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Freyr

Freyr (Old Norse: 'Lord'), sometimes anglicized as Frey, is a widely attested god in Norse mythology, associated with kingship, fertility, peace, prosperity, fair weather, and good harvest. Freyr, sometimes referred to as Yngvi-Freyr, was especially associated with Sweden and seen as an ancestor of the Swedish royal house. According to Adam of Bremen, Freyr was associated with peace and pleasure, and was represented with a phallic statue in the Temple at Uppsala. According to Snorri Sturluson, Freyr was "the most renowned of the æsir", and was venerated for good harvest and peace.

The Rällinge statuette from Södermanland, Sweden, believed to depict Freyr, Viking Age.[1]

In the mythological stories in the Icelandic books the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda, Freyr is presented as one of the Vanir, the son of the god Njörðr and his sister-wife, as well as the twin brother of the goddess Freyja. The gods gave him Álfheimr, the realm of the Elves, as a teething present. He rides the shining dwarf-made boar Gullinbursti, and possesses the ship Skíðblaðnir, which always has a favorable breeze and can be folded together and carried in a pouch when it is not being used. Freyr is also known to have been associated with the horse cult. He also kept sacred horses in his sanctuary at Trondheim in Norway.[2] He has the servants Skírnir, Byggvir and Beyla.

The most extensive surviving Freyr myth relates Freyr's falling in love with the female jötunn Gerðr. Eventually, she becomes his wife but first Freyr has to give away his sword, which fights on its own "if wise be he who wields it." Although deprived of this weapon, Freyr defeats the jötunn Beli with an antler. However, lacking his sword, Freyr will be killed by the fire jötunn Surtr during the events of Ragnarök.

Like other Germanic deities, veneration of Freyr was revived during the modern period through the Heathenry movement.

Name edit

The Old Norse name Freyr ('lord') is generally thought to descend from a Proto-Norse form reconstructed as *frawjaʀ, stemming from the Proto-Germanic noun *frawjaz ~ *fraw(j)ōn ('lord'), and cognate with Gothic frauja, Old English frēa, or Old High German frō, all meaning 'lord, master'.[3][4] The runic form frohila, derived from an earlier *frōjila, may also be related.[3] Recently, however, an etymology deriving the name of the god from a nominalized form of the Proto-Scandinavian adjective *fraiw(i)a- ('fruitful, generative') has also been proposed.[5][6] According to linguist Guus Kroonen, "within Germanic, the attestation of ON frjar, frjór, frær, Icel. frjór adj. 'fertile; prolific' < *fraiwa- clearly seems to point to a stem *frai(w)- meaning 'fecund'. Both in form and meaning, fraiwa- ('seed') is reminiscent of Freyr 'fertility deity' < *frauja-. The possibility must be considered, therefore, that *fraiwa- was metathesized from *frawja-, a collective of some kind."[7] Freyr is also known by a series of other names which describe his attributes and role in religious practice and associated mythology.

Adam of Bremen edit

Written c. 1080, one of the oldest written sources on pre-Christian Scandinavian religious practices is Adam of Bremen's Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum. Adam claimed to have access to first-hand accounts on pagan practices in Sweden. He refers to Freyr with the Latinized name Fricco and mentions that an image of him at Skara was destroyed by the Christian missionary Bishop Egino.[8] Adam's description of the Temple at Uppsala gives some details on the god.

In hoc templo, quod totum ex auro paratum est, statuas atrium deorum veneratur populus, ita ut potentissimus eorum Thor in medio solium habeat triclinio; hinc et inde locum possident Wodan et Fricco. Quorum significationes eiusmodi sunt: 'Thor', inquiunt, 'praesidet in aere, qui tonitrus et fulmina, ventos ymbresque, serena et fruges gubernat. Alter Wodan, id est furor, bella gerit, hominique ministrat virtutem contra inimicos. Tertius est Fricco, pacem voluptatem que largiens mortalibus'. Cuius etiam simulacrum fingunt cum ingenti priapo.
Gesta Hammaburgensis 26,

In this temple, entirely decked out in gold, the people worship the statues of three gods in such wise that the mightiest of them, Thor, occupies a throne in the middle of the chamber; Woden and Frikko have places on either side. The significance of these gods is as follows: Thor, they say, presides over the air, which governs the thunder and lightning, the winds and rains, fair weather and crops. The other, Woden—that is, the Furious—carries on war and imparts to man strength against his enemies. The third is Frikko, who bestows peace and pleasure on mortals. His likeness, too, they fashion with an immense phallus.

Gesta Hammaburgensis 26, Tschan's translation[9] 164815

Later in the account Adam states that when a marriage is performed a libation is made to the image of Fricco.

Historians are divided on the reliability of Adam's account.[10]

Prose Edda edit

When Snorri Sturluson was writing in 13th century Iceland, the indigenous Germanic gods were still remembered although they had not been openly worshiped for more than two centuries.

Gylfaginning edit

In the Gylfaginning section of his Prose Edda, Snorri introduces Freyr as one of the major gods.

Njörðr í Nóatúnum gat síðan tvau börn, hét sonr Freyr en dóttir Freyja. Þau váru fögr álitum ok máttug. Freyr er hinn ágætasti af ásum. Hann ræðr fyrir regni ok skini sólar, ok þar með ávexti jarðar, ok á hann er gott at heita til árs ok friðar. Hann ræðr ok fésælu manna. Gylfaginning 24,

Njördr in Nóatún begot afterward two children: the son was called Freyr, and the daughter Freyja; they were fair of face and mighty. Freyr is the most renowned of the Æsir; he rules over the rain and the shining of the sun, and therewithal the fruit of the earth; and it is good to call on him for fruitful seasons and peace. He governs also the prosperity of men. Gylfaginning XXIV,

 
Seated on Odin's throne Hliðskjálf, the god Freyr sits in contemplation in an illustration (1908) by Frederic Lawrence

This description has similarities to the older account by Adam of Bremen but the differences are interesting. Adam assigns control of the weather and produce of the fields to Thor but Snorri says that Freyr rules over those areas. Snorri also omits any explicitly sexual references in Freyr's description. Those discrepancies can be explained in several ways. Adam and Snorri were writing with different goals in mind. It is possible that the Norse gods did not have exactly the same roles in Icelandic and Swedish paganism. Either Snorri or Adam may also have had distorted information.

The only extended myth related to Freyr in the Prose Edda is the story of his marriage.

Þat var einn dag er Freyr hafði gengit í Hliðskjálf ok sá of heima alla. En er hann leit í norðrætt, þá sá hann á einum bœ mikit hús ok fagrt, ok til þess húss gekk kona, ok er hon tók upp höndum ok lauk hurð fyrir sér þá lýsti af höndum hennar bæði í lopt ok á lög, ok allir heimar birtusk af henni. Gylfaginning 37,

It chanced one day that Freyr had gone to Hlidskjálf, and gazed over all the world; but when he looked over into the northern region, he saw on an estate a house great and fair. And toward this house went a woman; when she raised her hands and opened the door before her, brightness gleamed from her hands, both over sky and sea, and all the worlds were illumined of her. Gylfaginning XXXVII,

The woman is Gerðr, a beautiful giantess. Freyr immediately falls in love with her and becomes depressed and taciturn. After a period of brooding, he consents to talk to Skírnir, his foot-page. He tells Skírnir that he has fallen in love with a beautiful woman and thinks he will die if he cannot have her. He asks Skírnir to go and woo her for him.

Þá svarar Skírnir, sagði svá at hann skal fara sendiferð en Freyr skal fá honum sverð sitt. Þat var svá gott sverð at sjálft vásk. En Freyr lét eigi þat til skorta ok gaf honum sverðit. Þá fór Skírnir ok bað honum konunnar ok fekk heitit hennar, ok níu nóttum síðar skyldi hon þar koma er Barey heitir ok ganga þá at brullaupinu með Frey. Gylfaginning 37,

Then Skírnir answered thus: he would go on his errand, but Freyr should give him his own sword—which is so good that it fights of itself—and Freyr did not refuse, but gave him the sword. Then Skírnir went forth and wooed the woman for him, and received her promise; and nine nights later she was to come to the place called Barrey, and then go to the bridal with Freyr. Gylfaginning XXXVII,

The loss of Freyr's sword has consequences. According to the Prose Edda, Freyr had to fight Beli without his sword, and slew him with an antler. But the result at Ragnarök, the end of the world, will be much more serious. Freyr is fated to fight the fire-giant Surtr, and since he does not have his sword he will be defeated.

 
The final battle between Freyr and Surtr, illustration by Lorenz Frølich

Even after the loss of his weapon Freyr still has two magical artifacts, both dwarf-made. One is the ship Skíðblaðnir, which will have favoring breeze wherever its owner wants to go and can also be folded together like a napkin and carried in a pouch. The other is the boar Gullinbursti whose mane glows to illuminate the way for his owner. No myths involving Skíðblaðnir have come down to us but Snorri relates that Freyr rode to Baldr's funeral in a wagon pulled by Gullinbursti.

