Norse Gods and Goddesses and the Asatru

lokavinr:

paganconnection:

Who are the Norse Gods and Goddesses and Who worships them?

Asatru is the modern re-birth of the old Norse beliefs. The Old Norse culture is the ancestors of the Norwegians, Danes, Swedes, the Icelanders, and probably a few other peoples in that general area. They follow the Norse Pantheon, See…

All right. We need to talk about this list.

The word “Norse” means exactly what it sounds like…Nordic. When people use the term “Norse Gods” or “Ásatrú” (a word derived from Icelandic), they are generally referring to the deities discussed in Eddic and skaldic poetry, Snorra Edda, the Icelandic or Norwegian sagas, or those attested in place names and/or identified in archeological sites in Iceland, Norway, the Faroe Islands, Sweden, Denmark, and parts on the UK heavily influenced by Norse settlers in the Middle Ages.

Looking at this list as a practitioner of Norse Heathenry/Ásatrú I am only familiar with about two thirds of the names you have included, and only worship about half of them. The deities you included that actually belong on a list of Norse Gods are:

  • Óðinn
  • Frigg
  • [The Æsir]
  • [The Vanir]
  • Buri
  • Forseti
  • Freyja
  • Gefjun
  • Hel
  • Iðunn
  • Njörðr
  • Norns
  • Ríg (Heimdallr)
  • Skaði
  • Þórr
  • Týr
  • Víðarr
  • [Valkyries…though I’ve never seen anyone worshiping them]

Moreover, you’ve left out quite a few, including:

  • Loki
  • Sif
  • Sigyn
  • Ullr
  • Freyr (How did you miss him?!)
  • Bragi
  • Sunna
  • Máni
  • Baldr
  • Váli
  • Magni and Móði
  • Ect…

Now the degree to which some of these beings (on both lists) were worshiped is a matter often debated, but at the very least you missed the well-attested and widely worshiped Gods Freyr and Ullr who are very much “Norse Gods.”

In their place, you filled in many Gods who do not belong here, erasing Slavic cultural identity and shepherding several region-specific groups of Deities under the label of “Norse.” You may have been going for “heathen” rather than “Norse” as your label, but even still, the identity of Slavic and Finnish branches as “heathen” is likewise contested. 

In general, “heathen” is applied to the religions of people in the “Germanic” language tree (Goths, Saxons, Frisians, Norsemen, and occasionally some of the earlier tribes attested by Tacitus). Each of these groups has its own religion, with some similarities but many more deities and practices unique to that area. For example:

Suebian (ca. 100 CE):

  • Nerthus
  • Cisa (?)

Frisian/Saxon (ca. 300 CE?):

  • Nehalennia

Hessian (ca. 800 CE):

  • Donar

Saxon/Franconian (ca. 800 CE):

  • Uuôtan/Uuodan
  • Phol
  • Donar
  • Frîja/Friia
  • Balder
  • Uolla
  • Sinthgunt
  • Zîu

(Anglo) Saxon (ca. 700-800 CE):

  • Wôden
  • Eorðe
  • Frige
  • Hretha
  • Eostre
  • Seaxnēat
  • Þunor
  • Tîw

There are also a few deities people have attempted to reconstruct based on more modern folklore, though there is a danger in doing this and assuming this reflects an earlier tradition:

  • Holda (Continental Germanic)
  • Perchta (Alpine)

In any case, the bottom line here is that these deities cannot all be labeled as “Norse,” and certainly cannot be lumped into one single religious tradition. They are region and time period specific, and, while there may be some crossover (Uuôtan/Wôden/Óðinn), each location had their own way of describing and honoring these deities and must be viewed as their own distinct religious tradition.

Furthermore, Finnish and Slavic deities are even more distinct from the “Norse” heathen group, and should not be lumped together. For one thing, the Finnish religion (through their possible connection with the Sami and other indigenous people of Scandinavia) probably predates the arrival of the Nordic people. There is evidence suggesting that some religious/magical practices (such as seiðr) and possibly certain “Norse” deities were appropriated early on by Norse settlers, but in any case that makes it even more disrespectful to erase Finnish religion by calling it Norse.

