Studia Islandica - 01.06.1963, Side 81

Studia Islandica - 01.06.1963, Side 81
SUMMARY Chapter I surveys briefly the Icelandic sources relating to the two families of Scandinavian gods: the Æsir and the Vanir, the war between them, and the settlement which ends it. The fullest accounts are to be found in the works of Snorri Sturluson: Ynglinga Saga (the introductory saga of the Heimskringla) and the Younger Edda. VölusTpá tells of the war of the gods, and many other Eddic poems distinguish clearly between Æsir and Vanir. This division of the gods into two groups is therefore certainly much older than Snorri, and there can hardly be any doubt that it goes back to heathen times. The problem of the relationship between Æsir and Vanir has long occupied students of Scandinavian religion and mythology. Of particular interest is the fact that the three Vanir deities: Njord, Frey, and Freyja, were beyond all other gods worshiped as fertility gods. It was suggested long ago that the story of the war between Æsir and Vanir contained reminiscences of a conflict be- tween two religions. Some scholars associate this conflict with a migration of peoples, but according to the testimony of archaeo- logy, no major migration into Northern Europe has taken place during the last 4000 years. Shortly before 2000 B. C. the Aryans — the Battle-Ax People of the archaeologists — broke through from the plains of Russia to the Rhine and settled among a farm- ing population which a few centuries earlier had begun to culti- vate the soil. But the author thinks it unlikely that the story of the war between the gods represents memories of events taking place in the first centuries after the Aryan invasion. If the story goes back to a conflict between two religions, that conflict must have come to an end not long before the beginning of historical times in Scandinavia. In recent years the prolific French scholar Georges Dumézil has interpreted the story of the war between the gods in a very dif- ferent fashion. He believes that all Aryan peoples originally had a common religion, and in this religion he finds the origin of the deities of the Germanic peoples. According to him the story of the struggle between Æsir and Vanir reflects not a clash between dif-

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