Norse Tradition
Þing
THING (Old Norse þing)
The Norse assembly where free men gathered to recite laws, settle disputes, and make community decisions — the Icelandic Alþing being the most celebrated, founded in 930 CE at Þingvellir.
Þing (Old Norse, “assembly,” cognate with Old English þing, German Ding — the word for “thing” in modern languages derives from it, because assemblies were where the important things of life were decided) was the fundamental governing and legal institution of Norse and Germanic society. At the þing, laws were recited, disputes were heard, marriages and alliances were announced, outlaws were declared, and the community’s collective decisions were made.
The Alþing of Iceland
The most famous þing was the Icelandic Alþing, established in 930 CE at Þingvellir — a dramatic landscape where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates meet, creating a long natural rift that served as a speaking ground. The Lawspeaker (lögsögumaðr) — the single most important official — recited one-third of the law from memory each year from the Lögberg (Law Rock), completing the full recitation over a three-year cycle. Before writing, the law lived in a human being.
Law, religion, and the þing
The þing was not a secular institution in the modern sense. The goðar presided over þing districts; the law’s authority derived from its divine grounding. Oaths sworn at the þing were sworn on the oath-ring — the hallowed arm-ring kept at the hof, reddened with sacrificial blood. To lie under such an oath was to invoke divine judgment as surely as a blót called down divine favor.
Frith and the þing
The þing operated under a sacred frith: violence within the assembly grounds was deeply taboo. The Norse term þingsfrið (assembly-peace) was one of the most strongly enforced legal concepts. Men who were mortal enemies by blood-feud were expected to argue their cases before the þing without drawing weapons. The assembly was a temporary suspension of all private violence in favor of community speech.
Related Terms
Ásatrú
Literally 'faith in the Æsir' — the modern revival of the pre-Christian Norse religion, publicly refounded in Iceland in the 1970s and now practiced worldwide.
NorseFrith
The Norse concept of inviolable peace and mutual goodwill maintained within a community or household — the social foundation that makes blót, sumbel, and right relationship possible.
NorseGoði / Gyðja
The Norse chieftain-priest (goði) and priestess (gyðja) who led blót, maintained the sacred space, mediated between community and gods, and held combined religious and political authority.
NorseHeathenry
The revival of the pre-Christian religions of the Germanic-speaking peoples — Norse, Anglo-Saxon, and continental — a polytheist tradition centered on the gods, the ancestors, and the exchange of gifts.