Cosmology
- Alexander Hansen
- Oct 1
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 3
Norse cosmology describes the spiritual structure of the mythic universe—where gods, giants, and other beings dwell in the Nine Worlds linked by Yggdrasil., you could say – is primarily an invisible, spiritual otherworld, although it overlapped with the Vikings’ physical world in a few cases. The Norse cosmology shares much in common with the cosmologies of other northern Eurasian shamanic traditions, but it presents a unique take on those shared patterns.[1][2]
In the center of the cosmos is the trunk of the mighty, sprawling world-tree Yggdrasil. Within its branches and roots it holds the Nine Worlds, the homelands of the various kinds of invisible beings who populate the Norse otherworld, as well as the world of mankind. While the surviving period sources never explicitly list the homelands that comprise the Nine Worlds, the list can be tentatively reconstructed as follows:
Midgard, the home of humanity and human civilization
Vanaheim, the world of the Vanir tribe of gods and goddesses
Niflheim, the primordial world of ice
Muspelheim, the primordial world of fire
Nidavellir/Svartalfheim, the world of the dwarves
Hel, the world of the eponymous goddess Hel and the dead
Other than the Nine Worlds, there are a few other locations that feature prominently in Norse mythology that are worthy of our consideration here:
Valhalla, where some elite warriors chosen by Odin find themselves after death
Folkvang, where Freya, too, receives some of those who die in battle
Ginnungagap, the chaotic void that existed prior to the creation of the cosmos
Bifrost, the rainbow bridge that connects Asgard and Midgard
Hlidskjalf, the seat where Odin sits to watch what’s going on throughout the worlds
References :
[1] Price, Neil S. 2002. The Viking Way: Religion and War in Late Iron Age Scandinavia.
[2] Eliade, Mircea. 1964. Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy. Translated by Willard R. Trask.







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