Viking Norse Goddess good Frigga Pagan Prayer Beads Palm Stone Prayer Beads Meditation Beads Chanting Beads Devotional Beads Altar Beads
good Norse Goddess Frigga, Frigg
Pagan Prayer Beads, Meditation Beads, Devotional Beads
23 inches in length
8mm Rose Quartz
8mm Strawberry Quartz
16mm Faceted Strawberry Quartz Focal Beads
Silver Accent Beads
Falcon, Wheat, and Sword Charms
1 inch Carved Strawberry Quartz Goddess Pendant
Frigg (pronounced “FRIG;” Old Norse Frigg, “Beloved” sometimes Anglicized as “Frigga,” is the highest-ranking of the Aesir goddesses. She's the wife of Odin, the leader of the gods, and the mother of Baldur.
Strangely for a goddess of her high position, the surviving primary sources on Norse mythology give only sparse and casual accounts of anything related to her personality, deeds, or other attributes. The specifics they do discuss, however, are not unique to Frigg, but are instead shared by both her and Freya, a goddess who belongs to both the Aesir and the Vanir tribes of deities. From these similarities, combined with the two goddesses' mutual evolution from the earlier Germanic goddess Frija, we can see that Frigg and Freya were only nominally distinct figures by the late Viking Age, when our sources were recorded, and that these two figures, who had formerly been the same deity, were still practically the same personage in everything but name.
Frigg wears many hats in Norse mythology. She is often described as “foremost among the goddesses,” and was the wife of Odin. She was the Queen of the Aesir and the goddess of the sky. She was also known as the goddess of fertility, household, motherhood, love, marriage, and domestic arts. Some of these domains were also overseen by another Norse goddess named Freyja. In Norse mythology, Frigg's primary roles were familial roles, mostly surrounding her husband and children.
Frigg was married to Odin and they had a family together. Because of his untimely death, Balder is the first child many associate with the goddess.
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