Seax
Wica And Lyblac
The Norse Gods And Goddesses
http://paganandproudofit.com/norse.html
An alphabetical listing and short stories, of the Gods/Goddess of the old
paths....
and many other general Norse concepts
Please note this is a scholars work, not esoteric work..
This page, in its entirety, is a gift from my friend RunicMourning.. AKA Scott
Hough
Re vamped by me :) May the information be of use to you :)
Thor: "Thunder," son of Odin and Earth. The most
beloved god of the Viking Age, perhaps seen as the chief god at that time, and
often known now as "god of the common man," Thor is best known for his ceaseless
battle against the giants. He is not a bloody minded reaver, however, but a
warder who protects the folk of Midgard and Asgard against the menacing beings
who would destroy the world; unlike Odin, he never involves himself in the
battles of men, but the gods often seem to rely wholly on his protection. He is
the only god that Loki seems to respect.
Although Thor is sometimes shown as being slow-witted in comparison with Odin or
Loki, he is a practical god whose solutions to problems are usually swift,
effective, and show the common sense the other two sometimes lack. He is also
called the "Deep Thinker," and in one Eddic poem, outwits the clever dwarf
Alviss ("All-Wise") by engaging him in a riddle contest until dawn turns the
dwarf to stone.
Thor's weapon is the Hammer Mjöllnir, images of which are worn by true folk
today as a sign of troth, as was also done towards the end of the Viking Age
when Red Thor was called on to battle the White Christ. As well as fighting
giants, Thor also uses his Hammer for hallowing both brides and funeral pyres,
and several runic inscriptions from late Viking Age Denmark call on him to
hallow the runes.
Thor was worshiped most by the free farmers (who were also warriors at need) and
by those who "trusted in their own might and main". Today, he is also seen as
the warder of his mother Earth against those who would harm her for their own
gain. He is able to raise great rages in himself, in which he summons up more
strength than any being in the worlds can match.
Thor appears as a big, muscular man with red hair and beard and huge fiery eyes.
He drives a wagon which is drawn by two goats, Tanngrísnir (Teeth-Barer or
Teeth-Gnasher) and Tanngnjóstr (Tooth-Gritter). When he travels to Jotunheim,
Loki often goes with him; Thor is the only god that Loki really seems to
respect. He is married to Sif, and had a daughter named Thrud (Strength) by her;
he also has a giantess-concubine, who bore him his sons, Modi (Courage) and
Magni (Main-strength). It is said that "Thor will help you if your prayer is
sincere".
Old Norse Þórr, Anglo-Saxon Thunar (from which "Thursday"), Old German Thonar,
Modern German/Wagnerian Donner, Proto-Germanic *Þunraz.
Freya: Freya is probably the best-known and best-loved of the goddesses today.
Her title simply means "Lady," her original name is not known. Freya is the
"wild woman" among the deities of the North: free with her sexual favors (though
furious when an attempt is made to marry her off against her will); mistress of
Odin and several other gods and men; skilled at the form of ecstatic,
consciousness-altering, and sometimes malicious magic called seidhr; and chooser
of half the slain on the battlefield (Odin gets the other half).
Freya's chief attribute is the necklace called Brisingamen, which she bought
from four dwarves at the price of four nights of her love. This necklace is
sometimes seen today as embodying her power over the material world; the
necklace has been the emblem of the earth-goddess since the earliest times.
This goddess drives a wagon drawn by two cats, perhaps large forest-cats such as
lynxes, and is seen today as the patron goddesses of cats and those who keep
them. As a battle-goddess, she also rides on a boar called Hildisvini
(Battle-Swine).
Like Odin, Freya is often a stirrer of strife. As Gullveig ("Gold-Drunkenness"),
she came among the Aesir to cause trouble. She was stabbed and burnt three
times, but arose from the flame each time; through this torment, she transformed
herself into Heith ("the Glorious"), mistress of magic, in a typical shamanic
initiation. This also seems to have started the war between the Aesir and the
Vanir.
Freya is sometimes seen as a fertility goddess, but there are no sources
suggesting that she was called on to bring fruitfulness to fields or wombs.
Rather, she is a goddess of riches, whose tears are gold and whose "daughters,"
in the riddle-poetry of the skalds, are precious objects. However, the giants
are always trying to take her away from the gods, and it is clear that this
would be a great disaster: she was obviously known to be the embodiment of the
holy life-force on some level. Perhaps because of this, Wagner gave her some of
Idunna's attributes, making her the keeper of the golden apples without which
the folk of Asgard would wither and die.
Old Norse Freyja, Old English Freo, Modern German Frau, Wagnerian Freia, Modern
English Frowe.
Frey: Son of Njord, twin brother of Freya. "Frey" is a title simply meaning
"Lord," his original name was apparently some form of Yngvi/Ing. Together with
Thor, Frey was one of the best-loved gods of the Viking Age.
Frey was the main god of kingship among the Swedes, whose royal family, the
Ynglings, was descended from him. His holy animal was the boar, which appears
several times on richly decorated helmets from the sixth century through the
eighth.
Frey was called on for protection in battle, for frith (fruitful peace) at home,
and for good weather and gentle rains. He was, and is, often thought of as a
giver of riches, whose blessing is called on for fruitfulness and growth in all
fields of endeavor. His priests at Uppsala were said to ring bells and clap
their hands with effeminate gestures, and it has been suggested that this
cryptic reference hints at a tradition involving shamanic cross-dressing.
Frey is the lord of the elves (see below), and is especially connected with the
blessings and worship given to the ancestral spirits and possibly land-spirits.
His image was often shown with an enlarged phallus; like his twin sister, he is
sometimes seen today as a deity of love and pleasure. Frey owns a gold boar
called Gullinbursti (Gold-Bristled) on which he can ride over air and water. He
once had a horse named Bloody-Hooved (perhaps having to do with his role as
battle-god) and a sword, but these he gave to his manservant Skírnir (the
Shining One) for winning the giant-maiden Gerd for him. At Ragnarok, he will
fight Surt with a stag's antler.
