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AEGIR
"Alebrewer."
So called because Aegir loves to give feasts for the gods. God of the sea. Saxon
pirates gave to Aegir a tenth of their captives, who were thrown into the sea.
ANGRBODA
The giantess who mated with Loki to create Hel, Fenrir and the Midgard Serpent.
BALDER
A hero god, the god who dies and rises again. Fair skinned, fair haired,
wise and merciful, beloved of all. Loke tricked Hoder into killing Balder, who
had to be rescued from the underworld. According to the epic poem VOLUSKA,
Balder will come to rule again after Ragnarok.

BRAGI
God of poetry and eloquence, husband of Iduun. It is Bragi's duty to prepare
Valhalla for new arrivals.
DONAR
German god of thunder, forerunner of Thor. His symbol is the swastika. Oak trees
are sacred to Donar, as they are to Jove.
FENRIR
Also FENRIS WOLF
A monstrous wolf conceived by Loki. Fenrir was raised in Asgard, the home of
the gods, until he became so immense and feroucious that only the god Tyr was
brave enough to feed him. Tyr bound Fenrir until the day of Ragnarok, when
Fenrir will break loose to slay Odin.
FORSETI
God of justice, the great arbiter, the god who "stills all strife."
Forseti dwells in a hall of gold and silver called Giltnir.
FREYR
"The god of the world," son of Njord, husband of Freyja. God of
fertility, sunlight and rain, peace, joy and contentment. Freyr was worshipped
with human sacrifices and a kind of religious play in which men dressed as women
mimed and danced to the sound of chimes and bells. Freyr had some association
with the horse cult as well, and horses sacred to his service were kpet near his
shrines. Freyr and his sister/wife FREYJA were of the Vanir, a family or race of
gods which originally competed with the Aesir and later became allies. The Vanir
may have been the gods of an earlier Scandinavian race who were adopted into the
pantheon of later conquerors.
FREYJA
Goddess of magic and death, goddess of sex, daughter of Njord, a shape-shifter
who often took the form of a falcon. When her husband Od disappeared, Freyja
wept golden tears. Donning a magical garment, Freyja could fly long distances.
Patroness of seithr, a practice in which a sorceress would enter a trance to
foretell the future. The women who practiced siethr, who were know as Volva,
wandered freely about the country casting spells and foretelling the future.
Freyja's worshippers involved orgiastic rites which horrified and outraged the
Christians. Half of all those slain in battle belonged to Freyja, the other half
belonging to Odin.
FRIGG
Wife of Odin, mother of Balder, queen of Asgard. A fertility goddess.
HEIMDALL
The god who guards the Bifrost Bridge which is the entrance to Asgard. Heimdall
can see for immense distances, and his ear is so sensitive that he can hear the
grass grow. On the day of Ragnarok, Heimdall will blow the great horn
Gjallarhorn, and in the ensuing battle he will slay Loki.
HEL
Goddess of death. Daughter of Loki. Ruler of Niflheim, the land of mists. Heroic
souls go to Valhalla. Those who die of disease or old age come to Niflheim.
Surrounded by high walls and strong gates, Niflheim is impregnable; not even
Balder could return from there without Hel's permission.
HERMOD
A hero god. Hermod rode through the gates of Niflheim to rescue Balder and found
Balder seated on the right hand of Hel. Hel agreed to release Balder on
condition that all living things weep for him.
HODER
Little is known about Hoder, other than that he is blind. Loki tricked Hoder
into killing Balder with a sprig of mistletoe. Hoder will join Balder in the new
world which will come into being when the present one is destroyed.
IDUNN
Wife of Bragi, keeper of the golden apples of eternal youth. The giant Thiazzi
kidnapped her with the aid of Loki.
LOKI
A trickster. Sly, deceitful, a master thief, not to be trusted. Nevertheless,
Loki is charming, witty, quite capable, and possessed of a sardonic sense of
humor which he aims at himself no less often than at others. A shape shifter who
can change into almost any animal form. Loki was involved in many of the gods'
adventures, usually because one of his tricks had made some kind of a mess.
MIDGARD
SERPENT
The great snake which lies in the ocean and encircles the world, its tail in its
mouth. On the day of Ragnarok, the world will disappear under the ocean's waters
when the Midgard Serpent rises from the sea. Thor will kill the Midgard Serpent
but will be killed by the Serpent's poision.
