[Glorantha] Re: Lappland, women and breeding

Nils Weinander nils at weinander.org
Tue Dec 13 12:22:43 GMT 2005


Hmm, the Gloranthan content may be a little low in
this reply...

Mikko:
> 
>>Of course, in Orlanthi society the age at which one marries and the age at
>>which one produces children are not as closely linked as in Xstian society
>>(were this lot Xstian?) But even so.... 30. Hmm. That's a good long time to
>>be in the Healer bracket. Or Adventurous. "Career" stage, isn't it?
> 
> 
> Christian, yes. When the swedes ditched their old religion they had a lot
> of fun crusading over the gulf and converting us finns (and the lapps).
> 
> By that stage I'm pretty sure even the most remote Lappish groups were
> pretty thoroughly converted.

In Sweden, the Same (laplanders) were christianized in the
17th  century, when swedish pioneers first moved up the great
rivers to the interior of Lapland, i.e. much later than the
12th-13th century crusades to Finland and Estonia.

>>Since the adult women weren't tied to the cycle of pregnant/feeding/nappies,
>>I take it they had less limits on their activities? How did that work out in
>>terms of their part in society?
> 
> 
> Unfortunately I don't know. Life must have beenpretty hard to the reindeer
> herders (living in yurt-like tents, following the herds), so I bet
> everybody had a lot of work in their hands, just to survive. I don't know
> how much political power the women had (propably not all that much), but
> their labour will have been very important.

Back to some Gloranthan connection, traditional Same society
has a gender structure similar to the Heortlings: men and
women are equal in status and power, but have different roles.
____________________________________________________________
Nils Weinander
We sail on a ship made of dreams



More information about the Glorantha mailing list