NERTHUS Godess of the VANIR
220-250
Born: Noatun, Sweden
Died: Noatun, Sweden
<p>In <font color="#0645ad">Germanic paganism</font>, <strong>Nerthus</strong> is a <font color="#0645ad">goddess</font> associated with <font color="#0645ad">fertility</font>. <strong>Nerthus</strong> is attested by <font color="#0645ad">Tacitus</font>, a <font color="#0645ad">first century AD</font> Roman historian, in his work entitled <em><font color="#0645ad">Germania</font></em>. Various theories exist regarding the goddess and her potential later traces amongst the <font color="#0645ad">Germanic tribes</font>. The <font color="#0645ad">minor planet</font> <font color="#0645ad">601 Nerthus</font> is named after <strong>Nerthus</strong>.</p><span>Etymology</span><p><strong>Nerthus</strong> often is identified with the <font color="#0b0080">Vanir</font> god <font color="#0b0080"><strong>Njörðr</strong></font> who is attested in various thirteenth century <font color="#0645ad">Old Norse</font> works and in numerous <font color="#0645ad">Scandinavian</font> <font color="#0645ad">place names</font>. The connection between the two is due to the linguistic relationship between <em><strong>Njörðr</strong></em> and the <font color="#0645ad">reconstructed</font> <font color="#0645ad">Proto-Germanic</font> <em>*Nerþuz</em>,<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>1<span>]</span></font></sup> "<strong>Nerthus</strong>" being the feminine, <font color="#0645ad">Latinized</font> form of what <em><font color="#0b0080"><strong>Njörðr</strong></font></em> would have looked like around 100 CE.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>2<span>]</span></font></sup> This has led to theories about the relation of the two, including that <strong>Njörðr</strong> may have once been a hermaphroditic deity or, generally considered more likely, that the name may indicate an otherwise unattested divine brother and sister pair such as the Vanir deities <font color="#0645ad">Freyja</font> and <font color="#0b0080">Freyr</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>1<span>]</span></font></sup> Connections have been proposed between the unnamed mother of Freyja and Freyr and the sister of <strong>Njörðr</strong> mentioned in <em>Lokasenna</em> and Nerthus.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>3<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span><em>Germania</em></span><p>In Tacitus's first century work <em>Germania</em>, he records a processional ritual devoted to this goddess enacted by the northern Germanic tribes:</p><blockquote><p>After the <font color="#0645ad">Langobardi</font> come the <font color="#0645ad">Reudigni</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Auiones</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Angli</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Varni</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Eudoses</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Suarines</font> and <font color="#0645ad">Nuithones</font>, all well guarded by rivers and forests.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>4<span>]</span></font></sup> There is nothing remarkable about any of these tribes unless it be the common worship of<strong> Nerthus</strong>, that is Earth Mother. They believe she is interested in men's affairs and drives among them.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>5<span>]</span></font></sup></p></blockquote><blockquote><p>On an island in the ocean sea there is a <font color="#0645ad">sacred grove</font> wherein waits a <font color="#ba0000">holy wagon</font> covered by a <font color="#0645ad">drape</font>. One priest only is allowed to touch it. He can feel the presence of the goddess when she is there in her sanctuary and accompanies her with great reverence as she is pulled along by <font color="#0645ad">kine</font>.</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>It is a time of festive holiday making in whatever place she decides to honour with her advent and stay. No one goes to war, no one takes up arms, in fact every weapon is put away, only at that time are peace and quiet known and prized until the goddess, having had enough of peoples company, is at last restored by the same priest to her temple. After which the wagon and the drape, and if you like to believe me, the deity herself is bathed in a mysterious pool.</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>The rite is performed by slaves who, as soon as it is done, are drowned in the lake. In this way mystery begets dread and a pious ignorance concerning what that sight may be which only those who are about to die are allowed to see. <em>--</em><font color="#0645ad">Germania</font>, ch. 40.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>6<span>]</span></font></sup></p></blockquote><span>General Theories</span><p>A number of theories have been proposed regarding the figure of <strong>Nerthus</strong>, including the location of the events described, relations to other known deities and her role amongst the Germanic tribes. Edgar Polomé argued that<strong> <em>Njörðr</em></strong> and <strong><em>Nerthus</em> </strong>come from different roots, adding that "<strong>Nerthus</strong> and <strong>Njörðr</strong> are two separate divine entities, whatever similarity their names show."