Old Norse Freyr or Yngvi-Freyr, Ingunar-Freyr; Anglo-Saxon Ing or Frea, Old High
German Fro, Modern German (Wagnerian) Froh, Proto-Germanic *Ingwaz, also called
Fro Ing (Lord Ing).
Odin: Originally a god of death, whose range later came to encompass magic
(especially runic magic), battle (giving victory by choosing who should die),
poetry, the fury of the berserk-warrior, and, at least in part, the authority of
the ruler descended from the gods (he is the most frequent father of royal lines
- including, according to Anglo-Saxon genealogies, the current royal house of
England). In the Prose Edda (written two hundred years after the conversion of
Iceland), he is shown as the chief of the gods, but historical accounts of
Germanic religion do not necessarily support this; it is likelier that Snorri
was modeling the Norse pantheon somewhat on the Classical.
Odin won the runes by hanging on a tree for nine days and nights, wounded with
his own spear. He gave up one of his eyes for a drink from the Well of Mímir
("Memory"). He won the mead of poetry by seducing the giant-maid Gunnlod who had
been set to keep it, then asking for a drink and draining all three cauldrons.
To his chosen ones, he gives victory, inspiration, magic, madness, and death
when he sees fit. He is seen as especially a god of wisdom, a patron of poets,
thinkers, and singers. Of all the gods, Odin is the one who seems to take the
most active part in the affairs of humans, and the one who appears most often in
the writings of the Germanic peoples.
Odin usually appears as a gray bearded man, tall and thin, with a blue-black
cloak and an eye patch or wide-brimmed hat tilted to hide his missing eye. His
weapon is the casting spear Gungnir, with which he dooms his chosen ones to die
in battle. He has two wolves, Geri and Freki (both names mean "the Greedy"); two
ravens, Huginn ("the Thoughtful" or "the Bold") and Muninn ("the Mindful" or
"the Desirous"); and a gray, eight-legged horse called Sleipnir ("Slipper"). He
is the husband of Frigga and the father of many gods and human heroes. As the
leader of the Wild Hunt, he also brings fruitfulness to the fields.
Odin is assisted by the Valkyries ("Choosers of the Slain") who work his will on
the battlefield, bringing the bravest warriors to Valhalla ("Hall of the
Slain"), where they ready their strength against the coming of Ragnarok. It is
said that "Odin will help you if he feels like it," and it is true that he is a
stern tester of his children, and often seems rather capricious. However, even
when he seems cruel, his purpose is always clear: to strengthen the hosts of the
gods for the last battle so that life and knowledge can be preserved and the new
world born after the old is destroyed. In the late Viking Age poem Eiríksmál,
Bragi asks Odin, "Why did you take victory from him (Erik Bloodaxe), if he
seemed the bravest to you?" and Odin answers, "Because of that which no one
knows (that is, the time of Ragnarok): the Gray Wolf gapes ever at the dwellings
of the gods." Odin is a god of foresight, careful weaving of plots, and
long-term agendas.
Old Norse Óðinn; Anglo-Saxon Woden; Old High German Wodan; Modern German Wotan;
Proto-Germanic *Woðanaz. "The Furious (or Mad) One".
Frigga: Wife of Odin, Frigga is the patron goddess of the home and of the
mysteries of the married woman. She is seen as Odin's match (and sometimes his
better) in wisdom; she shares his high-seat, from which they look out over the
worlds together.
Frigga is especially concerned with keeping social order. She is called on for
blessings when women are giving birth and for help in matters of traditional
women's crafts (spinning, weaving, cooking, sewing) and the magics worked
thereby. Frigga can also be called on by mothers who want to protect their
children. In olden days, this was especially the case with sons going out to
battle, for whom their mothers would weave or sew special protective items. She
is also called Hlin (protectress).
Frigga is the mother of Balder, and is often thought of as still mourning for
him. She is a seeress, who knows all fates, though she seldom speaks of them.
Her hall is called Fensalir - "marsh-halls". She has a handmaiden called Fulla
and a messenger named Gna.
Despite the likeness of names and the similar relationship to Odin, Frigga
should not be confused with Freya, who shares none of her essential traits. Her
only departure from strict social behavior is that during one of Odin's journeys
away from Asgard, she is said to have taken his brothers Vili and Ve as
husbands; however, this probably shows the queen-goddess as the embodiment of
sovereignty. Her name is also not directly related to the English slang-word,
though the two derive from the same original root ("love, pleasure"). Old Norse
Frigg, Anglo-Saxon Frige, Old High German Frija, Wagnerian Fricka.
Loki: An etin brought among the Aesir by Odin, who swore blood-brotherhood with
him, Loki wavers between a weal-bringing culture-hero/Trickster and a
woe-bringing destroyer. He is responsible for getting the gods most of their
good, but only after he has led them to the edge of destruction. He often
travels with Thor, sometimes leading him into trouble and sometimes getting him
out of it. Loki also brings a surprising amount of humor into the Norse tales
(and into the practice of the Northern religion today). The need for this
function of his appears explicitly in the tale of how the giantess Skadi was
reconciled to accepting weregild from the gods instead of insisting on revenge:
one of her conditions is that they must make her laugh, and it is only Loki who
can accomplish this.
Loki may have appeared in cultic dramas as a ritual Lord of Misrule: inversion
and reversal of all sorts are typical for him. As well as being the father of
the Wolf Fenrir, the Midgard Serpent, and, allegedly, Hel, he is also the mother
of Odin's eight-legged horse Sleipnir, and cross-dresses in the typically
feminine falcon-hides of Frigga and Freyja when he needs to fly between the
worlds.
Bad nineteenth-century etymology associated Loki with Logi (fire) and, helped
along by Wagner, the image of Loki as a fire-being seems to be with us to stay.