Similarly, the Baltic and Slavic regions were raided and settled by Norsemen, but we do not know for certain what elements of their religion predate these invasions and which were borrowed from the Norse. Mythologists have noted similarities in the stories from these religions, but we have no way of knowing who had them first, when they were borrowed, and, because Slavic mythology was largely recorded by outsiders, how often Slavic deities were conflated with Norse ones by outsiders who traveled there.

It is better to be safe and stick with the Gods actually recorded in Norse sources when talking about “Norse Heathenry” or the modern revival of these practices in Ásatrú or Forn Sed. To lump together all “Germanic” deities under the label of “Germanic” is to erase region-specific practices and beliefs and to collapse over a thousand years of history into one box. Furthermore, to call Slavic and Finnish Gods Norse is to completely ignore those cultures and traditions, and to assert the supremacy of a religion that, particularly in the case of the Finns, is newer in the region than those indigenous beliefs.

Norse Gods and Goddesses and the Asatru

Myths, Creatures, and Folklore

redadhdventures:

thewritingcafe:

thewritingcafe:

Want to create a religion for your fictional world? Here are some references and resources!

General:

Africa:

The Americas:

Asia:

Europe:

Middle East:

Oceania:

Creating a Fantasy Religion:

Some superstitions:

Read More

Here, I have some more:

Africa:

The Americas:

Asia:

Europe:

Oceanic:

General:

Reblogging because wow. What a resource.

lindentreeisle:

a-poet-for-hire:

workingitinportland:

anarcho-rokabilly:

workingitinportland:

“The scene takes no more than five minutes of the movie, and the tension between colonial history and race only escalates from that point on. However, we as museum professionals need to talk about the inclusion of this scene, especially regarding its function in a film that was cut from nearly four hours long in its first iteration to a solid two, a film that so many young people will see and one that is poised to become a cultural touchstone. The museum is presented as an illegal mechanism of colonialism, and along with that, a space which does not even welcome those whose culture it displays.

And is there anything incorrect about that?

It is worth considering the aspects of the scene that are realities in the modern museum. African artifacts such as those shown in the film’s museum are likely taken from a home country under suspicious circumstances, such as notable artifacts in real-life Britain like the Benin bronzes which now reside at the British Museum. It is often the case that individuals will know their own culture as well as or better than a curator, but are not considered valuable contributors because they lack a degree. People of color are less represented in museum spaces, and often experience undue discrimination while entering gallery spaces. Finally, museums are experiencing an influx of white women filling staff roles, leading to homogenized viewpoints, and lack senior staff with diverse backgrounds. With these truths represented in such a short but poignant scene, the tension between audiences and institutions is played out to the extreme.”

https://jhuexhibitionist.com/2018/02/22/why-museum-professionals-need-to-talk-about-black-panther/

With source, thank you!

About a year ago, I learned something sinister about museums that really fucked me up.

If you’ve ever spent time in a history/culture museum, you may have noticed that the rooms with Native or African artifacts tend to be very dimly lit compared to other parts of the museum. You probably thought (as I did) that it’s because the artifacts are old and light sensitive. Sometimes that’s the case. Lots of times, though, it’s not.

Museums often display *contemporary* African and Native artifacts in rooms with dim lighting because they’re trying to construct a mythology around these artifacts. The lighting subconciously suggests to us these are relics from the past, from “dead” cultures, even when they’re not.

Furniture and silverware from 1750s Europe? Bright lighting, placed on a lower museum floor that gets lots of foot traffic. Shields made by members of an African tribe in the *1930s*? Dim lighting, placed on a quiet upper level of the museum that feels like a mausoleum.

This is completely intentional. Museums play into our Western notions of whose culture is “alive” and whose is “dead.” They give us what they think we want to see. They’re also doing real political harm, because if they can convince us that African and Native cultures are relics of the past, that means we don’t have to think about what we’re doing to the (very much still alive) peoples that they represent.

I love museums, but shit like that’s gotta stop.

I’ve had two pretty eye-opening experiences in regard to museums: I read Chasing Aphrodite, which revealed the appalling amount of antiquities theft that’s still taking place, and I visited the National Museum of the American Indian, which provided the contrast that made me realize how I’d been trained to think of Native American cultures as dead.