<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>7<span>]</span></font></sup> <font color="#0645ad">Lotte Motz</font> proposed that the Germanic goddess described by Tacitus may not have been called <strong>Nerthus</strong> at all, stating her opinion that Grimm selected the name <strong>Nerthus</strong> from among the manuscript readings precisely because it bore an etymological resemblance to <em><strong>Njörðr</strong></em>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>8<span>]</span></font></sup> <font color="#0645ad">John Grigsby</font> (2005) theorizes that the overthrowing of the Vanir religion by that of the <font color="#0b0080">Æsir</font> is remembered in the Old English poem <em><font color="#0645ad">Beowulf</font></em>, that <font color="#0645ad">Grendel's mother</font> is derived from the lake-dwelling <strong>Nerthus</strong>, and that Beowulf's victory over her is symbolic of the ending of the <font color="#0b0080">Vanir</font> cult in Denmark by the <font color="#0b0080">Odin</font>-worshiping Danes.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>9<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Later traces</span><p>It has been theorized that evidence of the veneration of a <font color="#0645ad">mother goddess</font>, representing the earth, survived among the <font color="#0645ad">Angles</font> (Tacitus' <em>Anglii</em>) into Christian times as evidenced in the partially-Christianized <font color="#0645ad">pagan Anglo-Saxon</font> <em><font color="#0645ad">Æcerbot</font></em> ritual.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>10<span>]</span></font></sup> The earliest history of the Longobardi states that this tribe revered Odin's wife, Frea, suggesting her role as an <font color="#0645ad">earth mother</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>11<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Location</span><p>A number of scholars have proposed a potential location of Tacitus' account of <strong>Nerthus</strong> as on the island of <font color="#0645ad">Zealand</font> in <font color="#0645ad">Denmark</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>12<span>]</span></font></sup><sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>13<span>]</span></font></sup> Reasoning behind this notion is the linking the name <strong>Nerthus</strong> with the medieval place name Niartharum (now called Naerum) located on Zealand. Further justification is given that <font color="#0645ad">Lejre</font>, the seat of the ancient kings of Denmark, also is located on Zealand. Nerthus is then commonly compared to Gefjun who is said to have plowed the island of Zealand from Sweden in Gylfaginning.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>14<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Identity</span><p>Jacob Grimm (1835) first identified Nerthus as the Germanic earth-mother who appeared under such names as <font color="#0645ad">Erda</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Erce</font>, <font color="#ba0000">Fru Gaue</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Fjörgyn</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Frau Holda</font> and <font color="#ba0000">Hluodana</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>15<span>]</span></font></sup></p><p><strong>Nerthus</strong> typically is identified as a Vanir goddess. Her wagon tour has been likened to several archeological wagon finds and legends of deities parading in wagons. Terry Gunnell and many others have noted various archaeological finds of ritual wagons in Denmark dating from 200 AD and the <font color="#0645ad">Bronze Age</font>. Such a ceremonial wagon, incapable of making turns, was discovered in the Oseberg ship find. Two of the most famous literary examples occur in the Icelandic family sagas. The <font color="#0b0080">Vanir</font> god <font color="#0b0080"><strong>Freyr</strong></font> is said to ride in a wagon annually through the country accompanied by a priestess to bless the fields, according to a late story titled <em>Hauks þáttr hábrókar</em> in the fourteenth century <em><font color="#0645ad">Flateyjarbók</font></em> manuscript. In the same source, King Eric of Sweden is said to consult a god named <font color="#0645ad">Lytir</font>, whose wagon was brought to his hall in order to perform a divination ceremony.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>12<span>]</span></font></sup> <font color="#0645ad">H.E. Davidson</font> draws a parallel between these incidents and the Tacitus' account of Nerthus, suggesting that in addition a neck-ring wearing female figure "kneeling as if to drive a chariot" also dates from the Bronze Age. She posits that the evidence suggests that similar customs as detailed in Tacitus' account continued to exist during the close of the pagan period through worship of the Vanir.