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Woden



 
 
Woden is a god in Anglo-Saxon paganism, together with Norse Odin
Odin

Odin , is considered the chief ?sir in Norse paganism. Homologous with the Anglo-Saxons Woden and the Old High German Wotan, it is descended from Proto-Germanic *Wodanaz or *Wodanaz....
 representing a development of a Proto-Germanic god, *Wodanaz
Wodanaz

or is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic language name of a god of Germanic paganism, known as in Norse mythology, in Old English language, or in Old High German and in Lombardic language....
. Other West Germanic forms of the name include Old High German
Old High German

The term Old High German refers to the earliest stage of the German language and it conventionally covers the period from around 500 to 1050. Coherent written texts do not appear until the second half of the 8th century, and some treat the period before 750 as 'prehistoric' and date the start of Old High German proper to 750 for this reason...
 Wuotan, Low German
Low German

Low German or Low Saxon is any of the regional language varieties of the West Germanic languages spoken mainly in northern Germany and the eastern part of the Netherlands....
 and Dutch
Dutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic languages spoken by over 22 million people as a first language, and about 5 million people as a second language."1% of the EU population claims to speak Dutch well enough in order to have a conversation." Outside the European Union the number of second language speakers of Dutch is very small. Most native...
 Wodan.

Woden was worshipped during the Migration period
Migration Period

The Migration Period, also called Barbarian Invasions or V?lkerwanderung , was a period of human migration which occurred within the period of roughly 300?700 Common Era in Europe, marking the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages....
, until the 7th or 8th century, when Germanic paganism
Germanic paganism

Germanic paganism refers to the religion beliefs of the Germanic peoples preceding Christianization. The best documented version of the Germanic pagan religions is 10th and 11th century Norse paganism, though other information can be found from Anglo-Saxon paganism and Continental Germanic mythology....
 was gradually replaced by Christianity
Germanic Christianity

The Germanic peoples underwent gradual Christianization in the course of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. By the 8th century, most of Anglo-Saxon England and the Frankish Empire was de jure Christian, and by AD 1100, Germanic paganism had also ceased to have political influence in Scandinavia....
.






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Georg Von Rosen   Oden Som Vandringsman, 1886 (odin, the Wanderer)
Woden is a god in Anglo-Saxon paganism, together with Norse Odin
Odin

Odin , is considered the chief ?sir in Norse paganism. Homologous with the Anglo-Saxons Woden and the Old High German Wotan, it is descended from Proto-Germanic *Wodanaz or *Wodanaz....
 representing a development of a Proto-Germanic god, *Wodanaz
Wodanaz

or is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic language name of a god of Germanic paganism, known as in Norse mythology, in Old English language, or in Old High German and in Lombardic language....
. Other West Germanic forms of the name include Old High German
Old High German

The term Old High German refers to the earliest stage of the German language and it conventionally covers the period from around 500 to 1050. Coherent written texts do not appear until the second half of the 8th century, and some treat the period before 750 as 'prehistoric' and date the start of Old High German proper to 750 for this reason...
 Wuotan, Low German
Low German

Low German or Low Saxon is any of the regional language varieties of the West Germanic languages spoken mainly in northern Germany and the eastern part of the Netherlands....
 and Dutch
Dutch language

Dutch is a West Germanic languages spoken by over 22 million people as a first language, and about 5 million people as a second language."1% of the EU population claims to speak Dutch well enough in order to have a conversation." Outside the European Union the number of second language speakers of Dutch is very small. Most native...
 Wodan.

Woden was worshipped during the Migration period
Migration Period

The Migration Period, also called Barbarian Invasions or V?lkerwanderung , was a period of human migration which occurred within the period of roughly 300?700 Common Era in Europe, marking the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages....
, until the 7th or 8th century, when Germanic paganism
Germanic paganism

Germanic paganism refers to the religion beliefs of the Germanic peoples preceding Christianization. The best documented version of the Germanic pagan religions is 10th and 11th century Norse paganism, though other information can be found from Anglo-Saxon paganism and Continental Germanic mythology....
 was gradually replaced by Christianity
Germanic Christianity

The Germanic peoples underwent gradual Christianization in the course of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. By the 8th century, most of Anglo-Saxon England and the Frankish Empire was de jure Christian, and by AD 1100, Germanic paganism had also ceased to have political influence in Scandinavia....
. In Christianised Anglo-Saxon England, Woden was rationalized as a historical king, and remnants of worship were continued into modern times as folklore
Folklore

Folklore is the body of expressive culture, including tales, music, dance, legends, oral history, proverbs, jokes, superstitions, customs, and so forth within a particular population comprising the traditions of that culture, subculture, or group ....
, Wodan featuring prominently in both English and Continental folklore as the leader of the Wild Hunt
Wild Hunt

The Wild Hunt was a folk myth prevalent in former times across Northern, Western and Central Europe. The fundamental premise in all instances is the same: a phantasmal group of huntsmen with the accoutrements of hunting, horses, hounds, *etc., in mad pursuit across the skies or along the ground, or just above it....
.