Skaldic poetry edit

Freyr is referred to several times in skaldic poetry. In Húsdrápa, partially preserved in the Prose Edda, he is said to ride a boar to Baldr's funeral.

Ríðr á börg til borgar
böðfróðr sonar Óðins
Freyr ok folkum stýrir
fyrstr enum golli byrsta. Húsdrápa 7,
The battle-bold Freyr rideth
First on the golden-bristled
Barrow-boar to the bale-fire
Of Baldr, and leads the people. Húsdrápa 7,

In a poem by Egill Skalla-Grímsson, Freyr is called upon along with Njörðr to drive Eric Bloodaxe from Norway. The same skald mentions in Arinbjarnarkviða that his friend has been blessed by the two gods.

[E]n Grjótbjörn
of gæddan hefr
Freyr ok Njörðr
at féar afli. Arinbjarnarkviða 17,
Frey and Njord
have endowed
rock-bear
with wealth's force. Arinbjarnarkviða 17, Scudder's translation

Nafnaþulur edit

In Nafnaþulur Freyr is said to ride the horse Blóðughófi (Bloody Hoof).

Poetic Edda edit

 
A detail from Gotland runestone G 181, in the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities in Stockholm. The three men are interpreted as Odin, Thor, and Freyr.

Freyr is mentioned in several of the poems in the Poetic Edda. The information there is largely consistent with that of the Prose Edda while each collection has some details not found in the other.

Völuspá edit

Völuspá, the best known of the Eddic poems, describes the final confrontation between Freyr and Surtr during Ragnarök.

Surtr fer sunnan
með sviga lævi,
skínn af sverði
sól valtíva.
Grjótbjörg gnata,
en gífr rata,
troða halir helveg,
en himinn klofnar.
Þá kømr Hlínar
harmr annarr fram,
er Óðinn ferr
við úlf vega,
en bani Belja
bjartr at Surti,
þá mun Friggjar
falla angan. Völuspá 51–52,
Surtr moves from the south
with the scathe of branches:[11]
there shines from his sword
the sun of Gods of the Slain.
Stone peaks clash,
and troll wives take to the road.
Warriors tread the path from Hel,
and heaven breaks apart.
Then is fulfilled Hlín's
second sorrow,
when Óðinn goes
to fight with the wolf,
and Beli's slayer,
bright, against Surtr.
Then shall Frigg's
sweet friend fall. Völuspá 50–51, Dronke's translation

Some scholars have preferred a slightly different translation, in which the sun shines "from the sword of the gods". The idea is that the sword which Surtr slays Freyr with is the "sword of the gods" which Freyr had earlier bargained away for Gerðr. This would add a further layer of tragedy to the myth. Sigurður Nordal argued for this view but the possibility represented by Ursula Dronke's translation above is equally possible.

Grímnismál edit

Grímnismál, a poem which largely consists of miscellaneous information about the gods, mentions Freyr's abode.

Alfheim Frey
gáfu í árdaga
tívar at tannféi. Grímnismál 5, GJ's edition[permanent dead link]
Alfheim the gods to Frey
gave in days of yore
for a tooth-gift. Grímnismál 5,

A tooth-gift was a gift given to an infant on the cutting of the first tooth. Since Alfheimr or Álfheimr means "World of Álfar (Elves)" the fact that Freyr should own it is one of the indications of a connection between the Vanir and the obscure Álfar. Grímnismál also mentions that the sons of Ívaldi made Skíðblaðnir for Freyr and that it is the best of ships.

Lokasenna edit

In the poem Lokasenna, Loki accuses the gods of various misdeeds. He criticizes the Vanir for incest, saying that Njörðr had Freyr with his sister. He also states that the gods discovered Freyr and Freyja having sex together. The god Týr speaks up in Freyr's defense.

Freyr er beztr
allra ballriða
ása görðum í;
mey hann né grætir
né manns konu
ok leysir ór höftum hvern. Lokasenna 37, GJ's edition[permanent dead link]
Frey is best
of all the exalted gods
in the Æsir's courts:
no maid he makes to weep,
no wife of man,
and from bonds looses all. Lokasenna 37,

Lokasenna also mentions that Freyr has servants called Byggvir and Beyla. They seem to have been associated with the making of bread.

Skírnismál edit

 
"The Lovesickness of Frey" (1908) by W. G. Collingwood.

The courtship of Freyr and Gerðr is dealt with extensively in the poem Skírnismál. Freyr is depressed after seeing Gerðr. Njörðr and Skaði ask Skírnir to go and talk with him. Freyr reveals the cause of his grief and asks Skírnir to go to Jötunheimr to woo Gerðr for him. Freyr gives Skírnir a steed and his magical sword for the journey.

Mar ek þér þann gef,
er þik um myrkvan berr
vísan vafrloga,
ok þat sverð,
er sjalft mun vegask
ef sá er horskr, er hefr. Skírnismál 9, GJ's edition
My steed I lend thee
to lift thee o'er the weird
ring of flickering flame,
the sword also
which swings itself,
if wise be he who wields it. Skírnismál 9,

When Skírnir finds Gerðr he starts by offering her treasures if she will marry Freyr. When she declines he forces her to accept by threatening her with destructive magic.

Ynglinga saga edit

 
Yngvi-Freyr constructs the Temple at Uppsala in this early 19th century artwork by Hugo Hamilton.
 
"In Freyr's Temple near Uppsala" (1882) by Friedrich Wilhelm Heine.

Snorri Sturluson starts his epic history of the kings of Norway with Ynglinga saga, a euhemerized account of the Norse gods. Here Odin and the Æsir are men from Asia who gain power through their prowess in war and Odin's skills. But when Odin attacks the Vanir he bites off more than he can chew and peace is negotiated after the destructive and indecisive Æsir-Vanir War. Hostages are exchanged to seal the peace deal and the Vanir send Freyr and Njörðr to live with the Æsir. At this point the saga, like Lokasenna, mentions that incest was practised among the Vanir.

Þá er Njörðr var með Vönum, þá hafði hann átta systur sína, því at þat váru þar lög; váru þeirra börn Freyr ok Freyja. En þat var bannat með Ásum at byggja svá náit at frændsemi. Ynglinga saga 4, Schultz's edition Archived 31 December 2005 at Bibliotheca Alexandrina

While Njord was with the Vanaland people he had taken his own sister in marriage, for that was allowed by their law; and their children were Frey and Freya. But among the Asaland people it was forbidden to intermarry with such near relations. Ynglinga saga 4,

Odin makes Njörðr and Freyr priests of sacrifices and they become influential leaders. Odin goes on to conquer the North and settles in Sweden where he rules as king, collects taxes and maintains sacrifices. After Odin's death, Njörðr takes the throne. During his rule there is peace and good harvest and the Swedes come to believe that Njörðr controls these things. Eventually Njörðr falls ill and dies.

Freyr tók þá ríki eptir Njörð; var hann kallaðr dróttinn yfir Svíum ok tók skattgjafir af þeim; hann var vinsæll ok ársæll sem faðir hans. Freyr reisti at Uppsölum hof mikit, ok setti þar höfuðstað sinn; lagði þar til allar skyldir sínar, lönd ok lausa aura; þá hófst Uppsala auðr, ok hefir haldizt æ síðan. Á hans dögum hófst Fróða friðr, þá var ok ár um öll lönd; kendu Svíar þat Frey. Var hann því meir dýrkaðr en önnur goðin, sem á hans dögum varð landsfólkit auðgara en fyrr af friðinum ok ári. Gerðr Gýmis dóttir hét kona hans; sonr þeirra hét Fjölnir. Freyr hét Yngvi öðru nafni; Yngva nafn var lengi síðan haft í hans ætt fyrir tignarnafn, ok Ynglingar váru síðan kallaðir hans ættmenn. Freyr tók sótt; en er at honum leið sóttin, leituðu menn sér ráðs, ok létu fá menn til hans koma, en bjoggu haug mikinn, ok létu dyrr á ok 3 glugga. En er Freyr var dauðr, báru þeir hann leyniliga í hauginn, ok sögðu Svíum at hann lifði, ok varðveittu hann þar 3 vetr. En skatt öllum heltu þeir í hauginn, í einn glugg gullinu, en í annan silfrinu, í hinn þriðja eirpenningum. Þá hélzt ár ok friðr. Ynglinga saga 12, Schultz's edition Archived 31 December 2005 at Bibliotheca Alexandrina

