah' embroidered into funeral clothes? - BBC News
 

Blackleaf

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Simple, they were Medieval Muslim terrorists.

Parts of Viking Scandinavia probably became like parts of modern Britain - infested by hordes of TB-ridden, curry-munching Muslims refusing to fit into their adopted society.
 

MHz

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Simple, they were Medieval Muslim terrorists.
What he said.
Everybody knows stealing is a gateway activity to become one of those. Not to be mistaken for the English Pirate who were actually working for the Crown to bilk money out of the peasants without actually even leaving the Castle as incest is way more fun that bleeding to death on some wet grass. OMG that's blood not rain, . . .

[youtube]gsC4kf6x_Q0[/youtube]
DUELING BANJOS
 

Johnnny

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The Vikings went everywhere and they did reach the Middle East. Hell even a small section of Hagia Sofia has Viking graffiti on its walls back in the day when the Byzantines hired them as mercenaries.
 

MHz

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Parts of Viking Scandinavia probably became like parts of modern Britain - infested by hordes of TB-ridden, curry-munching Muslims refusing to fit into their adopted society.
Seems like you are saying the kicked your ass so easy they just walked on by until they came across some real men.
[youtube]1hMALVlwzNY[/youtube]

Read it more closely. It says: "Helly Hansen".
Mine says 'Stolen from Mable's Whore House', some guy named Boomer has a whole truck load, set up shop at various truck-stops, till some Hooker beats him up and steals his money and phone.
 

Blackleaf

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The Vikings went everywhere and they did reach the Middle East. Hell even a small section of Hagia Sofia has Viking graffiti on its walls back in the day when the Byzantines hired them as mercenaries.

The Viking Rus people as good as established Russia.
 

MHz

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Let me get this straight, the Vikings conquered England as many times as they liked and that is including the language thing yet if they go a few miles east they teach those people a whole different language. That about sum it up you forked tongue fool?
 

Blackleaf

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Let me get this straight, the Vikings conquered England as many times as they liked and that is including the language thing yet if they go a few miles east they teach those people a whole different language. That about sum it up you forked tongue fool?

The Vikings didn't teach the Russians Russian.
 

MHz

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So the attempted invasion was unsuccessful then, yes Comrade??
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Roads to Moscow
 

Blackleaf

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The Viking Rus - who also gave their name to Belarus - did meet with Muslims:

The Muslim diplomat and traveller Ahmad ibn Fadlan, who visited Volga Bulgaria in 922, described the Rus' (Rusiyyah) in terms said to suggest Norsemen:

"I have seen the Rus as they came on their merchant journeys and encamped by the Itil. I have never seen more perfect physical specimens, tall as date palms, blond and ruddy; they wear neither tunics nor caftans, but the men wear a garment which covers one side of the body and leaves a hand free. Each man has an axe, a sword, and a knife, and keeps each by him at all times. The swords are broad and grooved, of Frankish sort. Each woman wears on either breast a box of iron, silver, copper, or gold; the value of the box indicates the wealth of the husband. Each box has a ring from which depends a knife. The women wear neck-rings of gold and silver. Their most prized ornaments are green glass beads. They string them as necklaces for their women."

— Gwyn Jones, A History of the Vikings.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rus'_people
 

TenPenny

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Yes, enlarging it and reversing it in a mirror shows that it was Arabic. And playing 'Stairway to Heaven' backward results in a message from the Beatles telling you to play the entire White Album backwards.
 

Blackleaf

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Yes, enlarging it and reversing it in a mirror shows that it was Arabic. And playing 'Stairway to Heaven' backward results in a message from the Beatles telling you to play the entire White Album backwards.

Funnily enough, I was thinking the same thing.
 

MHz

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Yes, enlarging it and reversing it in a mirror shows that it was Arabic. And playing 'Stairway to Heaven' backward results in a message from the Beatles telling you to play the entire White Album backwards.
The flip side of the 45 was worth listening to a few times or more.
[youtube]kl2pFgEywng[/youtube]
The Beatles - Hey Jude



The best part on the lp is you were so stoned by the end of it nobody got up to pick the arm off the vinyl. scratch, . . . . scratch, . . . . scratch, . . . . etc. Charlie Daniels was a bit more standing and doing things type of music. Bit plainer than the bar, sorry, pub music from England.
 

Blackleaf

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It does masks you think, though, why the Vikings wrote "Allah" in mirror image, unless they just accidentally wrote it incorrectly.

The flip side of the 45 was worth listening to a few times or more.
[youtube]kl2pFgEywng[/youtube]
The Beatles - Hey Jude



The best part on the lp is you were so stoned by the end of it nobody got up to pick the arm off the vinyl. scratch, . . . . scratch, . . . . scratch, . . . . etc. Charlie Daniels was a bit more standing and doing things type of music. Bit plainer than the bar, sorry, pub music from England.

That's the wrong in which, around three minutes in, someone (many say it was McCartney, some say it was Lennon and some say it was Ringo) can supposedly be heard shouting "****ing hell!" in the background.
 

MHz

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Vikings also had mystics. Visions are always a mirror image or it would be reality.






Winner= #3 89.7% Knock out drops from a knock out, how novel.