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The list of "Nine Noble Virtues" is due to either John Yeowell (a.k.a. Stubba) [1] and John Gibbs-Bailey (a.k.a. Hoskuld), members of Odinic Rite, or alternatively due to Edred Thorsson, at the time member of the Asatru Free Assembly. [7]
The list of noble virtues (Courage, Truth, Honour, Fidelity, Discipline, Hospitality, Self-Reliance, Industriousness, and Perseverance) is attributed to either John Yeowell (a.k.a. Stubba) and John Gibbs-Bailey (a.k.a. Hoskuld), members of Odinic Rite; or alternatively to Stephen Flowers (writing as 'Edred Thorsson'), at the time member of the ...
In addition to naturally adopting the moral code of the Odinist religion, the Nine Noble Virtues, as part of its creed, COE has added its own set of nine Programmatic Points: [14] Odinism, our ancestral religion in Europe. The religion of the future. The Gods and the sacred. A code of values as a vital livelihood. Odinism as a lifestyle.
Nine Noble Virtues; This page was last edited on 14 November 2022, at 07:53 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License ...
The idea to found a folk religious organization came about in late winter 1972 in discussions in a café in Reykjavík. The four men who would become the organization's early leaders and ideologues were Sveinbjörn Beinteinsson, a farmer and a traditionalist poet, Jörmundur Ingi Hansen, a jack of all trades and a prominent person in the Reykjavík hippie movement, Dagur Þorleifsson, a ...
The Asatru Folk Assembly (AFA) is a white nationalist [3] [4] international Ásatrú organization, founded by Stephen A. McNallen in 1994. Many of the assembly's doctrines, heavily criticized by most heathens , [ 5 ] are based on ethnicity , an approach it calls " folkish ". [ 6 ]
[1] [2] The AA defines Ásatrú as "the ethnic religion of the Northern European peoples". [3] The Ásatrú Alliance is recognized as a 501(c)(3) non-profit religious organization, or church. The AA was formed on June 19, 1988 by seven kindreds, which were members of the disbanded Ásatrú Free Assembly, who ratified on this day a set of by ...
The Troth defines itself as a religious organization of Germanic Heathenry open to all the forms of the religion (Asatru, Urglaawe, Forn Sed, and others) [1] international in scope, with training clergy, promoting cooperation and community, and providing information and educational publications as objectives.