Frey took the kingdom after Njord, and was called drot by the Swedes, and they paid taxes to him. He was, like his father, fortunate in friends and in good seasons. Frey built a great temple at Upsal, made it his chief seat, and gave it all his taxes, his land, and goods. Then began the Upsal domains, which have remained ever since. Then began in his days the Frode-peace; and then there were good seasons, in all the land, which the Swedes ascribed to Frey, so that he was more worshipped than the other gods, as the people became much richer in his days by reason of the peace and good seasons. His wife was called Gerd, daughter of Gymir, and their son was called Fjolne. Frey was called by another name, Yngve; and this name Yngve was considered long after in his race as a name of honour, so that his descendants have since been called Ynglinger. Frey fell into a sickness; and as his illness took the upper hand, his men took the plan of letting few approach him. In the meantime they raised a great mound, in which they placed a door with three holes in it. Now when Frey died they bore him secretly into the mound, but told the Swedes he was alive; and they kept watch over him for three years. They brought all the taxes into the mound, and through the one hole they put in the gold, through the other the silver, and through the third the copper money that was paid. Peace and good seasons continued. Ynglinga saga 12,

Þá er allir Svíar vissu, at Freyr var dauðr, en hélzt ár ok friðr, þá trúðu þeir, at svá mundi vera, meðan Freyr væri á Svíþjóð, ok vildu eigi brenna hann, ok kölluðu hann veraldar goð ok blótuðu mest til árs ok friðar alla ævi síðan. Ynglinga saga 13, Schultz's edition Archived 31 December 2005 at Bibliotheca Alexandrina

When it became known to the Swedes that Frey was dead, and yet peace and good seasons continued, they believed that it must be so as long as Frey remained in Sweden; and therefore they would not burn his remains, but called him the god of this world, and afterwards offered continually blood-sacrifices to him, principally for peace and good seasons. Ynglinga saga 13,

Freyr had a son named Fjölnir, who succeeds him as king and rules during the continuing period of peace and good seasons. Fjölnir's descendants are enumerated in Ynglingatal which describes the mythological kings of Sweden.

Ögmundar þáttr dytts edit

The 14th century Icelandic Ögmundar þáttr dytts contains a tradition of how Freyr was transported in a wagon and administered by a priestess, in Sweden. Freyr's role as a fertility god needed a female counterpart in a divine couple (McKinnell's translation 1987[12]):

Great heathen sacrifices were held there at that time, and for a long while Frey had been the god who was worshipped most there – and so much power had been gained by Frey's statue that the devil used to speak to people out of the mouth of the idol, and a young and beautiful woman had been obtained to serve Frey. It was the faith of the local people that Frey was alive, as seemed to some extent to be the case, and they thought he would need to have a sexual relationship with his wife; along with Frey she was to have complete control over the temple settlement and all that belonged to it.

In this short story, a man named Gunnar was suspected of manslaughter and escaped to Sweden, where Gunnar became acquainted with this young priestess. He helped her drive Freyr's wagon with the god effigy in it, but the god did not appreciate Gunnar and so attacked him and would have killed Gunnar if he had not promised himself to return to the Christian faith if he would make it back to Norway. When Gunnar had promised this, a demon jumped out of the god effigy and so Freyr was nothing but a piece of wood. Gunnar destroyed the wooden idol and dressed himself as Freyr, then Gunnar and the priestess travelled across Sweden where people were happy to see the god visiting them. After a while he made the priestess pregnant, but this was seen by the Swedes as confirmation that Freyr was truly a fertility god and not a scam. Finally, Gunnar had to flee back to Norway with his young bride and had her baptized at the court of Olaf Tryggvason.

Other Icelandic sources edit

Worship of Freyr is alluded to in several Icelanders' sagas.

The protagonist of Hrafnkels saga is a priest of Freyr. He dedicates a horse to the god and kills a man for riding it, setting in motion a chain of fateful events.

In Gísla saga a chieftain named Þorgrímr Freysgoði is an ardent worshipper of Freyr. When he dies he is buried in a howe.

Varð og sá hlutur einn er nýnæmum þótti gegna að aldrei festi snæ utan og sunnan á haugi Þorgríms og eigi fraus; og gátu menn þess til að hann myndi Frey svo ávarður fyrir blótin að hann myndi eigi vilja að freri á milli þeirra.[13]

And now, too, a thing happened which seemed strange and new. No snow lodged on the south side of Thorgrim's howe, nor did it freeze there. And men guessed it was because Thorgrim had been so dear to Frey for his worship's sake that the god would not suffer the frost to come between them. -[14]

Hallfreðar saga, Víga-Glúms saga and Vatnsdœla saga also mention Freyr.

Other Icelandic sources referring to Freyr include Íslendingabók, Landnámabók, and Hervarar saga.

Íslendingabók, written c. 1125, is the oldest Icelandic source that mentions Freyr, including him in a genealogy of Swedish kings. Landnámabók includes a heathen oath to be sworn at an assembly where Freyr, Njörðr, and "the almighty áss" are invoked. Hervarar saga mentions a Yuletide sacrifice of a boar to Freyr.

Gesta Danorum edit

The 12th Century Danish Gesta Danorum describes Freyr, under the name Frø, as the "viceroy of the gods".

Frø quoque deorum satrapa sedem haud procul Upsala cepit, ubi veterem litationis morem tot gentibus ac saeculis usurpatum tristi infandoque piaculo mutavit. Siquidem humani generis hostias mactare aggressus foeda superis libamenta persolvit. Gesta Danorum 3, Olrik's edition

There was also a viceroy of the gods, Frø, who took up residence not far from Uppsala and altered the ancient system of sacrifice practised for centuries among many peoples to a morbid and unspeakable form of expiation. He delivered abominable offerings to the powers above by instituting the slaughter of human victims. Gesta Danorum 3, Fisher's translation

That Freyr had a cult at Uppsala is well confirmed from other sources. The reference to the change in sacrificial ritual may also reflect some historical memory. There is archaeological evidence for an increase in human sacrifices in the late Viking Age[15] though among the Norse gods human sacrifice is most often linked to Odin. Another reference to Frø and sacrifices is found earlier in the work, where the beginning of an annual blót to him is related. King Hadingus is cursed after killing a divine being and atones for his crime with a sacrifice.

Siquidem propitiandorum numinum gratia Frø deo rem divinam furvis hostiis fecit. Quem litationis morem annuo feriarum circuitu repetitum posteris imitandum reliquit. Frøblot Sueones vocant. Gesta Danorum 1, Olrik's edition

[I]n order to mollify the divinities he did indeed make a holy sacrifice of dark-coloured victims to the god Frø. He repeated this mode of propitiation at an annual festival and left it to be imitated by his descendants. The Swedes call it Frøblot. Gesta Danorum 1, Fisher's translation

The sacrifice of dark-coloured victims to Freyr has a parallel in Ancient Greek religion where the chthonic fertility deities preferred dark-coloured victims to lighter ones.

In book 9, Saxo identifies Frø as the "king of Sweden" (rex Suetiae):

Quo tempore rex Suetiae Frø, interfecto Norvagiensium rege Sywardo, coniuges necessariorum eius prostibulo relegatas publice constuprandas exhibuit. Gesta Danorum 9, Olrik's edition

About this time the Swedish ruler Frø, after killing Sivard, king of the Norwegians, removed the wives of Sivard's relatives to a brothel and exposed them to public prostitution. Gesta Danorum 9, Fisher's translation

The reference to public prostitution may be a memory of fertility cult practices. Such a memory may also be the source of a description in book 6 of the stay of Starcatherus, a follower of Odin, in Sweden.

Mortuo autem Bemono, Starcatherus ab athletis Biarmensibus ob virtutem accitus, cum plurima apud eos memoratu digna edidisset facinora, Sueonum fines ingreditur. Ubi cum filiis Frø septennio feriatus ab his tandem ad Haconem Daniae tyrannum se contulit, quod apud Upsalam sacrificiorum tempore constitutus effeminatos corporum motus scaenicosque mimorum plausus ac mollia nolarum crepitacula fastidiret. Unde patet, quam remotum a lascivia animum habuerit, qui ne eius quidem spectator esse sustinuit. Adeo virtus luxui resistit. Gesta Danorum 6, Olrik's edition

After Bemoni's death Starkather, because of his valour, was summoned by the Biarmian champions and there performed many feats worthy of the tellings. Then he entered Swedish territory where he spent seven years in a leisurely stay with the sons of Frø, after which he departed to join Haki, the lord of Denmark, for, living at Uppsala in the period of sacrifices, he had become disgusted with the womanish body movements, the clatter of actors on the stage and the soft tinkling of bells. It is obvious how far his heart was removed from frivolity if he could not even bear to watch these occasions. A manly individual is resistant to wantonness. Gesta Danorum 6, Fisher's translation

Yngvi edit

A strophe of the Anglo-Saxon rune poem (c. 1100) records that:

Ing was first among the East Danes seen by men

This may refer to the origins of the worship of Ingui in the tribal areas that Tacitus mentions in his Germania as being populated by the Inguieonnic tribes. A later Danish chronicler lists Ingui was one of three brothers that the Danish tribes descended from. The strophe also states that "then he (Ingui) went back over the waves, his wagon behind him" which could connect Ingui to earlier conceptions of the wagon processions of Nerthus and the later Scandinavian conceptions of Freyr's wagon journeys.