I learned about Native cultures in school.  I was fascinated and admiring, I read all kinds of books and went to museums; if you’d asked I’d say I loved and respected these beautiful people and their varied beliefs.  But the way I was taught about Native Americans wasn’t the way I was taught about US history, or about Europeans.  The curricula taught about Native cultures and beliefs the same way they taught about Sumerians and ancient Egyptians, and so I learned the implied lesson: Native cultures were past, they were gone, they were dead.  None of the museums I went to challenged that, just as the writer above explains.  (Moreover, nobody taught us kids about modern Native people, their sociopolitical issues, or their cultures- as far as we knew, Native people were quaint historical footnotes, and any of their descendants still alive had the same lives and concerns as us white suburbanites.)

When I first went to NMAI I was confused, because it felt different than I expected and I couldn’t figure out why.  Eventually I realized it was because I went expecting a temple to sadly dead mythologies and ways of life, and what I saw instead was a cultural history lovingly curated and cared for by its inheritors, just as any other modern ethnicity or nationality remembers and teaches its history.  I recognize it’s not exactly the same as say, remembering Italian-American history, because of the weight of the genocide committed against Native people, and the sometimes all-too-successful attempts to wipe out their cultures.  But my point is that in NMAI, I learned that Native cultures are alive, and it made me realize just how badly wrong my thought process had been to that point.

I am certainly not an expert in museums or in anything related to NMAI, but I can’t help thinking that the difference is in large part because Native people are so deeply involved in creating the exhibits and maintaining the collections.  The exhibits feature Native voices and commentary, and they talk about Native life and culture today, making it clear that these communities haven’t simply vanished into the past.  Just another example of how critically important representation is- it may be that ALL museums that handle Native or African objects/art need to have staff of African or Native descent, or it may be that they simply need to consult and take advice from modern representatives of the culture in question.  I’m sure this would lead to the usual cries of “political correctness run amok” that always arise from certain quarters; but really, it’s the idea that white people alone get to decide how best to select and display artifacts from other culture (cultures which still exist, and have plenty of living representatives) that’s exceptionally weird. 

Anyway, if you’re within range of DC I’d suggest you check out NMAI to see what I mean, it’s a cool place.  (Also their restaurant is completely rad, so there’s that.)  (And if anyone else knows museums that provide good examples of curatorship of living cultures, I’d be interested to know about them.)

jasmiinitee:

All you American people acting like Halloween is the best time of the year have clearly never been to Finland under Easter Holidays. It’s the time of year around this country when little children dress up as witches and cats, decorate willow twigs with bright paper and feathers, and go door to door chanting old poems of blessing in exchange for sweets. They’re very cute.
Eastern Orthodox Christians end their fasting and on Good Friday they have a huge feast the Lutheran rest of us are missing, but everyone is generally in the same boat – time to eat good desserts, whether they be western mämmi, eastern pasha or kids’ candies.

But the best thing about easter is this.
It’s an egg.

Fazer’s Mignon egg. Est. 1896.
This is the shit the Tsar of Russia used to order for his family from Finnish chocolate man Karl Fazer. 

And it’s filled with a chunk of pure thick almond nougat that makes you sick after eating just half an egg, and it’s all worth it. And Mignon is the sole reason I would never want to switch our Easter for your Halloween.

In Which Diversity Isn’t a Myth

faefolksuggestion:

smuttine:

oddmoy:

spacedpanini:

wigmund:

clementive:

Ok. I’m tired of the typical vampire, werewolf and fairy.I’m also tired of the occidental-centrism in mythology. Hence, this list. 

I tried to included as many cultural variants as I could find and think of. (Unfortunately, I was restricted by language. Some Russian creatures looked very interesting but I don’t speak Russian…) Please, add creatures from your culture when reblogguing (if not already present). It took me a while to gather all those sites but I know it could be more expansive. I intend on periodically editing this list. 

Of note: I did not include specific legendary creatures (Merlin, Pegasus, ect), gods/goddesses/deities and heroes.