MIMIR
The guardian of a spring of wisdom at the root of Yggdrasill, the world tree
which connects the lower and higher worlds and is the source of all life. Odin
gave an eye to drink from that spring. NERTHUS An earth mother worshipped by the
German tribe of the Suebi. Her sacred grove stood on an island in the North Sea.
NJORD
The chief of the Vanir, who warred with the Aesir. Lord of the winds and of the
sea, giver of wealth. Particularly revered on the west coast of Sweden. In pagan
days, oaths in law courts were sworn in his name. Njord may be a masculine form
of Nerthus.
ODIN
Also OTHINN; WODEN; WOTAN
A god of
strife and war, magic and death. The chief of the Aesir who lives in his hall
Valaskjal in Sagard from which he can look out over all the worlds. In his hall
Valhalla, valkyries (female war spirits) serve heros who have fallen in battle
and will aid the god in the great battle of Ragnarok. On Odin's shoulders perch
two ravens, Hugin ("Thought") and Munin ("Memory") who can
fly about all the worlds to bring Odin knowledge. Odin often aids great heros
but is quite fickle and can turn against a man for any reason or none. Tales of
Odin's treachery are not merely Christian propaganda. Odin's worshippers
themselves could be quite sharp-tongued about Odin's unfaithfulness. Odin's
worship involved human sacrifices, who were generally hung from trees or
gallows.
RAGNAROK
"Destruction of the powerful ones." The Twilight of the Gods. The time
of fire and ice. The great battle at the end of time between the gods and the
Frost Giants in which the world will be destroyed and made anew. Ragnarok will
be preceded by three winters of bitter wars followed by the Fimbulvetr, a winter
so cold that the usn will give no heat. Then the forces of evil will gather and
make war on the gods. THOR God of thunder. Huge, red-bearded, red-eyed,
powerful. His weapon is the magic hammer Mjollnir, which is augmented by a magic
belt which doubles Thor's strength, and iron gloves with which Thor grips
Mjollnir. In some ways Odin's rival, Thor is the god of law and order, the
champion of the people. Unlike Odin, Thor will keep faith. Oaths were sworn in
Thor's name, which no sane man would ever do with Odin. When Christianity came
to Iceland, the other gods surrendered meekly, but Thor fought to the bitter
end. The Hammer is Thor's sacred sign and is the most common image in Nordic
art. The worship of Thor survived well into the Christian age; little silver
hammers were often made in the smith's shop along with crosses and crucifixes.
TIWAZ
The one-handed sky god and war god of the early Germanic peoples. Tiwaz was
worshipped with human sacrifices conducted in the deep forest. Tiwaz is god of
law and justice, and oaths were sworn in his name. His functions were later
taken over by Odin and Thor, though unlike Odin Tiwaz is completely without
deceit and guile. Tiwaz is also known as Irmin, and his sacred pillar Irminsul
symbollically held the universe together. TYR God of battle, the only god with
the strength and courage to bind Fenris. Warriors marked their swords with a T
to gain the god's protection. Tyr was originally was Tiwaz, retained in a later
pantheon but overshadowed by Odin and Thor.
Valkyries

Originally
sinister spirits of slaughter, dark angels of death who soared over the
battlefields like birds of pray, meting out fate in the name of Odin. Chosen
heroes were gathered up and borne away to Valhalla, the heavenly abode of Odin's
ghostly army.
In
later Norse myth, the Valkyries were romanticized as Odin's Shield-Maidens,
virgins with golden hair and snowy arms who served the chosen heroes everlasting
mead and meat in the great hall of Valhalla.
On
the battlefield they soared over the host as lovely swan-maidens or splendid
mounted Amazons. This far more appealing portrayal was further developed in the
Volsung Saga and Niebelungenlied, where the heroine, Brynhild or Brunhild, was a
beautiful fallen Valkyrie. Idealized Valkyries were definitely more vulnerable
than their more fierce predecessors, and often fell in love with mortal heroes.
Swan-maidens, especially, were at risk as they might easily be trapped on earth
if caught without their plumage.
WELAND
Also VOLUNDR; WIELAND; WAYLAND
God of smiths and metal workers. Son of the giant Wade. Weland has much in
common with smith gods such as Govannon and Hephaistos, which comes as no
surprise. Technology and metalworking spread slowly in the ancient world,
usually on a person to person basis, and highly skilled metalsmiths and other
technical workers formed a virtual international brotherhood similar to the
Masons.
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