Santa Odin and the Night of the Mothers
By Sarah Dahl
The Viking pagan religion
goes back at least 1,000 years; and it shares roots with the Christian
religion. The Germanic and the Anglo-Saxon as well as the Norse traditions all
turned into several different customs over time only.
This merging of religions
was done gently and on purpose by the Norwegian King Hákon the Good. He
introduced Christian traditions by blending them with the old pagan rituals,
instead of forcing Christianity onto the Vikings. And it is likely that during
this transition the figure of Odin morphed into a long-bearded man called Santa
Claus (the German Weihnachtsmann). He seems to be a later twin of the Allfather
Odin, disguised by a silly red hat. Odin means “Jólnir”, “the Yule One” – and
Yule was the Viking Christmas celebration. The ancient Scandinavian festivities
were called Jól in Iceland; Jul in Norway, Sweden, and Denmark; and Yule in
some English-speaking societies.
Since the early 10th
century, the Jólablót is held on December 25, and Hákon made it a law that
“everyone was to have ale for the celebration with a measure of grain, or else
pay fines, and had to keep the holiday while the ale lasted” – nice, eh?
This holiday began at
winter solstice and lasted until the Yule sacrifices, around the 12th
of January, so three whole weeks! Personally, I’m exhausted after three days of
Christmas, but that’s just me, ahem.
In the last three days that
led up to the sacrifices there was drinking, feasting, games and song, topped
off by sacrifices to the gods and other powers of winter. Sacrifices were
vital. Winter solstice was the shortest day and marked the darkest and most
dangerous point of the year: would the sun return, and with it, life? Or would
the darkness win and bring death and despair?
During these three weeks,
the Vikings must have anxiously waited for proof that the days indeed would
again become longer and brighter – their lives depended on it. A new cycle of
life could only start if the sun was victorious and rebirthed itself from the
dark belly of the wolf (death) that had swallowed her.
So the Yule weeks were not
at all mindless drinking and frolicking; they were a fragile, strict time with
many rituals, including sacrifices.
From a Viking perspective,
winter was a fierce time of death and cold, in which darkness ruled and the
boundaries between the world of the living and the dead blurred. It’s not by
accident that Vikings counted their age in “winters” survived. It was the time
when the souls of the dead and other creatures like elves and trolls roamed the
world of the living, with unclear intentions. It was of vital importance to
give offerings by gifting food and drink, to placate the powers that were
potentially threatening and dangerous.
Hopefully, the new year
started another cycle of rejuvenation, nourishment, and renewed strength. So in
this sense, Yule was the time when the Vikings celebrated the powers who gave
just that: life. And who gave life and ensured new cycles?
Right, the mothers (beside
other female deities).
Yule was the time of
worshipping the ancestral mothers and other female powers of different realms.
Because, just like the sun, females were life-givers, through birth and
midwifery, similar to the power of the sun. For the Vikings, the first night of
celebrations was “Mothers’ Night”: the goddess Frigga and the dísir (female
ancestral spirits) were honoured. Only females could ensure the rebirth of the
world from the dark grip of winter.
But of course women helped
nourishment in a very basic, practical sense, too. The feasting was only
possible through countless women providing food and drink they had made days or
weeks in advance. In many ways, without women – or rather: mothers! –
starvation and death was just around the corner.
So even the Anglo-Saxon
heathens celebrated “The Night of the Mothers”: New Year in the 7th
century corresponds with Yule. And they were not the only ones to worship
women: the continental Germanic Mother Cult did the same.
Christianity then very much
diminished the female role (of the Sun goddess, Sól, the Mothers, and
goddesses), and turned the once central importance of women, living and dead,
into a mere side note.
So with offerings and gatherings
the days of Yule slowly moved towards the hopefully successful rebirth of the
sun around the 12th of January. Farmers from near and far came with
food in abundance. All took part in the drinking of ale and the killing and
serving of animals. Surely a sacrificial beaker was carried around the fires.
The host, a chieftain, would bless the meat and toasts would be made. In King
Hákon’s time those were: 1. to Odin for victory and power, 2. to the gods
Njördr and Freyr for good harvests and peace, 3. to the King, and lastly to the
dead kinsfolk. These were all especially serious and meaningful oaths, sworn to
the cup or horn while drinking and feasting at the Yule banquet with friends,
family, and the wider community from near and far. In the hope there would be a
new sun, and new life.
Do you suddenly see where
our New Year’s Resolutions stem from?
They’re just a bloody
Viking Yule Oath ;-)
So
raise your horns: Skål to Odin, the sun, and all mothers!
Sources:
freya.theladyofthelabyrinth.com
(excellent source for all things Viking!)
Valkyria.com (a
beautiful Norse lady’s blog about living the Viking life and mythology)
Theasatrucommunity.org
wikipedia: Yule (all
accessed on 4th Dec. 2017)
The wait is finally over...
Now available in paperback!
Tales of Freya
By Sarah Dahl
A collection of sensual short stories set in the Viking Age
A collection of sensual short stories set in the Viking Age
In a world of crackling fires and rough landscapes, long winters and bloody raids, the immediacy of life and death ignites undeniable passions. Warriors and monks, healers and housewives – all follow the call of their hearts and bodies to indulge in pleasures that may forever change their lives.
In this collection of adult bedtime stories, Sarah
Dahl pulls back the curtain of history to depict the erotic lives of Viking men
and women. Amid the stark landscapes of fjords, forests and snowcapped mountain
peaks, her characters search for love and passion. Dahl authentically
illuminates the sensual side of a world of battle and plunder in an alluring
collection perfect for every lover of gritty Viking romance.
Sarah
Dahl
Sarah Dahl lives on the
edge of the rural German Eifel and writes historical fiction primarily set in
the Viking age. She also works as an editor, translates, and coaches new
writers in German and English. She is interested in everyday life in bygone
centuries and the human stories that may have occurred behind the hard,
historical facts.
Connect with Sarah: Website/Blog • Books • Mailing List • Facebook • Twitter • Goodreads
Tales of Freya –
sensual short stories by Sarah Dahl
Publication date: Dec 14,
2018
A collection of seven
sensual short stories
Genre: Historical fiction,
sensual romance
Excellent post, thank you and have a great celebration
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Judith! :-) Happy week to you.
DeleteHappy Odinsmas! :-)
ReplyDeleteThanks and happy feasting to you too ;-)
DeleteGreat insights into those long winter nights.
ReplyDeleteThanks. Exactly that is the fascination! :-) Happy week to you.
DeleteSuch a wonderful post, Sarah!
ReplyDelete