Wednesday
Wednesday

Wednesday is a day of the week in the Gregorian calendar. According to international standard ISO 8601, it is the third day of the week. This day is between Tuesday and Thursday....
, Wensley
Wensley

Wensley is a small village in the Richmondshire district of North Yorkshire, England, about south west of Leyburn. It lies on the A684 road and the River Ure passes through the village....
, Wednesbury
Wednesbury

Wednesbury is a market town in England's Black Country, part of the Sandwell metropolitan borough in West Midlands , near the source of the River Tame, West Midlands....
, Wansdyke
Wansdyke

Wansdyke may refer to:*Wansdyke *Wansdyke *Wansdyke ...
 and Wednesfield
Wednesfield

Wednesfield is a town within the city of Wolverhampton, West Midlands . It is east-northeast of Wolverhampton city centre, and is part of the West Midlands conurbation....
 are named after Woden.

Origins


*Wodanaz or *Wodinaz is the reconstructed Proto-Germanic
Proto-Germanic language

Proto-Germanic, or Common Germanic, as it is sometimes known, is the hypothetical common ancestor of all the Germanic languages such as modern English language, Dutch language, German language, Danish language, Norwegian language, Icelandic language, Faroese language, and Swedish language....
 name of a god of Germanic paganism
Germanic paganism

Germanic paganism refers to the religion beliefs of the Germanic peoples preceding Christianization. The best documented version of the Germanic pagan religions is 10th and 11th century Norse paganism, though other information can be found from Anglo-Saxon paganism and Continental Germanic mythology....
. He is in all likelihood identical with the Germanic god identified as "Mercury
Mercury (mythology)

In Roman mythology, Mercury was a messenger, and a god of trade, profit and commerce, the son of Maia Maiestas, also known as Ops, the Roman version of Cronus, and Jupiter ....
" by Roman writers and possibly with Tacitus' regnator omnium deus
Regnator omnium deus

In Tacitus' work Germania from the year 98, regnator omnium deus was a deity worshipped by the Semnones tribe in a sacred grove. Comparisons have been made between this reference and the poem Helgakvi?a Hundingsbana II, recorded in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources....
.

Woden probably rose to prominence during the Migration period
Migration Period

The Migration Period, also called Barbarian Invasions or V?lkerwanderung , was a period of human migration which occurred within the period of roughly 300?700 Common Era in Europe, marking the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages....
, gradually displacing Tyr
Tyr

File:T?r by Fr?lich.jpgT?r is the god of single combat, victory and heroic glory in Norse mythology, portrayed as a one-handed man. In the late Icelandic Eddas, he is portrayed, alternately, as the son of Odin or of Hymir , while the origins of his name and his possible relationship to Tuisto suggest he was once considered the father of...
 as the head of the pantheon
Pantheon (gods)

A pantheon is a set of all the gods of a particular polytheistic religion or mythology.Max Weber's 1922 opus, Economy and Society discusses the link between a pantheon of gods and the development of monotheism....
 in West and North Germanic cultures
List of Germanic peoples

This is a list of Germanic peoples....
 -- though such theories are only academic speculation based on trends of worship for other Indo-European cognate deity figures related to Tyr.

Testimonies of the god are scattered over a wide range, both temporally and geographically. More than a millennium separates the earliest Roman accounts and archaeological evidence from the 1st century from the Odin of the Edda
Edda

The term Edda applies to the Old Norse Poetic Edda and Prose Edda, both of which were written down in medieval Iceland during the 13th century....
 and later medieval folklore
Medieval art

Medieval art covers a vast scope of time and place, over 1000 years of art history in Western art history, the Islamic art. It includes major art movements and periods, national and regional art, genres, revivals, the artists crafts, and the artists themselves....
.

