The Old Ways

Norse Tradition

Jötnar

YOT-nar (Old Norse jötnar, singular jötunn)

The jötnar (giants) are the primordial beings of Norse cosmology who predate the gods, provide them with wives and wisdom, and oppose them at Ragnarök — neither simply evil nor simply heroic.

Jötnar (Old Norse, singular jötunn; also called þursar or rime-giants) are the ancient, powerful beings who exist in fundamental tension with the Æsir — older than the gods, often wiser, frequently their in-laws, and ultimately their destroyers at Ragnarök. The English word “giant” understates them: jötnar are not merely large, but primordial, embodying natural forces before the gods imposed order on chaos.

From Ymir to the Nine Worlds

Gylfaginning ch. 5–8 sets the cosmological frame. Before anything else, there was Ginnungagap — the void between fire and ice. From the ice, animated by the heat of Muspelheim, came Ymir: the first jötunn, source of all subsequent jötnar who sprang from his sweating body. Odin and his brothers Vili and Vé slew Ymir, and from his body fashioned the Nine Worlds: flesh became earth, blood became sea, bones became mountains, skull became sky.

Kin and adversaries

The relationship between gods and giants is not cleanly adversarial. Odin’s mother is the giantess Bestla; Thor’s mother is Jörð, herself giantess-nature. Freyr falls in love with the giantess Gerðr (Skírnismál). The wisest being in the cosmos is the giant Vafþrúðnir, whom Odin visits in disguise to test his own knowledge (Vafþrúðnismál). The giant Hymir brews the ale for the gods’ feast.

And yet: Jötnar will side with Loki at Ragnarök. The wolf Fenrir and the World Serpent Jörmungandr — Loki’s children by the giantess Angrboða — will kill Odin and Thor. Surtr of Muspelheim will burn the worlds. The relationship is one of permanent dynamic tension, not simple good-against-evil.

Jötnar and forces of nature

Modern Ásatrú theology often reads the jötnar as embodiments of natural forces — the raw, indifferent power of mountain, sea, storm, and fire — against which the Æsir represent the ordering principle that makes human life possible. Neither can exist without the other; the tension is generative.

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