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Freyr: God of the World
"Freyr's might is that of bringing
the worlds together in frith and making sure that all goes rightly:
from this work of his stem holiness, wisdom, and earthly fruitfulness." - Our Troth
Names:
Freyr, Yngvifreyr or Ingunar-Freyr; Old Norse
Ing, Frea; Anglo-Saxon
Fro; Old High German
Engus; Gothic
- These names roughly translate to the title "Lord" in the sense of the
peacetime/judicial function of rulership. In Anglo-Saxon, Lord itself
is derived from the same root as the word "loaf" and refers to bread,
grain and harvest. Presumably, the Lord of a tribe was a dispenser of
food stores, more generally of good things for the community. Thus
kingship and the land are linked.
By-names:
Blótguð svía, "blessing-god of the Swedes"
Nenna, "active, striving, energetic"
Veraldar guð, "god of the world" meaning (modernly) the god of everyday
life; of the here and now. For example: agriculture, brewing, working,
building, the community, in short the business of living.
"Leader of the host of the gods" - his warrior/kingly aspect.
"Prince of peace" (modern) refering to his role as hostage/peace-maker
between the Aesir and Vanir as well as his pervue as a god of peace and
prosperity and creation of the period known as the "peace of Frodi."
Common Icons and Symbols:
Ingwaz, Boar, Stallion, Phallus, Colors Gold Green Brown, Sun and the
sun wheel, Rain, the Alfar (both as "light elves" and mighty male
ancestors), Sword, Antler, Crown, Sickle, Sheaf of grain, Wain (wagon),
Ship, Bells (reference in Saxo), Holts (stony hillocks) and burial
mounds
Possessions:
Blóðughófi (Bloody-Hooved) - Freyr's battle stallion.
Skíðblaðnir - The magical ship which can sail over land and sea and also be folded up and stored in a pouch.
Gullinbursti (Gold-Bristled) or Slíðrugtanni (Cutting-Tusked) - a boar,
one of the gifts forged by the dwarves at Loki's behest. He could "run
over air and water, night and day, better than any horse, and it would
never be so dark at night or in mirk-worlds, that it would not be
bright enough where he fared, his bristles gave off such light".
Servants: According to Lokasenna, Freyr has two servants, a married
couple named Beyla (perhaps "bee" or "cow", "cow-keeper" - difficult
etymology) and Byggvir ("barley"). The latter may perhaps bear some
relationship to the British "John Barleycorn". If Beyla does indeed
mean "bee", the two of them could be read as the givers of the basic
materials for brewing - grain for ale, honey for mead.
Pervue:
In brief: Sun
and rain for crops, fertility, fecundity, peace, prosperity, sex,
shamanic ecstacy, sacred kingship, defensive battle, death and the life
cycle, the natural world, creativity (my UPG).
Lord of the Fields and Woods:
In the natural world, Freyr is the giver of sunlight, fair winds and
light rain and all that is needed for the crops to grow. His might is
known in the bright and warm weather of a good harvest-time.
Though in the Lore Freyr is mainly shown in agricultural terms, he
seems to have had a connection to wild nature as well. In modern times
Freyr is often seen as a god of ecology. This stems from many sources,
but may be most directly due to his associated animals (boar, stag and
stallion), his association with the Alfar, and his holy places being
rocky, hilly areas or groves. If his association with the non-Norse
deities is accurate, then there is an even stronger case for this.
Sacred King and Frith Keeper: Freyr
is good to keep in mind in matters of leadership, building frith and
grith, settling disputes and conflicts, presiding over ceremonies and
rites for the folk. At the funeral of Baldr, it is told how,
"Battle-wise Freyr rides first on his gold-bristled boar to the hill
(pyre) of Óðinn's son, and leads the hosts" (Úlfr Uggason, "Húsdrápa"
7). This could be thought of as an example of sacral kingship -
functioning as a Master of Ceremonies for an important rite of passage
for the tribe.
One of the best examples of Freyr as a
sacred king, a builder of a nation as well as of peace and prosperity
is the "Peace of Fróði" mentioned in Saxo. This was a sort of Norse
Golden Age when frith (fruitful peace) ruled throughout the Northlands
and attributed to Freyr by the Swedes. Fróði is assumed to be an
euhemerized Freyr character; the best of all possible rulers.
Frith was also a great part of his holy places and seemingly typical of
Vanic cult in general. Weapons and outlaws could not be brought nor
blood shed. Víga-Glúms saga shows Freyr as being particularly angered
by the Óðinnic Glúmr, who did all these things in Freyr's holy places
(Turville-Petre, Myth and Religion, pp. 69-70).