Migration period

Details of Migration period
Migration Period

The Migration Period, also called Barbarian Invasions or V?lkerwanderung , was a period of human migration which occurred within the period of roughly 300?700 Common Era in Europe, marking the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Middle Ages....
  Germanic religion
Germanic paganism

Germanic paganism refers to the religion beliefs of the Germanic peoples preceding Christianization. The best documented version of the Germanic pagan religions is 10th and 11th century Norse paganism, though other information can be found from Anglo-Saxon paganism and Continental Germanic mythology....
 are sketchy, reconstructed from artifacts, sparse contemporary sources, and the later testimonies of medieval legends and place names.

Jonas of Bobbio

According to Jonas of Bobbio
Jonas of Bobbio

Jonas of Bobbio was a Columbanian monk and writer of hagiography, among which his Life of Saint Columbanus is outstanding.In 618, Jonas arrived at the monastery of Bobbio Abbey in the province of Pavia, just three years after the death of its founder Columbanus, and he asserted that he had based his account of the great Irish saint...
, the 6th century Irish missionary Saint Columbanus is reputed to have disrupted a Beer sacrifice
Symbel

Symbel and sumbel are Germanic terms for "feast, banquet".Paul C. Bauschatz in 1976 suggested that the term reflects a Germanic paganism ritual which had a "great religious significance in the culture of the early Germanic people"....
 to Wuodan (Deo suo Vodano nomine) in Bregenz
Bregenz

Bregenz is the capital of Vorarlberg, the westernmost states of Austria of Austria. The city is located on the eastern shores of Lake Constance, the third-largest freshwater lake in Central Europe, between Switzerland in the east and Germany in the northwest....
, Alemannia. "Wuodan" was the chief god of the Alamanni
Alamanni

The Alamanni, Allemanni, or Alemanni were originally an alliance of Germanic languagess located around the upper Main river . One of the earliest references to them is the cognomen Alamannicus assumed by Caracalla, who ruled the Roman Empire from 211?17 and claimed thereby to be their defeater....
, his name appears in the runic inscription on the Nordendorf fibula
Nordendorf fibula

The Nordendorf fibula is an early 7th century Alamanni Fibula found in Nordendorf near Augsburg ....
.

Lombardic sacrifice

The Lombards
Lombards

The Lombards were a Germanic peoples originally from Northern Europe who settled in the valley of the Danube and from there invaded Byzantine Italian peninsula in 568 under the leadership of Alboin....
 in 579 during their blockade of Rome
Rome

Rome is the capital city of Italy and Lazio, and is Italy's largest and most populous city, with 2,724,347 residents in an urban area of some ....
, according to the Dialogues (ch. 28) of Pope Gregory I
Pope Gregory I

Pope Saint Gregory I or Gregory the Great was pope from 3 September 590 until his death.He is also known as Gregory the Dialogist in Eastern Orthodoxy because of his Dialogues....
, sacrificed a goat's head to their god of war, dancing around it and singing "nefarious songs" (per circuitum currentes et carmine nefando dedicantes, c.f. ansulaikom). Gregory claims that the Lombards demanded of 400 of their Christian prisoners to bow before the goat's head in adoration, and as they refused slew them all.

Historia gentis Langobardorum

The Langobard historian Paul the Deacon
Paul the Deacon

Paul the Deacon , also known as Paulus Diaconus, Warnefred and Cassinensis, , was a Benedictine monk and historian of the Lombards....
, who died in southern Italy in the 790s, was proud of his tribal origins and related how his people once had migrated from southern Scandinavia. In his work Historia gentis Langobardorum
Historia gentis Langobardorum

The Historia gentis Langobardorum is the chief work by Paul the Deacon, written in the late 8th century.This incomplete history in six books was written after 787 and at any rate no later than 796, maybe at Montecassino....
, Paul relates how Godan (Odin)'s wife Frea (Frigg/Freyja) had given victory to the Langobards in a war against the Vandals
Vandals

The Vandals were an East Germanic tribe that entered the late Roman Empire during the 5th century. The Goths Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths and regent of the Visigoths, was allied by marriage with the Vandals as well as with the Burgundians and the Franks under Clovis I....
. She is depicted as a wife who knows how to get her own way even though her husband thinks he is in charge.