Modern thought also associates Loki especially with computers, for a number of
reasons.
After the death of Balder, the gods bound Loki in an underground cave, and Skadi
hung a venom-dripping snake over his face. The venom is caught in a cup by his
Aesir-wife Sigyn; supposedly, when she turns away to empty it, his writhings
cause earthquakes. There is much debate among true folk as to whether Loki is
really bound, or just how bound he is, however.
Not surprisingly, views on Loki range from those who think of him as a merry
friend to those who see him almost as a Nordic Satan. Although he plays a key
role in many of our holy tales, it is fairly safe to guess that he was not
worshiped in the sense that the other gods and goddesses were - but whenever a
drink is given to Odin, according to the terms of their oath, Loki also gets
one.
Other Gods, Goddesses and Wights
Aegir: the giant who embodies the sea. Aegir brews ale for the gods and hosts
some of their feasts. His wife is Ran, a less friendly personification of the
sea; their daughters are the waves. Old Norse Ægir.
Aesir: "the gods," used specifically for the godly tribe including Odin, Thor,
and Tyr (in contrast to the Vanir, Njord, Frey, and Freya), but also used in
general for all the deities. Generally more associated with air, fire, and the
mechanical or artificial; whereas the Vanir are associated with earth, water,
and the natural or organic - though these are by no means firmly set boundaries.
The Aesir and the Vanir once held a war, which, since their battle-might was
equal, ended in a draw. The truce was settled by the creation of the being
Kvasir (see below) and the trading of hostages: Odin's brother Hoenir and the
giant Mimir went to the Vanir, and Njord and Frey were sent among the Aesir
(Freya seems to have come along of her own choice), where, according to Ynglinga
saga, they held the role of "priests". Old Norse Æsir, singular Áss; Modern
English Ase, plural Ases.
Angrboda: Loki's giant-wife, mother of the Wolf Fenrir, the Midgard Serpent, and
Hel.
Askr: "Ash-Tree"; the first human male, made out of an ash-log by Odin, Hoenir,
and Lodurr. Husband of Embla, the first human female.
Audhumla: the primal cow, born at the same time as Ymir (see below), whose
licking brought the first god, Odin's grandfather Bor, out of the ice of
Niflheim.
Austri, Sudri, Vestri, Nordri: the four dwarves who hold up the four corners of
the sky (Ymir's skull): East, South, West, and North. Sometimes also thought to
be the four who forged Freya's necklace Brisingamen. Old Norse Austri, Suðri,
Vestri, Norðri.
Balder: Son of Odin and Frigga, he is shown in the Prose Edda as a rather pallid
Heathen imitation of Christ, but other sources, notably the Danish chronicler
Saxo Grammaticus, portray him as a doughty and aggressive warrior. Today we
often think of him as the shining young hero who embodies the hope of an age.
After his death was foretold, Frigga got everything in the Nine Worlds to swear
not to harm him, but neglected the mistletoe, which she thought was too small
and weak to harm him. Making a game of his invulnerability, the gods cast
weapons at him; meanwhile, Loki made an arrow of mistletoe and put it in the
hand of Balder's blind brother Hod, aiming it for him. After Balder's death,
Frigga sent a messenger to Hel to ask for him back. Hel answered that if
everything would weep for Balder, she would return him. Only one old hag, who
some think was Loki and others identify as Hel herself, refused to shed a tear;
and so Balder stays in Hel's realm yet. After Ragnarok, he and Hod will come
back to inherit Odin's seat. Balder is seldom called on, but is remembered as
the hidden seed of the new world to come after the final battle. Old Norse
Baldr, Old English Bealdor.
Beyla: servant of Frey, wife of Byggvir. Her name is thought to be related to a
word for "cow," and she the protectress of dairy work; the alternate suggestion
is that "Beyla" is related to "bee," so that Beyla and Byggvir might be the
givers of mead and ale.
Bragi: Husband of Idunna, sometimes identified as the best of poets or the god
of poetry. Here his function overlaps with Odin's, since Odin is the keeper and
giver of the mead of poetry. Bragi is sometimes thought to be an historical poet
of the early Viking Age who was taken up among the ranks of the gods.
Byggvir: "Barley"; servant of Frey, husband of Beyla. Perhaps related to the
English "John Barleycorn" of the folk-song.
Disir: ancestral female spirits who look after their descendants, worshipped
especially at the festival of Winternights (mid-October). The word "dis" can
also mean "goddess" or "kinswoman"; for instance, Freya is called "Vanadis" (dis
of the Vanir). Old Norse dísir (singular dís), Anglo-Saxon ides, Old High German
idis (pl. idisi), Modern English idis (pl. idises). Probably the same as the
Romano-Germanic Matronae, or Mothers, who were worshipped along the Rhine in the
first part of the Common Era and appear in votive carvings as triads of women
with beehive hairdresses and baskets of fruit.
Dwarves: The great smiths of the Germanic world, the dwarves were formed from
the maggots crawling in the body of the proto-giant Ymir. They dwell beneath the
earth; they forged, among other things, most of the great treasures of the gods.
Many dwarf-names suggest that they were originally thought of as the dead or as
demons of death. Though sometimes surly, if approached with fitting respect,
they can be friendly to humankind, and several of our heroes (such as
Sigurd/Siegfried and, according to Thidreks saga, Wayland) were fostered by
dwarves. If offended or forced to work against their will, they take nasty
revenge. Old Norse Dvergar. Also called Swart Alfs (Old Norse Svartálfar),
Nibelungen (Wagner).
Earth:Identified as a giantess, mother of Thor by Odin, she is often referred to
in poetry as "Odin's bride". The traces that have survived of the worship of the
personified Earth herself show that she was honored by the Germanic people,
though not active in tales. Old Norse Jörð.
