GERMANIC RELIGION

pre-Christian religious practices among the tribes of Western Europe, Germany, and Scandinavia. The main sources for our knowledge are the Germania of Tacitus and the Elder Edda and the Younger Edda. Although it is possible to perceive certain basic concepts that were important to the pre-Christian Germans, there was no Germanic religion common to all the Scandinavian and Teutonic peoples; neither can we know whether a ritual or legend peculiar to one Germanic tribe was common to all Germanic tribes.

Conversion of the Germans to Christianity began as early as the 4th cent. a.d., but it took many centuries for the new religion to spread throughout the northern lands of Europe. In Nazi Germany the spirit of the old religion and the heroic attributes of the Germanic gods were revived as part of the propaganda program of the Nazi party.

The Germanic Pantheon

Germanic religion, like most ancient religions, was polytheistic. In early times there were two groups of gods—the Aesir and the Vanir. However, after a war between the rival pantheons (which perhaps reflects a war between two rival tribes), the defeated Vanir were absorbed into the Aesir, and the gods of both were worshiped in a single pantheon. This pantheon, which according to some accounts consisted of 12 principal deities, had Woden (Odin) as its chief god. Other important deities were Tiw (Tyr), Thor (Donar), Balder, Frey, Freyja, and Frigg. The gods dwelled in Asgard, where each deity had his or her own particular abode. The most beautiful of the palaces was Valhalla; there Woden, attended by the Valkyries, gave banquets to the dead heroes. The ancient Nordic gods, however, unlike the gods of most religions, were not immortal. They continually renewed their youth by eating the apples of Idun, but they were doomed, like mortals, to eventual extinction.

The gods were opposed by the giants and demons, representing the destructive and irrational forces of the universe. It was prophesied that at Ragnarok, the doom of the gods, the forces of evil and darkness led by Loki and his brood of monsters, would attack the gods of Asgard. After a ferocious battle, in which most of the gods and giants would be destroyed, the universe would end in a blaze of fire. However, it was also prophesied that from the ashes of the old world a new cosmos would emerge and a new generation of gods and humans would dwell in harmony.

The Creation Myth

In early Nordic belief, from the mixture of the glacial waters of Niflheim (the land of ice and mist) and the warm winds of Muspellsheim (the land of fire), came forth the first two creatures—the giant Ymir, who fathered a race of giants, and the cow Audhumla, who created the first god, Buri. Buri's son, Borr, fathered the gods Odin, Vili, and Ve, who together destroyed Ymir and from his body fashioned the heavens and the earth. From two trees the gods created the first man and woman—Ashr (Ask) and Embla. The universe was supported by the great ash tree Yggdrasill, whose roots and branches extended into the heavens, the earth, and the underworld. Near one of the roots of the tree flowed the fountain of Mimir, in whose sacred waters all the wisdom of the universe flowed. Near another root dwelled the Norns, who represented fate. (The concept of fate was one of the most important beliefs of Germanic religion; everything, even the gods, was subject to it.) In the tree's branches perched a sacred bird, who, with the god Heimdall, warned the gods when an attack from the giants was imminent.

Rites and Ceremonies

The temples of the gods were attended by priests who were responsible essentially for the reading of omens and other types of divination, for administering the propitiation of the gods, and for guarding the sacred groves and objects. Their duties were frequently performed by the political leader of a particular tribe. Festivals and religious ceremonies were held throughout the year, usually for celebration of the harvest or of victory in battle. At festivals, animal (or sometimes human) sacrifices and libations were offered to the gods, and the dead were commemorated. In Germanic religion the dead were believed to retain their faculties and to affect the fate of the living. Burial places were sacred, and sacrifices were made at them.

