HestavígHestavíg was an entertainment activity during the Viking Age in the Icelandic Commonwealth (930–1262), presumably a sport consisting of a brutal and bloody confrontation between two stallions, egged on by their masters, which mainly served to choose the best specimens for breeding.[1] It was a cultural event of great importance and sometimes behaved verbal and physical confrontations among the spectators. The triumph of a champion or the other could impact socially and politically in the pacts and alliances between goði (chieftains) and bóndi (homesteaders), as testified in the Norse sagas.[2] The site where these battles held was a neutral place used to strengthen friendship or treat issues among rivals. It was also an opportunity for courtship between young couples.[3] Sometimes rivalries raised among participants and ended in bloody conflicts.[4] Some examples appear in the Njáls saga (chapter 59) and Víga-Glúms saga (chapters 13-14).[5] The origin of the activity came possibly from Norway. Sometimes Icelanders exported stallions specially trained for competitions on the continent.[6] SkeiðSkeið was another activity related to horses. It was a popular race competition from mainland Scandinavia.[7] Popular cultureHestavíg is featured in the Icelandic viking film In the Shadow of the Raven. References
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