Easter:the English name of an continental Germanic Heathen goddess of spring,
whose memory proved so enduring in Saxon England that the christian springtime
feast was eventually called by her name. The hare may have been her holy beast.
Anglo-Saxon Eostre; Old High German Ostara.
Edda: See Prose Edda, Poetic Edda.
Eir: Goddess of healing, patroness of health-care workers, called on against
sickness or injury. She is one of the goddesses on the mountain called Lyfia
("to heal through magic"), and gives both physical and psychic means of healing;
shamanic healing, especially, falls into her realm.
Elves: usually called "alfs" in the Troth to avoid confusion with the elves of
Shakespeare or Tolkien. The Elves sometimes appear to be the ghosts of dead
ancestors still dwelling in mounds or hills; sometimes they are more similar to
land-wights (earth spirits). The Elves are worshipped together with the Disir
(see above) and often with Frey. Sometimes they are kindly, as names like Alfred
(Elf-Counsel) show; when offended, they shoot humans or animals with elf-shot,
causing stroke and other forms of sickness. They are divided into Light Elves
(often seen as wights of sun and air), Dark Elves (the dead in the mound), and
Swart Elves (see "dwarves"). Old Norse Álfar (singular álfr), Anglo-Saxon Ælf,
Modern English Alf.
Embla: First human female. The name is often translated "elm," though it could
also refer to a sort of vine. See "Askr".
Etins: giants. "Etin-kin" is used as a general term for giants of various sorts
and trolls. Usually seen as the foes of the gods, although many of them are
quite helpful, and etins and gods often interbreed. In fact, at least two of the
goddesses, Skadi and Gerd, are etins; and there are none of the gods who do not
have quite a lot of giantish ancestry. Some true folk today see the etin-kin as
the largest of the land-wights, who now need to be helped to restore the balance
of being rather than battled against; others stick to the traditional view of
the giants as, in general, the embodiment of destruction. Old Norse Jötunn
(plural jötnar), Anglo-Saxon Eoten,
Fenrir: the great Wolf, son of Loki and his giant-wife Angrboda, who will
swallow Odin at Ragnarok. The commonly seen form "Fenris" is a grammatical error
based on a misunderstood Old Norse poetic convention of identifying things by
their type and a possessive: "the ash of Yggdrasill," askr Yggdrasils; "the wolf
of Fenrir," úlfr Fenris.
Forseti: Patron god of the Frisians and giver of their laws. Silence had to be
kept while drinking from the spring on his holy island, which he had brought
forth from the rock with his ax, and beasts on the island could not be harmed.
In the Old Norse sources, he appears as the son of Balder, whose hall Glitnir,
"Glistening," is pillared with gold and thatched with silver; he is also a
settler of lawsuits and quarrels. Frisian: Fosite, Foseti.
Gefjon: Her name means "giver". With a plough drawn by four sons whom she bore
to a giant and changed into oxen for the purpose, she ploughed the island
Zealand (the main island of Denmark) away from the Swedish mainland, later
mothering the chief dynasty of Danish kings. She is clearly a goddess of
fruitfulness in some aspects; however, she is also the protectress of maidens
and their modesty, and unmarried women are said to go to her hall after death.
Gungnir: Odin's spear.
Harrow: an altar, in early times usually made of heaped stones. Old Norse hörgr.
Heimdall: Watcher at the gates of Asgard, he can hear the grass growing on the
ground and the wool on a sheep's back, and needs no sleep. He is the son of nine
etin-maids, perhaps the nine waves. His hall is called Himinbjörg
(Heaven-Mountain). He owns the Gjallarhorn (the Horn Resounding) which he shall
blow at the beginning of Ragnarok to gather the hosts of the gods. Some see this
horn as a cowhorn, others as one of the sousaphone-like lurhorns used in Bronze
Age rituals. Under the name of Rig ("King"), he came to Midgard in order to
father the three tribes of humans - thralls, freemen, and rulers - and to teach
runes and lore to the last. Heimdall is described as very fair, with golden
teeth. His horse is called Gulltoppr ("Golden-Mane"). He is a great foe of Loki:
according to one tale, when Loki had stolen Freya's necklace, Heimdall changed
into a seal and fought with him in that shape, winning it back. Heimdall and
Loki will slay each other at Ragnarok. Heimdall is sometimes seen as a rather
aloof god and lacking in humor; however, he is a great teacher, and an
especially good god to call on for those who work in subjects calling for cool
intellect rather than the furious inspiration given by Odin.
Hel: Ruler of the kingdom of death, the Prose Edda describes her as half-black,
half-white (she is sometimes seen as half-rotting, half alive) and of grim and
unmistakable appearance. Her name may originally derive from the buried
slab-rock grave-chambers of the Stone Age. The Hel-word is known to all branches
of the Germanic speech, and clearly very old, but there is some question as to
whether the goddess was recognized as an independent person before the Viking
Age. The Prose Edda, probably suffering from semantic contamination (the use of
the English word Hell for the frightful Christian after world), describes her
hall as full of horrors, but older sources make it rather pleasant, and indeed a
close reflection of the idealized god-house seen in descriptions of Valhall (Hel
and Odin have much in common, in fact). The specialization of the Germanic
afterlife into the glorious Valhall where the chosen battle-dead go and the
hideous Hel where everyone else ends up is probably a product of Christian
influence on the retelling of Norse god-lore; our earlier sources offer far more
options (going to the hall of the deity to whom one is closest, dying into a
hill or rock where the other ghosts of one's family dwell, remaining as the
guardian of a stead, being reborn in a child who bears one's name and/or
lineage), and the name Valhall does not become specialized for Odin's hall until
the middle of the tenth century, when it is probably a description rather than a
proper name. There is no evidence for the worship of the goddess Hel in elder
times, but there are several folk who work with her today. Also called Hella.
