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Nerthus:
Toward an Identification
William
P. Reaves
Written for Boudicca's Bard
The identity of
the goddess Nerthus, called Terra Mater, Mother Earth by Tacitus in Germania, has
been a topic of much scholarly debate. Thus I feel it would be of use to investigate
the identify of the Earth Mother in the Germanic literature, and see if we can find
any correlation between her and Tacitus' goddess Nerthus.
Throughout the poems
of the Elder Edda, the use of various names for a single character often meets the
reader. For example, the poem Rigsthula calls Heimdall, Righ. From Grimnismal, we
know that Odin has at least forty-nine names. The Younger Edda too tells us that
the gods may be polynymous and informs us that Freyja can be called Mardoll, Vanadis,
Horn, and Syr. This poetic usage, referred to as polynomy, is a characteristic feature
of the skaldic art. By comparing the epithets of known characters, we often can
glean much more information about the character than was previously known. Such
was the technique of the late Swedish scholar Viktor Rydberg in his two volume work,
Unders”kingar i Germanisk Mythologi, 1886, 1889. (Volume one of which was translated
into English as Teutonic Mythology, 1889.)
From the poems pertaining
to Thor in the Elder Edda, we know that he too has a number of epithets. The skalds
call him Hlorridi, Veor, and Odin's son, as well as frequently referring to him
as Jord's Son. Jord literally means Earth and thus for obvious reasons, she is conceived
of as Mother Earth (Terrae Mater). Besides that, we know little about this important
goddess. A comparison of the sources however, reveals a wealth of information about
her.
We can assume that Jord like
other characters spoken of in the myths is polynomous, and this assumption is immediately
confirmed in Harbardsljod 56 where Thor is called Fj”rgyn's son, and Voluspa 55
which calls Thor Hlodyn's son. Thus the goddess Jord is also named Fj”rgyn and Hlodyn;
the name Hlodyn is a feminine epithet meaning "Hearth," and may relate
to Frau Holde of the German tradition. Of Jord's family relations, Snorri Sturrelsson
in the Younger Edda informs us:
(Arthur Brodeur translation) "N”rfi or Narfi is the name of a giant that dwelt
in J”tunheim: he had a daughter named Night; she was swarthy and dark, as befitted
her race. She was given to a man named Naglfari; their son was Audr. Afterward she
was wedded to him that was called Annarr; J”rd (Earth) was their daughter; Last
of all Dayspring (Delling) had her, and he was of the race of the Aesir; their son
was Day."
As Jord is the granddaughter of a giant
named Narvi, she is usually thought of as a giantess, but we must remember that
even many of the highest gods have giant blood coursing through their veins. Of
Night's children, two are well-known, Jord and Day. Audr, also called Unnr (Udr),
however is not, and therefore we must look under this epithet for a personality
better known to us. Surely the brother of so famous personages as Earth and Day
cannot have been unknown. The name Audr means "rich," and its alternate
form Unnr means "wave." Thus Audr-Unnr would seem to be a god of commerce
and the seas. To the name Audr, we should compare the descriptive phrase "audigr
sem Njordr," as rich as Njord. Njord rules over the commerce of the seas and
coastal harbors, as opposed to Aegir and Ran who are the representatives of the
rougher waters of great western ocean. This comparison is not conclusive and nothing
definitive should be based upon it. I merely suggest the possibility that by Audr,
Njord may be meant.
Tacitus writing in the Germania has also
heard of an earth goddess among the Teutons. In chapter 2, Tacitus speaks of Tuisto,
"an earth-born god," who the Germans celebrate "in the traditional
songs that form their only record of the past." Chapter 27 confirms that this
was a general belief among the Germanic tribes informing us that the foregoing chapters
held "a general account" of the "origin and customs of the Germans
as a whole." Thus the belief in the earth-born god Tuisto, celebrated in the
traditional songs was widespread among all Germanic heathens. The name itself offers
us no clue as to the god's identity; It is derived from the root "Tiu,"
and simply means "god." However the description of Tuisto corresponds
exactly to the description of the most popular Germanic god, the earth-born Thor,
who is indeed celebrated in a number of Eddic lays, the songs which form the heathen
record of the past. Voluspa calls him "Hlodyn's celebrated son," a description
which corresponds exactly to Tacitus' statements regarding him. The "earth-born"
god Thor is said to be the most celebrated in songs throughout the Germanic territory.
