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  2. Norse rituals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse_rituals

    Norse religious worship is the traditional religious rituals practiced by Norse pagans in Scandinavia in pre-Christian times. Norse religion was a folk religion (as opposed to an organized religion), and its main purpose was the survival and regeneration of society. Therefore, the faith was decentralized and tied to the village and the family ...

  3. Old Norse religion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Norse_religion

    Rooted in ritual practice and oral tradition, [12] Old Norse religion was fully integrated with other aspects of Norse life, including subsistence, warfare, and social interactions. [13] Open codifications of Old Norse beliefs were either rare or non-existent. [ 14 ]

  4. Blót - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blót

    The Stentoften Stone, bearing a runic inscription that likely describes a blót of nine he-goats and nine male horses bringing fertility to the land. [1]Blót (Old Norse and Old English) or geblōt (Old English) are religious ceremonies in Germanic paganism that centred on the killing and offering of an animal to a particular being, typically followed by the communal cooking and eating of its ...

  5. Sacred trees and groves in Germanic paganism and mythology

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_trees_and_groves_in...

    The scholar of Germanic religion Jan de Vries noted that placenames such as Frølund (Denmark), and Ullunda, Frösvi, and Mjärdevi (Sweden), in which the name of a deity is compounded with words meaning "grove" or "wood", suggest a continuation of the same practice, but are found almost exclusively in eastern Scandinavia; however, there is a ...

  6. Norse funeral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse_funeral

    Eyewitness accounts even credit women as having key roles in these ritualistic practices, serving as almost the director of the funeral. [13] These performance styled funeral rituals tended to occur within similar places in order to create a spatial association of ritualistic practice to the land for the community.

  7. Seiðr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seiðr

    The practice of seiðr is believed to be a form of magic which is related to both the telling and the shaping of the future. Connected to the Old Norse religion, its origins are largely unknown, and its practice gradually declined after the Christianization of Scandinavia.

  8. Norse mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse_mythology

    Norse, Nordic, or Scandinavian mythology, is the body of myths belonging to the North Germanic peoples, stemming from Old Norse religion and continuing after the Christianization of Scandinavia as the Nordic folklore of the modern period.

  9. Heathenry (new religious movement) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heathenry_(new_religious...

    Heathen ritual space marked out by an engraved wooden pillar, located on The Wrekin in Shropshire, England. Another name for the religion is the Icelandic Ásatrú, which translates as "Æsir belief", or "loyalty to the Æsir"—the Æsir being a sub-set of deities in Norse mythology.