The Winnili and the Vandals
Vandals

The Vandals were an East Germanic tribe that entered the late Roman Empire during the 5th century. The Goths Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths and regent of the Visigoths, was allied by marriage with the Vandals as well as with the Burgundians and the Franks under Clovis I....
 were two warring tribes. Godan favoured the Vandals, while Frea favoured the Winnili. After a heated discussion, Godan swore that he would grant victory to the first tribe he saw the next morning upon awakening-- knowing full well that the bed was arranged so that the Vandals were on his side. While he slept, Frea told the Winnili women to comb their hair over their faces to look like long beards so they would look like men and turned the bed so the Winnili women would be on Godan's side. When he woke up, Godan was surprised to see the disguised women first and asked who these long bearded men were, which was where the tribe got its new name, the Langobards ("longbeards"). Godan kept his oath and granted victory to the Winnili (now known as the Lombards
Lombards

The Lombards were a Germanic peoples originally from Northern Europe who settled in the valley of the Danube and from there invaded Byzantine Italian peninsula in 568 under the leadership of Alboin....
).

Old Saxon Baptismal Vow

Woden is mentioned in an Old Saxon
Old Saxon

Old Saxon, also known as Old Low German , is the earliest recorded form of Low German, documented from the 9th century until the 12th century, when it evolved into Middle Low German....
 Baptismal vow in Vatican Codex pal. 577 along with Thunear (Thor
Thor

Thor is the red-haired and bearded god of thunder in Germanic mythology and Germanic paganism, and its subsets: Norse paganism, Anglo-Saxon paganism and Continental Germanic mythology....
) and Saxnot. The 8th or 9th century vow, intended for Christianizing pagans, is recorded as:
ec forsacho allum dioboles uuercum and uuordum, Thunaer ende Uuöden ende Saxnote ende allum them unholdum the hira genötas sint


Which translates to:
I renounce all the words and works of the devil
Devil

The Devil is the title given to the supernatural being, who, in mainstream Christianity, Islam, and some other religions, is believed to be a powerful, evil entity and the tempter of humankind....
, Thunear, Woden and Saxnot, and all those fiends that are their associates.


Merseburg Incantations

Recorded during the 9th or 10th Century, though dating to an unknown earlier time, one of the two Merseburg Incantations
Merseburg Incantations

The Merseburg Incantations are two Middle Ages magic spells, charms or incantations, written in Old High German. They are the only known examples of Germanic paganism preserved in this language....
, from Merseburg
Merseburg

Merseburg is a town in the south of the Germany state of Saxony-Anhalt on the river Saale, approx. 14 km south of Halle . It is the capital of the Saalekreis district....
, Germany
Germany

Germany , officially the Federal Republic of Germany , is a country in Central Europe. It is bordered to the north by the North Sea, Denmark, and the Baltic Sea; to the east by Poland and the Czech Republic; to the south by Austria and Switzerland; and to the west by France, Luxembourg, Belgium, and the Netherlands....
 mentions Wodan who rode into a wood together with Balder (Baldr), then Balder's horse was injured, and Wodan, together with goddesses, cured the horse with enchantments.

Nine Herbs Charm

Recorded in the 10th century, the Anglo-Saxon poem
Anglo-Saxon literature

Anglo-Saxon literature encompasses literature written in Old English language during the 600-year Anglo-Saxon England period of England, from the mid-5th century to the Norman Conquest of 1066....
 the Nine Herbs Charm
Nine Herbs Charm

The Nine Herbs Charm is an Anglo-Saxon literature recorded in the 10th century Lacnunga manuscript. The charm is intended for treatment of poison and infection through the preparation of nine herbs....
 contains a mention of Woden:
A snake came crawling, it bit a man.
Then Woden took nine glory-twigs,
Smote the serpent so that it flew into nine parts.
There apple brought this pass against poison,
That she nevermore would enter her house.


Anglo-Saxon Woden

The Anglo-Saxon tribes
Anglo-Saxons

Anglo-Saxons is the term usually used to describe the invading tribes in the south and east of Great Britain starting from the early 5th century AD, and their creation of the English nation, lasting until the Norman conquest of England of 1066....
 brought their indigenous faith to what was to become England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
 around the 5th and 6th centuries and continued in that form of worship
Worship

Worship usually refers to acts of religion devotion typically directed to one or more deity. It is the informal term in English for what sociology of religion call cult —traditional beliefs and practices, the individual study of which is one of the chief concerns of theology....
 until nearly all were converted to Christianity by the 9th century, at which point the old gods and any records of them were almost completely lost. This process of Christianization
Christianization

The historical phenomenon of Christianization, the religious conversion of individuals to Christianity or the conversion of entire peoples at once, also includes the practice of converting native Paganism practices and culture, pagan religious imagery, pagan sites and the pagan calendar to Christian uses, due to the Christian efforts at Ch...
 followed an established pattern that is attested in accounts of the same from continental Europe
Europe

Europe is, conventionally, one of the world's seven continents. Comprising the westernmost peninsula of Eurasia, Europe is generally divided from Asia to its east by the water divide of the Ural Mountains, the Ural , the Caspian Sea, and by the Caucasus Mountains to the southeast....
: leaders were baptised
Baptism

In Christianity, baptism is the ritual act, with the use of water, by which one is admitted as a full member of the Christian Church and, in the view of some, as a member of the particular Church in which the baptism is administered....
 for varied reasons, and the conversion of their respective peoples almost always inevitably followed, sometimes in the space of a few years, but more often over the course of a few generations though numerous aspects of indigenous beliefs often remained.

