Odin has long been debated as either an ancient deity common to all Germanic peoples, or an immigrant god who arrived in Scandinavia from elsewhere. This document outlines the main lines of interpretation on each side of the debate. Those who see Odin as an immigrant god propose origins in areas like the lower Rhine region or southeastern Europe, spreading with warrior groups or cultural influences. Those who see Odin as an ancient pan-Germanic god link him to the hypothesized arrival of Indo-European peoples or compare Germanic myths to other Indo-European traditions. The debate considers factors like origins, means of spread, and changes to Odin's character over time.
Odin has long been debated as either an ancient deity common to all Germanic peoples, or an immigrant god who arrived in Scandinavia from elsewhere. This document outlines the main lines of interpretation on each side of the debate. Those who see Odin as an immigrant god propose origins in areas like the lower Rhine region or southeastern Europe, spreading with warrior groups or cultural influences. Those who see Odin as an ancient pan-Germanic god link him to the hypothesized arrival of Indo-European peoples or compare Germanic myths to other Indo-European traditions. The debate considers factors like origins, means of spread, and changes to Odin's character over time.
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Odin
Original Title
2009 Odin – an immigrant in Scandinavia (Hultgård)
Odin has long been debated as either an ancient deity common to all Germanic peoples, or an immigrant god who arrived in Scandinavia from elsewhere. This document outlines the main lines of interpretation on each side of the debate. Those who see Odin as an immigrant god propose origins in areas like the lower Rhine region or southeastern Europe, spreading with warrior groups or cultural influences. Those who see Odin as an ancient pan-Germanic god link him to the hypothesized arrival of Indo-European peoples or compare Germanic myths to other Indo-European traditions. The debate considers factors like origins, means of spread, and changes to Odin's character over time.
Odin has long been debated as either an ancient deity common to all Germanic peoples, or an immigrant god who arrived in Scandinavia from elsewhere. This document outlines the main lines of interpretation on each side of the debate. Those who see Odin as an immigrant god propose origins in areas like the lower Rhine region or southeastern Europe, spreading with warrior groups or cultural influences. Those who see Odin as an ancient pan-Germanic god link him to the hypothesized arrival of Indo-European peoples or compare Germanic myths to other Indo-European traditions. The debate considers factors like origins, means of spread, and changes to Odin's character over time.
Anders Hultgrd, Uppsala, Sweden Introduction The origins of the god Odin and his cult in Scandinavia has captured the interest of scholar- ship for almost two hundred years. Many different interpretations have been proposed on more or less convincing grounds. My paper aims at reconsidering the main lines of interpreta- tion and critically review the arguments brought forward (the use of two forms Wodan and Woden is no slip of the pen, see Hultgrd 2007). The issue includes a complex of problems, the most significant being the following ones: The geographical aspect. The identification of an area of origin for the cult of Odin (within or outside the Germanic speaking world) and the way it spread further. The genesis of the Odin figure proper as we know it from Viking age and medieval sources. A common Germanic god who preserved a continuity in character or underwent a thor- oughgoing transformation. We may roughly distinguish two main lines of interpretation: A. The first one considers Odin as a deity having arrived to Scandinavia from the south in a relatively late period. His rise to pre-eminence was a gradual one. This line of interpretation was dominant in the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries but has been revived in recent times. B. The second line of interpretation regards Odin as an ancient deity common to all Ger- manic peoples. He had a prominent position from the very beginning and his character re- mained essentially the same through the centuries. Odin as an incomer to Scandinavia The first line of interpretation (A) is found in several variants depending on three different factors and the way they are combined: the geographic area where the origins of the god are sought. the circumstances under which the cult of the god emerged and the way it was diffused. what parts of the character of the god were changed during the spread of his cult. A. 1 Several scholars place the origins of the Odin cult in the lower Rhine area from where it spread to the north. Some of them also emphasize the connection with the Gallo- Roman cult of Mercury. In the first half of the 20 th century the most prominent representative of that line