In the Norse worldview, the self is comprised of numerous different parts that are semi-autonomous and can detach from one another under certain circumstances. More specifically, their names refer to their being concrete visualized forms of the “thought” of Odin. They’re a duplicate form of the same underlying idea. ![]() This reflects the fact that, in the sources, Hugin and Munin don’t have distinct personalities. Hugin (Old Norse Huginn) comes from the word hugr, “thought.” Munin (Old Norse Muninn) comes from the word munr, which is more difficult to translate, but can encompass the concepts of “thought,” “desire,” and “emotion.” (The two ravens’ names are often translated as “Thought” and “Memory” in popular works on Norse mythology, and “Thought” is quite accurate, but “Memory” is at best imprecise and rather arbitrary.) The two names therefore can’t be neatly distinguished from one another they overlap to the point of being virtually synonymous. This aspect of the connection is indicated by the names of Hugin and Munin. Ravens aren’t only birds of gore and carnage they’re also exceptionally intellectual birds, and Odin is an exceptionally intellectual god. Yet there’s still more to this connection. Thus, the association between the raven and Odin was only natural for the Norse. But the gift of a dead man also went to Odin, due to his role as the ruler of the dead in Valhalla and the common practice of symbolically sacrificing an enemy host to Odin before a battle. Countless kennings express this concept: to cite but two, the warrior is the “feeder of the raven” ( hrafngrennir) and the “fattener of the battle-starling” ( folkstara feitir). To slay someone in battle was, in a sense, to give the ravens a gift. Ravens, as carrion birds, were present when a battle took place, and were some of its prime beneficiaries. Why was there such a longstanding and intense connection between Odin and the raven, of all species? As those kennings suggest, the answer largely has to do with Odin’s roles as a god of war and death. įurthermore, the sight of ravens immediately following a sacrifice to Odin was taken as a sign that the god had accepted the offering. The poets occasionally use Munin’s name in the same way, but Hugin’s is far more common. The warrior in battle is “the reddener of Hugin’s claws” ( fetrjóðr Hugins) or “the reddener of Hugin’s bill” ( munnrjóðr Hugins). Sometimes kennings use “Hugin” as a substitute for “raven.” Blood is designated as “Hugin’s sea” ( Hugins vör) or “Hugin’s drink” ( Hugins drekka). In the same vein, ravens are called “the greedy hawks of Odin” ( átfrekir Óðins haukar), or else his “swan” ( Yggs svanr), his “seagull” ( Yggjar már), or – showing how far the bird equivalencies could be stretched – his “cuckoo” ( Gauts gaukr). (A kenning is a common Old Norse literary device that uses images from a body of traditional lore to refer to something rather than calling it by its everyday name.) Odin is called the “raven-god” ( Hrafnaguð or Hrafnáss), the “raven-tempter” ( Hrafnfreistuðr), or “the priest of the raven sacrifice” ( Hrafnblóts Goði this is surely a poetic way of describing fallen warriors as “sacrifices” to the ravens and other carrion birds, with Odin as a decider of who lives and who dies in battle). The skaldic poetry of the Viking Age often uses kennings involving ravens to refer to Odin, and vice versa. Already in the sixth and seventh centuries AD – well before the beginning of the Viking Age in the late eighth century – visual depictions of Odin on helmets and jewelry frequently picture him accompanied by one or more ravens. The connection between Odin and ravens is very old and very deep. Snorri’s main source for this passage seems to be an evocative stanza in the Eddic poem Grímnismál, in which Odin says: Thus, he finds out many new things and this is why he is called ‘raven-god’ ( hrafnaguð). He sends them out in the morning to fly around the whole world, and by breakfast they are back again. Two ravens sit on his (Odin’s) shoulders and whisper all the news which they see and hear into his ear they are called Huginn and Muninn. According to the medieval Icelandic historian Snorri Sturluson, Hugin and Munin (pronounced “HOO-gin” and “MOO-nin” Old Norse Huginn and Muninn, the meaning of which will be discussed below) are two ravens in Norse mythology who are helping spirits of the god Odin. Book Review: Neil Price’s The Viking Way: Magic and Mind in Late Iron Age ScandinaviaĪ warrior, likely Odin, flanked by two ravens on an Iron Age helmet from what is now Sweden.Who Were the Indo-Europeans and Why Do They Matter?.The Swastika – Its Ancient Origins and Modern (Mis)use.The Old Norse Language and How to Learn It. ![]() The 10 Best Advanced Norse Mythology Books. ![]()
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