For the Anglo-Saxons, Woden was the psychopomp
Psychopomp

Many religions include a particular spiritual being, angel, or deity whose responsibility is to escort newly-deceased souls to the afterlife. These creatures are called psychopomps, from the Greek language word ????p??p?? , literally meaning the "guide of souls"....
 or carrier-off of the dead, but not necessarily with the exact same attributes of the Norse Odin. There do not appear to have been the concepts of Valkyries and Valhalla
Valhalla

In Norse mythology, Valhalla is a majestic, enormous hall located in Asgard, ruled over by the god Odin. Chosen by Odin, half of those that die in combat travel to Valhalla upon death, led by valkyries, while the other half go to the goddess Freyja's field F?lkvangr....
 in the Norse sense, although there is a word for the former, Waelcyrge.

In addition to the roles named here, Woden was considered to be the leader of the Wild Hunt
Wild Hunt

The Wild Hunt was a folk myth prevalent in former times across Northern, Western and Central Europe. The fundamental premise in all instances is the same: a phantasmal group of huntsmen with the accoutrements of hunting, horses, hounds, *etc., in mad pursuit across the skies or along the ground, or just above it....
. The familial relationships are the same between Woden and the other Anglo-Saxon gods as they are for the Norse.

Wednesday (*Wednes dæg, "Woden's day", interestingly continuing the variant *Wodinaz (with umlaut
Germanic umlaut

In linguistics, umlaut is a process whereby a vowel is pronounced more like a vowel or semivowel in a following syllable.The term umlaut was originally coined and is principally used in connection with the study of the Germanic languages....
), unlike Woden, continuing *Wodanaz) is named after him, his link with the dead making him the appropriate match to the Roman Mercury
Mercury (mythology)

In Roman mythology, Mercury was a messenger, and a god of trade, profit and commerce, the son of Maia Maiestas, also known as Ops, the Roman version of Cronus, and Jupiter ....
.

The Anglo-Saxon kings claimed descent from Woden. According to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle

The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle is a collection of annals in Old English language chronicling the history of the Anglo-Saxons. The annals were created late in the 9th century, probably in Wessex, during the reign of Alfred the Great....
 and the Historia Britonum
Historia Britonum

The Historia Brittonum, or The History of the Britons, is a historical work that was first written sometime shortly after AD 833, and exists in several recensions of varying difference....
, Woden had the sons Wecta
Wecta

Wecta is mentioned in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle and the Historia Brittonum, and was a Jutes chieftain who ruled East Saxony in Germany. His mother was Frigg and his father was Woden....
, Baeldaeg, Casere
Casere

Casere is one of the Sons of Odin, according to Historia Britonum. His son, T?tman, was the progenitor of the royal line of East Anglia....
 and Wihtlaeg.
  • Wecta's line is continued by Witta
    Witta, son of Wecta

    Witta son of Wecta is mentioned as a Jutes chieftain in the 449 entry of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the father of Wihtgils and the grandfather of Hengest and Horsa....
    , Wihtgils
    Wihtgils

    Wihtgils was a semi-legendary Jutes chieftain who, according to the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, was the father of Hengest and Horsa:...
    , Hengest and Horsa, and the Kings of Kent.
  • Baeldaeg's line is continued by Brona
    Brona

    Brona may be:*a legendary Anglo-Saxon king, son of Baeldaeg, son of Woden, ancestor of the kings of Wessex.*a fictitious character, see Warlock Lord...
    , Frithugar, Freawine
    Freawine

    Freawine, Frowin or Frowinus figures as a governor of Schleswig in Gesta Danorum and in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as an ancestor of the List of monarchs of Wessex, but the latter source only tells that he was the son of Frithugar and the father of Ket and Wig....
    , Wig, Gewis
    Gewis

    Gewis appears in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle as the son of Ket and Wig and a descendant of Woden. He is also described as the father of Esla, the father of Elesa, the father of Cerdic of Wessex who invaded Britain and founded the kingdom of Wessex....
    , Esla, Elesa, Cerdic
    Cerdic of Wessex