Ingui is mentioned also in some later Anglo-Saxon literature under varying forms of his name, such as "For what doth Ingeld have to do with Christ" and the variants used in Beowulf to designate the kings as 'leader of the friends of Ing'. The compound Ingui-Frea (OE) and Yngvi-Freyr (ON) likely refer to the connection between the god and the Germanic kings' role as priests during the sacrifices in the pagan period, as Frea and Freyr are titles meaning 'Lord'.

The Swedish royal dynasty was known as the Ynglings from their descent from Yngvi-Freyr. This is supported by Tacitus, who wrote about the Germans: "In their ancient songs, their only way of remembering or recording the past they celebrate an earth-born god Tuisco, and his son Mannus, as the origin of their race, as their founders. To Mannus they assign three sons, from whose names, they say, the coast tribes are called Ingaevones; those of the interior, Herminones; all the rest, Istaevones".

Archaeological record edit

Rällinge statuette edit

In 1904, a Viking Age statuette identified as a depiction of Freyr was discovered on the farm Rällinge in Lunda, Södermanland parish in the province of Södermanland, Sweden. The depiction features a cross-legged seated, bearded male with an erect penis. He is wearing a pointed cap or helmet and stroking his triangular beard. The seven-centimeter-tall statue is displayed at the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities.[16]

Skog tapestry edit

A part of the Swedish Skog tapestry depicts three figures that have been interpreted as allusions to Odin, Thor, and Freyr,[17] but also as the three Scandinavian holy kings Canute, Eric and Olaf. The figures coincide with 11th century descriptions of statue arrangements recorded by Adam of Bremen at the Temple at Uppsala and written accounts of the gods during the late Viking Age. The tapestry is originally from Hälsingland, Sweden but is now housed at the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities.

Gullgubber edit

Small pieces of gold foil featuring engravings dating from the Migration Period into the early Viking Age (known as gullgubber) have been discovered in various locations in Scandinavia, at one site almost 2,500. The foil pieces have been found largely on the sites of buildings, only rarely in graves. The figures are sometimes single, occasionally an animal, sometimes a man and a woman with a leafy bough between them, facing or embracing one another. The human figures are almost always clothed and are sometimes depicted with their knees bent. Scholar Hilda Ellis Davidson says that it has been suggested that the figures are taking part in a dance, and that they may have been connected with weddings, as well as linked to the Vanir group of gods, representing the notion of a divine marriage, such as in the Poetic Edda poem Skírnismál; the coming together of Gerðr and Freyr.[18]

Toponyms edit

Norway

Sweden

Denmark

Modern influence edit

Freyr appears in numerous works of modern art and literature. He appears, for example, alongside numerous othe figures from Norse mythology in the Danish poet Adam Gottlob Oehlenschläger's Nordens Guder (1819). He also appears in Icelandic poet Gerður Kristný's Blóðhófnir (2010),[19] a feminist retelling of the Eddic poem Skírnismál that won the 2010 Icelandic Literature Award.[20]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Lindow 2001, p. 121.
  2. ^ Davidson 1964, pp. 96–97.
  3. ^ a b de Vries 1962, p. 142.
  4. ^ Orel 2003, p. 112.
  5. ^ Elmevik 2003.
  6. ^ Sundqvist 2013, p. 26.
  7. ^ Kroonen 2013, pp. 152–153.
  8. ^ Tschan 2002, p. 192 (Book 4, ix (9))
  9. ^ Tschan 2002, p. 207 (Book 4, xxvi (26))
  10. ^ Haastrup 2004, pp. 18–24.
  11. ^ A kenning meaning "fire".
  12. ^ "Heinrichs, Anne: The Search for Identity: A Problem after the Conversion, in alvíssmál 3. pp. 54–55" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 10 June 2004. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  13. ^ "Gísla saga Súrssonar". www.snerpa.is. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
  14. ^ . Northvegr. Archived from the original on 5 June 2008.
  15. ^ Davidson 1999, Vol. II, p. 55.
  16. ^ Swedish Museum of National Antiquities inventory number 14232. Viewable online: [1]
  17. ^ Leiren, Terje I. (1999). From Pagan to Christian: The Story in the 12th-Century Tapestry of the Skog Church. Published online: http://faculty.washington.edu/leiren/vikings2.html 31 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Davidson 1988, p. 121.
  19. ^ Kristný, Gerður (2010). Blóðhófnir. Mál og menning.
  20. ^ Crocker, Christopher; Geeraert, Dustin (2022). Cultural legacies of Old Norse literature: new perspectives. Cambridge: D. S. Brewer. ISBN 978-1-84384-638-3.

References edit

  • Ásgeir Blöndal Magnússon (1989). Íslensk orðsifjabók. Reykjavík: Orðabók Háskólans.
  • Berger, Pamela (1988). Goddess Obscured: Transformation of the Grain Protectress from Goddess to Saint. Beacon Press. ISBN 978-0-8070-6723-9.
  • Brodeur, Arthur Gilchrist (tr.) (1916). The Prose Edda by Snorri Sturluson. New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation.
  • Davidson, Hilda E. (1964). Gods and Myths of Northern Europe. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-194150-9.
  • Davidson, H. R. Ellis (1988). Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe: Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-2579-2.
  • de Vries, Jan (1962). Altnordisches Etymologisches Worterbuch (1977 ed.). Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-05436-3.
  • Dronke, Ursula (1997). The Poetic Edda: Mythological poems. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 978-0-19-811181-8.
  • Dumézil, Georges (1973). From Myth to Fiction: The Saga of Hadingus. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-16972-9.
  • Elmevik, Lennart (2003). "Freyr, Freyja, och Freyfaxi". Studia Anthroponymica Scandinavica. 21: 5–13.
  • Eysteinn Björnsson (ed.) (2005). Snorra-Edda: Formáli & Gylfaginning : Textar fjögurra meginhandrita. Published online:
  • Finnur Jónsson (1913). Goðafræði Norðmanna og Íslendinga eftir heimildum. Reykjavík: Hið íslenska bókmentafjelag.
  • Finnur Jónsson (1931). Lexicon Poeticum. København: S. L. Møllers Bogtrykkeri.
  • Guðni Jónsson (ed.) (1949). Eddukvæði : Sæmundar Edda. Reykjavík: Íslendingasagnaútgáfan.
  • Kaspersen, Søren; Haastrup, Ulla. (2004). Images of Cult and Devotion: Function and Reception of Christian Images in Medieval and Post-Medieval E Urope. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 978-87-7289-903-9.
  • Kroonen, Guus (2013). Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Germanic. Brill. ISBN 978-9004183407.
  • Lee Milton Hollander (1986). The Poetic Edda. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-76499-6.
  • Leiren, Terje I. (1999). From Pagan to Christian: The Story in the 12th-Century Tapestry of the Skog Church. Published online: [2] 31 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Lindow, John (2001). Norse Mythology: A Guide to Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-983969-8.
  • Orel, Vladimir E. (2003). A Handbook of Germanic Etymology. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-12875-0.
  • "Rällinge-Frö" Historiska museet. Retrieved 6 February 2006, from the World Wide Web.
  • Sundqvist, Olof (2020). "Freyr". In Schjødt, Jens Peter; Lindow, John; Andrén, Andres (eds.). The Pre-Christian Religions of the North: History and Structures. Vol. 3, ch. 43. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 1195–1245.
  • Sundqvist, Olof (2013). "On Freyr: The 'Lord' or 'The Fertile One'? Some Comments on the Discussion of Etymology from the Historian of Religions' Point of View". Onoma. 48: 11–35.
  • Thordeman, Bengt (ed.) (1954) Erik den helige : historia, kult, reliker. Stockholm: Nordisk rotogravyr.
  • Thorpe, Benjamin (tr.) (1866). Edda Sæmundar Hinns Froða : The Edda of Sæmund The Learned. (2 vols.) London: Trübner & Co. Available online