Bede tells us that the Anglo-Saxon high priest was not allowed to carry
weapons, or ride any horse other than a mare. Similarities have often
been seen between these rules and Freyr's giving away his own horse and
sword to win Gerðr.
Holder of Oaths:
He is almost certainly a god of oaths as is evidenced by the
sacrificial Yule boar (dedicated to him and Freyja) being used for the
swearing of holy oaths. Participants would (and do now) lay a hand upon
the beast and speak their public oaths (or private messages to the God)
before it is sacrificed. The animal being used as a messenger. Oaths,
of course, are part and parcel of keeping the frith.
King of the Alfar:
Alf (plural Alfar) is a confusingly general term meaning simply
"spirit" and has had many applications both in the Lore and beyond. The
Vanir as a whole are sometimes refered to as Alfar, as are male
ancestral spirits, as are spirits of nature (esp. Ljosalfar "light
alfs"). This last useage is further confused when we consider its
modern English derivative - "elf" which in folkore and popular culture
has lost any meaning beyond "nature spirit," Tolkien's race of graceful
beings not withstanding.
God of Death and the Howe:
Freyr's roles as Sacred King, Primal Ancestor and Lord of the Alfar
come together in his role as a death deity. Though similar, this is not
the same as Odin's role as a lord of death and battle. Rather, Freyr is
the master of the past. His ship is sometimes seen as a metaphor for
the journey from one world to the next. As ruler of the Alfar, he is
the keeper of the wisdom of both nature and, more important to most
humans, that of our forefathers. It was from the burial mounds of his
forefathers that a king got his authority. He also got advice directly
from them via the howe by "mound sitting" - the practice of spending
the night on an ancestor's bural howe in the hopes that they would
speak wisdom.
The Shaman:
Some folk regard Freyr as a god of ecstasy, mainly sexual, similar to
other such ancient deities. He may thus be linked to early shamanic
practices and sorcery. This would be part and parcel with his role as a
guide, mediator or bridge between humans and the wild and between life
and death. In this context, he may have been associated with ritual
sexual ambiguity - a ritual or social expression of the crossing of
boundaries seen in several cultures. His priests may have
cross-dressed. Saxo Grammaticus' hero Starkaðr fled Freyr's temple at
Uppsala because of the "effeminate gestures", the "unmanly clatter of
bells", and the "clapping of mimes upon the stage" (Saxo, VI, 185, p.
228).
Tacitus describes a similar phenomenon among the
Naharvali, a Germanic tribe: "The Naharvali proudly point out a grove
associated with an ancient worship. The presiding priest dresses like a
woman; but the deities are said to be the counterpart of Castor and
Pollux. This indicates their character, but their name is the Alci.
There are no images, and nothing to suggest that the cult is of foreign
origin; but they are certainly worshipped as young men and as
brothers." (Tacitus, p. 137)
Pre- and Non-Norse Associations:
Freyr was known throughout the Germanic world, perhaps most
popualr/important in Sweden (particularly the southeastern part) where
he is held to be the progenitor of the Yngling royal line.
The first evidence of worship of Freyr or a similar deity comes from
Bronze Age rock-carvings in Östergötland which show a phallic man with
a sword and a boar. The distribution of these carvings partly
corresponds to place-names containing the name of Freyr. Some Bronze
Age carvings show a phallic man with a sun-wheel body, sometimes
carrying out a ritual wedding with a female figure.
Freyr's use of the stag's antler has led some to suggest he may be
something of a Norse equivalent of the Celtic Cernunnos (Horned One) as
seen on the Gundestrup Cauldron, or to the Anglo-Saxon Herne the
Hunter. He is among the possible progenitors of such characters as the
English Greenman and Alberich (elbe "elves" reix, rex "king"), a
sorcerer in the legendary history of the Merovingian dynasty known to
Shakespeare fans as Oberon.
History/Archaeology:
There are several finds of what may be images associated with Freyr.
The best known of these is the small silver figurine from Södermanland
(Viking Age), where the god sits with chin on hand and a substantial
erection. This was probably carried in a belt-pouch, like the silver
image of Freyr that Ingimundr the Old was said to carry with him in
Vatnsdæla saga. From the Celtic and Roman Iron Ages, there are also the
phallic wooden figures found in the bogs of Denmark, which, if they do
not represent this god himself, showed a deity of very similar
character.