of inter- pretation was Karl Helm. He stated that the notice of Tacitus in his Germania that the Ger- manic tribes worship Mercury as the foremost god (deorum maxime Mercurium colunt) re- ferred to western Germania, more specifically the lower Rhine area where the cult of Wodan existed already in the first century C.E. Helm suggested that Herules returning home to Scan- dinavia brought with them the cult of the god in the 5 th century. The Odin cult was thought to have spread over the entire area of Germanic speaking peoples in varying ways but usually linked to movements of warlike elite groups. Alois Closs (1934) thus referred to I quote- eine kriegerische Kulturbewegung whicht brought the worship of Odin to Scandinavia. In more recent research the idea that the worship of Odin emerged in the lower Rhine area has been revived by Michael Enright (1996), Richard North (1997) and Ludwig Rbekeil (2002 and 2003). According to Enright the cult typical of Woden emerged in that area under Celtic influ- ence as a warband religion inspired by the leader of the Batavians, Civilis. The success of this
406 new form of religion depended largely on the prestige conveyed by the cult of a prominent Germanic warlord. North suggests that the Germanic cult of Odin originated as a worship of Mercury in Ro- man Gallia. Through warfare and trade the cult spread over the Rhine into northern Germania and along the coasts of the North Sea. By the end of the 5 th century it had reached England and southern Scandinavia and the god was worshipped with his Germanic name Woden. Rbekeil maintains that the form of the gods name as reflected by Scandinavian tradition is the original one: proto-Germanic *Winaz > inn. Germanic tribes settled along the lower Rhine were, according to Rbekeil, impressed by the sacrificial cult of Celtic prophetic priests. These priests were called by a term cognate with Latin vates, Celtic *atis > Old Irish fith. The basic word underlying inn is *wi which is a Germanic reflection of Celtic *atis. The Germanic tribes began to address their worship to the same god to whom the Celtic priests dedicated their sacrifices but applied the name of the vates to the god. It was a Germanic reception on a superficial ritual level of the cult of the Celtic god Lug. 2 Other scholars point instead at a more southern and southeastern provenance of the cult of Odin. From these areas, the central and eastern parts of the Roman empire, as well as the territories north of the Black Sea, cultural influences that partly can be attested by archaeo- logical evidence, reached Scandinavia and brought with them also the worship of Odin. This interpretation includes the assumption that the runic script was part of the same cultural proc- ess, it is suggested that the runes came to Scandinavia through the intermediary of the Goths when settled in southeastern Europe and this would explain the close connection of Odin with the runes. A number of scholars have followed this line of interpretation. In the beginning of the 20 th
century two Scandinavian scholars made influential contributions to the problem of the ori- gins of the Odin cult. Bernard Salin assumed more than one cultural wave reaching Scandina- via from the south and southeast. One of the later brought the belief in Odin and the other sir and at the same time also the runes. He seems to have been the first one to interpret the iconography of the C-bracteates as representing the god Odin. Sune Ambrosiani referred also to the bracteates and their Roman models suggesting that the cult of Odin was nothing else than the cult of the Roman emperor transposed to a Scandinavian setting where it had blended with a native worship of an animal deity. Elias Wessn (1924) emphasized the role of the Goths in southern Russia in transmitting the Odin cult together with the runes to Scandinavia. A Roman influence through Mithriacism on the development of the Odin figure has also been suggested by some scholars. Hilda Ellis Davidson (1964) suggests that Odin developed from an earlier Germanic war god: In Twaz we have an early Germanic war god, an ances- tor of Odin (p. 60) but sees also a connection with the Roman Mithras (Ellis Davidsson 1978; Kaliff & Sundqvist 2004) We may classify the view of Lotte Motz as a third variant of the immigration theory. The Odin figure has emerged after the image of an ecstatic visionary and magician with shaman- istic features. Eastern tribes penetrating into the territory of Germanic peoples brought with them this image of an itinerant shaman deity who probably also borrowed traits taken from the worship of a native Germanic god. At a later stage, according to Motz, Odin was then transformed into a mounted warrior god and magician. Odin as an ancient and prominent god of all Germanic peoples B. Looking at the second main line of interpretation, i.e. the assumption that Odin represents a very ancient god among all the Germanic peoples is intimately bound up with the Indo- European question.