Hod: Blind brother of Balder, who unknowingly (at Loki's direction) cast the
mistletoe to slay him. Slain in turn by Vali. According to the rather different
version of the story told by Saxo, Hod was not blind, nor related to Baldr; he
was a doughty warrior, who fought with Baldr over the woman Nanna. Old Norse
Höðr.
Hoenir: brother of Odin, long-legged and handsome, but slow of speech. Sent to
the Vanir as a hostage after the war between Aesir and Vanir. After Ragnarok, he
will take the role of priest among the gods. Little more is known of him,
although he appears traveling beside Odin and Lodurr (or Loki) in several tales.
Hof: originally a large farmhouse, especially one at which the holy feasts were
held for a whole settlement. Used in modern times for a hallowed temple.
Holda: A goddess known through German folklore, her name means "the Gracious
One". She has much in common with Frigga, being the patroness of spinners and
the keeper of social order, especially enforcing taboos about working on holy
days. She is also said to be the keeper of the souls of un-baptized (or
sometimes simply young) children, and women who want to bear children ask for
them at her well. Holda also appears at times as the leader of the Wild Hunt.
According to one tale, it was she who taught humans how to plant and process
flax. When it snows, Holda is supposed to be shaking out her feather-bed.
Idunna: the goddess who keeps the apples of youth, by which the gods stay
ever-young. Loki arranged for the etin Thjazi to abduct her, but then was forced
to get her back, a deed which ended in Thjazi's death. Apples are one of the
oldest and holiest symbols of life and rebirth among the Germanic folk,
appearing as grave-gifts from the Bronze Age onward. The Troth's quarterly
journal is named after this goddess. Old Norse Iðunn.
Ing: See Frey.
Irminsul:"Great Pillar"; a pillar which was a major center of worship to the
Continental Saxons, destroyed by Charlemagne at the beginning of his genocidal
war against this people in 772. Possibly a ritual representation of the
World-Tree.
Jormungandr: See "Midgard Serpent".
Kvasir: After the war of the Aesir and Vanir, the two godly tribes sealed peace
by spitting into a bowl and creating Kvasir from the mingled spittle. He was
said to be the wisest of all creatures. He was slain by two dwarves, who brewed
the mead of poetry (Odroerir) from his blood. The name derives from kvase
(Norwegian), kvas (Russian), a kind of fermented berry juice traditionally
prepared by communal chewing of the berries and spitting into a bowl.
Land-wights: the beings who dwell in rocks, springs, and so forth. They are shy
and easily driven away (especially by noise or strife); when they have fled, the
land will not prosper. In Heathen Iceland, it was illegal to come within sight
of the shore with a dragon-prow raised, as that frightened them. The land-wights
are friendly towards humans who treat them well. Gifts of food and drink were
often left by their dwelling places; in America, tobacco is often added, as they
have grown used to it from the practices of the Native Americans. Old Norse
landvættir.
Lif: "Life," the human woman who survives Ragnarok by hiding beneath the bark of
the World-Tree (or one of its shoots) and, with her husband Lifthrasir ("the one
striving after life"), reproduces humankind after the last battle. Old Norse
Líf, Lífþrasir.
Lodurr: possibly another name for the brightest aspects of Loki, though this is
not certain. The third god of the Odin-Hoenir-Lodurr trio which shaped
humankind. Old Norse Lóðurr.
Lofn: One of Frigga's women, who gets permission for folk to marry when it had
been forbidden before. Especially the patroness of those whose love is
criticized by outsiders.
Midgard Serpent: child of Loki and Angrboda, this great Wyrm circles Midgard,
lying in the depths of the ocean. Some think that he holds the world together
while the age last. Thor caught him once while fishing and struck him on the
head, but Thor's companion, the giant Hymir, became afraid and cut the line. At
Ragnarok, the Midgard Serpent and Thor will slay each other. The Wyrm is also
called Jörmungandr (the Great Wand or the Great Magic-Beast).
Mimir: a giant, perhaps the brother of Odin's etin-mother Bestla. Keeper of the
Well of Mimir, in which all wisdom lies - the spring where Odin gave up his eye
to drink. Mimir was sent to the Vanir as a hostage with Hoenir, but when
Hoenir's slowness of speech was discovered, the Vanir became angry. Unwilling to
harm Odin's brother, they lopped off Mimir's head instead and sent it back. Odin
preserved it with herbs and spells, and gains much wisdom from talking with the
head. According to the Eddic poem Sigrdrífumál, Odin learned the runes from
Mimir's head. Old Norse Mímir.
Mjollnir: Thor's Hammer; see "Thor". Old Norse Mjöllnir.
Moon: The Moon is always masculine in Germanic language and culture, just as the
Sun is always feminine. This is one of the most difficult things in Northern
religion for those brought up on the Greco-Roman Diana and Apollo to get used
to; but traces of our original way of thinking of these two survive even in
English (cf. "the Man in the Moon"). The Moon is the brother of the Sun: he is
seen as dressed in a gray sark (long shirt), driving a wagon drawn by a horse
called Hrimfaxi (Ice-Mane) and chased by a troll in wolf-shape who will devour
him at Ragnarok. Old Norse Máni (used only as a personal name or poetic term,
not usually applied to the simple heavenly body).
Muspilli: The meaning of the name is not certain; it may be "destruction of the
world through fire". The Muspilli are fire-giants, led by Surt, who will break
through to fight against the gods at Ragnarok. The belief in the fiery
destruction of the cosmos, and the association of it with the name "Muspilli,"
is probably very early. Other than this, we know little of them; they hardly
appear in the Norse sources.
Nanna: Wife of Balder (of Hod in Saxo's version), mother of Forseti. Her name
may mean "the daring one". According to the Prose Edda version of the story, she
dies of grief and is burned on the pyre with Balder.
Nerthus: The "Mother Earth" worshipped by the North Sea Germans, according to
the Roman historian Tacitus (writing in the first century of the Christian era).
