Tumgik
#Norse Magic
lokeanheart · 9 months
Text
*gives every lokean a pretty shiny rock*
Because I love you !
168 notes · View notes
moonlight1237 · 8 months
Text
Elder ᚠᚱᛖᛁᛃᚨ Younger ᚠᚱᛁᛁᛁᛅ
Freyja/Frøya (The Lady)
Epithets And Titles
Gullveig (gold-greed) Her more magical and ruthless side is closely associated with fire due to her being burned but not harmed
Vanadis (lady of the Vanir) Her neural side has a little bit of all her aspects and is what you normally call on
Gefn (giver) Her motherly giving side associated with fertility and harvests etc
Horn (flax) Her side associated with Love, sex, and playfulness
Mardoll (root word Marr meaning sea. Sea bright) One of her sides associated with death and war
Syr (sow)
Valfreyja (Lady of the Slain) Another side associated with Death and War
Lady of fire
Heid (Völva from Voluspa)
Thrung
Lady of the Disir
Skialf
Queen of Folkvangr
Chief of the Vanir
Queen of the valkyrie
Possessor of the fallen
Ruling/Domain
Folkvangr is her realm and Sessrumnir is her hall.
(and is sometimes said to be where she takes her half of the dead but this is disputed)
Family
Njord is her father and her mother is never mentioned but is speculated to be Skadi or Njords sister, an unnamed Vanir goddess. Her twin is Frey(r). She has 2 daughters Hnoss and Gersemi both of which translate to "treasure" though only mentioned in Christian sources and Gersemi is only mentioned once. In the Eddas, it says she has a husband named Oðr which is one of Odin's names, and gets into the Frigga and Freyja debate.
History
I won't get too much into the debate on her and Frigga but by the myths, they are different and separate beings. Historically they were possibly the same once and split over time but they are not the same now.
Frøya has a necklace she always wears. Its name is Brisgamen is a torc/necklace made by the dwarves and frøya supposedly spent a night with each of them who made it to get Brisingamen. In other myths Thor wears it dressed as Frøya during the fake wedding to Thrym the giant who stole Thor's hammer, then when Loki stole it and gave it to Odin when Odin made her start a war to get it back.
She also had a Boar named Hildisvini "Battle-swine" which she turned her husband oðr into and rode in one of the myths.
In the Grimnismal translation, it says "then" Odin picks not "and" giving the idea Freyja picks first but it's never mentioned otherwise. But modernly we accept that she does have the first pick.
Gullveig is believed to be another name for frøya she was a sorceress who predicted the Æsir, Vanir war and was burned alive 3 times by the Æsir each time coming back to life and was struck by spears and still didn't die.
She, like Odin, was known to use many different names throughout the myths and in her travels.
She's the one who taught Odin and the other Æsir gods how to do Seidr magic.
After the Æsir, Vanir war they exchanged hostages, and Frøya, Njordh, and Frey went to live with the Æsir in Asgard.
It's rumored but never confirmed if Freyr and Freyja have Elven ancestors. But she is NOT a valkyrie; the only sources with that are later Christian sources; this is believed to be the same thing as making her out to be a love goddess and sexualizing her.
The myths never actually show her as a Vølva but her association with magic gives us the idea she is.
She also had a chariot that was pulled by cats sometimes people believe they’re Lynx.
Historical worship/practice
She had a fertility cult in the Viking age that stopped due to Christianity and a cult that lasted up until Snorri's age and time but that stopped soon after. She and Frigga were called on during childbirth, historically our source coming from a midwife.
