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Axes, armour, torches: Vikings feast on Scottish island

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Vikings partied in Scotland's Shetland Islands on Tuesday in the annual "Up Helly Aa" festival, featuring a parade of men in suits of armour torching a wooden ship.

The event -- which means "long winter's end" in Old Norse -- has taken place in the port of Lerwick, around 125 miles (200 kilometres) northwest of mainland Scotland, on the last Tuesday in January every year since the early 1890s to celebrate the region's Viking heritage.

'Vikings' parade through town in a torchlit procession before torching the longship
'Vikings' parade through town in a torchlit procession before torching the longship
ANDY BUCHANAN, AFP

"It means a lot to Shetlanders and people in Lerwick that we can do this festival," John Nicolson, one of the organisers, told AFP.

"It's really steeped in Viking history here."

The 48-year-old is the figurehead for this year's festival -- known as the "Guizer Jarl" -- leading a "Jarl Squad" of dozens of Vikings for the day and hundreds of other dressed up "guizers".

The festival celebrates the Viking heritage of the Shetland islands
The festival celebrates the Viking heritage of the Shetland islands
ANDY BUCHANAN, AFP

"I've been looking forward to it for 13 years," said Nicolson, a self-employed decorator who has been on the 17-strong organising committee all that time.

"There's only been a few guys that have been (Guizer Jarl), so it's a great privilege."

The Jarl dons the same suit of armour -- comprising helmet, breastplate, shield, axe, dagger and belt -- each year.

But in a closely guarded secret, he chooses the design for his and his squad's other garments, representing a different character from the Norse Sagas stories each time.

The festival culminates with 'guizers' throwing flaming torches into a replica Viking long...
The festival culminates with 'guizers' throwing flaming torches into a replica Viking longship and setting it alight
ANDY BUCHANAN, AFP

The formidible looking crew spent Tuesday parading through the town, before a torchlit procession of hundreds led the burning down of the replica longship -- and celebratory parties were expected to last until dawn.

The festivities take place regardless of conditions on the far-flung islands -- which sit in the North Atlantic Ocean on the same latitude as southern Greenland.

"There's no postponement for weather," said Nicolson.

"It'll be what it'll be, and we'll just carry on."

Vikings partied in Scotland’s Shetland Islands on Tuesday in the annual “Up Helly Aa” festival, featuring a parade of men in suits of armour torching a wooden ship.

The event — which means “long winter’s end” in Old Norse — has taken place in the port of Lerwick, around 125 miles (200 kilometres) northwest of mainland Scotland, on the last Tuesday in January every year since the early 1890s to celebrate the region’s Viking heritage.

'Vikings' parade through town in a torchlit procession before torching the longship

'Vikings' parade through town in a torchlit procession before torching the longship
ANDY BUCHANAN, AFP

“It means a lot to Shetlanders and people in Lerwick that we can do this festival,” John Nicolson, one of the organisers, told AFP.

“It’s really steeped in Viking history here.”

The 48-year-old is the figurehead for this year’s festival — known as the “Guizer Jarl” — leading a “Jarl Squad” of dozens of Vikings for the day and hundreds of other dressed up “guizers”.

The festival celebrates the Viking heritage of the Shetland islands

The festival celebrates the Viking heritage of the Shetland islands
ANDY BUCHANAN, AFP

“I’ve been looking forward to it for 13 years,” said Nicolson, a self-employed decorator who has been on the 17-strong organising committee all that time.

“There’s only been a few guys that have been (Guizer Jarl), so it’s a great privilege.”

The Jarl dons the same suit of armour — comprising helmet, breastplate, shield, axe, dagger and belt — each year.

But in a closely guarded secret, he chooses the design for his and his squad’s other garments, representing a different character from the Norse Sagas stories each time.

The festival culminates with 'guizers' throwing flaming torches into a replica Viking long...

The festival culminates with 'guizers' throwing flaming torches into a replica Viking longship and setting it alight
ANDY BUCHANAN, AFP

The formidible looking crew spent Tuesday parading through the town, before a torchlit procession of hundreds led the burning down of the replica longship — and celebratory parties were expected to last until dawn.

The festivities take place regardless of conditions on the far-flung islands — which sit in the North Atlantic Ocean on the same latitude as southern Greenland.

“There’s no postponement for weather,” said Nicolson.

“It’ll be what it’ll be, and we’ll just carry on.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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