Valkyrie
(pronounced val-keer-ee, val-kahy-ree,
vahl-kerr-ee or val-kuh-ree)
(1) Any of the twelve beautiful war-maidens
attendant upon Odin who rode over battlefields, gathering the souls of slain
warriors chosen by Odin or Tyr and taking them to Valhalla, there to wait upon them.
(2) Code name for the civil-military conspiracy against the Nazi German government, culminating in the attempt coup d'état of 20 July 1944 during which an attempt was made to assassinate Adolf Hitler (1889-1945; German head of government 1933-1945 & head of state 1934-1945).
(3) A frequently used name for high performance machinery (eg Aston Martin Valkyrie, North American XB70 Valkyrie).
1768: From the Old Norse valkyrja (literally "chooser of the slain") and cognate with the Old English wælcyrie (witch). The construct was valr (those who fell battle, slaughter (and cognate with Old English wæl)) + kyrja (chooser (and cognate with Old English cyrie)). Kyrja was from the ablaut root of kjosa (to choose), from the Proto-Germanic keusan, from the primitive Indo-European root geus- (to taste; to choose). The Old English form wælcyrie, strangely was less prevalent in Anglo-Saxon tales than in Scandinavian myths although linguistic anthropologists have suggested this may be a consequence of the better preservation of old texts. Köri was an alternative Norse form of kyrjam, from the ablaut root of kjosa, from the Proto-Germanic keusan, the earlier form of which was geus (to taste; to choose) from which
English ultimately gained gusto. Richard Wagner's (1813–1883) modern German Walküre
was directly from the Norse while the word was first noted in English as
a proper noun (valkyries) in the 1770s and as a common noun (valkyries) since
the 1880s. Valkyrie is a noun & valkyrian is an adjective; the noun plural is valkyries.
Rides of some Valkries
Valkyries
Riding into Battle (1838) by Johan Gustaf Sandberg (1782–1854).
The Valkyries now
get quite good press but in heathen times they were thought rather more
sinister. The literal translation of their
name (choosers of the slain), referred to them choosing who gains admittance to
Valhalla, the Norse resting place of fallen warriors, but in some tellings of the myth they decided also who
died in battle and used their malicious magic to ensure their preferences were brought
to fruition. The tales of them writing
their ledger of death are recounted in Edda,
(an Old Norse term that refers to the collective of two Medieval Icelandic
literary works: the Prose Edda and an
older collection of poems now known as the Poetic Edda. Assembled in Ireland during
the thirteenth century and written in Icelandic, they comprise material reaching
back to the Vikings and are the main sources of medieval skaldic tradition in
Iceland and Norse mythology), their most gruesome side illustrated vividly in
the Darraðarljóð, a poem contained within Njal’s Saga. In the saga are depicted a dozen Valkyries prior
to the Battle of Clontarf, sitting at a loom and weaving the tragic fate of the
warriors using intestines for their thread, severed heads for weights, and
swords and arrows for beaters, all the while chanting their intentions with
ominous delight. That might delight some radical feminists but part of the myths is also that having carried the fallen to Valhalla, there the twelve beauties waited upon them hand and foot, attending to their every whim. Readers have always been able to take from mythology what they will. The artists of the nineteenth century however were always evocatively romantic when depicting the Valkyries, perhaps recalling the Nietzschean visions in the thirteenth century Norse Saga of the Volsungs in which beholding
a Valkyrie is compared with staring into a flame.
Valkyrie and a Dying
Hero (circa 1877)
by Hans Makart (1840-1884).
The imagery
exists also in the folklore of other Germanic peoples. In the Anglo-Saxon tradition, the valkyries (wælcyrie in the Old English) were female
spirits of carnage and the Celts, with whom the Norse and other Germanic
peoples associated for centuries, had in their mythology similar beings such as
the war goddesses Badb and the Morrígan. Whether in their loving or bloodthirsty
modalities, the valkyries are part of the complex of shamanism that permeates
pre-Christian Germanic religion. Much like the ravens Hugin and Munin, they’re
projections of parts of Odin, semi-distinct entities part of his larger being.