Associations
Death
Love
Lust
Magic (especially Seidr)
War
Cats
Wealth
Divination
Fertility
Beauty
Glory
Days of the Week
Friday
Special days
Alfarblót (The first day of winter celebrated in the home in private the time when we connect to ancestral magic to the Elven folk)
Elements
Fire
Numbers
9
Colors
Gold (fav)
Light Pink
Green (fav)
Copper
Silver
Yellow
Light Purple
Red
Brown
Planet
The Moon
Animals
Cats
Horses
Boar/Sows
Rabbits
Swallows
Lynx
Falcons/Birds of prey
Ladybugs
Cuckoo
Plants
And flowers
Basil
Roses
Roseroot
Common Valerian
Mugwort
Rosemary
Apples
Primrose
Raspberries
Strawberries
Cinnamon
Poppy's
Daisy's
Almonds
Hay
Snow Blossoms
Linden
Essential oils/incense
Strawberry
Lavender
Lilac
Juniper
Cinnamon
Any sweet scents
Any baked good scents
Amber
Mint
Peppermint
Rose
Mulberry
Rosemary
Vanilla
Jasmine
Cypress
Sandalwood
Myrrh
Birch
Crystals
Rose quartz
Amber
Gold
Carnelian
Citrine
Any moonstone
Malachite
Black Tourmaline
Pink Tourmaline
River rock
Rubies
Divinational associations (runes/tarot)
Fehu, Sowilo, Berkano, Queen of wands, Queen of swords, The empress, The high priestess, The lovers, The star (Wildwood deck The Seer, and The Woodward)
Offerings and Devotional acts
Any Meads
Flowers (pressed or fresh)
Anything handmade for her
Stretching
Learning sword work
Exercising
Things respectfully taken from nature
Jewelry
Poetry (especially traditional Norse)
Hot coco
Any tea
Wine
Sweet drinks or spice like cinnamon
Potatoes
Stews
Any meats
Any Berries
Ethically gathered Bones, Cat claws, and cat whiskers (DO NOT HARM AN ANIMAL FOR THESE)
Self-Care
Spending time in nature
Learning runes
Learning distaff spinning
Any imagery associated with her
Learning magic or divination
Any baked goods (bread, muffins, honey cakes, etc)
Honey
Honeycomb
Cat statues
Boar imagery
Fostering cats/kittens
Lighting candles every day in her honor
Burning incense for her (she likes things with flames or burning)
Bonfires
Flax bundles
A staff making a staff for your craft if you practice Seidr they are commonly used in it and you could make your devotional staff for that and have it by her alter.
Alter Suggestions
Candles
Bones
Jewelry (especially gold-colored)
Statues of her or her cats
Swords/axes/spears/shields
Wooden bowls or horn bowls
Incense
Plants
Imagery of Folkvangr
Dedicated Poems about her or love or death
The artwork you make her
Animal pelts
Runes
Fehu imagery
Chants
Runic Chants/chanting the runes
Old Norse songs
(Both are commonly used in seidr)
Signs they may be reaching out
Smelling scents associated with her out of nowhere
Seeing her in dreams and meditations
Becoming more attracted to colors associated with her
Being closer to Cats or cats favoring you a lot or having different behaviors toward you
Views over death and war changed drastically
Having potential in Seidr magic
Being a seer/seeress
Being open to the spirit realm and the dead and speaking to them
Having a very sudden interest in her
Feeling a very feminine energy and string energy in the room (she's not subtle at all)
Liking foods associated with her that you didn't before
Sudden interest in distaff or spindling.
SOURCES
Freyja, Lady, Vanadis: An Introduction to the Goddess
by Patricia M. Lafayllve
Poetic Edda translated by Jackson Crawford
Tales of Norse Mythology by Helen A. Guerber
The Norse Gods and Goddesses (Intro.)
Frigg and Freyja
The Vanir
The Vǫlva (Norse Seeress) and Seiðr
Valkyries (Valkyrjur)
Fólkvangr (Folkvang)
THE NORSE GODS: FREYJA || General info, what working with Freyja is like and offerings
Freyja (Freya) Norse Goddess of Love, Warriors, and Cats
My Experiences with Deities: Freyja
Seiðr Magic and Gender
https://teaandrosemary.com/freya-goddess/
https://study.com/academy/lesson/goddess-freyja-facts-symbols-norse-mythology.html
https://historycooperative.org/freyja-the-norse-goddess-of-love/
https://historiska.se/norse-mythology/freyja-en/
https://hrafnar.org/articles/dpaxson/asynjur/freyja/
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Freyja
https://www.northvegr.org/nordic-goddess/froya-freyja
https://www.spiritualityhealth.com/freyja-sensuality
Tumblr media
104 notes · View notes
awinterrosesstuff · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Norse Mythology : Odin - the one-eyed All-Father, god of wisdom, war, dead, runes and magic
56 notes · View notes
Text
Valhalla is not heaven, and other reasons fascists are dumb dumbs.
