Up Helly Aa Shetland Viking festival: Women and girls lead festival for first time

Video caption, Ava tells us how Up Helly Aa is celebrated in Shetland (2019)

Up Helly Aa is the spectacular Shetland Viking festival which always takes place on the last Tuesday of January.

This year, for the first time in its history, women and girls will help lead the procession through the town.

The change is the result of a campaign to include womenwhich has been active since the 1980s.

The festival is very important to the people of Shetland, with the the first Up Helly Aa taking place in Lerwick, Shetland's main town, in 1881.

What is Up Helly Aa?

Up Helly Aa (meaning Up Holy Day) is a huge spectacle, a celebration of Shetland history, and a demonstration of islanders' skills.

Image source, 大象传媒/Getty Images

Image caption, The festival takes place in Shetland, off the north east coast of Scotland

It harks back to Shetland's Viking heritage. As well as the main event there is a junior version, just for kids, which takes place on the same day.

The events last all day and involve a series of marches and visits, ending in a torch-lit procession and the burning of a Viking longship.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, The Junior Guizer Jarl and their squad march along their route cheered on by the adult Guizer squad. They also build their own Viking boat with the help of their teachers and parents.

It's an event most of the local community takes part in, with loads of volunteers spending hours each winter getting ready for the big event and building the huge Viking longship that is at the centre of the festival.

Much of the preparations are done in strictest secrecy. The biggest secret of all is what the head of the festival, the Guizer Jarl, will wear and which character from the Norse Sagas - or stories from Norse history - they'll represent.

What happens on the day?

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, 1,000 locals dressed as Vikings take to the streets for this famous event to celebrate Shetland's Viking heritage.

On the evening of Up Helly Aa almost 1,000 warriors or 'guizers', some in full Viking dress, parade in groups, known as 'squads', wearing helmets and carrying shields and swords.

Each guizer carries a fencing post, covered with sacking material soaked in paraffin.

Image source, PA

Image caption, The Jarl squad parade with burning torches

In Lerwick, at 7.30pm, a firework explodes over the town hall.

The torches are lit, the band strikes up and the blazing procession begins, snaking through the streets with the Guizer Jarl standing proudly at the helm of their replica longship, or 'galley'.

It takes half an hour for the Jarl's squad of Vikings to drag them to the burning site, through a crowd of 5,000 spectators or more.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption, The participants set fire to their longboat during the event as a way to mark the heritage of the Scandinavian Vikings in Scotland.

The Jarl leaves their ship, to a surge of cheers. A bugle call sounds, and then the torches are hurled into the galley.

As the blaze destroys the shipbuilders' work, the crowd sings the song, The Norseman's Home.

Women and girls to lead the Up Helly Aa festival

Image source, Euan Cherry

Traditionally women were only allowed to be "hostesses" during the festival - organising the parties which take place in community halls across the Shetland capital.

But in 2023 women and girls took part in the festival's procession thanks to a campaign dating back to the 1980s.

This year, for the first time, women and girls will join the main squad at the head of the procession through the town.

Four young women will now form part of the lead group - the Jarl Squad - wearing full Viking dress.