Hitler’s other Valkyrie
Unity
Valkyrie Mitford (1914–1948) was one six daughters of a right-wing father from
the English aristocracy, five of whom, had they lived in the modern era would
have been among the most prolific on social media and staples of celebrity gossip
sites; they were “content providers” and “click bait” before their time. Diana (1910–2003) became the wife of Sir Oswald
Mosley (1896–1980), founder and leader of the British Union of Fascists and the
mother of Max Mosley (1940–2021; president of the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) 1993-2009); on the
day she died she was the last person alive to have known both Adolf Hitler
(1889-1945; Führer (leader) and German head of government 1933-1945 & head
of state 1934-1945) and Winston Churchill (1875-1965; UK prime-minister
1940-1945 & 1951-1955). Jessica
(1917-1996) became a communist, Nancy (1904-1973 an author of note and Deborah
(1920–2014) ended her life as Dowager Duchess of Devonshire. Only Pamela (1907-1994) enjoyed what might be
thought a “normal” rural life. The only
brother (Tom, 1909-1945) was killed while on active service with the British
Army in Burma, one of several theatres in which he fought, declining to take up
arms against Nazi Germany, his choice of deployment the sort of indulgence the establishment
were extended.
Adolf Hitler & Unity Mitford taking tea during the annual Wagner Festival, Bayreuth, Germany, July
1936.
Unity
became besotted with admiration for Hitler and although various theories have
been offered to account for the attraction which seems to date from her
attendance at the 1933 Nuremburg Rally, there’s no doubt about her methods. While the legend was that after taking up
residence in Munich in 1934, she stalked him, making her presence known at the
restaurants & cafés where he was a habitué until she gained an invitation
to his table, she was a socialite who knew how the system worked and actually
gained a meeting by more traditional “networking”. Hitler was intrigued, not only by her obvious
personal (the depth of her political knowledge is contested) devotion but also
her family’s historic connections with notable figures of importance in German
culture including the composer Richard Wagner (1813–1883) and the proto-Nazi
author Houston Stewart Chamberlain (1855–1927).
Telling one confidant that being next to Hitler was “like sitting next
to the sun”, she became part of the court circle which surrounded Hitler where
the Wagnerian touch of her middle name gained her the nickname “the Valkyrie”
and some historians have speculated the second (and rather-half-hearted) of Eva
Braun’s (1912–1945) two suicide attempts during the 1930s was at least
partially motivated by her jealousy of Unity.
Perhaps
already mentally unstable, Unity was distraught at the thought of Britain and
Germany being at war and on 3 September 1939 (the day the British declaration
of war was delivered), shot herself in the head. She joined the surprisingly long list of
those who survived such an act although, badly injured, she was never again the same; repatriated to the UK via Switzerland, she died in 1948 from
complications related to the bullet which remained lodged in her brain. Even in the 1940s conspiracy theories were a
thing and there were several about the already strange tale of Unity Mitford,
something encouraged by veil of secrecy her family draped around her. The most bizarre was that shortly after
returning to England she was admitted to a private maternity hospital in Oxford
where she gave birth to Hitler’s child.
The origin of the claim was said to have been the sister of the hospital’s
former manager who passed it on to her daughter, the niece revealing it some
years later. Unfortunately, it appears the hospital “neglected to register” babies born during the war, something quite unusual and
another element onto which the conspiracy theorists latched. Historians have dismissed the possibility
Hitler had a child.
North American XB-70 Valkyrie.
Even while the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress (1952-1962) was in still in production, the
Pentagon was planning its successor.
The
North American XB-70 Valkyrie was nuclear-armed, long-range, deep-penetration
strategic bomber, capable of cruising at Mach 3+ (circa 2000 mph (3,200 km/h))
at an altitude of 70,000 feet (circa 24 km), performance which would have
rendered it close to invulnerable to both ground-based anti-aircraft fire and
short-range fighter interceptors.
However,
by the late 1950s, while the XB-70 was still in the prototype stage, the
introduction of surface-to-air missiles put this near-invulnerability in doubt
and this, coupled with the advent of intercontinental ballistic missiles
(ICBMs) meant the brief era of dominance by the big strategic bomber was over although the platforms, re-purposed, remain in use to this day.