The utterly, bewildering, so funny it's depressing thing about neo n@z1s and blanc enthusiasts being so fucking quick to appropriate Norse iconography as a symbol of their "proud heritage" is that they consistently demonstrate a grasp on Norse Mythology as deep as the Marvel Cinematic Universe does. Not a dig on the MCU, but, let's just say creative liberties is an understatement when it comes to representing Norse Mythology.
The primary point of interest boils down basically to the concept of the "exhalted warrior death." As fascism is the ideology of hero worship, on a surface level, this makes sense. Old Norse Culture was one largely defined by conflict and vikinging as a trade.
Many Norse beliefs are shaped by, designed to inspire and exhalt the warrior who fights without fear. Their society in part relied on "the hero warrior."
Couple things though:
1. Not all Norsemen were vikings, and you REALLY aren't one.
You think the Norse belief system was so heavily lazer focused on a single profession in what needed to be an entire functioning community everyone that wasn't a viking was poopooed to damnation and/or a dishonorable life? No bitch. "Hel" in Norse mythology is just where the dead ARE. It's a very morally neutral place to be. Hel be vibin'. Odin, Freya, and possibly Njord were collecting souls for a very specific reason. That being . . .
2. The souls of warriors were being brought to Valhalla (among other places) to train for a final battle THEY WERE DESTINED TO LOSE.
Y'all fucking forgot about Ragnorok didn't you? The souls in Valhalla are being conscripted to a suicide mission. It's a place of honor to be chosen, but it's not a reward.
The training is apparently honestly a bitch in a half in it of itself supposedly. I guess you get god mead, though. Sit next to Odin at the big boy table, maybe. An afterlife of pain and awaiting doom for beer and for daddy to notice you.
That's the thing, though. Valhalla isn't supposed to be Heaven. It aligns with many other Norse Myths in that it exhalts to bravery in the face of certain annihilation. Valhalla as a function of beleif designed to psychologically break past the human instinct to prioritize self-preservation. The quality in which it exhalts is not the hero's death, but embracing doom. THAT'S WHY Odin chose warriors who died WITH WEAPON IN HAND, as in, they already faced one destruction, they can face another.
The army of Valhalla weren't even the only deaths of honor Odin recognized one could achieve. The Volva were all very much in Hel once they died, and they are all distinguished as Odin's special little future-seeing squad in the mythos too. And that's JUST Odin, ignoring the other gods who chose souls for their armies.
Norse mythology, ironically to the point of head-exploading farce, spits in the face of the concept of the Hero's Death as defined by fascism. "Dying for the cause" is a Christian/Abrahamic value that they are retroactively interjecting into Norse belief because historical self-insert fanfiction that is the Arian Mythos. There's no fucking point in training and fighting in Ragnorok, everyone is destined to fail, everyone knows it, and that's the fucking point.
The concept of Ragnorok and Valhalla was not even universal among the Norsemen. The inevitability of death and rebirth is just kind of a given as a natural truth in most pagan beliefs. Everyone you know and love is going to die, and then something else will come from the ashes. Literally "chill bro it be like that sometimes."
And if that's not enough to convince you fascists don't actually know shit about Norse mythology, I can tell you all about how fucking gay it is.
151 notes · View notes
raffaellopalandri · 14 days
Text
Book of the Day - Loki and Sigyn
Today’s Book of the Day is Loki and Sigyn: Lessons on Chaos, Laughter & Loyalty from the Norse Gods, written by Lea Svendsen in 2022 and published by Llewellyn Publications. Lea Svendsen is a writer and expert in the Norse pantheon. She has given many presentations and led workshop-style discussions about Loki and Sigyn and their role in the Heathen practices. Loki and Sigyn, by Lea Svendsen I…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
8 notes · View notes
hecatesdelights · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
Odin, god of War, Poetry, Magic and Knowledge
9 notes · View notes
freyjas-light · 9 months
Note
hi, I have a question. I just started researching seidr magic and I saw that it is a woman's-only magic/space and that it was a type of magic made for women, is that true? idk if this is bad to say but it would be nice if cis and trans women and afab nb witches had their own space/magic away from men who practice. I just didn't know who to ask, I see you are Norse pagan and witch, and idk if this is a bad POV, and if it is I want to correct myself...