Primary sources edit

  • Adam of Bremen (edited by G. Waitz) (1876). Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum. Berlin. Available online Translation of the section on the Temple at Uppsala available at The Temple at Old Uppsala: Adam of Bremen
  • Adam of Bremen (2002). History of the archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen. Tschan, Francis J. (trans.). Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12575-8.
  • Saxo, Grammaticus (1979). The History of the Danes. DS Brewer. ISBN 978-0-85991-502-1.
  • Olrik, J. and H. Ræder (1931). Saxo Grammaticus : Gesta Danorum. Available online
Preceded by Mythological king of Sweden Succeeded by

freyr, frey, redirects, here, freÿr, castle, freÿr, other, uses, frey, frey, disambiguation, norse, lord, sometimes, anglicized, frey, widely, attested, norse, mythology, associated, with, kingship, fertility, peace, prosperity, fair, weather, good, harvest, s. Frey redirects here For Freyr see Castle of Freyr For other uses of Frey and Freyr see Frey disambiguation Freyr Old Norse Lord sometimes anglicized as Frey is a widely attested god in Norse mythology associated with kingship fertility peace prosperity fair weather and good harvest Freyr sometimes referred to as Yngvi Freyr was especially associated with Sweden and seen as an ancestor of the Swedish royal house According to Adam of Bremen Freyr was associated with peace and pleasure and was represented with a phallic statue in the Temple at Uppsala According to Snorri Sturluson Freyr was the most renowned of the aesir and was venerated for good harvest and peace The Rallinge statuette from Sodermanland Sweden believed to depict Freyr Viking Age 1 In the mythological stories in the Icelandic books the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda Freyr is presented as one of the Vanir the son of the god Njordr and his sister wife as well as the twin brother of the goddess Freyja The gods gave him Alfheimr the realm of the Elves as a teething present He rides the shining dwarf made boar Gullinbursti and possesses the ship Skidbladnir which always has a favorable breeze and can be folded together and carried in a pouch when it is not being used Freyr is also known to have been associated with the horse cult He also kept sacred horses in his sanctuary at Trondheim in Norway 2 He has the servants Skirnir Byggvir and Beyla The most extensive surviving Freyr myth relates Freyr s falling in love with the female jotunn Gerdr Eventually she becomes his wife but first Freyr has to give away his sword which fights on its own if wise be he who wields it Although deprived of this weapon Freyr defeats the jotunn Beli with an antler However lacking his sword Freyr will be killed by the fire jotunn Surtr during the events of Ragnarok Like other Germanic deities veneration of Freyr was revived during the modern period through the Heathenry movement Contents 1 Name 2 Adam of Bremen 3 Prose Edda 3 1 Gylfaginning 3 2 Skaldic poetry 3 3 Nafnathulur 4 Poetic Edda 4 1 Voluspa 4 2 Grimnismal 4 3 Lokasenna 4 4 Skirnismal 5 Ynglinga saga 6 Ogmundar thattr dytts 7 Other Icelandic sources 8 Gesta Danorum 9 Yngvi 10 Archaeological record 10 1 Rallinge statuette 10 2 Skog tapestry 10 3 Gullgubber 11 Toponyms 12 Modern influence 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 15 1 Primary sourcesName editThe Old Norse name Freyr lord is generally thought to descend from a Proto Norse form reconstructed as frawjaʀ stemming from the Proto Germanic noun frawjaz fraw j ōn lord and cognate with Gothic frauja Old English frea or Old High German frō all meaning lord master 3 4 The runic form frohila derived from an earlier frōjila may also be related 3 Recently however an etymology deriving the name of the god from a nominalized form of the Proto Scandinavian adjective fraiw i a fruitful generative has also been proposed 5 6 According to linguist Guus Kroonen within Germanic the attestation of ON frjar frjor fraer Icel frjor adj fertile prolific lt fraiwa clearly seems to point to a stem frai w meaning fecund Both in form and meaning fraiwa seed is reminiscent of Freyr fertility deity lt frauja The possibility must be considered therefore that fraiwa was metathesized from frawja a collective of some kind 7 Freyr is also known by a series of other names which describe his attributes and role in religious practice and associated mythology Adam of Bremen editWritten c 1080 one of the oldest written sources on pre Christian Scandinavian religious practices is Adam of Bremen s Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum Adam claimed to have access to first hand accounts on pagan practices in Sweden He refers to Freyr with the Latinized name Fricco and mentions that an image of him at Skara was destroyed by the Christian missionary Bishop Egino 8 Adam s description of the Temple at Uppsala gives some details on the god In hoc templo quod totum ex auro paratum est statuas atrium deorum veneratur populus ita ut potentissimus eorum Thor in medio solium habeat triclinio hinc et inde locum possident Wodan et Fricco Quorum significationes eiusmodi sunt Thor inquiunt praesidet in aere qui tonitrus et fulmina ventos ymbresque serena et fruges gubernat Alter Wodan id est furor bella gerit hominique ministrat virtutem contra inimicos Tertius est Fricco pacem voluptatem que largiens mortalibus Cuius etiam simulacrum fingunt cum ingenti priapo Gesta Hammaburgensis 26 Waitz edition dd In this temple entirely decked out in gold the people worship the statues of three gods in such wise that the mightiest of them Thor occupies a throne in the middle of the chamber Woden and Frikko have places on either side The significance of these gods is as follows Thor they say presides over the air which governs the thunder and lightning the winds and rains fair weather and crops The other Woden that is the Furious carries on war and imparts to man strength against his enemies The third is Frikko who bestows peace and pleasure on mortals His likeness too they fashion with an immense phallus Gesta Hammaburgensis 26 Tschan s translation 9 164815 dd Later in the account Adam states that when a marriage is performed a libation is made to the image of Fricco Historians are divided on the reliability of Adam s account 10 Prose Edda editWhen Snorri Sturluson was writing in 13th century Iceland the indigenous Germanic gods were still remembered although they had not been openly worshiped for more than two centuries Gylfaginning edit In the Gylfaginning section of his Prose Edda Snorri introduces Freyr as one of the major gods Njordr i Noatunum gat sidan tvau born het sonr Freyr en dottir Freyja THau varu fogr alitum ok mattug Freyr er hinn agaetasti af asum Hann raedr fyrir regni ok skini solar ok thar med avexti jardar ok a hann er gott at heita til ars ok fridar Hann raedr ok fesaelu manna Gylfaginning 24 EB s edition Njordr in Noatun begot afterward two children the son was called Freyr and the daughter Freyja they were fair of face and mighty Freyr is the most renowned of the AEsir he rules over the rain and the shining of the sun and therewithal the fruit of the earth and it is good to call on him for fruitful seasons and peace He governs also the prosperity of men Gylfaginning XXIV Brodeur s translation nbsp Seated on Odin s throne Hlidskjalf the god Freyr sits in contemplation in an illustration 1908 by Frederic Lawrence This description has similarities to the older account by Adam of Bremen but the differences are interesting Adam assigns control of the weather and produce of the fields to Thor but Snorri says that Freyr rules over those areas Snorri also omits any explicitly sexual references in Freyr s description Those discrepancies can be explained in several ways Adam and Snorri were writing with different goals in mind It is possible that the Norse gods did not have exactly the same roles in Icelandic and Swedish paganism Either Snorri or Adam may also have had distorted information The only extended myth related to Freyr in the Prose Edda is the story of his marriage THat var einn dag er Freyr hafdi gengit i Hlidskjalf ok sa of heima alla En er hann leit i nordraett tha sa hann a einum bœ mikit hus ok fagrt ok til thess huss gekk kona ok er hon tok upp hondum ok lauk hurd fyrir ser tha lysti af hondum hennar baedi i lopt ok a log ok allir heimar birtusk af henni Gylfaginning 37 EB s edition It chanced one day that Freyr had gone to Hlidskjalf and gazed over all the world but when he looked over into the northern region he saw on an estate a house great and fair And toward this house went a woman when she raised her hands and opened the door before her brightness gleamed from her hands both over sky and sea and all the worlds were illumined of her Gylfaginning XXXVII Brodeur s translation The woman is Gerdr a beautiful giantess Freyr immediately falls in love with her and becomes depressed and taciturn After a period of brooding he consents to talk to Skirnir his foot page He tells Skirnir that he has fallen in love with a beautiful woman and thinks he will die if he cannot have her He asks Skirnir to go and woo her for him THa svarar Skirnir sagdi sva at hann skal fara sendiferd en Freyr skal fa honum sverd sitt THat var sva gott sverd at sjalft vask En Freyr let eigi that til skorta ok gaf honum sverdit THa for Skirnir ok bad honum konunnar ok fekk heitit hennar ok niu nottum sidar skyldi hon thar koma er Barey heitir ok ganga tha at brullaupinu med