Norse Tradition
Einherjar
AYN-hehr-yar (Old Norse einherjar, singular einheri)
Warriors slain in battle and chosen by the valkyries to dwell in Valhöll, fighting each day and feasting each night as Odin's army assembled for the battle of Ragnarök.
Einherjar (Old Norse, singular einheri, “those who fight alone” or “those who stand alone”) are the company of warriors who dwell in Valhöll after dying in battle. They are not passive dead: Gylfaginning ch. 20 describes their daily regimen — they arm each morning, ride out to the training plain of Vígríðr, and fight each other with full violence until midday. At the sound of a horn, the wounds close, the dead rise, and the company returns to Valhöll to eat and drink until dawn.
Selection and purpose
The valkyries (valkyrjur) make the selection on the battlefield: of those who die, some are chosen for Odin’s hall and some are not. The criterion, as Völuspá and the skaldic tradition make clear, is not simply courage but Odin’s will — he gathers whom he needs. The purpose is explicit in the Prose Edda: these warriors are being assembled, trained, and kept ready for the day when Fenrir breaks his chain and Ragnarök begins. Odin knows the final battle is coming; the einherjar are his answer.
The feasting
Grímnismál stanzas 36–37 complete the picture. The einherjar eat the flesh of the boar Sæhrímnir — cooked each evening by the cook Andhrímnir in the cauldron Eldhrímnir, and whole again each morning. The valkyries — Hrist and Mist, Skögul and Göndul — serve the mead that flows from the udder of the goat Heiðrún as she grazes on the leaves of Yggdrasil. The feast is not leisure but maintenance: the army must be kept strong.
The einherjar in memory
Skaldic poetry made the einherjar into the highest warrior honor. Kings who died in battle were commemorated as joining the einherjar — the Hákonarmál imagines this reunion in direct terms, Odin bidding Hákon welcome while acknowledging that the world is worse for losing him.
Related Terms
Fólkvangr
Freyja's realm of the dead in Norse cosmology — she chooses half of all warriors slain in battle and receives them in her hall Sessrúmnir, while Odin takes the other half for Valhöll.
NorseRagnarök
The Norse end-time: the battle in which Odin falls to Fenrir, Thor to Jörmungandr, Freyr to Surtr, and the Nine Worlds burn — followed by the earth's renewal and the gods' return in Völuspá.
NorseValhöll
Odin's hall in Ásgarðr where the einherjar — warriors chosen on the battlefield by the valkyries — feast on the boar Sæhrímnir and drink mead from the goat Heiðrún until Ragnarök.
NorseValkyrjur
Odin's battle-maidens — divine women who ride over battlefields choosing which warriors die and which live, conducting the chosen slain to Valhöll as Odin's einherjar.