Her worship included the springtime procession of a wagon in which her image was
kept, which ended on a holy island. The name is an earlier form of the Old Norse
Njörðr (Njord), who is, however, clearly masculine. Still, it is said that Njord
fathered Frey and Freya on his sister, who is not named; it is possible that the
feminine and masculine Nerthus/Njord could have been a similar pair of mixed
twins.
Nine Worlds: The Nine Worlds of the Norse cosmos are Midgard (Miðgarðr, the
Middle-Garth) where humans dwell; Asgard (Ásgarðr, the Ases' Garth) or God-World
(Goðheimr); Light Alfheim (Ljósálfheimr, Light Elf-World); Niflheim (Niflheimr,
Nebel-Home), the "world of mists" and primal ice; Jotunheim (Jötunheimr,
Etin-World), where the giants live; Muspellheim (Muspellheimr, Muspilli-World -
perhaps "home of the destroyers of the world"), world of primal fire where the
Muspilli dwell; Vanaheim (Vanaheimr, Wan-World), home of the Vanir), Swart
Alfheim (Svartálfheimr), where the Swart-Alfs or dwarves dwell), and Helheim,
land of the dead, ruled by the goddess Hel.
Njord: Father of Frey and Freya, he is not active in the Northern tales.
However, he was seen as god of the sea and of ships, and also thought of as a
giver of riches and good harvest. He was usually blessed together with his son.
Norns: The three Norns, Urd (Wyrd), Verdandi, and Skuld, are etin-maidens who
guard the Well of Urd from which the World-Tree springs. They reach into the
Well's waters (the past) and sprinkle the Tree to shape that which shall happen.
They are also said to do their shaping by cutting runes and/or by spinning and
weaving. They are possibly related to the three Continental Matronae (see
"disir"); Snorri, and the Eddic poem Fáfnismál, also describe clan-disir as
"norns".
Odr: said to be Freya's husband, but the name is either the same as the
root-word on which Odin's name is based, "fury," or that from which Odroerir is
derived, "inspiration". It is most often thought that Odr is the same god as
Odin, perhaps in an earlier form.
Odroerir: "Stirrer of inspiration"; the mead of poetry (see "Kvasir").
Poetic Edda: A collection of poems about Norse god/esses and heroes. Also called
"Saemundr's Edda," as the first version was thought (erroneously) to have been
collected by Iceland's beloved magician/priest, Saemundr the Wise.The
manuscripts in which they are written down date from the late thirteenth century
onward, but many of the poems themselves probably go back to the Heathen period
(though dating them is notoriously difficult), and some of the material may be
extremely archaic. The chief "holy text" of the Elder Troth.
Prose Edda: A text written by Snorri Sturluson in roughly 1220, some two hundred
years after the conversion of Iceland. Also called "Snorri's Edda". Snorri's
intention was to preserve the dying art of skaldic poetry, which was totally
based on an intimate knowledge of Heathen god-lore. Although he often
over-systematized and sometimes got his materials wrong, his book is one of our
most valuable sources in learning about the deities of our forebears.
Ragnarok: The last battle, at which the Muspilli will break through the walls of
the world, and the wolves that follow the Sun and Moon will swallow them at
last. Most of the gods will die fighting against the etin-kin: Fenrir will
swallow Odin (and be ripped open in his turn by Vidar), Thor and the Midgard
Serpent will slay each other, as will Heimdall and Loki, Tyr and Garm. Frey will
fall before Surt. However, a new world will rise from the sea afterwards. Balder
and Hod will come back from Hel's realm; Vidar and Vali will sit in their
father's stead as well, and Modi and Magni will inherit Thor's Hammer. It is to
bring the new world safely about that Odin gathers his hosts in Valhall, and
works his many other subtle plots.
Ratatosk: The squirrel that runs up and down the World-Tree, bearing nasty
messages between the dragon at its roots and the eagle at its crown. Old Norse
Ratatoskr.
Runes: The word originally probably meant "secrets" or "whispered speech"; later
it was transferred to the actual staves of the native Germanic writing, and this
is the sense in which it is normally used today. The runic "alphabet" is called
a futhark because that is the order of the first few letters: F, U, Th, A, R, K.
The original form was the 24-rune Elder Futhark; with time and changes in
speech, this later mutated to the Anglo-Frisian Futhork (ranging from 28 to 31
or 32 letters) and, in Viking Age Scandinavia, the Younger Futhark (16 letters).
Runes were often used for magical or memorial inscriptions, though they were
also used for mundane phrases like "Katla owns this comb" and occasionally for
rather foul graffiti. Each of the runes has a name, a numerical value, and a
magical use. For more information on their magic, see Edred Thorsson's FUTHARK
and Runelore (pub. by Samuel Weiser), Freya Aswynn's Leaves of Yggdrasil
(Llewellyn), and Kveldulf Gundarsson's Teutonic Magic (Llewellyn). Avoid any
book which claims the existence of a "blank rune," which makes exactly as much
sense as a "blank letter" would in our everyday alphabet. The runes are a means
of writing known wholly through inscriptions.
Saga: an Icelandic prose work written in the period (roughly) between 1200 and
1400. The source of many of our stories of heroes, and most of our knowledge of
Icelandic and Norwegian history.
Sága: Her name is related to the Norse word saga, though not the same. She is
mentioned in the poem Grímnismál and, passingly, in the Prose Edda. According to
the poem, her hall is called Sökkvabekk, ("Sunken Benches") and she and Odin
drink out of golden cups there - probably, if her name is any clue, retelling
old stories while they do it. She, together with Odin, cares for writers. It has
also been suggested that she might also be seen as the patron goddess of Iceland
- certainly she was the only one to bless that country for many years.
Saxnot: a patron god of the Saxons; since he was apparently not known to the
Norse, no tales of him have survived. However, we know that when Charlemagne was
carrying out his war of cultural destruction against the Heathen Saxons, those
forcibly converted were made to swear an oath forsaking Woden (Odin), Thunaer
(Thor), and Saxnot. In the slightly variant form Seaxnet, he is also recorded as
the father of the East Saxon dynasty in England. The first element of his name
is probably related to the word sax (a type of knife).