    Cerdic was the King of Wessex and is regarded as the ancestor of all subsequent Kings of Wessex ....
     and the Kings of Wessex.
  • Casere's line is continued by Tytmon, Trygils, Hrothmund, Hryp, Wilhelm, Wehha, Wuffa and the Kings of East Anglia.
  • Wihtlaeg's line is continued by Wermund
    Wermund

    Wermund or Garmund is an ancestor of the Mercian royal family, a son of Wihtlaeg and father of Offa of Angel. Mythology claims him to be a grandson of Odin, but the Danish histories written by Saxo disagree with this concept....
     king of Angel
    Angles

    The Angles is a modern English language word for a Germanic languages people who took their name from the cultural ancestral region of Angeln, a modern district located in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany....
    , Offa Wermundson
    Offa of Angel

    Offa , also Uffo or Uffe, was the 4th-great-grandfather of Creoda of Mercia, and was reputed to be a great-grandson of Odin. Whether historical or mythical, Offa was the son of Wermund, and the father of Angeltheow....
    , Angeltheow
    Angeltheow

    Angeltheow, also spelled Angletheow, Engengenthe, or Angenwit was the great-great-great-grandfather of Creoda of Mercia and the son of Offa of Angel....
    , Eomer
    Éomer

    ?omer is a character in J. R. R. Tolkien's Tolkien's legendarium. He appears in The Two Towers and The Return of the King, the second and third volumes of his fantasy novel The Lord of the Rings....
    , Icel
    Icel (person)

    Icel was an early king of Mercia, according to an eighth-century life of Saint Guthlac. Early genealogies record him as the great-grandfather of Creoda of Mercia and the son of Eomer, last King of the List of kings of the Angles in Europe....
     and the Kings of Mercia.


The Christian writer of the Exeter Book
Exeter Book

The Exeter Book, Exeter Cathedral Library MS 3501, also known as the Codex Exoniensis, is a tenth-century book or codex which is an anthology of Anglo-Saxons poetry....
 (341, 28) records the verse Wôden worhte weos, wuldor alwealda rûme roderas ("Woden wrought the (heathen) altars / the almighty Lord
Names of God in Old English poetry

In Old English language poetry, many descriptive names of God were used to satisfy alliterative verse. These epithets include:...
 the wide heavens"). The name of such Wôdenes weohas (Saxon Wôdanes wih, Norse Oðins ve) or sanctuaries to Woden survives in toponymy as Odinsvi, Wodeneswegs.

In folklore

Woden persisted as a figure in folklore and folk religion throughout the Middle Ages and into the modern period, notably as the leader of the Wild Hunt
Wild Hunt

The Wild Hunt was a folk myth prevalent in former times across Northern, Western and Central Europe. The fundamental premise in all instances is the same: a phantasmal group of huntsmen with the accoutrements of hunting, horses, hounds, *etc., in mad pursuit across the skies or along the ground, or just above it....
 found in English
English folklore

English folklore is the folk tradition which has developed in England over a number of centuries. Some stories can be traced back to their roots, while the origin of others is uncertain or disputed....
, German
German folklore

German folklore shares many characteristics with Scandinavian folklore and English folklore due to their origins in a common Germanic mythology....
, Swiss, and Scandinavian
Scandinavian folklore

Scandinavian folklore is the folklore of Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Iceland, the Faroe, and the Finland Swedish.In Scandinavia the term 'folklore' is not often used in academic circles, instead terms such as Folketro or Folkesagn have been coined....
 traditions.

A celebrated late attestation of invocation of Wodan in Germany dates to 1593, in Mecklenburg
Mecklenburg

Mecklenburg is a region in northern Germany comprising the western and larger part of the federal state Mecklenburg-Vorpommern. The largest cities of the region are Rostock, Schwerin, and Neubrandenburg....
, where the formula Wode, Hale dynem Rosse nun Voder "Wodan, fetch now food for your horse" was spoken over the last sheaf of the harvest.