Hey anon! This is a really interesting question so let's get into some facts:
Seidr was just one type of magic practiced during the Viking/Iron age. It is believed that seidr was more focused on prophecy and divination, and was at the time, primarily practiced by Völvas. Seidr is considered to be a way of connecting to the Nornir and accessing the threads of fate (meanwhile, today the term seidr encompasses all types of norse based magic). The connection to weaving could explain why it is believed to be considered a more feminine practice, as men did not learn these skills. Seidr can also be known as Spá/Spae, and while some people believe these are two different types of magic, they both stem from wanting to determine one's fate. The other types of norse magic include Galdr, which included chanting to help raise energy for healing and protection. Historically, it seems that any gender could practice galdr, but it tends to be viewed as the more "masculine" form of magic.
When it comes to practicing these forms of magic, we all know Odin as the defier of these social and gender norms. Odin, ruler of Asgard, does not care about the trivial genders assigned to magic, he just wants to learn, to understand the power that this form of magic holds. And while I know this information about Odin is common knowledge, I feel that it is important to highlight as it shows that rules can be broken, and gender roles do not matter. We also do not have a lot of facts about historical seidr. Most of what we know comes from the sagas, and we have found some grave sites that include distaffs and staffs that can corroborate the information in these stories. But we do not have a lot of information about how seidr was practiced. I feel that this lack of information makes it hard to form solid opinions on what seidr used to be like.
However, the term Völva/Völur is specifically a women-only role. Men could be seidmenn, seidmadr, or vitki, but never a Völva.
In today's society, Norse paganism prides itself on being gender inclusive. Anyone can practice seidr, and there are very few exclusive circles (luckily I've avoided any that might be out there). However I understand your want for a safe space. I find that my local norse pagan community is mostly comprised of males, and that is the reason that I am a solo practicioner. Tumblr is a huge help in finding like-minded, safe people to share my practice with. So while you won't find any gender exclusive magic in the practice of seidr anymore, I hope you can still find a safe space for you to hone your skills and share your thoughts.
23 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
27 notes · View notes
mischiefandmisery · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
Work in progress.. Loki, and Hermes from my comic fighting on a beach. Hermes slowing time down, while using his ability 1000 arrows. Loki using magic, and his good boy son Fenrir.
17 notes · View notes
milbethmorillo · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Odin Ravens for Odin's day~ if you spot two ravens they possibly be Odin's helpers, they bring him news of Midgard be respectful to Ravens
Norse Mythology Coloring Book:
https://a.co/d/cdWVEw3
Etsy:
https://www.etsy.com/listing/1530764701 /norse-mythology-coloring-book
16 notes · View notes
lokeanheart · 9 months
Text
Lokeans with Loki fr
137 notes · View notes
theherbwitchshoppe · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
Seiðr Set will be available in my Shoppe Shortly!
7 notes · View notes
awinterrosesstuff · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Norse Mythology : Idunn - Goddess of eternal youth & rejuvenation & keeper of the magic apples of immortality
38 notes · View notes
kind-hufflepuff · 10 months
Text
DRACO AS A CHILD OF HEIMDALL (NORSE PANTHEON)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
17 notes · View notes
cavorta · 1 year
Text
Free online course (with 8 video lectures on YouTube) about Seidr (Norse Pagan Magic)
Short Description of the course: SEIDR- History, Craft and Modern Practice. An online teaching program with Annette Høst.
26 notes · View notes
raffaellopalandri · 1 month
Text
Book of the Day - Odin: Ecstasy, Runes, & Norse Magic
Today’s Book of the Day is Odin: Ecstasy, Runes, & Norse Magic, written by Diana L. Paxson in 2017 and published by Weiser Books. Diana L. Paxson is Diana L. Paxson is a prolific novelist and author of nonfiction who primarily writes about Paganism and Heathenism. A leader in the Neopagan and Heathen revivals, Paxson is the founder of The Fellowship of the Spiral Path and has been Steerswoman…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
3 notes · View notes