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  2. Heathen holidays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heathen_holidays

    The modern Icelandic festival of Þorrablót is sometimes considered a "pagan holiday" due to folk etymology with the name of the god Thor. [5] The name, while historically attested, is derived from Þorri which is not explicitly linked to Thor, instead being the name of a month in the historic Icelandic calendar and a legendary Finnish king.

  3. Álfablót - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Álfablót

    The first element of Ǫlvir means "beer", which was an important element in Norse pagan sacrifices generally. [ 1 ] There is a notable account of the ceremony in Austrfararvísur by the Norwegian skald Sigvatr Þórðarson , where he tried to impose on the privacy of a series of homes during the sacred family holiday, a privacy that he was ...

  4. Dísablót - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dísablót

    The dísablót by August Malmström. The celebration lives on as an annual market in Uppsala, Sweden.A scene from the disting of 2008. The Dísablót was the blót (sacrificial holiday) which was held in honour of the female spirits or deities called dísir [1] (and the Valkyries [2]), from pre-historic times until the Christianization of Scandinavia.

  5. Yule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule

    Yule is a winter festival historically observed by the Germanic peoples that was incorporated into Christmas during the Christianisation of the Germanic peoples.In present times adherents of some new religious movements (such as Modern Germanic paganism) celebrate Yule independently of the Christian festival.

  6. Norse mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norse_mythology

    Norse, Nordic, or Scandinavian mythology, is the body of myths belonging to the North Germanic peoples, stemming from Old Norse religion and continuing after the Christianization of Scandinavia as the Nordic folklore of the modern period.

  7. Krampus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Krampus

    1900s illustration of Saint Nicholas and Krampus visiting a child. The Krampus (German: [ˈkʁampʊs]) is a horned anthropomorphic figure who, in the Central and Eastern Alpine folkloric tradition, is said to accompany Saint Nicholas on visits to children during the night of 5 December (Krampusnacht; "Krampus Night"), immediately before the Feast of St. Nicholas on 6 December.

  8. Ēostre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ēostre

    A holiday named for the goddess is part of the neopagan Wiccan Wheel of the Year (Ostara, ... Dellingr, a potential personification of the dawn in Norse mythology;

  9. Mōdraniht - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mōdraniht

    Scholars have linked these Modra ("Mothers") with the Germanic Matres and Matronae. [3] Rudolf Simek says that Mōdraniht "as a Germanic sacrificial festival should be associated with the Matron cult of the West Germanic peoples on the one hand, and to the dísablót and the Disting already known from medieval Scandinavia on the other hand and is chronologically to be seen as a connecting link ...