The Influence of Norse / Germanic Deities

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The Influence of Norse / Germanic Deities Days of the Week

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The Influence of Norse / Germanic Deities. Days of the Week. Days of the Week. Have you ever wondered where our seven day week comes from? Is it just coincidence that four weeks coincides with the phases of the moon? Is it just coincidence that 52 weeks equals a year?. Days of the Week. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Influence of Norse / Germanic Deities

Page 1: The Influence of  Norse / Germanic Deities

The Influence of Norse / Germanic Deities

Days of the Week

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Days of the Week

Have you ever wondered where our seven day week comes from?

• Is it just coincidence that four weeks coincides with the phases of the moon?

• Is it just coincidence that 52 weeks equals a year?

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Days of the WeekOur days of the week were originally Latin (Roman) in origin. The Romans began using a 7 day week, with Sunday being the first day, between the 1st and 3rd centuries A.D. • 7 days because there were 7 “luminaries” in the sky – Sun,

Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, and Saturn.• These were the 5 “wanderers”, or planets, that could be seen

with the naked eye, and the Sun and the Moon, which the ancients believed ordered the cosmos.

• Interestingly, Jews used a 7 day week more than a thousand years before the Romans, based on their holy scripture in which God created all that there is in 6 days and rested on the 7th.

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Days of the WeekThe Roman days of the week: • Monday - dies Lūnae [day of the Moon] (lunar, lunatic) • Tuesday – dies Martis [day of Mars] (martial) in Greek, Ares God of War • Wednesday – dies Mercuriī [day of Mercury] (mercurial temper) in Greek,

Hermes Messenger of the Gods • Thursday – dies Jovis [day of Jupiter] in Greek, Zeus the Sky God and King

of the Gods • Friday – dies Veneris [day of Venus] in Greek, Aphrodite Goddess of Love • Saturday - dies Saturnī [day of Saturn] in Greek, Kronus or Cronus, the

Titan, father of Zeus

(Note how similar most of the Latin days are to modern Romance languages, ie. Lunes, Martes, Miercoles, Jueves, Viernes.)

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Days of the WeekSometime after the fall of the Roman Empire, and the rise of the Germanic tribes of Europe, Germanic/Norse deities replaced some of the Roman gods.

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Sunday• From the Old English Sunnandæg meaning

“Sun’s day”. • Germanic/Norse sun deity is the goddess Sol

or Sunna. • English preserved the original pagan/sun

association, but in most European languages and all the Romance languages, Sunday was called the Lord’s Day, such as in Spanish today, Domingo.

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Monday• From the Old English Mōnandæg meaning

“Moon’s day”. • Germanic/Norse moon deity is the god Mani,

brother of Sol (the Sun goddess).

The Dire Wolves Hati and Skol pursuing Sol and Mani

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Tuesday• From the Old English Tīwesdæg meaning “Tiw’s

Day” or “Tyr’s Day”, in honor of the Norse god Tyr, a one-handed god associated with justice, oaths, and warriors.

• Tyr was once the chieftain of the Norse gods, the Aesir, but stepped aside for Odin.

• The Romans believed Tyr was a representation of their god, Mars. However, although a god of warriors, he is very different from the brutal Roman god of war.

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Tuesday

Tyr’s Day• god of Oaths,

Justice, Warriors

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Wednesday• From the Old English Wōdnesdæg meaning

“Wodan’s Day” (Germanic) or “Odin’s Day” (in Norse).

• Wodan/Odin was the chief of the Germanic/Norse gods, called the All Father by the other gods.

• To the Germanic tribes, mid-week, or mittwoch as they called it, was an important time, the pivotal day of the week, and thus, associated with their most powerful god.

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Wodan’s Day• Wodan/Odin rode on a flying, eight

legged horse, often accompanied by two fierce wolves.

• He was attended by Valkyrie, warrior maidens who brought the souls of brave Norsemen who fell in battle to his golden mead hall – Valhalla.

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Wodan’s Day• Wodan/Odin was thought to wander

the world dressed as an old beggar in a floppy hat with a staff, accompanied only by his two ravens, Thought and Memory.

• The birds scoured the earth for him, gathering knowledge.

• Odin was the chieftain of the gods.

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Thursday• From the Old English dūnresdæg , meaning

“Donar’s day” or “Thor’s Day”. • (Old High German for Thor is Donar. The modern

German word for “thunder” is still Donner.) • Thor was the Germanic/Norse god of thunder

and a sky God like Jupiter who gave his name to dies Jovis - Thursday.

• Thor was, in Germanic/Norse mythology, the son of Odin.

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Thor’s Day• Thor / Donar was the most popular

of the Norse gods, especially with soldiers.

• Legends depict him as a brave, adventurous thunder god, the enemy of evil and the protector of mankind.

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Thor’s Day• Thor rode through the sky on a

chariot pulled by enchanted goats.• Only he could lift his mighty

hammer, Mjolnir, with which he could split mountains as well as the skulls of giants.

• Giant oak trees were sacred to his followers and he commanded the storms.

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Friday• From the Old English Frīgedæg, meaning the

day of the Anglo-Saxon goddess Fríge or Frigg. • The Norse name for the planet Venus was

Friggjarstjarna, 'Frigg's star'. • Frige/Frigg was the Germanic/Norse goddess

of love, beauty and fertility and is often depicted as the spouse of Odin.

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Frigg’s Day• Frigg is the wife of Odin and Queen of Asgard, the realm of the Aesir. • She was the foremost of the Norse goddesses.• Goddess of marriage and fertililty. • It was said Frigg had the power of prophecy yet she did not reveal her prophetic

knowledge.

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Saturday• The only day of the week to retain its Roman origin.• Named after the Roman Titan Saturn (associated with the

Greek Titan Cronus, father of Zeus and many Olympians.)• Its original Anglo-Saxon rendering was Sæturnesdæg,

meaning “day of Saturn”. • In Scandinavian, this day has no reference to Norse or

Latin gods. It literally means “washing-day”, which explains why modern English has retained the old usage.

• In most Romance languages, Saturday means Day of the Sabbath, such as in Spanish, sabado and Italian sabato, derived from Latin Sabbata dies.

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The Influence of Norse / Germanic Deities

Days of the Week