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Gods & Goddesses
Freya


Copyright (C) Jessica Galbreth
Image used with Permission
Freya

Goddess of Love and Fertility


Pantheon: Norse
Element: Water
Sphere of Influence: Love and Fertility
Preferred colors: Gold, Blue, Red, Black
Associated symbol: Falcon
Animals associated with: Cat , Falcon
Best day to work with: Friday
Strongest around Litha
Suitable offerings: Gold
Associated Planet: Venus

Freya is the goddess of erotic, sexual and sensual love, also fertility and marriage. She is the twin sister of Frey. She weeps tears of gold for her lost husband Odur. Freyas solar chariot was pulled by cats across the heavens. These cats were said to control the sunshine, and if it rained at inconvenient times, it was because cats living in the area where the rain fell were going hungry. She is generous, passionate and exuberant and expects the same of those who would honor her.

Additional Information on Freya from Wikipedia

Information is unedited and unchecked

This article uses English names. Old Norse names are given in italics in parentheses.

Freya (Freyja), the sister of Frey (Freyr) and the daughter of Niord (Njǫrðr), is usually seen as the fertility goddess of Norse mythology. While there are no sources suggesting that she was called on to bring fruitfulness to fields or wombs, she was a goddess of riches whose tears were gold. She was also goddess of love, sex and attraction, and correspondingly became one of the most popular goddesses. She may have been the same goddess as Frigg, and might be considered the counterpart of Venus (mythology)| Venus and Aphrodite.

She was also thought to be the most desirable of all goddesses, owner of the attractive piece of jewellery Brisingamen|Brosingamen (Brísingamen), which she bought from four dwarfs at the price of four nights of her love. This necklace is sometimes seen today as embodying her power over the material world; the necklace has been the emblem of the earth-goddess since the earliest times.

She was once married to Odr|Óðr, but he disappeared for some time. She cried golden tears afterwards. Óðr was one of Odins (Óðinns) names, and Freya does not seem to have been clearly distinguished from Frigg, the wife of Odin. They seem to have evolved from the same goddess. This seems to be contradicted by the description of Freya as a Vanir instead of an Aesir|Áss. However, the Vanir Freyja would have become an Áss by marrying Odin. Moreover, Gefyon (Gefjun), who some claim was a synonym for Freya, belonged both to the Æsir (the plural of Áss) and Vanir.

Freya is wild: free with her sexual favours and furious when an attempt is made to marry her off against her will; the mistress of Odin and several other gods. According to Loki, in Lokasenna, she even let her brother Frey into her bed.

==Freyas possessions==

Freya was the driver of a wagon drawn by two cats. She was associated with elf|elves. Her chambermaids were Fulla, Hlin|Hlín and Gna|Gná. Her palace was in Folkvang (Fólkvangr) and her hall was Sessrumnir|Sessrúmnir.

Along with the necklace, she owned a cloak of feathers which gave her the ability to change into a falcon, and the "battle-boar" Hildesvini|Hildisvín (see below).

== Freya as battle goddess==

As a battle-goddess, Freya rides a boar called Hildisvín the Battle-Swine. In the poem Hyndluljóð, we are told that in order to conceal her protegé Ottar (Óttarr) the Simple, Freya transformed him into the guise of a boar. The boar has special associations within Norse Mythology, both relative to the notion of fertility and also as a protective talisman in war. 7th century Sweden|Swedish helmet plates depict warriors with large boars as their crests, and a boar-crested helmet has survived from Anglo-Saxon time and was retrieved from a tumulus at Benty Grange in Derbyshire. In Beowulf, it is said that a boar on the helmet was there to guard the life of the warrior wearing it.

==Freyas slain==

Freya chooses half the slain on the battlefield whilst Odin gets the other half, according to Grimnismál|Grímnismál:

:The ninth hall is Folkvang, where bright Freyja
:Decides where the warriors shall sit:
:Half of the fallen belong to her,
:And half belong to Odin.

This association of Freyja with death is underlined in Egils saga when his daughter, Thorgerda (Þorgerðr), threatens to commit suicide in the wake of her brothers death, saying: "I shall not eat until I sup with Freya".

== Freya as a witch==

Freya was a skilled practitioner of seidhr|seiðr, a form of magic which Snorri relates in the Ynglinga Saga in his Heimskringla she introduced among the Aesir. It has been been widely speculated that Gullveig was Freya under another name. If so, she was stabbed and burnt three times, but arose from the flame each time and transformed herself into Heiðr ("the Glorious"), mistress of magic, in a shamanic initiation (see mystery religion). This also started the war between the Æsir and the Vanir.

The Jotun|giants are always trying to take Freya away from the gods, and it is clear that this would be a great disaster. She was obviously the embodiment of the holy life-force.

==Other names==

===Forms of "Frey(j)a"===

* Friia
* Froya
* Common Danish and literary Swedish form: Freja
* Common Norwegian, and rural Swedish form: Frøya

===Other forms===

*Gefn (according to Snorri Sturluson|Snorri Gefyon/Gefjun is not the same as Gefn)
*Heath
*Vanadís

==Sources==
* Grimnismál
* Egils Saga
* Snorri Sturluson, The Younger Edda
* H R Ellis Davidson, Gods and Myths of Northern Europe
* E O G Turville-Petre, Myth and Religion of the North
* Jan de Vries, Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte, 2nd Edition (the seminal work of reference on Germanic and Scandinavian religion).

NorseMythology

This text is made available under the GNU Free Documentation License Agreement. The full text of this article is available for download here. (Freya)

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