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The forgotten female soldiers who fought long ago – and why their stories matter today

Women have long fought in wars, but their contribution is often erased.

July 01, 2023 / 10:56 IST
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Stone carvings of women warriors at Deopahar in Assam. If it looks like a warrior, and is armed like a warrior, it must be a warrior. (Representational image via Wikimedia Commons 4.0)

By Sarah Percy, The University of Queensland

On the Swedish island of Björkö lie the remains of Birka, a significant Viking trading post. Birka is studded with burial chambers, stuffed with clues about their occupants – amber, textiles, gold, silver and many other treasures. One particular chamber caught the eye of 19th-century archaeologists, who labelled the grave Bj.581. This grave contained weapons: a sword, an axe, a spear, a battle knife, two shields and 25 arrows, and the remains of two horses.

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Clearly, this was the grave of a warrior. No one really looked closely at the skeleton in this grave to confirm it was male but for 100 years, the record held that the warrior in Bj.581 was a man.

An 1889 sketch of the archaeological grave labelled Bj581. Wikimedia Commons

In the early 1970s, bone analysis suggested the skeleton was female. DNA analysis published in 2018 confirmed the bones were those of a woman, with two X chromosomes.The team conducting the DNA analysis also examined the relationship between the skeleton and the contents of the grave, drawing the same conclusion as all previous investigations: “the person in Bj.581 was buried in a grave full of functional weapons and war-gear […] outside the gate of a fortress”. If it looks like a warrior, and is armed like a warrior, it must be a warrior.