Bibliography

See P. D. Chantepie de la Saussaye, The Religion of the Teutons (1902); P. A. Munch and O. Magnus, Norse Mythology (1926, repr. 1970); H. R. E. Davidson, Scandinavian Mythology (1982) and Myths and Symbols in Pagan Europe (1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...been so different from the Germanic as to demand explanation by...the claim that the Christian religion touched every chord of sensibility...religious emotion that the austere Germanic creed had been unable to quench...by Christian, and Roman by Germanic. The point is that it does...
...CHAPTER XII THE WORSHIP OF THE DEAD Germanic religion in general--Cult and creed...patron-saint and the fylgja . RELIGION in general has two sides, the...dualism in a different fashion. Religion rests upon ethics and emotion...
...The Indo-European component in Germanic religion . Myth and law among the Indo...1970c. The position of Germanic among West-Indo-European languages...Prokosch E. 1939. A comparative Germanic grammar . Baltimore: Linguistic...
...the earlier ways than have other Germanic societies, and that is the justification...sudden invention based on non-Germanic literature. 1 Among those earlier...their writings preserved was the religion of their ancestors. Here the Eddic...
...Grammatical Treatise: The Earliest Germanic Phonology. An Edition, Translation...1923. Owen, Francis. The Germanic People . New York: Bookman...Petre, E.O.G. Myth and Religion of the North: The Religion of Ancient Scandinavia . London...
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...literature associated with a particular Germanic language. So, for example, Rudolf Simek covers Germanic religion and the conversion to Christianity...the runic alphabet). The particular Germanic languages covered are Gothic (Brian...
...hatred toward France, dress in "Germanic" style, and follow "German...secret student society, the "Germanic League of Blacks", similar...write poetry, romanticizing the Germanic, romantic religion, and the battles and heroes...
...Junges Deutschland " movement. The criticism of organized religion in Tannhauser also resembles the views of the proponents of...Mary A. Cicora (Bern: Peter Lang, 1992 ) in the series Germanic Studies in America. 1. Richard Wagner, Die Musikdramen...
...God: Studies in the Relation between Religion and Philosophy (New York: Harper and...advantages of this system for their religion. See, for instance, Robert L. Moore...Mircea Eliade and the History of Religions." Religion 19 ( 1989 ): 101-128. He was called...
...blosse Toleranz hinaus erweist sich Religions- und Gesinnungsfreiheit als fur das...nicht in Anschlag gebracht werden. Religion und Gesinnungen sind nicht delegierbar...von Glaubensartikeln (167) als eine Religion, deren Geschichtswahrheiten die Religion der Vernunft als die allen Menschen...
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...genocide. Theirs was a deeply pessimistic religion: they believed that the sun and the...In 1834 Heinrich Heines The History of Religion and Philosophy in Germany was published...Today the secret, or not-so-secret, religion of a majority of continental Europeans...
...synthesized a reactionary form of religion with elements of European millenarian...to respect and revere Hindu religion.... Or they may stay in...ardent championship of Indo-Germanic civilization are welcomed by...Indians, and an organization for religion and proselytization, as well...
...The problem with salad bowl religion. by Jon D. Levenson "I...need only browse in the "Religion" or "Spirituality" sections...something very like them among Germanic pagans, and the celebration...told, so are there no pure religions. Powerful intellectual currents...without its counterparts in religions other than Judaism. The...
...from the centering authority of the ancient Church." How bizarre. Of course, I know that many people brought up in the Germanic world, presented with a stark choice between a very Protestant (and latterly existentialist) Lutheranism and a traditional...
...analysis of Islam, a religion he regarded as a throwback...Islam, between the Germanic peoples and the Arabs...parody of revealed religion," while Allah is...than three Abrahamic religions, Rosenzweig saw only two religions arising from the self...distinguish Judeo-Christian religion from Islam. Contemporary...
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Lent Traditions Vary Greatly from Religion to Another. by Anna Johnson Deriving from a variety of Anglo-Saxon and Germanic words, Lent means spring and a time of new life and hope. For Christians around the world, this 40-day period beginning...
...celebrates its Constitution Day today. Norway has a population of around 4.5 million, most of whom are of Germanic stock. The predominant religion is Evangelical Lutheran, which is professed by almost 90 percent of the population. Education is free...
...celebrates its Constitution Day today. Norway has a population of around 4.5 million, most of whom are of Germanic stock. The predominant religion is Evangelical Lutheran, which is professed by almost 90 percent of the population. Education is free...
...Punic Wars between Rome and Carthage, early Germanic wars and the French wars of religion. More recent sets represent the Napoleonic...by chapters about the effect of geography, religion and politics on the design of the chessmen...
...Teskeys still live in the Rathkeale area. Although the Palatines initially preserved their Lutheran style religion, and their Germanic way of life, eventually many of them became Methodists. The Palatines who emigrated from Ireland to North...
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GERMANIC RELIGION pre-Christian...many centuries for the new religion to spread throughout the...Germany the spirit of the old religion and the heroic attributes...Germanic Pantheon Germanic religion, like most ancient religions, was polytheistic. In early...
TEUTONIC RELIGION see Germanic religion . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
NORSE RELIGION see Germanic religion . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...the name of that tribe the Germanic peoples are sometimes called Teutonic. See Germanic laws ; Germanic religion ; Germany . Bibliography See F. Owen, The Germanic People (1960); A. Schalk, The Germans (1971...
...of Germany are covered in the articles Germans ; Germanic laws ; Germanic religion ; Holy Roman Empire ; Austria ; and in the articles...they held the Agri Decumates, protected against Germanic inroads by a fortified line from Cologne to Regensburg...
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