The christian historian Adam of Bremen, writing just before A.D. 1200, describes the high temple at Uppsala thus:
"in this temple, richly ornamented with gold, the people worship the
images of three gods. Thor, the mightiest of the three, stands in the
centre of the church, with Wodan and Fricco on his right and left.
Thor, they say, holds the dominion of the air. He rules over the
thunder and lighting, winds and rain, clear weather and fertility. The
second deity, Wodan, that is to say, 'Rage', wages war and gives man
courage to meet his foe. The third is Fricco. He gives to mortals peace
and enlightenment, his image having a much exaggerated penis. All their
gods are provided with priests, who offer the sacrifices of the people.
When plague or famine threatens, sacrifice is offered to Thor; when war
is imminent, to Wodan; when a wedding is to be celebrated, to Fricco"
(Lost Gods of England, p. 114).
Saxo Grammaticus describes Freyr as being the "satrap" of the gods, and
as introducing human sacrifice at Uppsala, Sweden. Earlier, he mentions
how the king Hadding had established the yearly feast which the Swedes
called Freyr's-blót, when "swarthy" victims were given to the god.
The Anglo-Saxon Rune Poem tells us that "Ing was first seen by men
among the East Danes, till he, after that, went over the sea again: his
wain ran after him - thus the warriors named the hero."
Freyr also appears to have been popular in Iceland. Gísla saga tells
how Þórgrímr is said still to be in the howe, and "he was so dear to
Freyr on account of his sacrifices to Freyr that Freyr would have no
frost between them" - that is, the barrow-mound stayed green even in
the snow. Hrafnkels saga Freysgoða recounts the story of a man who was
specifically given to Freyr and shared all his best possessions with
the god he loved, especially the horse Freyfaxi.
Certain geographic features are associated with Freyr, particularly
hilly wooded elevations. Such places are seen as being full of might in
many cultures. For Freyr, rocky or secluded hills may have been deemed
particularly appropriate since he is the god of the burial mound and of
the wilderness where men may not live easily.
Gerdr:
We know only one major myth of Freyr - that recounted in the Eddic poem
Skírnismál. Freyr had seen the etin-maid Gerðr (Snorri adds that this
happened when Freyr was sitting on Óðinn's seat Hliðskjálf) and fallen
in love with her, retiring from the company of the other gods in his
sorrows. Skaði sends Freyr's manservant Skírnir to find out what is
wrong; Freyr then sends Skírnir to woo Gerðr, but must give the
messenger his horse and his sword (both often considered symbols of his
manhood) so that Skírnir will be able to get past the trolls on the way
and ride through the ring of fire surrounding Gerðr. Gerðr is reluctant
at first, but when threatened with enchantment, yields and says that
she will be wedded to Freyr. It is possible, though not proven, that
Skírnír is an hypostasis of Freyr. His name means "radiance," which is
a title of Freyr.
As a result of these actions, Freyr will fight only with a stag's
antler at Ragnarök (Lokasenna 42), specifically the one he used to kill
the giant Beli on his journey to meet Gerdr for their honeymoon. The
stag is thus thought of as one of Freyr's beasts. Like the boar and the
stallion, it is among the most male of animals and suggests his
closeness to the wild.
Many
have analyzed this story as an example of Hieros Gamos, of the marriage
of heaven and earth for the fertility of the crops. Freyr, who is a
solar deity, represents heaven; and Gerðr, who is a giantess, the
earth. This seems to be the typical model of the "Spring Drama": the
woman may embody the powers of the sleeping earth, the man the sunlight
that awakes and makes her fruitful.
Boars:
The most specific beast of Freyr is the boar, which is one of the
fertile/verile of ancient farm animals as well as a symbol of
indomitable wild nature and of fierceness in battle - a typical motif
on armor and in proto-heraldic designs. Images of a man with a boar are
found on some Migration Age bracteates, and these may be connected with
the cult of Freyr.
Snorri also tells us that one of the gifts forged by the dwarves at
Loki's behest was Freyr's boar Gullinbursti (Gold-Bristled) or
Slíðrugtanni (Cutting-Tusked), which could "run over air and water,
night and day, better than any horse, and it would never be so dark at
night or in mirk-worlds, that it would not be bright enough where he
fared, his bristles gave off such light".
Lastly, the boar was a holy animal. The Yule-oaths were sworn on the
best boar of the herd, which was then given to Freyr and/or Freyja
(according to Heiðreks saga) as the Midwinter sacrifice.
Horses:
Freyr also appears to have been connected with horses. He was the owner
of a horse called "Blóðughófi", "Bloody-Hooved". Sometimes this has
been read as suggesting an injury to the horse's leg, but may describe
Freyr's riding forth in battle over fallen foes.