As we know, the phrase "Jord's son" immediately identifies the subject
as Thor and in the Teutonic mythcycle, the stories and poems devoted to the adventures
of Thor are by far the most popular l. What Tacitus further relates about Tiusto
is best left examined elsewhere for brevity's sake, but also aptly describes the
best of the Aesir.
In chapter 40
of the Germania, Tactitus vividly details the cult of the goddess Nerthus, whom
he identifies as Terra Mater, Mother Earth. Grimm and Vigfusson both connect the
name Nerthus to a feminine form of Njord, Nirdu. The duel-gender form is not uncommon
in skaldic poetry in which we find such forms as Frey and Freya, Fj”rgynr and Fj”rgyn,
Audr and Auda. Thus in Nerthus, we find a feminine form of the masculine name Njord,
the god of commerce on the seas. According to Tactitus, the Longobardi tribe in
particular, as well as their neighbors by the sea "share a common worship of
Nerthus" and "believe that she takes part in human affairs."
Of Njord, Ynglingasaga 4 informs
us that when he lived among the Vans, Njord had his sister for his wife, as that
was their custom, but among the Aesir, it was forbidden to wed so close akin. Lokasenna
36 confirms this view, there Loki accuses Njord of begetting Frey by his own sister.
This sister is seemingly unknown, but based on etymology as well as the description
of her in Snorri's Edda, Nerthus-Jord is a likely candidate.
Nor have we exhausted
the sources in regard to Jord. An odd parallel found in Paul the Deacon's History
of the Lombards and Tacitus' account of the goddess Nerthus provides more clues
as to the identity of the Earth goddess, Jord.
In a much-quoted passage, Paulus Deaconus relates
a "silly story told by old men" in which Frigg the patron of the Vinnili
tribe, gained for them a victory, by fooling her husband. Previously, the enemies
of the Vinilli had prayed to Odin for favor. He answered that he would give the
victory to those he first saw on the horizon at dawn. With this knowledge, Frigg
told the Vinnili to rise before dawn and follow behind their womenfolk, who were
to comb their long hair over their faces in the shape of beards. Then, by turning
Odin's bed around as he slept, Frigg caused himto rise and, upon seeing the Vinnili
vanguard, ask "Who are these Longbeards?" Thereafter they were called
the Longobardians, The Lombards.
Tactitus knows Nerthus to be patron of the Longobardians, Paulus Deconus calls that
goddess Frigg (Frea). Thus in one place Nerthus is the patron of the Lombards, and
in another Frigg. Both are said to take part in human affairs. The obvious conclusion
here is that Frigg, Jord, and Nerthus are identical.
This conclusion would make
Frigg, Njord's sister, and by extension a Vana-goddess. By Njord she bore the children
Frey and Freyja, and by Odin the sons Thor, Balder, and Hodr. Thus she truly is
the Mother of the Gods. Tacitus confirms both of these statements. In Chapter 45
of Germania, he says (H. Mattingly Translation) "The Aestii, who have the same
customs and fashions as the Suebi, but a language more like the British"
...."worship the mother of the gods, and wear, as an emblem of this cult, the
device of a wild boar." The boar is intimately connected with the Van gods
Frey and Freya (owners of the boar Gullinbursti). The boar particularly is a creature
of the earth, as it roots about in the soil for food. Here, the boar is an emblem
of the cult of "the mother of the gods."
Archeological evidence supports the fact that such a cult existed.
Furthermore, our sources attribute a peculiar trait to Frigg, as well as the Vanir.
Lokasenna 29 lets Freya say "Frigg knows Urd's law concerning all living things,
though she speak not of it." In Lokasenna 25, Frigg herself speaks of "Urd's
law." Odin does not possess the power of foresight, nor does Frigg confide
in him. In Vegtamskvida, Odin does not learn details of Balder's death beforehand
from his wife, but from a Vala in Hel (Vegtamskvida). In Thrymskvida 16, Heimdall
is said to "foresee as do all the Vanir," and before the Ragnarok, Voluspa
says that Njord will return to "wise Vans" (Vafthrudnirsmal 39). It should
be added that the Vans also conquered the Asas through "vigspa" (Voluspa)
during the Van-As conflict. The power of prediction is characteristic to the Vanir.