407 Here we are faced with two different types of interpretations (1 and 2). One combines the myth of the war between the sir and the vanir with archaeological evidence. The other is based on the comparative study of Indo-European mythologies and deities. 1 The myth of the war between the sir and the vanir (Vlusp; Snorris Edda) as well as the story of the immigration of the sir into Scandinavia (Snorris Edda; Ynglingasaga) is considered to reflect a pre-historic immigration wave into Scandinavia by a warlike people speaking an Indo-European language and worshipping the gods who later became known as the sir. The conflict between the peaceful native population and their deities, the vanir , and the Indo-European intruders ended with a fusion of the two population groups in which the Indo-European element became dominant. This event is thought to correspond in archaeologi- cal terms to the arrival of the Battle Axe culture around 2000 B.C.E. This interpretation has long been a favourite theme in the history of ancient Scandinavian religion. As representatives we may mention Philippson (1953), Henrik Schck, Eugen Mogk. In the broader perspective of Indo-European studies the archaeologist Marija Gimbutas has elaborated the sharp contrast between the peaceful agriculturalists of Old Europe, who mainly worshipped mother goddesses, and the warlike patriarchal Indo-Europeans who coming from the plains of southern Russia and Kazakhstan penetrated much of Europe. Being worshippers of male sky gods they adhered to a different type of religion (e. g. Gimbutas 1988). A. 2 Without involving themselves in the complicated interpretation of the archaeological evidence for Indo-European origins and diffusion, other scholars prefer to concentrate on the comparative study of Indo-European mythologies. They deny any historical reality behind the myth of the war between the sir and the vanir and the euhemeristic migration stories in me- dieval Old Norse literature. In the first half of the 20 th century scholars like Hermann Gntert made broad comparisons covering the entire field of Indo-European languages and cultures. Gntert (1923:151153) emphasized the similarities between Odin and the Indic god Varuna and concluded that both reflect the Indo-European type of a binding world ruler and king of the gods. Having a common background these two gods acquired new features as time passed on, however. Odin was no doubt a god common to all Germanic groups but he attained his supremacy gradually his worship spreading from certain important cult centres. In the first place we have the French comparatist Georges Dumzil whose three-functional system is too well known to be presented here in detail. As to the divine world it implies that the main deities of the early Indo-Europeans can be classified in a tripartite system. The common characteristics found between the Indo-European deities of the same functional cate- gory are according to Dumzil best explained as based on inherited tradition. The first func- tion is shared between two deities representing different aspects of the sovereignty. Odin who together with Tr belongs to the first function stands for the religious-magical aspect, and Tr for the judicial one. Odin/Woden as head of the Germanic pantheon constitutes thus for Dumzil a very ancient feature. Many scholars have accepted the tripartite system as elaborated by Dumzil but others use the comparative Indo-European approach without building on Dumzils theory. Jan de Vries (195657 406) points to striking affinities in character between the Indic god Rudra and Odin and to a certain extent also between the Greek Hermes and Odin. De Vries speaks of Odin as a high god and seems implicitly to accept Dumzils classification of the Indo- European deities when referring to Odin as die dunkle Seite des Hochgottes (410; cp. also 412). Also taking the precise similarities between Lug and Odin into account(de Vries 1961) we may state that for de Vries Odin represents from the very beginning a prominent deity part of the Indo-European legacy (412). Jaan Puhvel refers likewise to the Indic Rudra as a counterpart to the Celtic Esus-Lugus and to the Germanic Odin but comes to a different conclusion than Jan de Vries. For Puhvel
408 Odin seems to be in origin the semidemonic patron of the warriors. In warlike Celtic and Germanic society a homologue of Rudra ascended to the pinnacle of the pantheon assimilat- ing or supplanting whatever pristine god may have kept company there (1987:201). While admitting that Odin was an ancient god among Germanic peoples Puhvel appears nevertheless to assume a gradual elevation of the Odin figure to the chief god of the pantheon. The roots of Odin in the religious and social context of the Mnnerbnde means for Kershaw (2000) that the god has an Indo-European background. In his reconstruction of an Indo-European family of deities Peter Jackson (2002) proceeds independently of Dumzil and suggests that Odin belongs with the proto-Indo-European god who is reflected in the Indic Varuna and the Greek Ouranos. The validity of the arguments The first of the two main lines of interpretation (A) includes different types of argumentation. Since the opinion of Karl Helm influenced much of the subsequent discussion on the origins of the Odin cult (most recently North 1997) it is appropriate to start with the reasons he ad- duced to support his view. Helm chose to interpret the notice of Tacitus on the worship of the Germanic Mercury (see above) as referring only to western Germania more specifically the lower Rhine area. There but not elsewhere, according to Helm, was Wodan worshipped as the chief deity in the 1 st century C. E. Admittedly most of the information on Germanic culture and religion that reached the Romans came from (or passed through) the Rhineland area but this fact in no way excludes the possibility that other Germanic (including Scandinavian) tribes also worshipped Odin in the same early period. More weight should be put on Helms second main argument. In the entire source material from Scandinavia (archeological findings, rock carvings, bracteates, early runic inscriptions) there is no evidence of a cult of Woden/Odin. If the bracteates depict the god an assumption of which Helm is skeptical we dont reach any farther back in time as the early 6 th century. However, the lack of references to Woden/Odin in Scandinavian sources prior to the 5 th