The saga of Hrafnkell Freysgoði tells how Hrafnkell dedicated a horse
(Freyfaxi) to Freyr, which only he and Freyr were allowed to ride. Such
horses seem similar to the holy horses described by Tacitus in Germania
ch. 10: the "white horses, never soiled by human use" who are "yoked to
a sacred chariot and accompanied by priest or king or other head of
state, who observe their neighing or snorting. No other divination has
greater faith placed in it, not only by the ordinary people but by the
kings and priests; they are the servants of the gods, but the horses
their confidants."
Another horse named Freyfaxi appears in the Vatnsdæla saga, where the
sons of Ingimundr, worshippers of Freyr, attended a horse-fight. To
EllisDavidson, it seems likely that horse-fights were associated with
the cult of Freyr. (Ellis-Davidson, 1964:98). In Óláfs saga
Tryggvasonar (Flateyjarbók), it is told how the christian king carried
out his attack on a Trondheim hof by riding the stallion of a herd that
was dedicated to Freyr.
The Völsa þáttr of St. Óláfr's saga (Flateyjarbók) tells of a family
which had a preserved horse-phallus as a holy item; this has also been
associated with Freyr.
Ships:
Ships were also affiliated with Freyr. He had the magical ship
Skíðblaðnir ("assembled from pieces of thin wood"), made for him by the
same dwarves who crafted Óðinn's spear and Sif's gold hair. This ship
could be folded up and carried in his pocket, or be put down and grow
to be large enough to hold all the gods and goddesses. It has a
favorable breeze whenever it is used, and can sail over land as well as
sea. The ship is the symbol of death and rebirth dating back to the
Bronze Age. Both functions are in Freyr's domain. Death and rebirth are
often seen as a journey and Freyr (along with or instead of Odin) may
have been seen as a ferryman of the dead. The ship is also a sign of
fruitfulness, and the Wanic processions were carried out both in a ship
and in a wain.
Worship:
Blot was made to Freyr at key times of the year: Yule Feast (along with Freyja), Missummer Feast, Harvest time (the Freyfaxi
festival which included horse fighting) and during weddings. Adam of
Bremen reported that "sacrifices to Frey among the Swedes took place at
the same time as marriages."
The most typical sacrifice
was swine or boar though other offerings are known including Ox. Today,
folk often give him bread and grains as well as mead and ale - all
harvest goods.
A popular practice associated with Freyr is the procession of his idol
in a chariot through the fields. This procession may be the most
typical characteristic of the Vanic cult as it may also be associated
with Njord/Nerthus (Tacitus). In the tale of Gunnarr Helming (part of
the Flateyjarbók in the saga of King Olaf Tryggvason) it is told that
the statue of Freyr is taken around to bless the fields during autumn,
accompanied by his "wife", a priestess. Today some kindreds have done
this ritual using a trailer pulled by a truck instead of by oxen,
circumnavigating the town or region and visiting the homes of Heathens
in order to make merry and give all a chance to add gifts to Freyr to
the wain.
Mound sitting could also be considered a form of worship, though
perhaps of a more shamnic or meditative and personal nature.
Because of the reference in Saxo many Freyrsmen wear bells. The boar or sun wheel are also popular symbols for adornment.
My UPG:
Indeed, I see Freyr as the interface, the junction or bridge beteen the
world of man and the world of nature. There's no real seperation
between the two, of course, but we tend to not perceive this in every
day life. Freyr is the expression of joyful harmony between the
individual, his/her community and of both the individual and the
community with the natural world with which we must interact to
survive. More than just survive, but to build good - to develop
ourselves as we experience wyrd and set orlog. Frith is the glue
binding together the many facets of this process of growth and
evolution. Freyr is the embodiment of that frith, that process, that
ultimate sense of wholeness.
He is the spirit of the homestead - of living in nature, as a part of
it, and harnessing some aspects of it in order to create life, health
and livlihood for ourselves. This can only take place in a state of
natural peace.
I feel that Freyr is wrathful when this harmony is disrupted. His war
is the battle of the father and mother against those who would harm
their cubs or their ancestral lands. In that light, he could be a
patron of granola tree-huggers, assuming they are rational tree-huggers
not blinded to the big picture or slaves to a political ideology
(neither of which is practical or natural). He embodies for me the Tao.
