The Frithstead – Telegram
The Frithstead
1.29K subscribers
1.44K photos
67 videos
13 files
1.18K links
An independent publishing & educational organization preserving & advancing the native Germanic faith of Sedianism & the American folcsida, serving as a hearth of study & cultural continuity shaping the spiritual, mental, emotional, & physical self.
Download Telegram
Gódne myrġen = Good morning
(gode-ney mir-yen)

Gódne dæġ = Good day
(gode-ney dæ-ye)

Gódne ǽfen = Good evening
(gode-ney æven)

Gódne Nyht = Good night
(gode-ney nisht)

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
Old English Kinship

Hús = Family (hoose)

Mǽgþ = Clan
(Mæ-yeth)

Mǽgcynren = Race
(mæy-kin-ren)

Folcmǽgþ = Nation/Tribe
(folk-mæ-yeth)

Manncyn = Mankind
(monn-kin)

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
The Frithstead

is proud to sponsor the

The Anglish Times

“News written in Anglish, a kind of English that does not have borrowed words from other languages like French or Latin”

With an impressive Anglish Wordbook containing hundreds of Anglish terms.

https://theanglishtimes.com/backers.html

thefrithstead.com
👍1
Spotify released their data for my listening this year. My most listened is https://news.1rj.ru/str/wolcensmen. What’s your top five?

Speaking of music, if anyone has original music, message me. It’d be good for our folk to hear something new. Also looking for OE music; it seems hard to come by.

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Abandoned Viking village in Iceland.
Well, this is a shame…
Welcome all! The Frithstead is a place where heritage, Folcsida, culture, language, history, beauty, self-sufficiency, and various other topics are promoted to edify our folk. Engage in conversation and help build our folk in the old ways! Feel free to ask questions!

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
Forwarded from 🅵🆁🅴🅴 🆉🅾🅽🅴 (ғʀᴇᴇ ʜʏᴅᴇ 🎈)
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
hi fwend.
Forwarded from BC Neanderthal Mindset
Family Tree

Knowing your cultural background and where you came from can help develop a strong sense of who you really are.
The way you relate to family stories and create narratives helps establish our unique, authentic cultural identity as People of the North.

But if we go even further back in time we realize that we are just part of an even older tree of life whose root is buried somewhere even deeper in the past and whose branches we as Hyperboreans share.

Our ancestors actually knew all this, or at least had some kind of awareness of its implications.
Seaxnéat is Fréa - Part 5

Within various accounts, we see the same three gods linked: Wóden, Þunor, and Fréa (each in their various spellings ).

In this temple, entirely decked out in gold, the people worship the statues of three gods in such wise that the mightiest of them, Thor, occupies a throne in the middle of the chamber; Wotan [Odin] and Frikko [Freyr] have places on either side

⁃ Adam of Bremen


Let the gods banish the king,
pay him for stealing my wealth,
let him incur the wrath
of Odin and the gods.
Make the tyrant flee his lands,
Frey and Njord; may Thor
the land-god be angered at this foe, the defiler of his holy place

⁃ Egil’s Saga

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead

- cont. in Part 6
Seaxnéat is Fréa - part 6

Othin grows angry, | angered is the best of the gods (Thor),
Freyr shall be thy foe,
Most evil maid, | who the magic wrath
Of gods hast got for thyself.

⁃ Skírnismál

Let Freyr and Frey rage,
and Thor the hindered too;
let wretched worship Odin:
I forsook the folly of Njord

⁃ Hallfreðr vandræðaskáld

The Skog tapestry possibly depicts Odin, Thor, and Freyr.

When we look again at the Abrenuntiatio Diaboli, “…and I forsake all the Devil's works and promises, Thunaer and Woden and Seaxnot…” does it not seem likely that Seaxnéat is Fréa? There clearly seems to be a patterned formula of linking these gods together.

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
Forwarded from Folk Wisdom & Ways
-The #WildHunt -

Probably the oldest attestation of the
Wild Hunt in Great Britain derives from
the 10th century “Wið færstice”, an
#OldEnglish medical text surviving in the
collection known now as #Lacnunga*
It starts with these words:

Hlūde wǣran hȳ lā hlūde
ðā hȳ ofer þone hlǣw ridan,
wǣran ānmōde ðā hȳ ofer land ridan

They were loud, yes, loud,
when they rode over the (burial) mound;
they were fierce when they rode across the land.

(From the #IndoEuropeanHeathenGroup)
*#FornThreifa
Seaxnéat is Fréa - Part 7

Seaxnéat can mean “Seax-Companion” & Ingwine "friends of Ing", but let’s look at another possible connection. In Old Saxon, -nód means “Need”, and in time, the language saw what’s called Final Consonant Devoicing, where the final “d” becoming a “t”; thus becoming -nót, as in Saxnót. Now, in looking at Snorri’s account of Fréa, he sees Ġearde (ON Gerðr) from afar and falls in love. his servant Sċira (ON Skírnir) travels to Eotenhám to win her love. Ġearde initially refuses, but eventually yields. In this wooing process, Fréa gains Ġearde as his wife, but loses his sword. Perhaps Saxnót, is referring to this account. “Sax-Need”, as in “Sword-Need”, as in the God who lost his sword and needs his weapon* (given that ultimately, he’s killed from this loss).

