The Old Ways

Norse Tradition

Vanir

VAH-nir (Old Norse Vanir, singular Vanr)

The second divine tribe of Norse religion — Njörðr, Freyr, and Freyja — associated with natural abundance, seiðr, seafaring, and fertility; integrated into the Æsir after their war.

Vanir (Old Norse, singular Vanr) are the second great tribe of Norse deities — gods and goddesses of nature, fertility, seafaring, magic, and prosperity. The three Vanir of whom the most is preserved are Njörðr (god of sea, winds, and fishing), Freyr (god of sunshine, rain, and the harvest), and Freyja (goddess of love, war, fertility, and seiðr). After the war that divided and then reunited the divine tribes, these three were exchanged as hostages and took up permanent residence in Ásgarðr, where they are counted among the Æsir in practice while retaining their distinct nature.

The Æsir-Vanir war

Völuspá stanzas 21–24 give the mythological account. Gullveig — a figure usually identified with Freyja in her role as bringer of seiðr — was sent to the Æsir and burned three times; three times she rose. Heiðr she was then called, “shining one.” The war that followed ended in the stalemate of exchange: the Vanir sent Njörðr and Freyr (and Freyja, who came with her brother) to Ásgarðr, and the Æsir sent Hœnir and Mímir to Vanaheimr. Ynglinga saga ch. 4 adds that Freyja became chief sacrificial priestess (blótgyðja) among the Æsir and taught them seiðr.

The Vanir’s domain

The Vanir govern the productive world: the rain that makes the crops grow, the sea lanes that bring trade, the cycles of sexuality and birth. Freyr’s connection to sunshine and rain is explicit in the saga sources — til árs ok friðar, “for good year and peace,” the toast drunk to Njörðr and Freyr at the great blóts (Hákonar saga góða). Freyja’s domain spans erotic love, fierce grief, and the shamanic arts — a breadth that modern categorization struggles to contain.

Vanaheimr

The Vanir’s home realm, Vanaheimr, is rarely described in the surviving sources. Vafþrúðnismál mentions it; Ynglinga saga locates it geographically (following the euhemeristic approach). After the exchange of hostages, Vanaheimr appears largely deserted of named inhabitants in the mythological sources.

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