and 6 th centuries is not a convincing argument in view of the almost total absence of written sources and the uncertainty of identifying deities known from the Viking period in the rock carvings and other early iconographic material. I agree with Helm that the presence of the Woden/Odin figure on the rock carvings cannot be demonstrated. On the other hand there is no convincing evidence to prove his absence either. Among modern proponents of the Rhineland hypothesis North (1997) follows the reason- ing of Helm but Enright (1996) sees the typical Woden/Odin cult (not necessarily the origin of the god, however) as intimately bound up with the emergence of the Celtic-Germanic war- band (or comitatus) institution. Focus is on the Rhineland area with its mixture of Gaulish and Germanic elements. He elaborates an extensive parallelism between Sertorius, leader of the Celtiberians in their wars against Rome, and the chieftain of the Batavians, Civilis, who took Sertorius as a model for his political agenda. Both men developed a similar religious propa- ganda which in the case of Civilis shaped the typical image of Woden/Odin . The Scandina- vian Odins involvement with warfare and prophecy, his attributes such as the one-eyedness and the spear, correspond in a surprising manner with what is known about Civilis and the rising phenomenon of the warband. This correspondence shows according to Enright that the god and his cult ultimately received its characteristics from the Gallo-Roman and Germanic worship of Mercury in the form it was propagated by Civilis. The principal objection to this hypothesis is that the similarities adduced do not compel us to accept the conclusion reached by Enright. The similarities may be explained differently and gods are not necessarily shaped by specific political and cultural circumstances. Thus, an al-
409 ternative explanation would be that Woden/Odin already possessed the characteristics that suited a warlord and his warband and therefore became their particular deity. Rbekeils theory rests on a linguistic argument which is combined with the particular ethnic and cultural situation prevailing in the Rhineland area where Celtic and Germanic groups were in close contact. His linguistic reasoning is complicated and presupposes some stages that cannot be directly attested. The assumption that the Germanic groups called the god they took over from Celtic Rhineland tribes after the name of the priests that served him is too speculative and is clearly inspired from the linguistic argument. If this does not hold good, the theory as a whole cannot stand. For those who favour a more southern and southeastern origin of the Odin cult (A. 2) the main argument is the cultural impact of the Roman empire and the influences that reached Scandinavia from southeastern Europe. One must ask why precisely Odin among all the dei- ties was imported. His connection with the runes is the only plausible argument for this ex- ception and is also put forward by the adherents of a southeastern origin of Odin. Again there is a presupposition that appears to be doubtful: the runes were invented among the Goths in southern Russia on the base of the Greek script (e.g. Wessn 1924:26). Not to speak of the idea that a core of historical truth underlies the euhemeristic story of Odin and his followers migrating into Scandinavia from Asia Minor (Salin and others) . This idea still influenced much of the early 20 th century scholarship. As to the second main line of interpretation (B.) comparisons with other Indo-European gods serve the purpose of demonstrating the presence of Odin among all Germanic peoples already from the settlement of Indo-European speaking groups in northern Europe. The point is that the study of the homologues of Odin in Indo-European mythologies show him to be part of an ancient religious legacy. This in turn implies some sort of a common Indo- European pantheon which must be put far back in time. Here we are confronted with the main difficulty that faces the proponents of an Indo-European heritage. Could myths and images of deities be preserved in oral tradition throughout two or three millennia and still be recognized as deriving from a common source? We would be on safer ground when using the compara- tive etymological-onomastic approach which does not yield much result for the Odin figure except for some of his heiti. The attempt to link the origin of Odin and the sir with the appearance of the Corded Ware/Battle Axe culture in Scandinavia is based on uncertain parameters. It is assumed that this culture a) was brought to northern Europe by invading population groups and b) that these invaders were Indo-Europeans bringing a new form of religion with them. Both supposi- tions are far from certain. To identify ethnic and language groups solely on archaeological grounds is hazardous and there is evidence to suggest that the Battle Axe culture to a large extent had a local origin. Conclusions The present survey and discussion has demonstrated the difficulties in ascertaining the hy- pothesis of Odin being a late incomer in Scandinavia. Conversely we have no clear evidence to show the presence of his cult before the middle of the first millennium C. E. To judge from the information given by Roman writers the god was worshipped by Germanic tribes on the continent as one of the main deities already in the 1 st century C.E. (cf. also Simek 2003:110 111). In my view there is nothing to suggest that Woden/Odin was not worshipped in Scandi- navia during the same period (cf. also Hultgrd 2007 and Schjdt 2008:451). We have to assume a continuity in the cult of this god in Scandinavia and the Germanic continent from a very early time as long as there is no conclusive evidence for the opposite.
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Scandinavian Studies Volume 85 Issue 3 2013 (Doi 10.5406/scanstud.85.3.0267) Anders Andrén - Places, Monuments, and Objects - The Past in Ancient Scandinavia