jprussell: (Default)
Jeff Russell ([personal profile] jprussell) wrote2025-03-29 09:54 am
Entry tags:

[Open Post] Heathen Open Post

Howdy,

So, I'm looking to strengthen some connections among Ecosophia-adjacent Heathens, and an easy first step seemed to be a regular open post here on my dreamwidth.

A few ground rules:

  1. The overall goal here is for folks interested in Heathenry to meet, share resources, and so forth. So, even though I won't draw a hard line on "on-topic" against "off-topic," it would be best if posts have something to do with Germanic/Northern European polytheism, whether ancient or modern.

  2. Let's keep things civil. Disagreement is welcome, but insults, rudeness, and attacks are not.

  3. I don't expect enough traffic to need to put a hard limit on when this post will be open, but once the next open post goes up, please post any new discussions there.



Otherwise, welcome, and kindly say hello!
sdi: Oil painting of the Heliconian Muse whispering inspiration to Hesiod. (Default)

[personal profile] sdi 2025-04-06 04:47 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks as always for the references, Jeff. Taliesin's Map, in particular, seems like exactly what I'm looking for, like a parallel project to my own.

Regarding Hyperborea: yeah, Hyperborea is traditionally held to be the island of Great Britain, and I've seen books arguing, on the basis of place names, that Troy could be possibly placed in Cambridgeshire. As I have said many times, I am not a linguist, so I can't assess those arguments, but there's a lot of internal evidence in the Iliad that makes the traditional location in Anatolia seem rather silly even to someone as untraveled as myself. (The sea beside Troy is tidal, whereas the Mediterranean is not. It is always raining at Troy, but Anatolia is arid. Akhilles is blond; Menelaus is auburn-haired; various women, but especially Helen, are said to be white as snow; etc.; which doesn't fit the people we believe to have lived in the Aegean at the time. The times and distances described are not merely wrong but ludicrous if the Aegean is the sea between the Danaans and Troy. That sort of thing.)

Regarding symbolic equivalences: I was also thinking Baldr was the obvious Apollon/Horus equivalent, all being gods of sunlight and victory; in particular, Plutarch recounts a tradition that Horus defeating Set is the return of the Sun after an eclipse, which sure sounds a lot like Baldr slaying Fenrir after he gobbles up the Sun! Othin, is, if anything, more Osiris-y than Zeus ever was, since Othin is a (the?) divine mind striving to know all, and Osiris is the discoverer of all things (and, following the Pythagoreans, I have related him to Plotinus's Intellect, also the divine Mind striving to know all, many times in my Horus series). The Aesir-Vanir war erupts over Gullveig/Heithr coming to Asgard, which is reminiscent of the Trojan war erupting when Helen came to Troy. If the Aesir are, indeed, Trojans, it's also noteworthy that Zeus and Apollo were the two main gods fighting on the side of Troy...

Regarding history as propaganda: I think what I'm trying to say is that things exist at a level of being "below" whatever created them. Historical events exist at the material level of being. If historical events give rise to a narrative, then the narrative is "below" the material level of being; if, on the other hand, the narrative gives rise to the historical events, then the narrative is "above" the material level of being. Therefore, if we want to go "up," it is important to separate the spiritual wheat from the historical chaff. (Or, to put it another way, I'm interested in the question of whether Troy could be Hyperborean because it may provide more versions of the myth for me to compare against, which could help me abstract the myth's essential meaning from any one version of the myth's particulars!)
sdi: Oil painting of the Heliconian Muse whispering inspiration to Hesiod. (Default)

[personal profile] sdi 2025-04-06 07:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, you know what? My mistake, it is Vitharr who slays Fenrir, not Baldr. Well that certainly weakens my case!
sdi: Oil painting of the Heliconian Muse whispering inspiration to Hesiod. (Default)

[personal profile] sdi 2025-04-06 09:52 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, it sounds like we're in agreement! And, in all fairness to the historical-reconstruction folks you cite, my only real criticism of them is that I think the "real" event is spiritual rather than historical. So I'm trying to track down that "archetypal" Troy, and would not be surprised at all to see the "Trojan War" play out in many times and places over the last few thousand years. Since the "Trojan War" is all about the children of the heroes, my guess is that the myths I've been tracking—Horus, Apollon, Perseus, etc.—are all tied into it somehow, and out of devotion to the gods I'd love to try and understand how, though I despair of actually accomplishing it. (I dearly hope the daimons will be kind enough to explain it all to me once I'm dead, though!)