In 1961, after two Valkyries had been built (one of
which was lost in an accident), the project was cancelled, viewed as a flying
dreadnought overtaken by technology. President Dwight Eisenhower (1890-1969; US president 1953-1961), a practical military man who had over the decades seen many weapons rendered obsolete by advances in technology, thought the Valkyrie was like "
bows and arrows in the gunpowder age". The end of the dominance of the big strategic bomber had earlier been predicted by the man who more than any remains associated with the once often-expressed advocacy of the platform which alone could win wars: Marshal of the Royal Air Force Sir Arthur "Bomber" Harris (1892–1984; head of RAF Bomber Command 1942-1945) noted during World War II (1939-1945) the "
...day of the heavy bomber will pass as it did for the cavalry charge and soon will for the battleship". The admirals weren't best pleased to hear that but he was right although, seventy-odd years on, the B-52, much updated, remains in service but it has been re-purposed, no longer envisaged as something to fly over Russian or Chinese targets, dropping gravity bombs.
North American XB-70 Valkyrie Specifications
Length: 189 ft 0 in (57.6 m)
Wingspan: 105 ft 0 in (32 m)
Height: 30 ft 0 in (9.1 m)
Wing area: 6,297 ft2 (585 m2)
Airfoil: Hexagonal; 0.30 Hex modified
root, 0.70 Hex modified tip
Empty weight: 253,600 lb (115,030 kg; operating empty
weight)
Loaded weight: 534,700 lb (242,500 kg)
Take-off weight: 542,000 lb (246,000 kg)
Fuel capacity: 300,000 pounds (140,000 kg) or 46,745 US
gallons (177,000 L)
Powerplant: 6 × General Electric YJ93-GE-3
afterburning turbojets
Dry thrust: 19,900 lbf (84 kN) each
With afterburner: 28,800 lbf (128 kN) each
North American XB-70 Valkyrie Performance
Maximum speed: Mach 3.1 (2,056 mph (3,309 km/h))
Cruise speed: Mach 3.0 (2,000 mph (3,200 km/h))
Range: 3,725 nautical miles (4,288 mi (6,901 km))
on combat mission
Service ceiling: 77,350 ft (23,600 m)
Wing loading: 84.93 lb/ft2 (414.7 kg/m2)
Lift-to-drag: About 6 at Mach 2[116]
Thrust/weight: 0.314
End of an era: The Aston Martin Valkyrie
The days of such things may be numbered but the
manufacturers of petrol-fueled hypercars are hastening, while they still can, to offer the
rich a way amusingly (and given the aftermarket, often profitably) to spend the
quantitatively-eased cash governments have given them this past decade.
In August 2021, Aston Martin unveiled the Valkyrie
Spider, an open-roof version of the Formula One-inspired hybrid hypercar, the coupés produced in 2022, the Spiders the following year. Revealed at
the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in California, the Valkyrie Spider differs
from the coupé in having a removable carbon-fibre roof panel, two hinged
polycarbonate side windows and front-hinged dihedral doors rather than the closed
version’s
gull-wings.
The powertrain of both is essentially the same,
combining a 6.5 litre (397 cubic inch), Cosworth-designed, naturally-aspirated
V12 and a single electric motor for a total output of 1160 bhp (865 kW) in the
coupé and 20 bhp (15 kW) less in the spider, Aston Martin not commenting on the
difference.
Drive is to the rear wheels
through what’s described as a seven-speed “automated manual” transmission and
though the coupé is slightly lighter, performance for both is said to be
similar with a 0-60 mph (100 km) time around 2.5 seconds and a top speed around
217 mph (350 km/h) although it’s noted removing the roof sacrifices about 12
mph (20 km/h).
Eighty-five Valkyrie Spiders will be built, these
in addition to one-hundred and fifty coupés and twenty-five race-track only specials
and while pricing hasn’t been announced, leaks from the factory suggest
something over US$3 million. Interest is
said to be strong although the loss of the lucrative Russian market presumably saw some adjustments in national allocations. On the car's webpage, the factory summed up its estimate of the performance by concluding "Any faster and it would fly."
Less is more: Underside of the Aston Martin Valkyrie.
Actually, even were it able to go faster it still might not leave the ground. While the aerodynamic techniques visible in the bodywork are orthodox by contemporary standards, the Valkyrie also generates much "virtual downforce" by the sculpturing of the underside, significant parts of which are effectively "hollow", the channels using the fluid dynamics of the air-flow to "suck the car to the ground". The technique has been used for decades but the Valkyrie is the most extreme implementation yet seen on a road car.