Frey Gylfaginning 37 EB s edition Then Skirnir answered thus he would go on his errand but Freyr should give him his own sword which is so good that it fights of itself and Freyr did not refuse but gave him the sword Then Skirnir went forth and wooed the woman for him and received her promise and nine nights later she was to come to the place called Barrey and then go to the bridal with Freyr Gylfaginning XXXVII Brodeur s translation The loss of Freyr s sword has consequences According to the Prose Edda Freyr had to fight Beli without his sword and slew him with an antler But the result at Ragnarok the end of the world will be much more serious Freyr is fated to fight the fire giant Surtr and since he does not have his sword he will be defeated nbsp The final battle between Freyr and Surtr illustration by Lorenz Frolich Even after the loss of his weapon Freyr still has two magical artifacts both dwarf made One is the ship Skidbladnir which will have favoring breeze wherever its owner wants to go and can also be folded together like a napkin and carried in a pouch The other is the boar Gullinbursti whose mane glows to illuminate the way for his owner No myths involving Skidbladnir have come down to us but Snorri relates that Freyr rode to Baldr s funeral in a wagon pulled by Gullinbursti Skaldic poetry edit Freyr is referred to several times in skaldic poetry In Husdrapa partially preserved in the Prose Edda he is said to ride a boar to Baldr s funeral Ridr a borg til borgar bodfrodr sonar odins Freyr ok folkum styrir fyrstr enum golli byrsta Husdrapa 7 FJ s edition The battle bold Freyr rideth First on the golden bristled Barrow boar to the bale fire Of Baldr and leads the people Husdrapa 7 Brodeur s translation In a poem by Egill Skalla Grimsson Freyr is called upon along with Njordr to drive Eric Bloodaxe from Norway The same skald mentions in Arinbjarnarkvida that his friend has been blessed by the two gods E n Grjotbjorn of gaeddan hefr Freyr ok Njordr at fear afli Arinbjarnarkvida 17 FJ s edition Frey and Njord have endowed rock bear with wealth s force Arinbjarnarkvida 17 Scudder s translation Nafnathulur edit In Nafnathulur Freyr is said to ride the horse Blodughofi Bloody Hoof Poetic Edda edit nbsp A detail from Gotland runestone G 181 in the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities in Stockholm The three men are interpreted as Odin Thor and Freyr Freyr is mentioned in several of the poems in the Poetic Edda The information there is largely consistent with that of the Prose Edda while each collection has some details not found in the other Voluspa edit Voluspa the best known of the Eddic poems describes the final confrontation between Freyr and Surtr during Ragnarok Surtr fer sunnan med sviga laevi skinn af sverdi sol valtiva Grjotbjorg gnata en gifr rata troda halir helveg en himinn klofnar THa komr Hlinar harmr annarr fram er odinn ferr vid ulf vega en bani Belja bjartr at Surti tha mun Friggjar falla angan Voluspa 51 52 EB s edition Surtr moves from the south with the scathe of branches 11 there shines from his sword the sun of Gods of the Slain Stone peaks clash and troll wives take to the road Warriors tread the path from Hel and heaven breaks apart Then is fulfilled Hlin s second sorrow when odinn goes to fight with the wolf and Beli s slayer bright against Surtr Then shall Frigg s sweet friend fall Voluspa 50 51 Dronke s translation Some scholars have preferred a slightly different translation in which the sun shines from the sword of the gods The idea is that the sword which Surtr slays Freyr with is the sword of the gods which Freyr had earlier bargained away for Gerdr This would add a further layer of tragedy to the myth Sigurdur Nordal argued for this view but the possibility represented by Ursula Dronke s translation above is equally possible Grimnismal edit Grimnismal a poem which largely consists of miscellaneous information about the gods mentions Freyr s abode Alfheim Frey gafu i ardaga tivar at tannfei Grimnismal 5 GJ s edition permanent dead link Alfheim the gods to Frey gave in days of yore for a tooth gift Grimnismal 5 Thorpe s translation A tooth gift was a gift given to an infant on the cutting of the first tooth Since Alfheimr or Alfheimr means World of Alfar Elves the fact that Freyr should own it is one of the indications of a connection between the Vanir and the obscure Alfar Grimnismal also mentions that the sons of Ivaldi made Skidbladnir for Freyr and that it is the best of ships Lokasenna edit In the poem Lokasenna Loki accuses the gods of various misdeeds He criticizes the Vanir for incest saying that Njordr had Freyr with his sister He also states that the gods discovered Freyr and Freyja having sex together The god Tyr speaks up in Freyr s defense Freyr er beztr allra ballrida asa gordum i mey hann ne graetir ne manns konu ok leysir or hoftum hvern Lokasenna 37 GJ s edition permanent dead link Frey is best of all the exalted gods in the AEsir s courts no maid he makes to weep no wife of man and from bonds looses all Lokasenna 37 Thorpe s translation Lokasenna also mentions that Freyr has servants called Byggvir and Beyla They seem to have been associated with the making of bread Skirnismal edit nbsp The Lovesickness of Frey 1908 by W G Collingwood The courtship of Freyr and Gerdr is dealt with extensively in the poem Skirnismal Freyr is depressed after seeing Gerdr Njordr and Skadi ask Skirnir to go and talk with him Freyr reveals the cause of his grief and asks Skirnir to go to Jotunheimr to woo Gerdr for him Freyr gives Skirnir a steed and his magical sword for the journey Mar ek ther thann gef er thik um myrkvan berr visan vafrloga ok that sverd er sjalft mun vegask ef sa er horskr er hefr Skirnismal 9 GJ s edition My steed I lend thee to lift thee o er the weird ring of flickering flame the sword also which swings itself if wise be he who wields it Skirnismal 9 Hollander s translation When Skirnir finds Gerdr he starts by offering her treasures if she will marry Freyr When she declines he forces her to accept by threatening her with destructive magic This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Ynglinga saga edit nbsp Yngvi Freyr constructs the Temple at Uppsala in this early 19th century artwork by Hugo Hamilton nbsp In Freyr s Temple near Uppsala 1882 by Friedrich Wilhelm Heine Snorri Sturluson starts his epic history of the kings of Norway with Ynglinga saga a euhemerized account of the Norse gods Here Odin and the AEsir are men from Asia who gain power through their prowess in war and Odin s skills But when Odin attacks the Vanir he bites off more than he can chew and peace is negotiated after the destructive and indecisive AEsir Vanir War Hostages are exchanged to seal the peace deal and the Vanir send Freyr and Njordr to live with the AEsir At this point the saga like Lokasenna mentions that incest was practised among the Vanir THa er Njordr var med Vonum tha hafdi hann atta systur sina thvi at that varu thar log varu theirra born Freyr ok Freyja En that var bannat med Asum at byggja sva nait at fraendsemi Ynglinga saga 4 Schultz s edition Archived 31 December 2005 at Bibliotheca Alexandrina While Njord was with the Vanaland people he had taken his own sister in marriage for that was allowed by their law and their children were Frey and Freya But among the Asaland people it was forbidden to intermarry with such near relations Ynglinga saga 4 Laing s translation Odin makes Njordr and Freyr priests of sacrifices and they become influential leaders Odin goes on to conquer the North and settles in Sweden where he rules as king collects taxes and maintains sacrifices After Odin s death Njordr takes the throne During his rule there is peace and good harvest and the Swedes come to believe that Njordr controls these things Eventually Njordr falls ill and dies Freyr tok tha riki eptir Njord var hann kalladr drottinn yfir Svium ok tok skattgjafir af theim hann var vinsaell ok arsaell sem fadir hans Freyr reisti at Uppsolum hof mikit ok setti thar hofudstad sinn lagdi thar til allar skyldir sinar lond ok lausa aura tha hofst Uppsala audr ok hefir haldizt ae sidan A hans dogum hofst Froda fridr tha var ok ar um oll lond kendu Sviar that Frey Var hann thvi meir dyrkadr en onnur godin sem a hans dogum vard landsfolkit audgara en fyrr af fridinum ok ari Gerdr Gymis dottir het kona hans sonr theirra het Fjolnir Freyr het Yngvi odru nafni Yngva nafn var lengi sidan haft i hans aett fyrir tignarnafn ok Ynglingar varu sidan kalladir hans aettmenn Freyr tok sott en er at honum leid sottin leitudu menn ser rads ok letu fa menn til hans koma en bjoggu haug mikinn ok letu dyrr a ok 3 glugga En er Freyr var daudr baru their hann leyniliga i hauginn ok sogdu Svium at hann lifdi ok vardveittu hann thar 3 vetr En skatt ollum heltu their i hauginn i einn glugg gullinu en i annan silfrinu i hinn thridja eirpenningum THa helzt ar ok fridr Ynglinga saga 12 Schultz s edition Archived 31 December 2005 at Bibliotheca Alexandrina Frey took the kingdom after Njord and was called drot by the Swedes and they paid taxes to him He was like his father fortunate in friends and in good seasons Frey built a great temple at Upsal made it his chief seat and gave it all his taxes his land and goods Then began the Upsal domains which have remained ever since Then began in his days the Frode peace and then there were good seasons in all the land which the Swedes ascribed to Frey so that he was more worshipped