Frigg possesses this knowledge. If she were Jord, the probable sister of the Vanir
god Njord, this would make perfect sense.
The evidence is not conclusive.
However within the framework of Viktor Rydberg's reconstruction of the Teutonic
mythic epic, Frigg's role as the Earth Mother becomes apparent. This identification
adds much to the symbolic interpretation of the myths, which was always at the forefront
of the skald's mind; When Harbard tells Thor that his "mother must be dead,"
Thor's response is that Harbard now says something that to "every man"
is the worst thought. The obvious interpretation is here that everyone would be
loathe to hear that their mother died, but when we remember the fact that Thor's
mother is Jord, the Earth. The idea that Earth is dead is indeed the worst thought
that could be realized by "every man," all of mankind. Interestingly,
Harbard adds that Thor "sees the past clearly," most probably this is
a witty reference to Frigg's knowledge of "Urd's law" and Thor's lack
of said ability.
In Harbardsljod 56, Thor is called Fj”rgyn's son, thus the feminine name Fj”rgyn
is a byname of Jord, Thor's mother. In Lokasenna 26, Frigg is called a daughter
of Fj”rgynnr, a masculine name. Here we have a masculine and a feminine name based
on the same root, like Freyr and Freyja, and Njord and Nerthus. This seems to be
common among the Vanir. <<<Note that Rydberg, who identifies Jord and Frigg,
makes a distinction between the feminine form, Fj”rgyn, found as the name of Thor's
mother in Harbardsljod 56, and the masculine form, Fj”rgynn, found as the name of
Frigg's father in Lokasenna 26. The Neckel-Kuhn text also distinguishes between
these name forms in the name index of his work at the back of the Eddic poems, and
Jakob Grimm made the same distinction.>>>
Thus in the Nordic mythology, Fj”rgynnr is the father-in-law to the storm- and wind-god
Odin, and grandfather to the thundering Thor. This shows a high degree of probability,
that among the Germans, he also stood in the nearest connection with the natural
phenomena of storms and thunder. His name is also related to the Slavic Perkun,
the thunder god. The goddess Jord bears his name in feminine form, Fj”rgyn. Whereas
Frigg now represents, not the land and the earth as such, but the "oak-green"
(eikigroenu), harvest-bearing, life-sustaining earth, Mother Earth (Terra Mater,
Tacitus) and then, as she in this character is a conception of the rain-giver and
receives her power from him, so these kinship relationships increase the probability
that Fj”rgynn like the Indian Paraganya was the master of the rainstorm. Thereby
light is spread over an insinuation occurring in Lokasenna 26. Loki, who burdens
the gods and goddesses with insults, says there: "Shut up Frigg! Thou art Fj”rgynn's
daughter" and adds that she has always been wanton. It is apparent that the
words "Thou art Fj”rgynn's daughter," cannot in this association be a
mere genealogical notice, but rather, must imply an insult, and also an allusion
to a relationship that is intended to disparage her.
Nor should this be surprising. In the poem Lokasenna, Frigg, Freya, and Njord appear
as a group amid charges of incest. Freyja is said to have slept with all of the
Aesir and Elves present including her own brother Freyr, and Njord is said to have
begot his son Freyr on his own sister. Lokasenna 36 lets Loki say regarding Frey
"Stop there Njord, keep within measure, I can hold the secret no longer! With
thy sister thou begat that son!" Frigg is also accused of sleeping with her
husband Odin' brothers Vili and Ve, which was considered incest in ancient times.
Among the Vanir, this kind of relationship was acceptable, among the Aesir it was
not. Notice too how in the poem Lokasenna, Frigg, Freyja, and Njord respond to Loki
as a group defending one another, Loki even includes Frey by mentioning him. This
strengthens the sense of a family unit between them. The poets are subtle, but they
let us know of this connection between Frigg and Njord.
This identification even works well as Nature symbolism, which is one level of the
symbolic meaning of the myths. We know Njord is a Van (Vafthrudnirsmal 39).
He is sibling to the Earth and the Day. Thus Earth and Sea are sister and brother.
