-
Saxon gods, UUôden (Old
Saxon "Wodan")[clarification needed], Saxnôte, and
Thunaer, by way of
their renunciation as
demons in a
formula to be
repeated by...
- of the
early Saxons which the
reader is to forsake: Uuôden ("Woden"),
Thunaer and Saxnōt.
Scholar Rudolf Simek comments that the vow is of particular...
-
portion of the Old
Saxon Baptismal Vow
along with the gods Uuôden (Odin) and
Thunaer (Thor). The name is
usually derived from seax, the
eponymous long knife...
-
English royal genealogies Thor: Þórr (North Germanic), Þunor (Old English),
Thunaer (Old Saxon),
Donar (Southern
Germanic areas) "Thunder", all
names stem...
- no
wiser as to how it got there.
Hercynian Forest Indra Perkwunos Perun Thunaer List of
Lithuanian gods and
mythological figures Simas Sužiedėlis, ed....
-
kings of Es****. He is
mentioned as Saxnôte
alongside Uuôden (Wodan) and
Thunaer (Thunor) in the Old Dutch/Saxon
Baptismal Vow. He was
originally at the...
- past
tense lieten. End ec
forsacho allum dioboles uuer**** and uuordum,
Thunær ende Uuôden ende Saxnôte ende
allum thêm
unholdum thê hira genôtas sint...
-
simply knife-companion),
matching the Saxnôt whom,
along with
Wodan and
Thunaer, ninth-century
Saxon converts to
Christianity were made
explicitly to renounce...
-
records the
names of
three Old
Saxon gods, UUôden ('Woden'), Saxnôte, and
Thunaer ('Thor'), whom
pagan converts were to
renounce as demons. A 10th-century...
-
because an Old
Saxon baptismal vow
calls on the
Christian to
renounce "
Thunaer,
Woden and Saxnot". A
runic poem
mentions a god
known as
Ingwine and the...