than the other gods as the people became much richer in his days by reason of the peace and good seasons His wife was called Gerd daughter of Gymir and their son was called Fjolne Frey was called by another name Yngve and this name Yngve was considered long after in his race as a name of honour so that his descendants have since been called Ynglinger Frey fell into a sickness and as his illness took the upper hand his men took the plan of letting few approach him In the meantime they raised a great mound in which they placed a door with three holes in it Now when Frey died they bore him secretly into the mound but told the Swedes he was alive and they kept watch over him for three years They brought all the taxes into the mound and through the one hole they put in the gold through the other the silver and through the third the copper money that was paid Peace and good seasons continued Ynglinga saga 12 Laing s translation THa er allir Sviar vissu at Freyr var daudr en helzt ar ok fridr tha trudu their at sva mundi vera medan Freyr vaeri a Svithjod ok vildu eigi brenna hann ok kolludu hann veraldar god ok blotudu mest til ars ok fridar alla aevi sidan Ynglinga saga 13 Schultz s edition Archived 31 December 2005 at Bibliotheca Alexandrina When it became known to the Swedes that Frey was dead and yet peace and good seasons continued they believed that it must be so as long as Frey remained in Sweden and therefore they would not burn his remains but called him the god of this world and afterwards offered continually blood sacrifices to him principally for peace and good seasons Ynglinga saga 13 Laing s translation Freyr had a son named Fjolnir who succeeds him as king and rules during the continuing period of peace and good seasons Fjolnir s descendants are enumerated in Ynglingatal which describes the mythological kings of Sweden Ogmundar thattr dytts editThe 14th century Icelandic Ogmundar thattr dytts contains a tradition of how Freyr was transported in a wagon and administered by a priestess in Sweden Freyr s role as a fertility god needed a female counterpart in a divine couple McKinnell s translation 1987 12 Great heathen sacrifices were held there at that time and for a long while Frey had been the god who was worshipped most there and so much power had been gained by Frey s statue that the devil used to speak to people out of the mouth of the idol and a young and beautiful woman had been obtained to serve Frey It was the faith of the local people that Frey was alive as seemed to some extent to be the case and they thought he would need to have a sexual relationship with his wife along with Frey she was to have complete control over the temple settlement and all that belonged to it In this short story a man named Gunnar was suspected of manslaughter and escaped to Sweden where Gunnar became acquainted with this young priestess He helped her drive Freyr s wagon with the god effigy in it but the god did not appreciate Gunnar and so attacked him and would have killed Gunnar if he had not promised himself to return to the Christian faith if he would make it back to Norway When Gunnar had promised this a demon jumped out of the god effigy and so Freyr was nothing but a piece of wood Gunnar destroyed the wooden idol and dressed himself as Freyr then Gunnar and the priestess travelled across Sweden where people were happy to see the god visiting them After a while he made the priestess pregnant but this was seen by the Swedes as confirmation that Freyr was truly a fertility god and not a scam Finally Gunnar had to flee back to Norway with his young bride and had her baptized at the court of Olaf Tryggvason Other Icelandic sources editWorship of Freyr is alluded to in several Icelanders sagas The protagonist of Hrafnkels saga is a priest of Freyr He dedicates a horse to the god and kills a man for riding it setting in motion a chain of fateful events In Gisla saga a chieftain named THorgrimr Freysgodi is an ardent worshipper of Freyr When he dies he is buried in a howe Vard og sa hlutur einn er nynaemum thotti gegna ad aldrei festi snae utan og sunnan a haugi THorgrims og eigi fraus og gatu menn thess til ad hann myndi Frey svo avardur fyrir blotin ad hann myndi eigi vilja ad freri a milli theirra 13 And now too a thing happened which seemed strange and new No snow lodged on the south side of Thorgrim s howe nor did it freeze there And men guessed it was because Thorgrim had been so dear to Frey for his worship s sake that the god would not suffer the frost to come between them 14 Hallfredar saga Viga Glums saga and Vatnsdœla saga also mention Freyr Other Icelandic sources referring to Freyr include Islendingabok Landnamabok and Hervarar saga Islendingabok written c 1125 is the oldest Icelandic source that mentions Freyr including him in a genealogy of Swedish kings Landnamabok includes a heathen oath to be sworn at an assembly where Freyr Njordr and the almighty ass are invoked Hervarar saga mentions a Yuletide sacrifice of a boar to Freyr Gesta Danorum editThe 12th Century Danish Gesta Danorum describes Freyr under the name Fro as the viceroy of the gods Fro quoque deorum satrapa sedem haud procul Upsala cepit ubi veterem litationis morem tot gentibus ac saeculis usurpatum tristi infandoque piaculo mutavit Siquidem humani generis hostias mactare aggressus foeda superis libamenta persolvit Gesta Danorum 3 Olrik s edition There was also a viceroy of the gods Fro who took up residence not far from Uppsala and altered the ancient system of sacrifice practised for centuries among many peoples to a morbid and unspeakable form of expiation He delivered abominable offerings to the powers above by instituting the slaughter of human victims Gesta Danorum 3 Fisher s translation That Freyr had a cult at Uppsala is well confirmed from other sources The reference to the change in sacrificial ritual may also reflect some historical memory There is archaeological evidence for an increase in human sacrifices in the late Viking Age 15 though among the Norse gods human sacrifice is most often linked to Odin Another reference to Fro and sacrifices is found earlier in the work where the beginning of an annual blot to him is related King Hadingus is cursed after killing a divine being and atones for his crime with a sacrifice Siquidem propitiandorum numinum gratia Fro deo rem divinam furvis hostiis fecit Quem litationis morem annuo feriarum circuitu repetitum posteris imitandum reliquit Froblot Sueones vocant Gesta Danorum 1 Olrik s edition I n order to mollify the divinities he did indeed make a holy sacrifice of dark coloured victims to the god Fro He repeated this mode of propitiation at an annual festival and left it to be imitated by his descendants The Swedes call it Froblot Gesta Danorum 1 Fisher s translation The sacrifice of dark coloured victims to Freyr has a parallel in Ancient Greek religion where the chthonic fertility deities preferred dark coloured victims to lighter ones In book 9 Saxo identifies Fro as the king of Sweden rex Suetiae Quo tempore rex Suetiae Fro interfecto Norvagiensium rege Sywardo coniuges necessariorum eius prostibulo relegatas publice constuprandas exhibuit Gesta Danorum 9 Olrik s edition About this time the Swedish ruler Fro after killing Sivard king of the Norwegians removed the wives of Sivard s relatives to a brothel and exposed them to public prostitution Gesta Danorum 9 Fisher s translation The reference to public prostitution may be a memory of fertility cult practices Such a memory may also be the source of a description in book 6 of the stay of Starcatherus a follower of Odin in Sweden Mortuo autem Bemono Starcatherus ab athletis Biarmensibus ob virtutem accitus cum plurima apud eos memoratu digna edidisset facinora Sueonum fines ingreditur Ubi cum filiis Fro septennio feriatus ab his tandem ad Haconem Daniae tyrannum se contulit quod apud Upsalam sacrificiorum tempore constitutus effeminatos corporum motus scaenicosque mimorum plausus ac mollia nolarum crepitacula fastidiret Unde patet quam remotum a lascivia animum habuerit qui ne eius quidem spectator esse sustinuit Adeo virtus luxui resistit Gesta Danorum 6 Olrik s edition After Bemoni s death Starkather because of his valour was summoned by the Biarmian champions and there performed many feats worthy of the tellings Then he entered Swedish territory where he spent seven years in a leisurely stay with the sons of Fro after which he departed to join Haki the lord of Denmark for living at Uppsala in the period of sacrifices he had become disgusted with the womanish body movements the clatter of actors on the stage and the soft tinkling of bells It is obvious how far his heart was removed from frivolity if he could not even bear to watch these occasions A manly individual is resistant to wantonness Gesta Danorum 6 Fisher s translationYngvi editMain article Yngvi A strophe of the Anglo Saxon rune poem c 1100 records that Ing was first among the East Danes seen by men This may refer to the origins of the worship of Ingui in the tribal areas that Tacitus mentions in his Germania as being populated by the Inguieonnic tribes A later Danish chronicler lists Ingui was one of three brothers that the Danish tribes descended from The strophe also states that then he Ingui went back over the waves his wagon behind him which could connect Ingui to earlier conceptions of the wagon processions of Nerthus and the later Scandinavian conceptions of Freyr s wagon journeys Ingui is