John Grigsby presents compelling evidence that the legend of Beowulf and Grendel can co longer be dismissed as a folktale - it is based on historical fact. He reveals the existence of a pagan fertility rite once practiced by the ancestors of the English people that involved the ritual taking of a sacred intoxicant combined with human sacrifice...
J.R.R. Tolkien is often credited with writing The Lord of the Rings in an attempt to create a "mythology of England". but as Tolkien was well aware, England did once have a mythology of its own, of which only a few precious fragments remain. One such fragment is a Dark-Age poem that tells of the deeds of the monster-slaying hero Beowulf, who frees the feasting hall of a Danish king from the twelve-year tyranny of a creature named Grendel and it hideous, lake-dwelling mother.
Grigsby has discovered that it was the memory of the forceful suppression of a sacrificial cult in the 5th century AD that lies behind the seemingly fantastic deeds of Beowulf. His discovery helps to answer the questions of where, when and why the poem was written, and to restore the poem to its rightful place as a national epic.
Had I realised that Grigsby was associated with Graham Hancock and his "unconventional" ideas about an ancient advanced civilization, I probably would not have bought this book. But I didn't, so I did! And I'm glad I did, because it was a very absorbing read.
While not being convinced by all of his conclusions about the origins of the Beowulf story, there is a lot of interesting background and evocation of the Anglo-Saxon period. Whether you agree with the author's analysis or not, if you are interested in Beowulf, I think you would find this book worthy of a little of your time.
EDIT: Having asked for and kindly received expert opinion on the evidential quality and robustness of Grigsby's hypothesis, I've downgraded my rating by one star to three stars. As a non-acedemic I did enjoy reading it, so in fairness cannot knock any more off, but it seems the misgivings I spoke of above were justified.
Nope. Not for me. Too much wild conjecture stated as fact, and too little citing of good quality sources.
Also, there's too much citing of examples in unrelated world mythologies in order to "prove" that the same must be true in the Germanic mythologies. I didn't buy that argument with Joseph Campbell, and I'm not going to accept it here.
Saying that a man named "Shield", in the context of a fairly war-oriented culture, is actually a fertility figure is a REALLY tough sell. Frankly, it's just a ridiculous stance to take and I'm baffled that he even tried. Sure, he has one very good example of a shield being used in a ritual with a sheaf of grain. And I have zero problems believing that whatever myth/legend is behind that ritual is probably the backstory behind why there's an ancestor named "Sheaf" and an ancestor named "Shield." But to go on to imply that "Shield" is a fertility god? No. No way. Not buying that.
Mostly brilliant. Insightful, engaging, lots of interest and information and I found it easy to read and learned a lot. Would have given it 5 stars but some of the information does seem a little far fetched to say the least. Mostly it’s great though
Grigsby mounts an argument that Beowulf's fight with Grendel and his mother is a survival of some prehistoric cult that, Grigsby claims, conducted human sacrifice.
So far as it goes, he could even be right, depending on how loosely you define the terms of your historical scope for this claim. If you go far enough back, EVERY culture in Western Europe conducted human sacrifice of some kind. But by the time the composition of Beowulf rolled around, somewhere between 800 and 1,100 CE, England was solidly Christian. Grigsby argues for an extremely early date, sometime in the 600s. Although it's distantly possible that Beowulf was composed then, it's exceedingly unlikely. The form of Old English used in the poem is later, consistent with approximately the years 850-950 CE. The exact dating on the manuscript is something that scholars who specialize in Old English manuscripta still quibble about; I know because I used to be one of them.
By the time Beowulf was written, Britain was homogeneously Christian, and had been for a couple of centuries--it had been Christian in the 400s, while still under the later Roman Empire, then it was invaded by pagan Saxons, who then converted to Christianity starting around 600. Grigsby's chronology is way off.
He makes some other errors, too, like attributing the composition of Beowulf to a pro-Danish royal court. It's true that the poem as it is known to us must have been based on an older, oral tradition, but Grigsby fails to acknowledge how thoroughly the tale has been Christianized, and he also makes the cardinal error of not knowing his dynastic history before he makes a pronouncement on the subject of politics. The rulers of the assorted kingdoms in England at the time were themselves the descendants of Danish raiders. Beowulf was a story about their distant ancestors.
Is this to say that there aren't any visibly pagan elements to the tale? No. Not at all. They're just not very coherent, and they don't dovetail as neatly against the archaeological record as Grigsby would have his readers believe.