  • Dragons

The Chinese Dragon

The Japanese Dragon

The Korean Dragon

The Vietnamese Dragon

The Greek Dragon

The Indian Dragon

The Polish Dragon

The Austrian Dragon

The British Dragon

The Ancient Dragon (Egypt, Babylon and Sumer)

The Spanish Basque Dragon

Of the Cockatrice (creature with the body of a dragon)

Alphabetical List of Dragons Across Myths (Great way to start)

  • Little creatures (without wings)

The Legend of the LeprechaunsThe Leprechaun

Chanaque /Alux (the equivalent of leprechauns in Aztec/Mayan folklore)

Elves

Elves in Mythology and Fantasy

Elves in Germanic Mythology

Kabeiroi or Cabeiri (Dwarf-like minor gods in Greek mythology)

Norse Dwarves

The Myth of Loki and the Dwarves

Ten Types of Goblins

Goblins

Tengu: Japanese Goblins

Gnomes 

More on Gnomes

Pooka: an Irish phantom

  • Creatures with wings (except dragons)

Fairies

All sorts of Cultural Fairies

Fairies in Old French Mythology 

A Fairy List

Bendith Y Mamau (Welsh fairies)

Welsh Fairies

Peri (Persian fairies)

Yü Nü (Chinese fairies)

The Celtic Pixie

Angels in Judaism

Angels in Christianity

Hierarchy of Angels

Angels in Islam

Irish Sylph

Garuda (Bird-like creature in Hindu and Buddhist myths)

Bean Nighe (a Scottish fairy; the equivalent of a banshee in Celtic mythology)

Harpies

  • Spirited Creatures

Druids

Jinn (Genies in Arabic folklore)

Types of Djinns

Aisha Qandisha and Djinn in Moroccan Folklore

Oni (demons in Japanese folklore)

Nymphs

Spirits in Asturian Mythology

Valkyries

Lesovik

Boggarts: The British Poltergeist

Phantom black dogs (the Grim)

Demons in Babylonian and Assyrian Mythology (list)

Demons in the Americas (list)

European Demons (list)

Middle-East and Asia Demons (list)

Judeo-Christian Demons (list)

Nephilim, more on Nephilim

Mahaha (a demon in Inuit mythology)

Flying Head (a demon in Iroquois mythology)

  • Ghosts

Toyol (a dead baby ghost in Malay folklore)

Malay Ghosts

Yuki-onna (a ghost in Japanese folklore)

The Pontianak (a ghost in Malay mythology)

Funayurei (a ghost in Japanese folklore)

Zagaz (ghosts in Moroccan folklore)

Japanese Ghosts

Mexican Ghosts

  • Horse-like mythical creatures

Chinese Unicorns

Unicorns

The Kelpie (Could have also fitted in the sea creatures category)

The Centaur

The Female Centaur

Hippocamps (sea horses in Greek mythology)

Horse-like creatures (a list)

Karkadann, more on the Karkadann (a persian unicorn)

Ceffyl Dwfr (fairy-like water horse creatures in Cymric mythology)

  • Undead creatures

The Melanesian Vampire 

The Ewe Myth : Vampires

The Germanic Alp

The Indonesian Vampire

Asanbosam and Sasabonsam (Vampires from West Africa)

The Aswang: The Filipino Vampire

Folklore Vampires Versus Literary Vampires

Callicantzaros: The Greek Vampire

Vampires in Malaysia

Loogaroo/Socouyant: The Haitian Vampire

Incubi and Sucubi Across Cultures

Varacolaci: The Romanian Vampire

Brahmaparusha: The Indian Vampire

Genesis of the Word “Vampire”

The Ghoul in Middle East Mythology

Slavic Vampires

Vampires A-Z

The Medical Truth Behind the Vampire Myths

Zombies in Haitian Culture

  • Shape-shifters and half-human creatures (except mermaids) 

Satyrs (half-man, half-goat)

Sirens in Greek Mythology (half-woman and half-bird creatures)

The Original Werewolf in Greek Mythology

Werewolves Across Cultures

Werewolf Syndrome: A Medical Explanation to the Myth

Nagas Across Cultures

The Kumiho (half fox and half woman creatures)

The Sphinx

Criosphinx

Scorpion Men (warriors from Babylonian mythology)

Pooka: an Irish changelings

Domovoi (a shape-shifter in Russian folklore)

Aatxe (Basque mythology; red bull that can shift in a human)

Yech (Native American folklore)

Ijiraat (shapeshifters in Inuit mythology)

  • Sea creatures

Selkies (Norse mermaids)

Mermaids in many cultures

More about mermaids

Mermen

The Kraken (a sea monster)

