Rällinge statuette
The Rällinge statuette is a seated figure in bronze, discovered in Södermanland, Sweden in 1904 and dated to the Viking Age. The seven-centimetre-high figure, who wears a conical headdress, clasps his pointed beard and has an erect penis, has often been assumed to be the god Freyr. This is due to an 11th-century description of a phallic Freyr statue in the Temple at Uppsala, but the identification is uncertain.
It has also been suggested that the figure is a gaming piece, a flute player, and the god Thor blowing his beard to create wind. If it is the image of a god, it could be a small, devotional statuette of a type mentioned in Old Norse sagas. The object is in the collection of the Swedish History Museum.
Discovery and description
The object was discovered in the spring of 1904 at the farm Rällinge in Lunda parish, Södermanland, Sweden. According to the original report, it was found by Edvard Holmgren in the farm's garden under "a vast morass of stones, earth and several large trees and bushes". In 1990, the archivist Thomas Skalm presented documents which instead said that it had been found by the 12-year-old boy Gustav Karlsson in the farm's potato field; Karlsson had sold it to Holmgren for 25 öre, and Holmgren had gone to the Swedish History Museum in Stockholm where he received 20 kronor for it. The museum still has it in its possession.The statuette is made of bronze and has been dated to the late Viking Age, around the year 1000. It is high and weighs. Based on the design, and how it differs from contemporary artworks from continental Europe, it is assumed to have been made by a Scandinavian sculptor. The figure sits cross-legged and clasps his beard with his right hand while his left hand rests on his knee, with a part of the left arm missing. He wears a bracelet on each wrist and a conical helmet or pointed cap on his head. The beard is pointed and long and is accompanied by a large, upturned moustache. The figure is ithyphallic, which means he is depicted with an erect penis. The back of his shoulders and his buttocks are decorated with curly patterns.
Identity
Freyr
The earliest suggestion for the figure's identity was that it is the god Freyr. This position was taken by the archeologist Bernhard Salin in the earliest scholarly article about the object, published in 1913. The identification with Freyr remains the most accepted and is repeated in many works about Old Norse religion and the Viking Age. It is however uncertain, and is supported only by the phallus, which is associated with Freyr through the 11th-century chronicler Adam of Bremen, who makes a single, possibly unreliable mention of a phallic statue of Freyr supposed to have stood in the Temple at Uppsala. The Rällinge figure does not display any of the known attributes of Freyr from his myths, such as his sword, ship or boar.According to the historian of religions Olof Sundqvist, the statuette could be connected to Freyr's association with royalty and his function as a model for kings. Freyr was associated with battle and fertility, and Sundqvist writes that the statuette's helmet could represent the god's warrior aspect and the phallus his fertility aspect. This would correspond to a human king's responsibility to provide the military protection needed to keep the land of a kingdom fertile.
Other theories
The archeologist Kristján Eldjárn writes that the Rällinge statuette might not be an image of a mythological figure but a gaming piece. Because of similarities in age and design, Eldjárn writes that it "seems doubtless" that it belongs to the same artistic tradition as the Eyrarland statue from Iceland. The latter is often assumed to be a representation of the god Thor, but also resembles a smaller Icelandic whalebone figure, found in a grave in Baldursheimur together with black and white gaming pieces and a die. Eldjárn suggests that the statuettes are king pieces from hnefatafl game sets. Another suggestion comes from the philologist Lotte Motz, who writes that the statuettes from Eyrarland, Baldursheimur and Rällinge could represent musicians. She writes that the Rällinge statuette probably depicts a flute player, and compares it to images of "phallic flutists" from other regions.The Norse studies scholar Richard Perkins writes that the statuette could be a depiction of Thor who blows in his beard to create wind. Even if the figure is Freyr, which Perkins does regard as the most likely identity, some tradition could have attributed Freyr rather than Thor with the ability to control the wind with his beard. Perkins further suggests that the sitting figure has adopted features from the Buddha, inspired by depictions such as the 6th-century Buddha statuette found on the island of Helgö, not far from Rällinge. The conical headdress could then be a stylised version of the Buddha's ushnisha. The archeologist Neil Price writes that if the identification is based solely on the phallus, a symbol for a sexually active man, there is no lack of candidates from Norse myth, legend and history: in addition to Freyr, it is not possible to rule out other gods such as Odin, other beings like dwarfs, jötunns and elves, and human kings and earls such as Hakon Jarl.
Parallels in sagas and archeology
Although nothing is known for certain about the Rällinge statuette's original purpose, there are attestations of small devotional statuettes in the Old Norse saga literature. The Hallfreðar saga tells how Hallfreðr, the favourite poet of the Christian king Olaf Tryggvason, secretly carried a small ivory statuette of Thor which he worshipped, and Ingimundar Þorsteinsson is said in the Vatnsdæla saga to have kept a silver statuette of Freyr. These religious statuettes might have been called hlutir. The philologist E. O. G. Turville-Petre writes that the Rällinge and Eyrarland statuettes, like the statuettes in the sagas, may have been for personal devotional purposes.In 2002, three small phallic figurines from the Iron Age were uncovered at the farm Lunda in Strängnäs parish, also in Södermanland. Although they differ in design from the Rällinge statuette—two of them instead show similarities to the Kymbo figurine found in Västergötland—that makes for a total of four phallic statuettes found in Södermanland. It might be of significance that all four were found in the vicinity of places named Lunda.