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>12<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Notes</span><div style="-moz-column-count: 2; column-count: 2"><ol><li>^ <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">a</font></strong></em></sup> <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">b</font></strong></em></sup> Simek (2007:234) </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Lindow (2001:237-238) </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Orchard (1997:117-118). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> According to Grimm, Tacitus wrote: "Rendingi, Aviones, Anglii, Varini, Eudoses, Suarines, and Nuithones" </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> <em>Reudigni deinde et Aviones et Anglii et Varini et Eudoses et Suardones et Nuithones fluminibus aut silvis muniuntur. Nec quicquam notabile in singulis, nisi quod in commune Nerthum, id est Terram matrem, colunt eamque intervenire rebus hominum, invehi populis arbitrantur.</em> (Tacitus, <em><font color="#0645ad">Germania</font></em>, 1.40). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Tacitus, Germania, translation from <em>The Lost Gods of England</em>, by Brian Branston (Thames and Hudson, London, 1957). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Polomé, (1999:143-154). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Motz, Lotte (1992:1-18). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Grigsby(2005). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Davidson (1998). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Anonymous <em>Origo Gentis Longobardorum</em> and Paulus Diaconus, <em>Historia Langobardorum</em>, ch. 7.; Both works appear in English as <strong>History of the Lombards by Paul the Deacon</strong>, translated by William Dudley Foulke, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1907. </li><li>^ <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">a</font></strong></em></sup> <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">b</font></strong></em></sup> <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">c</font></strong></em></sup> Davidson (1964). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Chadwick (1907:267-268). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Chadwick (1907:289). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Deutsche Mythologie, Vol. I, ch. 13; translated as Teutonic Mythology, by James Steven Stalleybrass, 1883, pp. 251-253. </li></ol></div>
<p>In <font color="#0645ad">Germanic paganism</font>, <strong>Nerthus</strong> is a <font color="#0645ad">goddess</font> associated with <font color="#0645ad">fertility</font>. <strong>Nerthus</strong> is attested by <font color="#0645ad">Tacitus</font>, a <font color="#0645ad">first century AD</font> Roman historian, in his work entitled <em><font color="#0645ad">Germania</font></em>. Various theories exist regarding the goddess and her potential later traces amongst the <font color="#0645ad">Germanic tribes</font>. The <font color="#0645ad">minor planet</font> <font color="#0645ad">601 Nerthus</font> is named after <strong>Nerthus</strong>.</p><span>Etymology</span><p><strong>Nerthus</strong> often is identified with the <font color="#0b0080">Vanir</font> god <font color="#0b0080"><strong>Njörðr</strong></font> who is attested in various thirteenth century <font color="#0645ad">Old Norse</font> works and in numerous <font color="#0645ad">Scandinavian</font> <font color="#0645ad">place names</font>. The connection between the two is due to the linguistic relationship between <em><strong>Njörðr</strong></em> and the <font color="#0645ad">reconstructed</font> <font color="#0645ad">Proto-Germanic</font> <em>*Nerþuz</em>,<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>1<span>]</span></font></sup> "<strong>Nerthus</strong>" being the feminine, <font color="#0645ad">Latinized</font> form of what <em><font color="#0b0080"><strong>Njörðr</strong></font></em> would have looked like around 100 CE.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>2<span>]</span></font></sup> This has led to theories about the relation of the two, including that <strong>Njörðr</strong> may have once been a hermaphroditic deity or, generally considered more likely, that the name may indicate an otherwise unattested divine brother and sister pair such as the Vanir deities <font color="#0645ad">Freyja</font> and <font color="#0b0080">Freyr</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>1<span>]</span></font></sup> Connections have been proposed between the unnamed mother of Freyja and Freyr and the sister of <strong>Njörðr</strong> mentioned in <em>Lokasenna</em> and Nerthus.