*credit to https://news.1rj.ru/str/AEHTEMEN for the linguistic lead

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
Word

Word was spelled the same in Old English as in today’s English.

Here are some Old English words which were made with ‘word’:
wordcræft, wordful, wordhord, wordloc, wordlár

These are not hard to work out in today’s spellings:
wordcraft, wordful, wordhoard, wordlock, wordlore

We can use these words today to say meaningful things, such as:

The argument was made well and with great wordcraft

The rules were long-winded and hard to understand – the whole thing was too wordful

It makes sense what you’re saying – there is real wordlock

Wordlore gives background information about words – where they came form

In today’s English, folk tend to use a lot of Latin and other loanwords, but these older English words (above) are easier to learn than words like eloquence, verbose, vocabulary, logic and etymology!

(These words and many more can be found in How We’d Talk if the English had Won in 1066 (2020 Edition))

- David Cowley

thefrithstead.com
Sunday, February 2, 1902 - Page 4, column 8, middle

Battle Prayer of the Old Saxons
Most interesting is the prayer of the Saxons of the time of Charlemagne in their war against him. The mighty leader, whom we call "Karl the Great," they called "Karl the Butcher." In the archives at Goslar one finds the following prayer to their god of thunder in the Old Saxon language: "Great and Holy Wotan, help us and our field general Wittekind and the captains to defeat Karl the Butcher. I give you an aurochs [an extinct European bison], two sheep and a beehive. I slaughter all your prisoners in your holy mountain realm.

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
Áren - an Old English form of Aryan?

Although we Germanics are not Aryans, as that’s been proven to be the name of those who traveled east, with our forebears being those who traveled west, the name itself should give us pause to think on how we view our forebears, kin, ourselves, & what we teach our descendants.

Proto-Indo-European *h₂oys-éh₂ ~ fear, reverence, honor



Proto-Germanic *aizó ~ fear, reverence, honor



Proto-West Germanic *aiʀu ~ honor, respect, reverence



Old English Ár ~ honor, glory, rank, dignity, magnificence, respect, reverence

***

In OE, when adding the adjective suffix -en, it denotes a sense of belonging to or characterised by

Old English: Ár + -en = Áren,
/ɑːɾ.en/, (are-en)
Modern English : Aren, /ɛɹen/, (air-en)

The name of our folk, meaning ‘one who is upright’ or ‘of the upright folk

In honor of our forebears & holy gods, let us live a life of uprightness, standing proud of where we come from & mettlesome in where we’re headed

thefrithstead.com
Forwarded from Irminfolk Odinist Community (Michael S)
A freshly cast Thor's hammer in solid gold. Straight out of the flask.

Whenever I make these kinds of pieces I like to wonder if they will still be around in a thousand years and wind up in a museum.
Folcsida, an Anglo-Saxon term for Anglo-Saxon Belief:

Folcsida = [The] Folk-Ways, or Religion, of the folk.

Folcsidisċ = one who follows the Folk-Ways, or religion, of one’s folk, i.e. (a) Believer(s) in the (Anglo-Saxon expression of) Germanic Heathen faith

“(I am) (We are) Folcsidisċ because (I) (we) practice Folcsida” (both sg. & pl.)

Folcsidom = the ‘Collective body of Folcsida’ or the ‘World of Folcsida’

https://linktr.ee/TheFrithstead
The Nine Homes translated into Old English:

1. Ósġeard or Godhám (Home of the Gods)
2. Middanġeard or Mannhám (Home of Men)
3. Ylfhám (Home of the Elves)
4. Eotenhám (Home of the Eotens)
5. Wanahám (Home of the Wanas)
6. Hell (Home of Wyrd and the Blessed Dead)
7. Sweartes Sincdalu or Útġeard (Southern World of Fire)
8. Hordmimores Holt (Home of Mimor and the Dwarves)
9. Misthell or Misthám (Northern World of Ice, Realm of the Damned

OE-ON comparison:

Ósġeard - Ásgarðr
Godhám - Goðheim
Middanġeard - Miðgarðr
Mannhám - Mannheimr
Ylfhám - Álfheimr
Eotenhám - Jǫtunheimr
Wanahám - Vanaheimr
Hell - Hel
Sweartes Sincdalu - Surts Sökkdalir
Útġeard - Útgarðr
Hordmimores Holt - Hoddmímis Holt
Misthell - Niflhel
Misthám - Niflheimr

thefrithstead.com
👍1