Freyr's ideology is the wind. His dogma is the seed. His holy book is
written on green leaves. His sacrament is berries and honey in melted
snow. He has no time for petty arguments or in-fighting or material
conquest - there's planting to be done and harvesting to complete
before nightfall. He dances through his joyful work and invites us to
as well. He teaches us to enjoy life to the fullest and to make it
meaningful through experience and action. He is Joy through doing.
My UPG on the Alfar:
There may not be much difference, or any, between nature alfs and
mighty ancestor alfs. I feel that after death some souls may choose to,
or be drawn to, remain more closely intertwined with Midgard and with
humans, particularly their families. Such spirits exist in a state of
harmony with Midgard. This harmony is in keeping with Midgard?s basic
nature and structure and processes, thus the Alfar are "of the land." I
have a strong backing in Asian thought, so I find it easy to compare
these spirits to either Kami (the local nature gods of Shinto) and to
Bhuddist Bhodhisatvas
- enlightened beings who delay entering into a state of Nirvana so as
to help mortal beings along the path to enlightenment. I suppose one
might also argue that an ancestor Alf is merely a nature alf that has
spent some time in a human body. I'm open to such speculation, though I
don't worry about it very much.
Recommended Reading:
Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe by H. R. Ellis Davidson
Gods and Myths of Northern Europe by H.R. Ellis Davidson
Our Troth Second Edition Vol. I History and Lore by Kveldulf Gundarsson
God of the World by Groa (soon to be updated/expanded, I hear)
Idunna Issue # 57. Harvest, 2003
Frey, God of the World by Ann Groa Sheffield (www.medoburg.org)
A Queston of Universalism...
A friend wrote me recently and asked the following...
I
know of some wiccans who equate Freyr to Hern and Cernnunos. What is
your UPG regarding this comparison? Are they different personaes or the
same god that moved with the folk during migrations?
Answer:
Howdy,
Great question.
Well, I think I said in the handout that Freyr may be a progenitor or
parallel to those deities/characters. Thing is, I gather they know
less about Cernnunos than we do about Freyr in some respects. The
bronze age is mysterious, to say the least. The circumstantial
evidence is strong that they are related and may indeed be different
cultural understandings of the same deity (I'm thinking more of
Cernnunos than Hern though. Hern seems to be mainly a
forest/wilderness god and not so related to agriculture. (don't quote
me on that though)
But you're basically asking me my view on universalism vs. tribal
individuality. I personally feel that at one time this was the same
deity, yes. And they are closely related now because they are linked
to the same (or similar) forces. I buy into universalism in so far as
I buy into physics - there are not different laws of physics in
different parts of the world. Therefore at some very basic primal
level, all of the deities, and all of us, are connected at the root.
But I also feel that gods are like humans in that they grow and
evolve. We are all products of context, you know? Freyr is not
Cerrnunos because he is a "product" of the realties of the Nordic
peoples, not the Celtic peoples to the south. Just as you and I are
products of how and where we grew up; we are European-stock,
English-speaking Americans, not Mongols or Indians, although we're all
human, all mammals. Note that this line of thinking does not take into
account real time vs. mythic time.
Maybe Freyr was Cernnunos at one time and then changed his name when
he moved? Or maybe he split himself in twain to live among different
peoples. Or I suppose you could say Freyr and Cernnunos are brothers.
Heh, maybe Njordr is the real root ancient god here and is father to
both!
OK...I'm just having fun there. My point is that you can get
ridiculous with this sort of speculation. I mean, how far do you want
to go? Some folks trace our gods all the way back to the Caucasians in
northern India and the Vedic gods. Historically, there may be merit in
those theories, but do they matter when it comes to worship?
We know and identify Freyr through our Lore, our cultural
understanding and framework. I get a different "vibe" worshiping and
communing with him than I would worshiping say...Vishnu, even though
Vishnu may be a historic progenitor of Freyr. If I wanted that feel,
that experience, that sense of the divine, I would just go and be
Hindu, not Asatru. I think universalists who throw gods of different
pantheons together in ritual are silly, frankly, and miss out on the
understanding of deeper mysteries that comes from serious focus. I
also think they disrespect and devalue cultures they do not
understand, but that's a whole different topic.
Seriously, my gut feeling: I would go so far as to say Freyr,
Cernnunos and Hern are rather like brothers - same traits, same
purview, similar personalities maybe. All Llosalfar, you might say. Or
all members of the Vanic tribe perhaps (to put it in our Asatru
framework).
Finally, I'd just say that Freyr IS the God of the Here and Now after
all, so I feel we should look for him in the here and now. In the end,
that may be more important than the lore. Freyr is as Freyr does!
Written by Eric Munson |
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