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Fame Burst

The Real Meaning Behind Rollo's Tattoos On Vikings

Author

Mia Phillips

Updated on March 07, 2026

The two wolves Rollo has tattooed are brothers born of the great wolf Fenrir. In Norse mythology, the twin wolves Hati and Skoll — names that loosely translate to "hate" and "mockery" in English — were, in most versions of the tale, the sons of Fenrir and a werewolf mother. Being a creature of darkness and a son of Loki, Fenrir is eventually imprisoned in magical chains by Odin and the rest of the divine pantheon until the Norse interpretation of the apocalypse, Ragnarok. His wolf sons are enraged by the act, and, after failing to free him, begin chasing the astrological avatars of the sun and moon — the siblings Sol and Mani. As in many creationist myths, the brother-sister duo pull the celestial bodies around the world in perpetuity. Fenrir is meant to consume Odin when chaos reasserts itself and Ragnarok arrives, so his sons Hati and Skoll are destined to eventually catch and eat Sol and Mani to plunge the universe back into the darkness from whence it emerged.

In a 2014 video shot for History's YouTube ChannelVikings makeup department head Tom McInerney and Rollo actor Clive Standen spoke about the character's tattoos. While McInerney initally joked that he had no idea what Rollo's tats meant — and that the makeup team just slapped a bunch on his skin for no reason — Standen interjected with a laugh to explain that "Rollo" means "famous wolf," which factors into the wolf tattoos he has. 

McInerney piggybacked off that comment to detail, "We have two wolves in Norse mythology, chasing the moon and the sun. [...] One eating the sun and one devouring the moon." It was only a matter of seconds before the makeup department head was cracking jokes again, teasing that Standen was "so adamant that he wanted to get his shirt off all the time."

It's fitting for Rollo in particular to bear tattoos with such a history. He's the one who initially suggests the raids that make him and his brother famous — which is a particularly dark omen for history right off the cuff — and arrives on English shores to consume as he wills. Along with that effective historical characterization, the tattoos of Hati and Skoll that Rollo rocks is fitting for the place he has in his relationship to his family and the rest of his clan: He's separated from them by bitterness that eventually blooms into hatred, and acts out against them by joining their enemies.

This all goes to show that even the smallest touches can be thought out by a costume or art designer to give flavor and depth that only the most devoted audience would seek to learn.