mentioned also in some later Anglo Saxon literature under varying forms of his name such as For what doth Ingeld have to do with Christ and the variants used in Beowulf to designate the kings as leader of the friends of Ing The compound Ingui Frea OE and Yngvi Freyr ON likely refer to the connection between the god and the Germanic kings role as priests during the sacrifices in the pagan period as Frea and Freyr are titles meaning Lord The Swedish royal dynasty was known as the Ynglings from their descent from Yngvi Freyr This is supported by Tacitus who wrote about the Germans In their ancient songs their only way of remembering or recording the past they celebrate an earth born god Tuisco and his son Mannus as the origin of their race as their founders To Mannus they assign three sons from whose names they say the coast tribes are called Ingaevones those of the interior Herminones all the rest Istaevones Archaeological record editRallinge statuette edit Main article Rallinge statuette In 1904 a Viking Age statuette identified as a depiction of Freyr was discovered on the farm Rallinge in Lunda Sodermanland parish in the province of Sodermanland Sweden The depiction features a cross legged seated bearded male with an erect penis He is wearing a pointed cap or helmet and stroking his triangular beard The seven centimeter tall statue is displayed at the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities 16 Skog tapestry edit Main article Skog tapestry A part of the Swedish Skog tapestry depicts three figures that have been interpreted as allusions to Odin Thor and Freyr 17 but also as the three Scandinavian holy kings Canute Eric and Olaf The figures coincide with 11th century descriptions of statue arrangements recorded by Adam of Bremen at the Temple at Uppsala and written accounts of the gods during the late Viking Age The tapestry is originally from Halsingland Sweden but is now housed at the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities Gullgubber edit Main article Gullgubber Small pieces of gold foil featuring engravings dating from the Migration Period into the early Viking Age known as gullgubber have been discovered in various locations in Scandinavia at one site almost 2 500 The foil pieces have been found largely on the sites of buildings only rarely in graves The figures are sometimes single occasionally an animal sometimes a man and a woman with a leafy bough between them facing or embracing one another The human figures are almost always clothed and are sometimes depicted with their knees bent Scholar Hilda Ellis Davidson says that it has been suggested that the figures are taking part in a dance and that they may have been connected with weddings as well as linked to the Vanir group of gods representing the notion of a divine marriage such as in the Poetic Edda poem Skirnismal the coming together of Gerdr and Freyr 18 nbsp nbsp The Skog Church Tapestry portion possibly depicting Odin Thor and Freyr nbsp An example of the small gold pieces of foil that may depict Gerdr and FreyrToponyms editNorway Freysakr Freyr s field name of two old farms in Gol and Torpa Freyshof Freyr s temple name of two old farms in Hole and Trogstad Freysland Freyr s land field name of six old farms in Feda Halse Forde Sogndal Sogne and Torpa citation needed Freyslid Freyr s hill name of two old farms in Lunner and Torpa Freysnes Freyr s headland name of an old farm in Sandnes Freyssetr Freyr s farm name of two old farms in Masfjorden and Soknedal Freyssteinn Freyr s stone name of an old farm in Lista Freysteigr Freyr s field name of an old farm in Ramnes Freysvik Freyr s inlet bay name of two old farms in Fresvik and Ullensvang Freysvin Freyr s meadow name of four old farms in Hole Lom Sunnylven and Ostre Gausdal Freysvǫllr Freyr s field name of an old farm in Sor Odal Freysthveit Freyr s thwaite name of an old farm in Hedrum Sweden Froslunda Freyr s grove Uppland Frosaker Freyr s field Uppland Froson Freyr s island Jamtland Froseke Freyr s oak forest Smaland Frosve Freyr s sanctuary Vastergotland Frosakull Freyr s hill Halland Denmark Fros Herred Freyr s Shire Southern JutlandModern influence editFreyr appears in numerous works of modern art and literature He appears for example alongside numerous othe figures from Norse mythology in the Danish poet Adam Gottlob Oehlenschlager s Nordens Guder 1819 He also appears in Icelandic poet Gerdur Kristny s Blodhofnir 2010 19 a feminist retelling of the Eddic poem Skirnismal that won the 2010 Icelandic Literature Award 20 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Freyr List of Germanic deitiesNotes edit Lindow 2001 p 121 Davidson 1964 pp 96 97 a b de Vries 1962 p 142 Orel 2003 p 112 Elmevik 2003 Sundqvist 2013 p 26 Kroonen 2013 pp 152 153 Tschan 2002 p 192 Book 4 ix 9 Tschan 2002 p 207 Book 4 xxvi 26 Haastrup 2004 pp 18 24 A kenning meaning fire Heinrichs Anne The Search for Identity A Problem after the Conversion in alvissmal 3 pp 54 55 PDF Archived PDF from the original on 10 June 2004 Retrieved 22 May 2020 Gisla saga Surssonar www snerpa is Retrieved 22 May 2020 The Story of Gisli The Outlaw Northvegr Archived from the original on 5 June 2008 Davidson 1999 Vol II p 55 Swedish Museum of National Antiquities inventory number 14232 Viewable online 1 Leiren Terje I 1999 From Pagan to Christian The Story in the 12th Century Tapestry of the Skog Church Published online http faculty washington edu leiren vikings2 html Archived 31 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Davidson 1988 p 121 Kristny Gerdur 2010 Blodhofnir Mal og menning Crocker Christopher Geeraert Dustin 2022 Cultural legacies of Old Norse literature new perspectives Cambridge D S Brewer ISBN 978 1 84384 638 3 References editAsgeir Blondal Magnusson 1989 Islensk ordsifjabok Reykjavik Ordabok Haskolans Berger Pamela 1988 Goddess Obscured Transformation of the Grain Protectress from Goddess to Saint Beacon Press ISBN 978 0 8070 6723 9 Brodeur Arthur Gilchrist tr 1916 The Prose Edda by Snorri Sturluson New York The American Scandinavian Foundation Available online Davidson Hilda E 1964 Gods and Myths of Northern Europe Penguin ISBN 978 0 14 194150 9 Davidson H R Ellis 1988 Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe Early Scandinavian and Celtic Religions Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 2579 2 de Vries Jan 1962 Altnordisches Etymologisches Worterbuch 1977 ed Brill ISBN 978 90 04 05436 3 Dronke Ursula 1997 The Poetic Edda Mythological poems Oxford University Press USA ISBN 978 0 19 811181 8 Dumezil Georges 1973 From Myth to Fiction The Saga of Hadingus University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 16972 9 Elmevik Lennart 2003 Freyr Freyja och Freyfaxi Studia Anthroponymica Scandinavica 21 5 13 Eysteinn Bjornsson ed 2005 Snorra Edda Formali amp Gylfaginning Textar fjogurra meginhandrita Published online GYLFAGINNING Finnur Jonsson 1913 Godafraedi Nordmanna og Islendinga eftir heimildum Reykjavik Hid islenska bokmentafjelag Finnur Jonsson 1931 Lexicon Poeticum Kobenhavn S L Mollers Bogtrykkeri Gudni Jonsson ed 1949 Eddukvaedi Saemundar Edda Reykjavik Islendingasagnautgafan Kaspersen Soren Haastrup Ulla 2004 Images of Cult and Devotion Function and Reception of Christian Images in Medieval and Post Medieval E Urope Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 978 87 7289 903 9 Kroonen Guus 2013 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Germanic Brill ISBN 978 9004183407 Lee Milton Hollander 1986 The Poetic Edda University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 76499 6 Leiren Terje I 1999 From Pagan to Christian The Story in the 12th Century Tapestry of the Skog Church Published online 2 Archived 31 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine Lindow John 2001 Norse Mythology A Guide to Gods Heroes Rituals and Beliefs Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 983969 8 Orel Vladimir E 2003 A Handbook of Germanic Etymology Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12875 0 Rallinge Fro Historiska museet Retrieved 6 February 2006 from the World Wide Web Rallinge Fro Sundqvist Olof 2020 Freyr In Schjodt Jens Peter Lindow John Andren Andres eds The Pre Christian Religions of the North History and Structures Vol 3 ch 43 Turnhout Brepols pp 1195 1245 Sundqvist Olof 2013 On Freyr The Lord or The Fertile One Some Comments on the Discussion of Etymology from the Historian of Religions Point of View Onoma 48 11 35 Thordeman Bengt ed 1954 Erik den helige historia kult reliker Stockholm Nordisk rotogravyr Thorpe Benjamin tr 1866 Edda Saemundar Hinns Froda The Edda of Saemund The Learned 2 vols London Trubner amp Co Available online Primary sources edit Adam of Bremen edited by G Waitz 1876 Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum Berlin Available online Translation of the section on the Temple at Uppsala available at The Temple at Old Uppsala Adam of Bremen Adam of Bremen 2002 History of the archbishops of Hamburg Bremen Tschan Francis J trans Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 12575 8 Saxo Grammaticus 1979 The History of the Danes DS Brewer ISBN 978 0 85991 502 1 Olrik J and H Raeder 1931 Saxo Grammaticus Gesta Danorum Available online Preceded byNjordr Mythological king of Sweden Succeeded byFjolnir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Freyr amp oldid 1214336356, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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