Sif: Wife of Thor, mother of Ull (by an unknown father), best known for her long
golden hair. She appears only in one tale: where Loki cuts her hair off in the
night and, to save himself from Thor's wrath, gets the dwarves to forge hair of
real gold for her, along with several of the other great treasures of the gods.
It has often been suggested that she is a fertility goddess, whose rippling
golden hair may be seen in the ripe grain. In the prologue to the Prose Edda,
she is also called a seeress. There are hints that she may be associated with
the rowan tree as well.
Sigyn: Loki's godly wife, who bore him two sons, Narfi and Nari. She sits by the
bound Loki with a cup, protecting him from the venom dripping onto his face (see
Loki).
Sjofn: A goddess of marriage and love; Old Norse Sjöfn.
Skadi: An etin-maid, daughter of the giant Thjazi, who came among the Aesir in
full armor to take revenge for her father. As part of her weregild, she demanded
a husband; she had wanted Balder, but, being forced to choose among the gods by
their feet alone, ended up with Njord. His sea-home was as unpleasant to her as
her mountain-home was to him, and so they parted. She later bore a son to Odin:
this son fathered the line of the Jarls of Hladhir, who were some of the
greatest protectors of Heathenism in Norway during the extremely bloody and
brutal process of the conversion of that country. Place-names show that she was
especially worshipped in eastern Sweden; in the Eddic poem Lokasenna, she speaks
of her shrines and holy fields. Skadi is a goddess of skiing, hunting, revenge,
protection of the clan, and those women who follow the path of the "Maiden
Warrior". Old Norse Skaði.
Skirnir: "The Shining One"; Frey's servant and messenger. Old Norse Skírnir.
Sleipnir: Odin's gray, eight-legged horse, borne by Loki (in mare-shape) to the
giant-stallion Svadilfari.
Snotra: "the wise one," a goddess of wisdom and good behavior, always ready to
let folk know what is fitting at any given time. Often called on by the lady of
the house when men are feasting too boisterously.
Sunna: the Sun. The Sun is always feminine in Germanic languages and culture,
just as the Moon is masculine. There is fairly strong evidence showing that the
Sun was actually worshipped by the Norse. She is seen as driving a fiery wagon
across the sky, which is drawn by either one horse named Skinfaxi ("Shining
Mane") or two named Arvaki ("Early Awake") and Alsvidr ("All-Swift"), and chased
by a troll in wolf-shape who will devour her at Ragnarok. Old Norse Sól.
Surt: "The Black One," chief of the Muspilli, or fire-giants, who will lead the
battle against the gods and slay Frey at Ragnarok. His name appears attached to
several sources of Icelandic volcanic activities, from the Viking Age to the
modern era (the volcanic island flung up off the coast of Iceland in 1963 is
called "Surtsey," Surt's Island). The fire that burns the cosmos at Ragnarok is
called "Surt's fire". Old Norse Surtr.
Syn: "the denier": a goddess who guards gates and doorways against those who
should not enter.
Swart Alfs: see "dwarves".
Thjalfi: servant of Thor. When Thor stayed overnight at the house of a man (race
unclear; sources hint variously at human, giant, or elf) named Egill, there was
little to eat, so Thor slew his goats and served them up. He warned the family
not to harm any of the bones, but Thjalfi cracked one and sucked the marrow. The
next morning, Thor put the hides back over the bones and swung his Hammer over
them; the goats jumped up alive and well, but one was lamed. To pay for the
harm, Egill gave Thor his son Thjalfi and his daughter Roskva as servants.
Thjalfi was best known as a remarkably swift runner. The name (Old Norse Þjálfi)
has been interpreted as "serving-elf," but also appears as a personal name. His
sister's name, Old Norse Röskva, is related to the verb "to grow, to mature,"
and may hint at an original role as fertility goddess, fitting to both Thor's
role as a god of fruitfulness and to the character of his wife Sif.
Thrud: "Strength"; Thor's daughter. Perhaps abducted by the giant Hrungnir, whom
Thor slew; also desired by the dwarf Alviss, whom Thor outwitted. Her name is
sometimes listed among the valkyries; it is a common element in women's names
(such as Gertrude - "spear-Thrud" or "spear-strength"). Old Norse Þrúðr; English
Trude.
Thurse: another term for a giant, especially used for ill-willing giants.
Troll: originally, perhaps, simply meaning "magic," though it has also been
connected with "to roll". Today it is normally used for a being from Icelandic
and Norwegian folklore which seems to be a cross between a land-wight, a giant,
and the undead. Trolls of this sort are magical beings which kill (and perhaps
eat) travellers in the mountains and are turned to stone by daylight.
Tyr: His name simply means "god"; at one time, he may have been the Germanic
equivalent of Zeus or Jupiter, the "Sky-Father" of the Indo-Europeans. In Old
Norse, Tyr appears only in the myth in which he gives up his hand so that the
gods can bind the Wolf Fenrir. However, there are hints associating him with the
Thing (the judgement-assembly of the Germanic peoples) and suggesting strongly
that he may originally have been a god of justice. Tyr's justice, however, is
not that of calm Solomonic legislation, but that of the often lively wrangling
of the Germanic legal process, which was effectively a battle sublimated into a
form where the process of working out the problem could help, rather than harm,
the community. Tyr will fight Garm, the hound of Hel, at Ragnarok. No images or
descriptions of Tyr have survived, except that we know he is one-handed, and the
Prose Edda portrays him as a warrior. It is said that "Tyr will help you if -
and only if - your cause is just". A female deity named Cisa or Zisa (Upper
German feminine form of the name Tyr) is also recorded near Augsburg, but we
know even less of her, though it has been suggested in modern times that she may
be paired with Tyr in some way, perhaps as either a twin with similar functions
or as an Earth-Mother complementing the Sky-Father. Old Norse Tÿr, Anglo-Saxon
Tiw (from whence "Tuesday"), Old High German Ziu, Proto-Germanic *Tiwaz.