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>3<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span><em>Germania</em></span><p>In Tacitus's first century work <em>Germania</em>, he records a processional ritual devoted to this goddess enacted by the northern Germanic tribes:</p><blockquote><p>After the <font color="#0645ad">Langobardi</font> come the <font color="#0645ad">Reudigni</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Auiones</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Angli</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Varni</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Eudoses</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Suarines</font> and <font color="#0645ad">Nuithones</font>, all well guarded by rivers and forests.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>4<span>]</span></font></sup> There is nothing remarkable about any of these tribes unless it be the common worship of<strong> Nerthus</strong>, that is Earth Mother. They believe she is interested in men's affairs and drives among them.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>5<span>]</span></font></sup></p></blockquote><blockquote><p>On an island in the ocean sea there is a <font color="#0645ad">sacred grove</font> wherein waits a <font color="#ba0000">holy wagon</font> covered by a <font color="#0645ad">drape</font>. One priest only is allowed to touch it. He can feel the presence of the goddess when she is there in her sanctuary and accompanies her with great reverence as she is pulled along by <font color="#0645ad">kine</font>.</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>It is a time of festive holiday making in whatever place she decides to honour with her advent and stay. No one goes to war, no one takes up arms, in fact every weapon is put away, only at that time are peace and quiet known and prized until the goddess, having had enough of peoples company, is at last restored by the same priest to her temple. After which the wagon and the drape, and if you like to believe me, the deity herself is bathed in a mysterious pool.</p></blockquote><blockquote><p>The rite is performed by slaves who, as soon as it is done, are drowned in the lake. In this way mystery begets dread and a pious ignorance concerning what that sight may be which only those who are about to die are allowed to see. <em>--</em><font color="#0645ad">Germania</font>, ch. 40.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>6<span>]</span></font></sup></p></blockquote><span>General Theories</span><p>A number of theories have been proposed regarding the figure of <strong>Nerthus</strong>, including the location of the events described, relations to other known deities and her role amongst the Germanic tribes. Edgar Polomé argued that<strong> <em>Njörðr</em></strong> and <strong><em>Nerthus</em> </strong>come from different roots, adding that "<strong>Nerthus</strong> and <strong>Njörðr</strong> are two separate divine entities, whatever similarity their names show."<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>7<span>]</span></font></sup> <font color="#0645ad">Lotte Motz</font> proposed that the Germanic goddess described by Tacitus may not have been called <strong>Nerthus</strong> at all, stating her opinion that Grimm selected the name <strong>Nerthus</strong> from among the manuscript readings precisely because it bore an etymological resemblance to <em><strong>Njörðr</strong></em>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>8<span>]</span></font></sup> <font color="#0645ad">John Grigsby</font> (2005) theorizes that the overthrowing of the Vanir religion by that of the <font color="#0b0080">Æsir</font> is remembered in the Old English poem <em><font color="#0645ad">Beowulf</font></em>, that <font color="#0645ad">Grendel's mother</font> is derived from the lake-dwelling <strong>Nerthus</strong>, and that Beowulf's victory over her is symbolic of the ending of the <font color="#0b0080">Vanir</font> cult in Denmark by the <font color="#0b0080">Odin</font>-worshiping Danes.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>9<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Later traces</span><p>It has been theorized that evidence of the veneration of a <font color="#0645ad">mother goddess</font>, representing the earth, survived among the <font color="#0645ad">Angles</font> (Tacitus' <em>Anglii</em>) into Christian times as evidenced in the partially-Christianized <font color="#0645ad">pagan Anglo-Saxon</font> <em><font color="#0645ad">Æcerbot</font></em> ritual.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>10<span>]</span></font></sup> The earliest history of the Longobardi states that this tribe revered Odin's wife, Frea, suggesting her role as an <font color="#0645ad">earth mother</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>11<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Location</span><p>A number of scholars have proposed a potential location of Tacitus' account of <strong>Nerthus</strong> as on the island of <font color="#0645ad">Zealand</font> in <font color="#0645ad">Denmark</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>12<span>]</span></font></sup><sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>13<span>]</span></font></sup> Reasoning behind this notion is the linking the name <strong>Nerthus</strong> with the medieval place name Niartharum (now called Naerum) located on Zealand. Further justification is given that <font color="#0645ad">Lejre</font>, the seat of the ancient kings of Denmark, also is located on Zealand. Nerthus is then commonly compared to Gefjun who is said to have plowed the island of Zealand from Sweden in Gylfaginning.