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I
heard that at the deaths of their chief personages they did many things,
of which the least was cremation, and I was interested to learn more.
At last I was told of the death of one of their outstanding men. They
placed him in a grave and put a roof over it for ten days, while they
cut and sewed garments for him.
If the deceased
is a poor man they make a little boat, which they lay him in and
burn. If he is rich, they collect his goods and divide them into
three parts, one for his family, another to pay for his clothing,
and a third for making intoxicating drink, which they drink until
the day when his female slave will kill herself and be burned with
her master. They stupefy themselves by drinking this beer night
and day; sometimes one of them dies cup in hand.
They burn
him in this fashion: they leave him for the first ten days in a
grave. His possessions they divide into three parts: one part for
his daughters and wives; another for garments to clothe the corpse;
another part covers the cost of the intoxicating drink which they
consume in the course of ten days, uniting sexually with women and
playing musical instruments. Meanwhile, the slave girl who gives
herself to be burned with him, in these ten days drinks and indulges
in pleasure; she decks her head and her person with all sorts of
ornaments and fine dress and so arrayed gives herself to the men.
When a great
personage dies, the people of his family ask his young women and
men slaves, "Who among you will die with him?" One answers, "I."
Once he or she has said that, the thing is obligatory: there is
no backing out of it. Usually it is one of the girl slaves who do
this.
When the man
of whom I have spoken died, his girl slaves were asked, "Who will
die with him?" One answered, "I." She was then put in the care of
two young women, who watched over her and accompanied her everywhere,
to the point that they occasionally washed her feet with their own
hands. Garments were being made for the deceased and all else was
being readied of which he had need. Meanwhile the slave drinks every
day and sings, giving herself over to pleasure.
When the day
arrived on which the man was to be cremated and the girl with him,
I went to the river on which was his ship. I saw that they had drawn
the ship onto the shore, and that they had erected four posts of
birch wood and other wood, and that around the ship was made a structure
like great ship's tents out of wood. Then they pulled the ship up
until it was on this wooden construction. Then they began to come
and go and to speak words which I did not understand, while the
man was still in his grave and had not yet been brought out. The
tenth day, having drawn the ship up onto the river bank, they guarded
it. In the middle of the ship they prepared a dome or pavilion of
wood and covered this with various sorts of fabrics. Then they brought
a couch and put it on the ship and covered it with a mattress of
Greek brocade. Then came an old woman whom they call the Angel of
Death, and she spread upon the couch the furnishings mentioned.
It is she who has charge of the clothes-making and arranging all
things, and it is she who kills the girl slave. I saw that she was
a strapping old woman, fat and with a lowering countenance.
When they
came to the grave they removed the earth from above the wood, then
the wood, and took out the dead man clad in the garments in which
he had died. I saw that he had grown black from the cold of the
country. They put intoxicating drink, fruit, and a stringed instrument
in the grave with him. They removed all that. The dead man did not
smell bad, and only his color had changed. They dressed him in trousers,
stockings, boots, a tunic, and caftan of brocade with gold buttons.
They put a hat of brocade and fur on him. Then they carried him
into the pavilion on the ship. They seated him on the mattress and
propped him up with cushions. They brought intoxicating drink, fruits,
and fragrant plants, which they put with him, then bread, meat,
and onions, which they placed before him. Then they brought a dog,
which they cut in two and put in the ship. Then they brought his
weapons and placed them by his side. Then they took two horses,
ran them until they sweated, then cut them to pieces with a sword
and put them in the ship. Next they killed a rooster and a hen and
threw them in. The girl slave who wished to be killed went here
and there and into each of their tents, and the master of each tent
had sexual intercourse with her and said, "Tell your lord I have
done this out of love for him."
Friday afternoon
they led the slave girl to a thing that they had made which resembled
a door frame. She placed her feet on the palms of the men and they
raised her up to overlook this frame. She spoke some words and they
lowered her again. A second time they raised her up and she did
again what she had done; then they lowered her. They raised her
a third time and she did as she had done the two times before. Then
they brought her a hen; she cut off the head, which she threw away,
and then they took the hen and put it in the ship. I asked the interpreter
what she had done. He answered, "The first time they raised her
she said, 'Behold, I see my father and mother.' The second time
she said, 'I see all my dead relatives seated.' The third time she
said, 'I see my master seated in Paradise and Paradise is beautiful
and green; with him are men and boy servants. He calls me. Take
me to him.' " Now they took her to the ship. She took off the two
bracelets she was wearing and gave them both to the old woman called
the Angel of Death, who was to kill her; then she took off the two
finger rings which she was wearing and gave them to the two girls
who had served her and were the daughters of the woman called the
Angel of Death. Then they raised her onto the ship but they did
not make her enter the pavilion.
After that,
the group of men who have cohabitated with the slave girl make of
their hands a sort of paved way whereby the girl, placing her feet
on the palms of their hands, mounts onto the ship.
The men came
with shields and sticks. She was given a cup of intoxicating drink;
she sang at taking it and drank. The interpreter told me that she
in this fashion bade farewell to all her girl companions. Then she
was given another cup; she took it and sang for a long time while
the old woman incited her to drink up and go into the pavilion where
her master lay. I saw that she was distracted; she wanted to enter
the pavilion but put her head between it and the boat. Then the
old woman seized her head and made her enter the pavilion and entered
with her. Thereupon the men began to strike with the sticks on the
shields so that her cries could not be heard and the other slave
girls would not seek to escape death with their masters. Then six
men went into the pavilion and each had intercourse with the girl.
Then they laid her at the side of her master; two held her feet
and two her hands; the old woman known as the Angel of Death re-entered
and looped a cord around her neck and gave the crossed ends to the
two men for them to pull. Then she approached her with a broad-bladed
dagger, which she plunged between her ribs repeatedly, and the men
strangled her with the cord until she was dead.
Then the closest
relative of the dead man, after they had placed the girl whom they
have killed beside her master, came, took a piece of wood which
he lighted at a fire, and walked backwards with the back of his
head toward the boat and his face turned toward the people, with
one hand holding the kindled stick and the other covering his anus,
being completely naked, for the purpose of setting fire to the wood
that had been made ready beneath the ship. Then the people came
up with tinder and other fire wood, each holding a piece of wood
of which he had set fire to an end and which he put into the pile
of wood beneath the ship. Thereupon the flames engulfed the wood,
then the ship, the pavilion, the man, the girl, and everything in
the ship. A powerful, fearful wind began to blow so that the flames
became fiercer and more intense.
After the
girl is slain, two relatives of the dead take brands and set the
ship on fire, so that the dead man and the ship are shortly burned
to ashes. If in this moment a wind blows and the fire is strengthened
and the ashes are dispersed, the man is accordingly one who belongs
in Paradise; otherwise they take the dead to be one unwelcome at
the threshold of bliss or even to be condemned. When two people
among them quarrel and the dissention is prolonged and the king
is unable to reconcile them, he commands that they fight with swords;
he who wins is right.
One of the
Rus [Vikings] was at my side and I heard him speak to the interpreter,
who was present. I asked the interpreter what he said. He answered,
"He said, 'You Arabs are fools.' " "Why?" I asked him. He said,
"You take the people who are most dear to you and whom you honor
most and put them into the ground where insects and worms devour
them. We burn him in a moment, so that he enters Paradise at once."
Then he began to laugh uproariously. When I asked why he laughed,
he said, "His Lord, for love of him, has sent the wind to bring
him away in an hour." And actually an hour had not passed before
the ship, the wood, the girl, and her master were nothing but cinders
and ashes.
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