We know Njord to be the father of Frey and Freya (Gylf. 24). Thus Njord
and Jord, the rich Sea and the Earth, produced Frey and Freya, Fertility. Snorri
also lends some support for this. When Hermod visits the dead Balder in the underworld,
he returns with gifts. Balder's wife Nanna sends a her a veil to Frigg as a gift.
Balder gives him the ring Draupnir, which produces more rings on a regular basis.
The ring is a symbol of fertility, as may be the veil. A veil is meant to cover
the goddess, even as greenery covers the ground.After the death of her "sun,"
Frigg too begins to whither & die, but Nanna symbolically sends back a veil
(of flowers and vegetation) from the lower world to again beautify her. The lower
world contains the seeds that beautify the Earth each spring. It is a fitting gift
for the Earth Mother.
Voluspa lends more support to the conclusion that the heathen skalds knew of this
identity between Frigg and Jord. In Voluspa 52, which recounts the deaths of Odin
and Frey during Ragnarok, the strophe concludes with the words "Frigg's beloved
shall fall" (in closest proximity to the death of Frey "Beli's bright
slayer"). If Frigg indeed is Jord, and the mother of Frey, this would
add more weight to Voluspa, strophe 52, which describes the struggles of Frey with
Surt and Odin with the Fenris Wolf. We assume her beloved is Odin, however we know
she had great love for her children, as given in the example of Balder's death.
Thus by "Frigg's beloved" the poet meant both Freyr and Odin. It is another
example of the clever and economical use of language common in Old Norse poetry.
Note too that before his death in Voluspa 55, Thor's mother is invoked twice. She
is called Hlodyn and Jord, in the same breath. Immediately thereafter, the earth
is said to sink into the sea. If Frigg is the fertile Earth, the mother of
the gods, Thor, Balder, Hodr, Frey, and Freya, then the Voluspa poet has named her
five times in the verses preceding verses as Odin's wife, Freyr's mother, and Thor's
mother before "earth sinks into the sea."
And finally strophe 77 of Solarljod seems to clinch the matter. It reads:
77. Odin's wife rows in earth's ship, eager after pleasures, her sails are reefed
late, which on the ropes of desire are hung.
Odin's wife or "Oçin's kv n," must refer to Frigg, as "kv n"
designates ones legal wife, and the word also suggests "queen." We might
think of Jord, Thor's mother, but the designation best designates Frigg. And while
Loki called her wanton, and spoke openly of her infidelity, this verse seems to
indicate she was a bit "frisky" as well.
Not surprisingly, "Odin's wife" is again associated with Njord, Freyr,
and Freyja. In 78, we have a reference to a "hart's horn" which reminds
me at once of the comment that "Frey slew Beli with a hart's horn" which
I think is in the Younger Edda. Vigdvalin is unknown, but Dvalin is one of four
dwarves who create Brisingsamen for Freyja. In 79, we are told of 9 daughters of
Njord.
78. Son (Heir)! I thy father and Solkatla's sons alone have obtained for thee that
horn of hart, which from the grave-mound bore the wise Vigdvalin.
79. Here are runes which Njord's nine daughters have engraven; Radvor the eldest,
and Kreppor the youngest, and their seven sisters.
While the Eddas nowhere positively identify Frigg with the goddess Jord, the above
evidence suggests a strong possibility that the ancient Germanic tribes knew of
this relationship and spoke of a single goddess named Frigg, Jord, Frea, Fj”rgyn,
Hlodyn, Hlin, and Nerthus. The identity of these epithets of Frigg was first
pointed out to me by Viktor Rydberg, through the use of Tactitus and the Longobardian
saga, (thereby showing that Rydberg did not adhere blindly to the poems of the Elder
Edda, but always incorporated the statements of related documents to help support
and develop his conclusions). Although the initial identification was Rydberg's,
I want to express that through my own research I was able to confirm this identity,
as seen in the argument above.
In conclusion, I would like to state that if Frigg is the earth goddess, that would
make her the matriarch of the gods. She would then be the mother of the highest
gods. Kind of an "all-mother" if you will. Just think:
Frigg and Njord and their children Frey and Freyja Frigg and Odin and their children
Thor, Balder, and Hodr.
It would also mean that both of her husbands, Njord and Odin, are present in Asgard
and would explain both the prominence of the earth mother image in the archeological
record, as well as the high status afforded to women in the Germanic culture.
Wassail~William Reaves
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