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>14<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Identity</span><p>Jacob Grimm (1835) first identified Nerthus as the Germanic earth-mother who appeared under such names as <font color="#0645ad">Erda</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Erce</font>, <font color="#ba0000">Fru Gaue</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Fjörgyn</font>, <font color="#0645ad">Frau Holda</font> and <font color="#ba0000">Hluodana</font>.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>15<span>]</span></font></sup></p><p><strong>Nerthus</strong> typically is identified as a Vanir goddess. Her wagon tour has been likened to several archeological wagon finds and legends of deities parading in wagons. Terry Gunnell and many others have noted various archaeological finds of ritual wagons in Denmark dating from 200 AD and the <font color="#0645ad">Bronze Age</font>. Such a ceremonial wagon, incapable of making turns, was discovered in the Oseberg ship find. Two of the most famous literary examples occur in the Icelandic family sagas. The <font color="#0b0080">Vanir</font> god <font color="#0b0080"><strong>Freyr</strong></font> is said to ride in a wagon annually through the country accompanied by a priestess to bless the fields, according to a late story titled <em>Hauks þáttr hábrókar</em> in the fourteenth century <em><font color="#0645ad">Flateyjarbók</font></em> manuscript. In the same source, King Eric of Sweden is said to consult a god named <font color="#0645ad">Lytir</font>, whose wagon was brought to his hall in order to perform a divination ceremony.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>12<span>]</span></font></sup> <font color="#0645ad">H.E. Davidson</font> draws a parallel between these incidents and the Tacitus' account of Nerthus, suggesting that in addition a neck-ring wearing female figure "kneeling as if to drive a chariot" also dates from the Bronze Age. She posits that the evidence suggests that similar customs as detailed in Tacitus' account continued to exist during the close of the pagan period through worship of the Vanir.<sup><font color="#0645ad"><span>[</span>12<span>]</span></font></sup></p><span>Notes</span><div style="-moz-column-count: 2; column-count: 2"><ol><li>^ <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">a</font></strong></em></sup> <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">b</font></strong></em></sup> Simek (2007:234) </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Lindow (2001:237-238) </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Orchard (1997:117-118). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> According to Grimm, Tacitus wrote: "Rendingi, Aviones, Anglii, Varini, Eudoses, Suarines, and Nuithones" </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> <em>Reudigni deinde et Aviones et Anglii et Varini et Eudoses et Suardones et Nuithones fluminibus aut silvis muniuntur. Nec quicquam notabile in singulis, nisi quod in commune Nerthum, id est Terram matrem, colunt eamque intervenire rebus hominum, invehi populis arbitrantur.</em> (Tacitus, <em><font color="#0645ad">Germania</font></em>, 1.40). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Tacitus, Germania, translation from <em>The Lost Gods of England</em>, by Brian Branston (Thames and Hudson, London, 1957). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Polomé, (1999:143-154). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Motz, Lotte (1992:1-18). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Grigsby(2005). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Davidson (1998). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Anonymous <em>Origo Gentis Longobardorum</em> and Paulus Diaconus, <em>Historia Langobardorum</em>, ch. 7.; Both works appear in English as <strong>History of the Lombards by Paul the Deacon</strong>, translated by William Dudley Foulke, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1907. </li><li>^ <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">a</font></strong></em></sup> <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">b</font></strong></em></sup> <sup><em><strong><font color="#0645ad">c</font></strong></em></sup> Davidson (1964). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Chadwick (1907:267-268). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Chadwick (1907:289). </li><li><strong><font color="#0645ad">^</font></strong> Deutsche Mythologie, Vol. I, ch. 13; translated as Teutonic Mythology, by James Steven Stalleybrass, 1883, pp. 251-253. </li></ol></div>