This paper seeks evidence among our extensive Scandinavian mythological texts for an area which they seldom discuss explicitly: the conceptualisation and handling of illness and healing. Its core evidence is two runic texts (the Canterbury Rune-Charm and the Sigtuna Amulet) which conceptualise illness as a "purs" ("ogre, monster"). The article discusses the semantics of "purs," arguing that illness and supernatural beings could be conceptualised as identical in medieval Scandinavia. This provides a basis for arguing that myths in which gods and heroes fight monsters provided a paradigm for the struggle with illness.
CITATION STYLE
Hall, A. (2009). “Pur sarripu pursa trutin”: monster-fighting and medicine in early medieval Scandinavia. Asclepio; Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de La Medicina y Antropología Médica, 61(1), 195–218. https://doi.org/10.3989/asclepio.2009.v61.i1.278
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