David Franck adds, that at the squires' mansions, when the rye is all cut, there is Wodel-beer served out to the mowers; no one weeds flax on a Wodenstag, lest Woden's horse should trample the seeds; from Christmas to Twelfth-day they will not spin, nor leave any flax on the distaff, and to the question why? they answer, Wode is galloping across. We are expressly told, this wild hunter Wode rides a white horse. (34)

A custom in Schaumburg
Schaumburg

Schaumburg is a districts of Germany of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is bounded by the districts of Nienburg , Hanover and Hamelin-Pyrmont, and the state of North Rhine-Westphalia ....
 is reported by Grimm: the people go out to mow in parties of twelve, sixteen or twenty scythes, but it is managed in such a manner, that on the last day of harvest they are all finished at the same time, or some leave a strip standing which they can cut down at a stroke the last thing, or they merely pass their scythes over the stubble, pretending there is still some left to mow. At the last stroke of the scythe they raise their implements aloft, plant them upright, and beat the blades three times with the strop. Each spills on the field a little of the drink he has, whether beer, brandy, or milk, then drinks himself, while they wave their hats, beat their scythes three times, and cry aloud Wôld, Wôld, Wôld! and the women knock all the crumbs out of their baskets on the stubble. They march home shouting and singing. If the ceremony was omitted, the following year would bring bad crops of hay and corn. The first verse of the song is quoted by Grimm,
„Wôld, Wôld, Wôld! Hävens wei wat schüt, jümm hei dal van Häven süt. Vulle Kruken un Sangen hät hei, upen Holte wässt manigerlei: hei is nig barn un wert nig old. Wôld, Wôld, Wôld! “

“Wôld, Wôld, Wôld”! Heaven’s giant knows what happens, Looking down from heaven, Providing full jugs and sheaves. Many a plant grows in the woods. He is not born and grows not old. “Wôld, Wôld, Wôld”!
Grimm notes that the custom had died out in the fifty years preceding his time of writing (1835).

Toponyms


Grimm (Teutonic Mythology
Teutonic Mythology

Teutonic Mythology may refer to:*Continental Germanic mythology*Jacob Grimm's Deutsche Mythologie *Viktor Rydberg's Unders?kningar i germanisk mythologi I ...
, ) discusses traces of Woden's name in toponymy. Certain mountains were sacred to the service of the god. Othensberg, now Onsberg, on the Danish island of Samsø
Samsø

Sams? is a Denmark island in the Kattegat 15 kilometers off the Jutland Peninsula. Sams? is located in Sams? municipality. The community has 4,300 inhabitants called Samsingers and is 114 km? in area....
; Odensberg in Schonen. Godesberg near Bonn
Bonn

Bonn is the 19th largest city in Germany. Located about 20 kilometres south of Cologne on the river Rhine in the Federal State of North Rhine-Westphalia, it was the Capital of Germany West Germany from 1949 to 1990 and the official seat of government of united Germany from 1990 to 1999....
, from earlier Wôdenesberg (annis 947, 974). Near the holy oak in Hesse, which Boniface brought down, there stood a Wuodenesberg, still so named in a document of 1154, later Vdenesberg, Gudensberg; this hill is not to be confounded with Gudensberg by Erkshausen, nor with a Gudenberg by Oberelsungen and Zierenberg so that three mountains of this name occur in Lower Hesse alone; conf. montem Vodinberg, cum silva eidem monti attinente, (doc. of 1265). In a different neighbourhood, a Henricus comes de Wôdenesberg is named in a doc. of 1130. A Wôdnes beorg in the Saxon Chronicle, later Wodnesborough, Wansborough in Wiltshire
Wiltshire

Wiltshire is a Ceremonial counties of England in the South West England of England. It is landlocked and borders the counties of Dorset, Somerset, Hampshire, Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire....
. A Wôdnesbeorg in Lappenberg's map near the Bearucwudu, conf. Wodnesbury, Wodnesdyke, Wôdanesfeld. To this we must add, that about the Hessian Gudensberg the story goes that King Charles lies prisoned in it, that he there won a victory over the Saxons, and opened a well in the wood for his thirsting army, but he will yet come forth of the mountain, he and his host, at the appointed time. The mythus of a victorious army pining for water is already applied to King Carl by the Frankish annalists, at the very moment when they bring out the destruction of the Irminsul
Irminsul

An Irminsul was a kind of pillar which is attested as playing an important role in the Germanic paganism of the Saxon people. The oldest chronicle describing an Irminsul refers to it as a tree trunk erected in the open air....
; but beyond a doubt it is older : Saxo Grammaticus has it of the victorious Balder
Balder

Baldr is a deity in Norse Mythology associated with light and beauty.In the 12th. century, Danish accounts by Saxo Grammaticus and other Danish Latin chroniclers recorded a Euhemerus account of his story....
.

