Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
Freyja Wall Shrine
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  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Freyja Wall Shrine
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Freyja Wall Shrine
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Freyja Wall Shrine
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Freyja Wall Shrine

Regular price
€39,99
Sale price
€39,99
Regular price
€85,00
Unit price
per 

Handmade with love in Estonia, available in limited quantity. 

This small shrine can be hung on your wall to bless your home, or placed on any table-top, whether it be your tv table, next to your bed, or anywhere else! 

The engraved circle in front is suitable for a standard tea-candle. You can also place water or other offerings there, the possibilities are endless! 

Made from high quality plaster that looks and feels like clay.

Size:

Width: 8cm / 3 inches 

Height: 20cm / 8 inches

Candle holder part: reaches out by 7.5cm / 3 inch


Made from high quality plaster that looks and feels like clay.


Freyja, also written as Freya, most beautiful of the Norse spirits, has dominion over love, sex, fertility, magic, witchcraft, warcraft, death, pleasure, and glory. Freya literally means “Lady” and may be a title, not a name. (Her twin brother is Freyr, or “Lord.”) She is simultaneously a spirit of fertility and death, beauty and war.

Freya, daughter of Njord and Herta (Nerthus), Sea and Earth, is among the Vanir hostages who joined the Aesir to maintain spiritual peace. Freya, however, quickly became a dominant force in her new realm. When she first arrived in Asgard, she taught the Aesir how to craft charms and potions. She inducted Odin into the world of magic.

Freya is invoked for love, romance, and fertility, but she is a death goddess, too. Under the name Valfreya, she leads the Valkyries to the battlefield where she lays claim to half the dead who are brought to dwell in her beautiful palace, Folkvang, where love songs play continuously.

Freya was no obscure goddess but beloved and worshipped over a vast European territory including Scandinavia, Iceland, Greenland, the Germanic lands, Holland, and Anglo-Saxon Britain. She remains among the most beloved and widely venerated Pagan goddesses today. No spirit annoyed Christian authorities more than Freya. Ironically, the result was that Freya survives more vividly than virtually any other female European spirit. Constant condemnation kept Freya from fading into obscurity.

Freya was denounced as a Queen of Witches. Women who venerated her were automatically branded “witches.” And, of course, Freya’s rites and traditions did encourage magical practice, mediumship, shamanism, and female autonomy with Freya herself as the role model, behaviour the new regime considered abhorrent and sinful.

• Freya weeps tears of amber.

• Honey contains her essence.

• Freya knows the power of the runes. They can be used to communicate with her.

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