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Heathenry
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Heathenry is the term preferred, in the UK (and increasingly elsewhere), by many followers of Germanic paganism or Germanic neopaganism as the name of their religion. Overview While some practitioners use the term Heathenry as equivalent to Paganism, others use it much more specifically. It is used by those who are re-creating the old religion and worldview from the literary and archaeological sources, who describe themselves as "Heathen" in part to distinguish themselves from other pagans whose rituals come from other sources. Some North Americans use Heathenism with a similar intent. Heathenry in the UK differs from Ásatrú in North America in being generally more rooted in the landscape (Blain, 2002a, Harvey 2006 forthcoming) and in this may possibly more akin to Ásatrú in Iceland and similar religious expression in Scandinavia. Heathenry draws on ideas of a living landscape, close to some expressed by indigenous religions elsewhere. Heathenry, therefore, for many adherents, is about creating a connection between humans and landscape, through the acknowledgement of land- and other wights, ancestors (spiritual and cultural, not necessarily physical) and other beings; it is therefore an animist religion drawing on (for instance) the Old English healing charms, the Icelandic Eddas and Sagas, and folklore elements in creating a religion from today from these and other resources. Shamanic or shamanistic elements are evident and practitioners may use seid and galdr, or shamanistic magic and sung magic, in rituals. Heathenry relates to both the practices and worldviews of Heathens and to the practitioners - thus Heathenry can mean people who are Heathen, or what they do. In general, Heathens consider that people are called to the religion, perhaps by the gods or by the landscape, regardless of their ethnic origins. In this sense, Heathens are new-indigenes (Blain and Wallis, 2002). Heathenry and reconstruction Heathenry is often described as reconstructionism. Not all Heathens agree with this - saying that their goal is to create religious practice and personal empowerment for today, rather than to imitate or re-enact past rituals. Basically, such construction or reconstruction works from the principle that earlier documents or artefacts (from literature or archaeology) hold clues to religious or spiritual practice and relationships with deities or spirits, and in particular to world-views or religious philosophies. These practices and worldviews and relationships can be used or adopted meaningfully within today's world, with practitioners concerned to locate practices, deities, etc, within culture and time, and to be able to point to some documentation or other justification for what they do. or The deities of Heathenry are those of Anglo-Saxon religion and of Norse Mythology - see list of Norse gods. Some British Heathens may also honour one or more BrythonicGaelic deities of Celtic Mythology. As with other polytheist religions, it is quite common for individuals to owe personal allegiance to a small number of deities while also recognising and honouring many others. In North America there is also Theodism or Þéodisc Geléafa ("tribal belief") which started out as a form of Germanic Neopaganism which sought to reconstruct the beliefs and practices of the Anglo-Saxon tribes which settled in England. þéodisc is the adjective of þéod "people, tribe", cognate to deutsch. Culture Many of the ritual forms of blót - making an offering - and sumble (or symbel)- a ritual of toasting - are discussed under Asatru. Indeed these forms generally serve to separate Germanic/Nordic religion from other pagan and neo-pagan practices. Heathenry is defined, however, as much by worldview and discourse as by specific rituals. The following list is given by Blain (2006, based on 2002a) for this article, from her ethnographic work with today's Heathens, of understandings or discourses of Heathenry that shape what Heathens do.
Heathens meeting in small groups on a regular (monthly, quarterly) basis will often refer to this as their blót. Offerings during a blot usually involve mead or other alcohol, sometimes food, sometimes song or poetry, specially written for the occasion or for a particular deity, is delivered as an offering. Rituals of blot (most Heathens in Britain will omit the Icelandic accented 'o') may be designed or even scripted for the occasion or may be spontaneous. Usual dress for a blot is whatever suits the seasons - many blots are outdoors, sometimes at sacred sites. Some Heathens will wear clothing reminiscent of Anglo-Saxon or Norse 'Viking' times, especially if the blot is open to the public or part of a larger pagan event (camps, conferences, etc.) Heathens who are also involved in reenactment are most likely to do this. There is no single Heathen calendar of sacred days on which to make blot, and different groups or organisations celebrate their own festivals or sacred days as they see fit or as the season dictates: thus Winternights, for the end of summer and coming of winter, may be celebrated from early October to mid November in different areas of the UK. The festival most commonly celebrated is Yule, often over 12 days from the evening before winter solstice until New Year. Web resources relevant to Heathenry in Britain
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