Much of the study of shield-maidens focuses on them as a literary phenomenon. However, literary shield-maidens have long been seen by some as evidence of historical female warriors in the Viking Age. In the early 1900s a female weapon grave was found in Nordre Kjølen and labeled a shield-maiden. Shield-maidens however were not studied in depth until textual scholars began to examine the issue. Præstgaard Andersen, Jesch and Jochens all began to examine the textual sources.
Neil Price, argues that they existed. Some scholars, such as professor
Judith Jesch, have cited a lack of evidence for trained or regular female warriors.
Archaeology in Sweden, published 1889. Graves of female settlers containing weapons have been uncovered, but scholars do not agree how these should be interpreted. Graves in England and
chemical analysis of the remains from the period of
Viking activity in the British Isles suggested a somewhat equal distribution of men and women, suggesting husbands took wives, while some of the women were under the burial. In a tie-in special to the TV series
Vikings, Neil Price showed that a 10th-century
Birka grave Bj 581, excavated in the 1870s in
Birka and containing many weapons and the bones of two horses, turned out to be the grave of a woman upon bone analysis by Anna Kjellström. the so-called "Birka female Viking warrior".
Historical accounts Roman sources occasionally mention women fighting among the
Germanic peoples they faced; however, such reports are rare, and
Hermann Reichert writes that fighting women were probably exceptional, uncommon cases rather than the norm. There are historical attestations that
Viking Age women took part in warfare. The
Byzantine historian
John Skylitzes records that women fought in battle when
Sviatoslav I of Kiev attacked the Byzantines in
Bulgaria in 971. When
Leif Erikson's pregnant half-sister
Freydís Eiríksdóttir was in
Vinland, she is reported to have taken up a sword and, bare-breasted, scared away the attacking
Skrælings. ==In popular culture==