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Gods & Goddesses
Frey

© Thorskegga Thorn
Image used with Permission
Frey

God of Sunlight


Pantheon: Norse
Element: Fire
Sphere of Influence: Sun and Agriculture
Preferred colors: Green, Orange
Associated symbol: Sword
Best day to work with: Sunday
Best time to work with: Noon
Strongest around Lughnasadh
Associated Planet: Sun
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Frey is the god of the harvest, the planting, of all growing and cultivating. Frey teaches respect for the land.

Additional Information on Frey from Wikipedia

Information is unedited and unchecked

Freyr is a very important god in Old Norse religion; not so much in Norse mythology as one might suppose, for there he actually appears in only one story, but very much in the cult.

==Eddic traditions==
Freyr is a member of the Vanir, the male fertility god and god of love. He is normally the brother to Freya and son to Njord but in . Along with Odin and Thor he was one of the most popular gods, and received many offerings - according to Adam of Bremen, these three gods had their images in the temple of Upsala. Freyrs servant, Beyla, was the goddess of bees and/or dairy. He also had a boar named Slídhrugtanni or Gullinborsti, and a ship named Skidbladnir (Skídhbladhnir), built by Dvalin, a Norse dwarves|dwarf.

Snorri Sturluson describes him as being handsome, powerful, merciful and kind, and calls him "God of the World" (veraldar góð). Freyr has control of the weather, both rain and sunshine, thus the fertility of the earth. Prayers were also offered to Freyr for a good future, peace and prosperity.

As a fertility god, Freyr was often depicted with a prominent sexual organ; his cult included songs and actions which shocked contemporary and later Christians, who condemned them as indecent, which they of course were not to the participants in the cult themselves.

After the war between Aesir and Vanir, Freyr together with his father and sister were sent to the former as peace hostages (and these three are actually the only Vanir, in the strict sense of the word, known by name).

Freyr lived in Álfheim, "Elf-home", a name which indicates a possible connection between Vanir and Elves, possibly with his wife, the giantess Gerd (Gerð)—if she is his wife; the myths are not quite clear whether their union was a lasting marriage or just a temporary meeting.

He saw her first when he sat on Odins throne, Hlidskjálf. He looked north, saw Gerd and fell so much in love that he was no longer able to speak or eat or sleep. Freyrs henchman, Skírnir, went to Jotunheim where Gerd lived and brought her to Freyr. As a reward, Skirnir was given Freyrs sword which fought by itself.

That would not have been too bad, since Skirnir was after all on the right side; but shortly afterwards, the sword had to be given to the giants as payment for Freyrs privilege of meeting Gerd (and even then only after Skirnir had menaced Gerd with the most extreme suffering both in this life and the next, if she didnt agree). As a consequence, Freyr has no sword with which to fight, and he will die at Ragnarok (at the hands of Surt), possibly killed with his own sword, when the world ends. This courtship is dealt with extensively in the poem Skirnismal|Skírnismál.

==Other traditions==
The List of Swedish monarchs|Swedish kings counted Freyr as one of their ancestors. In Iceland, Freyr was second only to Thor in popularity. Some last vestiges of the offerings to Freyr still survive on the Sweden|Swedish Christmas table in the form of the Christmas Ham, so great was his importance.

A strophe of the Anglo Saxon Rune Poem (circa 1100) records that:

:Ing was first among the East Danes seen by men

and this may refer to the origins of the worship of Ingui in the tribal areas that Gaius Cornelius Tacitus|Tacitus mentions in Germania as being populated by the Inguieonnic tribes. A later Danish chronicler lists Ingui was one of three brothers that the Danish tribes descended from. The strophe also states that "then he (Ingui) went back over the waves, his wagon behind him" which could connect Ingui to earlier conceptions of the wagon processions of Nerthus, and the later Scandinavian conceptions of Frey|Freys wagon journeys. Ingui is mentioned also in some later Anglo-Saxon literature under varying forms of his name, such as "For what doth Ingeld have to do with Christ", and the variants used in Beowulf to designate the kings as leader of the friends of Ing. The compound Ingui-Frea (OE) and Yngvi-Freyr (ON) likely refer to the connection between the God and the cult of sacral kings on the continent and in England in the pagan period, as Frea and Frey are titles meaning Lord.

