Vikings S03 - 03.mkv -

This encounter is the episode’s intellectual climax. Ragnar has built his identity on being unique: the Viking who questions the gods, who seeks knowledge, who will not be bound by tradition. Yet Gisla reduces him to a type: a barbarian who mistakes cruelty for cleverness. Her mockery stings because it contains truth. Ragnar’s “conversion” is not spiritual; it is strategic. He wants the Christian God as a tool to unify his people, not as a truth to live by. Gisla sees this hypocrisy instantly. In spitting on him, she performs the same function as Harbard: she forces a character to confront the gap between their self-image and their reality.

By the episode’s end, Ragnar has not yet lost Kattegat, but the audience understands that loss is inevitable. Harbard will father a child with Aslaug (Ivar the Boneless, the most destructive force in the series). Gisla’s defiance will harden into a lifelong enemy. And Ragnar, sitting in his great hall with poison in his eyes, is already blind to the truth: the wanderer he should fear is not the stranger at his door, but the restless, faithless version of himself. Vikings S03 - 03.mkv

Across the sea, in the Frankish court, another performance unfolds. Princess Gisla, witnessing Ragnar’s audacious fake-death-and-resurrection trick from Episode 2, does not cower. She laughs. Then she spits in Ragnar’s face. Her contempt is not just personal; it is theological. She calls him a “devil” and a “monster,” but more importantly, she refuses to treat him as special. In her eyes, Ragnar is not a visionary—he is a pirate with good timing. This encounter is the episode’s intellectual climax