The Vedic Agni and Scandinavian Fire Rituals: A Possible Connection

Authors

  • Anders Kaliff Swedish National Heritage Board, Contract Archaeology Service East

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.2005.05

Keywords:

analogy, altar, cosmology, grave, ritual, sacrifice

Abstract

To use ethnographic analogies is not the same as picking up ready-made interpretations from one cultural context and importing them into another. On the contrary, analogies are a powerful and necessary tool for any archaeological interpretation. If we as scientists are not aware of this we will most certainly use our own time and culture as an unconscious analogy: it is not possible to make interpretations, or even to think, without references outside oneself, and such references are nothing but analogies. l will put forward the hypothesis that the Late Bronze Age society of Scandinavia had rituals resembling, and probably related to, the Vedic tradition. As in Vedic tradition, fire sacrifice seems to have been an important ritual practice in Scandinavia. The Vedic fire altars are built as a symbolic microcosmos, repeating the creation of the world, and the fire (Agni) is seen as a link between earth and the heavenly fire —the sun.

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Published

2005-12-28

How to Cite

Kaliff, A. (2005) “The Vedic Agni and Scandinavian Fire Rituals: A Possible Connection”, Current Swedish Archaeology, 13(1), pp. 77–97. doi: 10.37718/CSA.2005.05.

Issue

Section

Research Articles