Nuckelavee (a Scottish elf who mainly lives in the sea)

Lamiak (sea nymphs in Basque mythology)

Bunyip (sea monster in Aboriginal mythology)

Apkallu/abgal (Sumerian mermen)

An assemblage of myths and legends on water and water creatures

Slavic Water Creatures

The Encantado (water spirits in Ancient Amazon River mythology)

Zin (water spirit in Nigerian folklore)

Qallupilluk (sea creatures in Inuit mythology)

  • Monsters That Don’t Fit in Any Other Category

Aigamuxa, more details on Aigamuxa

Amphisabaena

Abere

Bonnacon

Myrmidons (ant warriors)

TrollMore on Trolls

Golems 

Golems in Judaism

Giants: The Mystery and the Myth (50 min long documentary)

Inupasugjuk (giants in Inuit mythology)

Fomorians (an Irish divine race of giants)

The Minotaur

The ManticoreThe Manticore and The Leucrouta

The Ogre

The Orthus (two-headed serpent-tailed dog)

The Windigo

The Windigo Psychosis

Rakshasa (humanoids in Hindu and Buddhist mythology)

Yakshas (warriors in Hindu mythology)

Taqriaqsuit (“Shadow people” in Inuit mythology)

  • References on Folklore and Mythology Across the Globe

Creatures of Irish Folklore 

Folklore and Fairytales

An Overview of Persian Folklore

Filipino Folklore

Myths, Creatures and Folklore

Alaska Folklore

Spanish (Spain) Mythology

Mythical Archive

Mythology Dictionary

List of Medieval and Ancient Monsters

Native American Animals of Myth and Legends

Native American Myths

Bestiary of Ancient Greek Mythology

Mythology, Legend, Folklore and Ghosts

Angels and Demons

List of Sea Creatures

Yoruba Mythology

Ghosts Around the World, Ghosts From A to Z

Strange (Fantastic) Animals of Ancient Egypt

Egyptian Mythology

Creatures from West Africa

On the Legendary Creatures of Africa

Myths, Creatures and Folklore

  • References on writing a myth or mythical creatures

Writing a MYTHology in your novel?

How to Write a Myth

10 Steps to Creating Realistic Fantasy Creatures

Creating Fantasy Creatures or Alien Species

Legendary Creature Generator

Book Recommendations With Underrated Mythical Creatures

(I have stumbled upon web sites that believed some of these mythical creatures exist today… Especially dragons, in fact. I just had to share the love and scepticism.)

Fearsome Critters – creatures of American frontier lore

Lists of Legendary Creatures

THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS LIST

 (keepers of nature/places from Scandinavian folklore, several types exist)

Thank you for this!

GET SOME LEARNING HERE.

sainatsukino:

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

meabhair:

systlin:

ella-raene:

systlin:

beautifultoastdream:

systlin:

GUYS THEY FIGURED OUT THE ROMAN CONCRETE RECIPE THAT MAKES IT IMMUNE TO SEAWATER

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/technology/mystery-of-2000-year-old-roman-concrete-solved-by-scientists/ar-BBDO5VC

EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!

I KNOW RIGHT?!???

I can’t help but feel this is one of those things where we had actual documents saying “it was done with this and this”, and some old rich white guys looked at it and went “oh mirth, the ancients were so silly. They probably wrote this basic stuff down and the actual builders had Secret Techniques we need to Discover”

For a long time, archeologists didn’t know how greek women did their high-piled braids and hair. There was a word that translated to “needle” in the descriptions. They went, “seems like we’ll never know.” Then a hairdresser took a fucking needle (big needle) and did the fucking thing you do with needles, which is sew – and by sewing the braids into place, she replicated ancient styles.

The Egyptians had diagrams of construction steps for their pyramids. Archeologists went “oooh, ancient primitive people, how they do this?” LITERALLY MYTHBUSTERS OR THE OLD DISCOVERY CHANNEL or someone went “what if we did the thing the pictures said they did” AND GUESS FUCKING WHAT. GUESS FUCKING WHAT.

Also that thing with native Americans saying squirrels taught them how to get sap for maple syrup, and colonizers going “that’s a myth sweaty”

Sincerely, if the scientists had to do actual analysis like spectroscopy or whatever, kudos, and no flame. But swear to god, if all these years, we’ve had the recipes and there was just this fuckin institutional bias against just TRYING THE THING THEY SAID WOULD WORK, HELLFIRE AND DEMENTIA.