Ull: God of the bow and the snowshoe, patron of hunters and single combat,
little is known of Ull from the tales of the North. His name means "Glory," and
has sometimes been thought to refer to the Northern Lights. His home is called
"Yew-Dales," fitting to the bow-god. Since his name often appears twinned with
that of Njord or Frey in place-names, it is possible that he may have alternated
with one or the other as the Winter half of a Winter King/Summer King pair. Old
Norse Ullr, Anglo-Saxon Wuldor, Primitive Norse Wulþur.
Utgard: "the world outside the enclosure"; the world of giants, sometimes the
evil dead, and other frightful beings. A clear distinction is made between
Asgard/Midgard, which gods and humans share, and Utgard; normally the divider is
seen as a river or ocean.
Vali: Fathered by Odin on the maiden Rind to avenge Balder's death.
Valkyries: "Choosers of the Slain," these maidens were originally seen as
frightful battle-spirits accompanying Odin in his work of marking men for death
in war. They appear in a more pleasant aspect in Valhall, where they carry out
the traditional womanly duty of bearing drink. The idea of the valkyrie as the
hero's supernatural lover is probably a product of romanticization by the
thirteenth-century scribes who recorded the earlier poems of the heroes Helgi
and Wayland (Völundr) and filled in gaps with their own prose; the poems
themselves do not recognize these spirit-wives as valkyries. The most famous of
the valkyries, known chiefly through Wagner's Ring Cycle, is Brunnhilde, demoted
from her position for defending a hero against Odin's will and punished by being
forced to fall in love with Siegfried the Dragon-Slayer (Sigurd).
Vanir: a tribe of deities which we only know about through their relationship
with the Aesir. After a war which ended in a truce between equally matched
forces, the two tribes were reconciled, and the Vanic Njord and Frey came to
live with the Aesir. Since Frey and Njord are often called on for peace and good
harvest, the Vanir are often seen as peaceful fertility deities and contrasted
to the warlike Aesir in this respect, but since Frey is one of the doughtiest
warriors and called "leader of the hosts of the gods," and his twin Freya is
well known as a patron goddess of warriors and stirrer of strife, this can
hardly be the wholeness of their being. The Vanir are especially known for their
wisdom and ability to see into the mists of what shall become; the mind-altering
magical technique called seidhr is originally attributed to them. The rock
carvings of the Bronze Age seem to show a great deal of Vanic symbolism, though
Aesic images (the god with the spear, the god with the double-headed Hammer or
axe) are also often present. In modern speech, Wans or Wanes.
Var: "Beloved" or "goddess of contracts". One of Frigga's women, a goddess of
love and marriage, especially of marriage oaths. Old Norse Vár,
Ve: "Holiness". Probably an aspect of Odin. The "three brothers" Odin, Vili, and
Ve slew the proto-giant Ymir and made the worlds out of his body. Old Norse Vé,
modern "Wih".
Vidar: Called "the Silent God," Vidar was fathered by Odin on the giantess Grid.
At Ragnarok, he will tear Fenrir's jaws apart, avenging Odin and freeing him (or
at least some important part of his spirit) from the Wolf's belly. His name may
mean "the Wide-Ruling One". Old Norse Víðarr.
Vili: "Will". Probably an aspect of Odin. See Ve.
Vingolf: "The Friendly House," which, according to Snorri, is the special holy
hall of the goddesses in Asgard. Old Norse Vingólf.
Vor: "The Careful One," one of Frigga's women. Old Norse Vörr.
Walpurga: "Wald-burga" (Wood-Protection), a christian saint whose name was given
to the holy night May Eve ("Walpurgisnacht"). No Heathen name for this feast
survives. However, for the sake of custom and because nothing more original
could be found in Teutonic tradition, the Troth has taken to calling the
festival "Waluburg's Night," after the second-century Heathen Germanic seeress
Waluburg.
Wayland: the greatest of smiths in Germanic legend. A human who was wedded to a
swan-maiden; after she left him, he was captured by the king Nidhad, hamstrung,
and forced to work at the forge, but he slew Nidhad's sons, seduced his daughter
and left her pregnant, and flew away on wings he had forged himself. There is a
megalithic tomb in England called "Weyland's Smithy". Old Norse Völundr; also
called Weyland.
Wild Hunt: the procession of the dead which rides through the night skies,
especially around Yuletime. Sometimes it is said to be led by Odin; sometimes by
either heroes (such as Gudrun, wife of Sigurd from the Volsung/Nibelung legends,
or Theoderik the Great) or local villains.
Yggdrasill: The World-Tree. The name Yggdrasill means "Ygg's steed"; Ygg is one
of Odin's many names. The title probably refers to the nine nights Odin spent
hanging from it to win the runes, as a gallows is often called "the steed of the
hanged". All the Nine Worlds lie within the span of the World-Tree. It is
usually called an ash, but some think that it may be a yew, since it is also
said to be evergreen. At its roots gnaw the dragon Niddhogg and many snakes; an
eagle nests at its crown with a falcon between his eyes, and the squirrel
Ratatosk runs up and down between them. Four stags also gnaw on the World-Tree's
bark; but the Norns' sprinkling of the waters from the Well of Wyrd heal it each
day.
Ymir: The first giant, born from the meeting of primal ice and primal fire
(according to the Prose Edda) or from the mists rising from the rivers that flow
from Niflheim (according to the Eddic poem Vafthrudnismal). Slain by Odin and
his brothers (or aspects) Vili and Ve. They made the sky from his skull, the
earth from his body; his blood became the sea and the waters of the earth, his
bones the rocks, and his hair trees and bushes.