The Swedish royal dynasty was known as the Ynglings from their descent from Yngvi-Freyr. This is supported by Gaius Cornelius Tacitus|Tacitus, who wrote in his "Germania" about the Germans: "In their ancient songs, their only way of remembering or recording the past they celebrate an earth-born god Tuisco, and his son Mannus, as the origin of their race, as their founders. To Mannus they assign three sons, from whose names, they say, the coast tribes are called Ingaevones; those of the interior, Herminones; all the rest, Istaevones." It may be interesting to note that there is a clearly related prename, "Ingo", which is quite common in Germany even today. "Ingó" and "Inga" are also very common names in Iceland.

Traditions related to Freyr may also appear connected with the legendary Danish king Fródi (which can mean "peaceful" and "free", both of which have application to Freyr). King Fródi is especially treated in Book Five of Saxo Grammaticus Gesta Danorum and in the Ynglinga saga.

==Veraldur==
Dumézil (1973, Appendix I) cites a Faroes|Faroese ballad recorded in 1840 about Odin and his son Veraldur. It is believed that this Veraldur is also Frey, as per Snorris statement that Frey was veraldar góð as mentioned above.

In this ballad Veraldur, Odins son, sets of to Zealand to seek the kings daughter in marriage despite Odins warnings. The king of Zealand mislikes Veraldur and tricks him into falling into a brewing vat in a "hall of stone" where Veraldur drowns. When Odin hears the news, he decides to die and go to Asgard where his followers will be also be welcomed after death.

The tale is similar to that of the death of Fjölnir son of Frey who accidently fell into a vat of mead and drowned while paying a friendly visit to Fridfódi the ruler of Zealand. This is told in the Ynglinga saga. Saxo Grammaticus also relates (Gesta Danorum, Book 1) how King Hunding of Sweden believed a rumor that King Hadding of Denmark had died and held his obsequies with ceremony, including an enormous vat of ale. Hunding himself served the ale, but accidently stumbled and fell into the vat, choked, and drowned. When word of this came to King Hadding of this unfortunate death, King Hadding publicly hanged himself.

==Possible Later Survivals==
According to Pamela Berger (pp. 81–84), some of Freyrs cultic practices survived under the guise of saints such as Saint Blaise, who was a patron saint of plowmen, seeding time, fertility, and fecundity, Saint Leonard in Germany, who was the patron of freeing prisoners and of farm animals, and Saint Guignole and Saint Foutin, who were openly phallic saints and even had wooden phalluses attached to their statues, which people would rub to increase their fertility. For some saints, a cart or wagon was carried around the districts with a representative of the saint riding therein, to bless the land with fertility, and these processions were accompanied by a bacchanalic revelry, just as carts with Freyrs image once were.

==Other Spellings==
* Common Danish, Swedish and Norwegian form: Frej, Frö or Frøy, sometimes Fröj
* Frequent alternate English form: Frey

==Bibliography and external links==
For general sources see Norse Mythology.
* Berger, Pamela (1985). The Goddess Obscured: Transformation of the Grain Protectress from Goddess to Saint Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 0807067237.
* Dumézil, Georges (1973). From Myth to Fiction: The Saga of Hadingus. Trans. Derek Coltman. Chicago: U. of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226169723.
* http://www.drengskap.com/gimle/modules/articles/article.php?id=45 Gimle: Hedniska ballader: Balladen om Oden och Veraldur (Frö) (Text of the ballad of Veraldur).
 
Mythological king of Sweden | prev= Njord | next=Fjolner
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