Michel Summer
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Early medieval ‘warrior’ images and the concept of Gefolgschaft
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This chapter reconsiders the traditional interpretation whereby the use of ‘warrior’ images on early medieval bronze-foils in post-Roman Western Europe indicates the spread of ‘Germanic’ military ideas. The chapter analyses how the historiographical concept of Gefolgschaft, developed and misused between middle of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in German medieval studies, influenced modern archaeological interpretations of early medieval ‘military’ imagery. The chapter suggests that the persistent and uncritical use of Gefolgschaft has created a tendency among archaeologists to interpret depictions of armed figures as an indicator that the military organisation of Post-Roman Western Europe was allegedly based on ‘heroic’ warfare, aristocratic retinues and non-Christian codes of loyalty. By reconsidering the diversity of the images’ archaeological contexts and by retracing the ideological distortion of Gefolgschaft in the first half of the twentieth century, the chapter argues that the ‘warrior’ images on the embossed foils from Sutton Hoo, Vendel, Valsgärde and other locations cannot be taken as reflections of a uniform ‘Germanic’ military culture.

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