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Encyclopedia > Aesir

The Aesir (Old Norse Æsir, singular Áss, feminine Ásynja, feminine plural Ásynjur) are the principal pantheon of gods in Norse mythology. They include many of the major figures, such as Odin, Frigg, Thor, Balder and Tyr. A second clan of gods, the Vanir, is also mentioned in the Norse mythos: the god Njord and his children, Freyr and Freya, are the most prominent Vanir gods who join the Aesir as hostages after a war between Aesir and Vanir. The Vanir were mainly connected with fertility, the Aesir with power and wars.


Ása is also a collective name given to an Aesir of the Norse pantheon. The term Ása tends to have a more religious connotation than Aesir, indicative of worship: it is the root of the name Ásatrú used of a contemporary re_implementation of pre_Christian Norse beliefs. (In comparison, the Vanir are each called Vana and their faith, would be called Vanatrú.) The form often appears as a prefix to indicate membership in the Aesir, for example, Ása_Thor or Ása_Loki.


These words appear to dervied from Proto-Indo-European *ansu- 'breath, god' related to Sanskrit asura and Avestan ahura with the same meaning; though in Sanskrit asura came to mean 'demon'. The cognate Old English form to áss is os 'god, deity' (as in the still-current surname Osgood). The word áss also means "beam" or "post" in Old Norse, but there has been no demonstration of etymological connection between the two words. Schefferus, a proto-ethnologist of the 17th century, held that aesir referred to 'Asian emperiors', that is, a pseudo-feudalic (shamanistic hereditary) leadership, emanating out from the Eurasian steppes into Europe in ancient time. No other scholar in the intervening centuries has found any evidence to back this contention.


The interaction between the Aesir and the Vanir is an interesting aspect of Norse mythology. While other cultures have had "elder" and "younger" families of gods, as with the Titans versus the Olympians of ancient Greece, the Aesir and Vanir were portrayed as contemporary. The two clans of gods fought battles, concluded treaties, and exchanged hostages (Frey and Freya are mentioned as such hostages). It is tempting to speculate that the interactions described as occurring between Aesir and Vanir reflect the types of interaction common to various Norse clans at the time. According to another theory, the cult of the Vanir (who are mainly connected with fertility and relatively peaceful) may be of an older date, and that of the more warlike Aesir of later origin, so the mythical war may perhaps mirror a religious conflict. On the other hand this may be a parallel to the historicized conflict between the Romans and the Sabines. The noted comparative religion scholar Mircea Eliade speculated that both conflicts are actually different versions of an older Indo-European myth of conflict and integration between deities of sky and rulership vs. deities of earth and fertility, with no strict historical antecedents.


The chronology of the cults would in that case not be pictured in the myths. However, only Odin and Thor were important in both myth and cult; an áss like Ull is almost unknown in the myths, but his name is seen in a lot of geographical names, especially in Sweden, so his cult was probably quite wide-spread.


The Aesir stayed forever young by eating the golden apples of Idun, although they could be slain, as it was predicted that nearly all will die at Ragnarok.


Ass rune

The a-rune ᚨ was probably called after the Aesir. The name survives only in the Icelandic rune poem as Óss, however, referring to Odin, identified with Jupiter:

Óss er algingautr
ok ásgarðs jöfurr,
ok valhallar vísi.
Jupiter oddviti.
Óss is aged Gautr
and prince of Ásgardr
and lord of Vallhalla.

The name of 𐌰 a in the Gothic alphabet is ahsa. The common Germanic name of the rune may thus have either been ansuz "God, one of the Aesir", or ahsam "ear (of corn)".


List of Aesir and Vanir


Norse mythology
The Nine Worlds of Norse Mythology
People, places and things: Deities | Giants | Dwarves | Valkyries
Orthography | Numbers | Runes | Kenning
Elder Edda | Younger Edda | Skald | Sagas | Later influence


Runic alphabet | Rune poems
Elder Fuþark: ᚠ f | ᚢ u | ᚦ þ | ᚨ a | ᚱ r | ᚲ k | ᚷ g | ᚹ w | ᚺ h | ᚾ n | ᛁ i | ᛃ j |ᛇ ï | ᛈ p | ᛉ z | ᛊ s |ᛏ t | ᛒ b | ᛖ e | ᛗ m | ᛚ l | ᛜ ng | ᛞ d | ᛟ o



External link

  • Bartleby: American Heritage Dictionary: Indo_European roots: ansu (http://www.bartleby.com/61/roots/IE19.html)





  Results from FactBites:
 
Aesir (6909 words)
Aesir (Æsir in Old Norse) were one race of gods that resided in Asgard.
Snorri wrote that the Aesir had come from Asia, and he compared the Ragnarok with the Fall of Troy, so Snorri is saying that Asgard, home of the gods, was also called Troy.
Aegir was the father of the nine daughters, known as the Nine Waves (nine giantesses).
Kids.Net.Au - Encyclopedia > Aesir (212 words)
The Aesir are the principal pantheon of gods in Norse mythology.
The interaction between the Aesir and the Vanir is an interesting aspect of Norse mythology.
It is tempting to speculate that the interactions described as occurring between Aesir and Vanir reflect the types of interaction common to various Norse clans at the time.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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