Overall, this volume is a hot mess of slipshod scholarship, written by someone whose academic credentials are at best tangentially related to the subject matter. Grigsby does not read Old English, Old West Norse, or Old East Norse, which you must be able to do in order to use the comparative approach to a project like this one; he relied on translations for this embarrassment of a book instead of reading the original sources directly. And then he swirled in some Greek and Near Eastern mythology, just for good measure--again, without showing even the slightest evidence that he was dealing from the original texts.
I have long been fascinated with the poem of Beowulf, and this is my first foray into non-fiction to study the origins & meanings behind the old text. This book I found to be a great introduction into such research, and it touches on many subjects: history, religion, mythology, literature, and language. However, while the book tantalize, it never goes far into detail on any particular subject, and left me wanting to delve deeper. Even so, it provides a historical explanation for the Beowulf legend I had not previously imagined, and has made me see the epic poem in a new way - which is what I was hoping to get from the text.
If I am getting Grigsby's thesis correctly, the truth behind Beowulf is that it is an expression of an agrarian myth of what is sometimes termed the (dying) 'cereal god'. Starting with discussions of the Norse Aesir and Vanir myths, Grigsby focuses on Freyr and Freyja, with the supposition that Grendel and Beowulf are expressions of these gods, though cast in the negative light of an incipient Christian religion.
Grigsby knows a vast amount about the history and mythologies of early English/Scandinavian/Celtic cultures, and connects these cultures and peoples together in a variety of ways. He also brings in material from Egyptian, Hindu, and Ancient Greek systems as well. In addition to his initial focus on Freyja and Freyr, he elaborates on beliefs concerning the decapitation of seed plants, how this relates to annual regicide rites, and how these were metaphorically linked to agricultural fertility.
Using the verses of John Barleycorn as a framework for the above, Grigsby moves into the realm of barley intoxicants, suggesting possibilities of ergot or other hallucinogens in the brewing of soma, and also discusses how these intoxicants could have led to the behavior of Norse berserkrs (and other cultural variants).
Unfortunately, while all the individual components of his arguments exhibit very interesting comparisons between various mythological systems, the book comes across as speculative suppositions in too many different guises. These are very interesting in isolation, but they do not gel into a coordinated thesis, and they left this reader confused about what the ultimate point of the book is.
Have you ever wondered if some of the legends and myths had a undercover meaning for the people who were part of them? This book builds the theory of a forgotten cult that most Germanic people had before they were "invaded" by the warrior religion. This cult was basically an agriculture based religion, in which human sacrifices were common and practiced each year. This is the account of an earthly goddess and her methods of worship transliterated to fit in the Beowulf legend (or vice-versa). John Grigsby will use all his knowledge, compare this legend with the Eleusis Mysteries, Celtic folktales and provide interpretations for some facts such as the Tollund Man's origins, the berserkers, the valkyries and more to demonstrate his thesis. Most of the Norse tradition is revisited with this new light on the background, which gives some plausible solutions to some enigmas revolving this subject. A complete work, well edited, organized and explained. Also, easy to understand and read but not entirely convincing as some of the theories are just interpretations with few palpable sources for validation. Even so, I my opinion, I found the proposal possible and I may read this book again soon.
In Beowulf and Grendel, Grigsby applies archaeology, philology, and comparative mythology to a study of the origins of the Beowulf story. His argument is that Beowulf is not just a hero story, but an allegory of struggle between agrarian fertility religion and the new warrior religions in ancient Germania, c. 500 BCE. This is not the sort of argument one can prove, but Grigsby piles up enormous amounts of suggestive evidence.
Much more plausible suggestions than the ridiculous "Beowulf on the Island of Harty in Kent". I think there are still many questions which need to be resolved. A very impressive work which goes far in discovering the reality behind one of the Dark Ages greatest myths and why this Scandinavian epic was so important to the Anglo-Saxons in England.
This book is fascinating, and I reread it regularly. Grigsby suggests that Beowulf is a Christianized gloss of a much-older pagan story about the war between two different pagan groups in Scandinavia/Northern Europe, and he builds up a meticulous and compelling argument for this, which he lays out in a thorough, yet easy-to-follow, manner.
For those interested in the subject of either Beowulf, Grendel or their time, this is a book to read. However, one should not expect it to be the final word on the subject, because of the constant use of words and phrases such as perhaps, may have been, might, suppose, and maybe.
A fascinating book outlining a theory about the Beowulf poem as a parable about the survival of a Neolithic cult that used ergot-derived hallucinogens in rituals. Interesting, though not entirely convincing . . .
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.