The breviarium Lulli, in names a place in Thuringia
Thuringia

The Free State of Thuringia is located in central Germany. It has an area of and 2.29 million inhabitants, making it the sixth smallest by area and the fifth smallest by population of Germany's sixteen States of Germany ....
: in Wudaneshusum, and again Woteneshusun; in Oldenburg
Oldenburg

||-||-||-||}Oldenburg is an Independent City in Lower Saxony, Germany. It is situated in the western part of the state between the cities of Bremen and Groningen , at the Hunte river....
 there is a Wodensholt, now Godensholt, cited in a land-book of 1428; Wothenower, seat of a Brandenburg family anno 1334; not far from Bergen op Zoom
Bergen op Zoom

Bergen op Zoom is a municipality and a city in the south of the Netherlands....
, towards Antwerp, stands to this day a Woensdrecht
Woensdrecht

Woensdrecht is a municipality and a town in the southern Netherlands.Woensdrecht is mainly known for Woensdrecht_Air_Base. In 1983 it was decided that the US would station 48 nuclear weapon cruise missiles here, unless the USSR would reduce the number of SS-20 missiles to 378....
, as if Wodani trajectum. Woensel
Woensel

Woensel is a former village in the Netherlands province of North Brabant, now part of Eindhoven.An important rural village in North Brabant, Woensel is mentioned in a document from 1107; it was the seat of a deanage of the diocese of Li?ge....
 = Wodenssele, Wodani aula, lies near Eindhoven
Eindhoven

Eindhoven is a municipality and a city located in the province of North Brabant in the south of the Netherlands, originally at the confluence of the Dommel and Gender streams....
 on the Dommel in Northern Brabant. This Woensel is like the Oðinssalr, Othänsäle, Onsala; Wunstorp, Wunsdorf, a convent and small town in Lower Saxony, stands unmutilated as Wodenstorp in a document of 1179. Near Windbergen
Windbergen

Windbergen is a municipality in the district of Dithmarschen, in Schleswig-Holstein, Germany....
 in the Ditmar country, an open space in a wood bears the name of Wodenslag, Wonslag. Near Hadersleben in Schleswig are the villages of Wonsbeke, Wonslei, Woyens formerly Wodensyen. An Anglo-Saxon documen of 862 contains in a boundary-settlement the name Wônstoc = Wôdenesstoc, Wodani stipes, and at the same time betrays the influence of the god on ancient delimitation (Wuotan, Hermes, Mercury, all seem to be divinities of measurement and demarcation)

Further reading

  • Brian Branston, The Lost Gods of England, Thames and Hudson, 2nd ed. (1974), ISBN 0-500-11013-1
  • Kathleen Herbert, Looking for the Lost Gods of England, Anglo-Saxon Books (1995), ISBN 1-898281-04-1
  • Pettit, E. Anglo-Saxon Remedies, Charms, and Prayers from British Library MS Harley 585: The ‘Lacnunga’, 2 vols., Edwin Mellen Press, 2001. [Includes an edition and translation of the Nine Herbs Charm, with commentary]
  • E.G. Stanley, Imagining the Anglo-Saxon Past : The Search for Anglo-Saxon Paganism and Anglo-Saxon Trial by Jury, D.S.Brewer (2000), ISBN 0-85991-588-3
  • Michael Wood, In search of the Dark Ages, Checkmark Books (2001), ISBN 0-8160-4702-2


See also

  • Germanic polytheism
  • Continental Germanic mythology
  • Germanic Christianity
    Germanic Christianity

    The Germanic peoples underwent gradual Christianization in the course of Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. By the 8th century, most of Anglo-Saxon England and the Frankish Empire was de jure Christian, and by AD 1100, Germanic paganism had also ceased to have political influence in Scandinavia....
  • Anglo-Saxon polytheism
    Anglo-Saxon polytheism

    Only a little Old English poetry has survived, and all of it has had Christian redactors. The epic poem Beowulf is an important source of Anglo-Saxon pagan poetry and history, but it is clearly addressed to a Christian audience, containing numerous references to the Christian Names of God in Old English poetry, and using Christian phrasing and...
  • South Germanic deities
  • Mythology of the Low Countries
    Mythology of the Low Countries

    The Folklore of the Low Countries of the Low Countries has its roots in the mythology of pre-Christian Celtic mythology and Continental Germanic mythology cultures, predating the region's Christianization by the Franks in the Early Middle Ages....
  • List of places named after Woden
  • Migration Period art
    Migration Period art

    Migration Period art is the artwork of Germanic peoples during the Migration period of 300 to 900. It includes the Migration art of the Germanic tribes on the continent, as well the Hiberno-Saxon art of the Anglo-Saxon and Celtic fusion in the British Isles....
  • Weoh