How Did Vikings Say "I Love You"? (Hint: They Almost Never Used Words)
If you asked a Viking to say, "I love you," he probably would have looked at you like you'd asked him to translate the wind. Not because Norse culture lacked love — it didn't. But the Vikings weren't a people who trusted words to carry the weight of a feeling that big. Words were cheap. Anyone could say them. What mattered to the Norse was action, ritual, and the things you did in front of witnesses that couldn't be taken back. If you wanted to know how much a Viking loved someone, you didn't listen to what he said. You watched what he did with his hands. And more often than not, what he did involve a horn. Love Without a Vocabulary for It Old Norse, the language spoken across Scandinavia during the Viking Age, didn't really have a phrase that maps cleanly onto our modern "I love you." There were words for affection, for loyalty, for the fierce protective bond between kin — but the sagas that survive from that era are strikingly light on ...