In this case, it was more they had roman writings saying what went into it but figured there was some secret because when they followed roman recipes it never turned out quite right. 

Because the sources left by Romans always just said to mix with water. Because, if you were a Roman??? Obviously you knew that you used seawater for cement. Duh. That’s so obvious that they never really bothered specifying that you use seawater to mix it, because it wasn’t necessary, everyone knew that. 

But then the empire fell, other empires rose and fell, time passed, and by the time we were trying to reconstruct the formula the ‘mix the dry ingredients with seawater’ trick had been forgotten, until chemical analysis finally figured it out again. 

It’s sort of like the land of Punt, a ally of Egypt that’s mentioned all the time, but we don’t actually know where it was located. Because it isn’t written down anywhere. Why would they write it down? It’s Punt. Everyone knew where Punt was back then. It’d be ridiculous to waste the ink and space to specify where it was, every child knows about Punt. 

3000 years later and we have no damned clue where it was, simply because at the time it was so blindingly obvious that it was never written down. 

@deadcatwithaflamethrower this seems relevant, with vital information being lost when the cultural oral history goes.

I truly adore that EVERYONE is on board with the FUCK YES, ROMAN CONCRETE is BACK! because we all know on some level or another that that shit is IMPORTANT.

Its a bit like straw used on floors in the middle ages. For a while we used to think that they just used loose straw and spread it on floors, because it all of the medieval housekeeping manuals or the diaries where people documented their everyday life, it would just say “oh you should change the straw a couple of times per year” or “we changed the straw today.”

Turns out they braided the straw to make some sort of carpet (which i imagine to be close to those i buy for my rabbit cage) and no one ever specified it in writings because OF COURSE you don’t just throw loose straw around what are you, an animal? And they didn’t think that their stuff would ever be read by anyone other than their contemporaries, even less people thousands of year in the future. Their audience would know what “the straw” would refer to.

worldcanbegood:

ngrigni:

Another illustration I did for the gender workbook. Five cultures which have understood and respected non-binary gender identities for centuries.

It bothers me when people act like the idea of identifying as transgender or third gender is a new concept, or a trend which started recently in the West. Let’s be honest: the west is thousands of years late to the party, and we’re just now catching up. Hijras are mentioned in the Kama Sutra, which was written in 400 BC. Non-binary understandings of gender have existed since ancient times. Google it, y’all.

Disclaimer: you can and should learn about these cultures to broaden your understanding of gender, but you cannot claim any of these identities unless you are actually a part of that culture. For example, it would be cultural appropriation for a non-Native person to read an article about Two Spirits and decide that they identify as a Two Spirit now. This should really go without saying, but it’s happened before.

Also, the Muxe from Oaxaca, Mexico would make a nice addition to this list.

caffeine-and-crystals:

procrastinating-my-life-away:

iloveminjae:

iloveminjae:

so i don’t think a lot of people really understand how often south asian culture is misinterpreted and appropriated so i’m making a post about it right here.

  • any mention of third eyes
  • any mention of chakras
  • people wearing bindis when they shouldn’t be 
  • fucking “om” or “aum” tattoos or appliques on things like yoga pants. do you know how fucking disrespectful it is to put a symbol that is so important to my religion and culture on the ass of some white chick’s yoga pants
  • people wearing maang tikka when they shouldn’t be
  • anklets with bells on them are very important to the dance culture of south asia and it’s disrespectful to wear them outside of a traditional dance setting

feel free to add any more that i missed because i’m fucking tired

this is okay to rb if you’re not south asian. in fact it’s encouraged that you reblog this post, regardless of your race

  • wearing henna/mehendi with religious designs without being aware of the religious and cultural significance 
  • assuming every south asian wears a turban??? like those are specific to a certain religion/culture 
  • not knowing what “namaste” even means but saying it anyway
  • or alternatively, messing it up. aka “namaslay” “namaste away from me” 

Genuine question, do you ever feel it’s acceptable for non-south Asian people to incorporate any of these things if they’ve researched and are aware and respectful of the origins? As in, cultural appreciation? Or would you rather we simply avoid these traditions altogether?