So, at least mythologically speaking, both meanings originate from our Ancestors kicking the hell out of some poor sap who was the leader of some hopelessly pathetic tribe that dared to give us the finger. I mean, think about it You're beat. Your shoulders ache from swinging a battle axe and crushing skulls, and you got blood and brains on your new wolf fur hoodie. All you want to do is sit around a campfire, drink some grog, and shoot the breeze with your buddies.
You're too tired to strike up a conversation, and as a warrior, you don't gush over someone when you see that they're still alive, so you come up with simple, one or two word phrases that capture the essence of the moment. Today, it's "dude". Back then, as the skull of the poor chucklehead who hours before was some minor bigshot is passed around, all you have the energy to do is give a wry smile over to a fellow warrior and say One word conveyed it all.
So skol has evolved from a battle cry of warriors to a common salutation or toast to friends, which in a way, it always was. Only under much different circumstances. And if it is just a myth, as many claim, well, it's one hell of a myth, and until someone can prove to me they DIDN'T drink from the skull of a vanquished opponent, then By God, they did. Because until then, it's just opinion, and I like this side of the story a lot better, because it's totally badass.
Since the Vikings did not record their own history , scholars are sometimes left to fill in some gaps based on conjecture or educated guesses. Such would be the case regarding how they interacted and conversed with one another. It is beyond dispute that alcohol played an important role in Viking social and ceremonial activities. As a practical matter, it is possible that the Vikings drank more ale than water because ale would be sterilized through the fermentation process and therefore be safer to consume.
Regardless, the Vikings viewed alcohol in its various forms as far more than just a beverage with intoxicating qualities. Here are just a few examples of the central role alcohol played in various aspects of Viking life:. With so many scenarios where Vikings fraternized with one another and alcohol consumption was expected, it would not be a stretch of the imagination to presume that many a skol would have passed through the drunken lips of attendees of these festivities.
In , the national soccer team of Iceland made a historic and highly improbable run through the Euro soccer tournament. Here is how the chant unfolds:. Bank Stadium to send the players into "battle. In fact, the Vikings' Old Norse language influenced modern English quite a bit, according to History : words as common as "anger" and "kid" have their roots in Scandinavian soil. The most famous example is probably "Thursday," derived from the Viking phrase for " Thor 's day.
Vikings will come to an end with the second half of its sixth season , set to air in late What other Norse words and phrases might audiences be introduced to before the show concludes?
Time will tell. Skol is the friendliest word on Vikings History. Skol and other Old Norse words used today History.
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