No
The popular image of Vikings wearing horned helmets is a myth. There is no historical evidence to suggest that Viking warriors wore helmets with horns. This misconception likely originated from 19th-century romanticized depictions of Vikings in operas and art. Archaeological findings of Viking helmets, such as the Gjermundbu helmet, show that they were simple and conical, without horns.
Source: GPT-4O Validator (OpenAI)

NO

Profile: Perplexity 70B Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: OpenRouter API request failed: 400 Bad Request. Details: {"error":{"message":"perplexity/pplx-70b-online is not a valid model ID","code":400},"user_id":"user_2ppBhZDf7TZ3CMFuJyzNBt0rEv7"}

NO

Profile: Zephyr 7B
Vote: NO
Rationale: OpenRouter API request failed: 404 Not Found. Details: {"error":{"message":"No endpoints found for huggingfaceh4/zephyr-7b-beta:free.","code":404},"user_id":"user_2ppBhZDf7TZ3CMFuJyzNBt0rEv7"}

NO

Profile: Llama 3.2 3B Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: There is no historical evidence to support the claim that Vikings wore horned helmets. The idea of horned helmets originated from 19th-century Romanticist art and has been largely debunked by historians and archaeologists.

NO

Profile: GEMINI Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: Archaeological evidence shows that Vikings did not wear horned helmets in battle or daily life. The horned helmet image is a popular misconception, likely stemming from theatrical productions of the late 19th century.

NO

Profile: DeepSeek V3
Vote: NO
Rationale: There is no historical evidence that Vikings wore horned helmets. This misconception likely stems from 19th-century artistic depictions and operas, not archaeological findings.

NO

Profile: GPT-4O Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: The popular image of Vikings wearing horned helmets is a myth. There is no historical evidence to suggest that Viking warriors wore helmets with horns. This misconception likely originated from 19th-century romanticized depictions of Vikings in operas and art. Archaeological findings of Viking helmets, such as the Gjermundbu helmet, show that they were simple and conical, without horns.

NO

Profile: Claude 3 Opus Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: While popular culture often depicts Vikings wearing horned helmets, there is no historical or archaeological evidence to support this. Depictions of Vikings with horned helmets originated in 19th-century artistic works, but actual Viking helmets were simple, rounded, and did not have horns.

NO

Profile: GPT-4 Turbo Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: Historical evidence and archaeological findings indicate that Vikings did not wear horned helmets. The image of Vikings wearing horned helmets is a myth popularized by 19th-century art and later media, but it is not supported by historical artifacts or records from the Viking era.

Provider: OpenRouter
Profile: Perplexity 70B Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: OpenRouter API request failed: 400 Bad Request. Details: {"error":{"message":"perplexity/pplx-70b-online is not a valid model ID","code":400},"user_id":"user_2ppBhZDf7TZ3CMFuJyzNBt0rEv7"}
Provider: OpenRouter
Profile: Zephyr 7B
Vote: NO
Rationale: OpenRouter API request failed: 404 Not Found. Details: {"error":{"message":"No endpoints found for huggingfaceh4/zephyr-7b-beta:free.","code":404},"user_id":"user_2ppBhZDf7TZ3CMFuJyzNBt0rEv7"}
Provider: OpenRouter
Profile: Llama 3.2 3B Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: There is no historical evidence to support the claim that Vikings wore horned helmets. The idea of horned helmets originated from 19th-century Romanticist art and has been largely debunked by historians and archaeologists.
Provider: Google
Profile: GEMINI Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: Archaeological evidence shows that Vikings did not wear horned helmets in battle or daily life. The horned helmet image is a popular misconception, likely stemming from theatrical productions of the late 19th century.
Provider: OpenRouter
Profile: DeepSeek V3
Vote: NO
Rationale: There is no historical evidence that Vikings wore horned helmets. This misconception likely stems from 19th-century artistic depictions and operas, not archaeological findings.
Provider: OpenAI
Profile: GPT-4O Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: The popular image of Vikings wearing horned helmets is a myth. There is no historical evidence to suggest that Viking warriors wore helmets with horns. This misconception likely originated from 19th-century romanticized depictions of Vikings in operas and art. Archaeological findings of Viking helmets, such as the Gjermundbu helmet, show that they were simple and conical, without horns.
Provider: OpenRouter
Profile: Claude 3 Opus Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: While popular culture often depicts Vikings wearing horned helmets, there is no historical or archaeological evidence to support this. Depictions of Vikings with horned helmets originated in 19th-century artistic works, but actual Viking helmets were simple, rounded, and did not have horns.
Provider: OpenRouter
Profile: GPT-4 Turbo Validator
Vote: NO
Rationale: Historical evidence and archaeological findings indicate that Vikings did not wear horned helmets. The image of Vikings wearing horned helmets is a myth popularized by 19th-century art and later media, but it is not supported by historical artifacts or records from the Viking era.