The God of War
Tyr Tiu, or Ziu was the son of Odin,
and, according to different mythologists, his mother
was Frigga, queen of the gods, or a beautiful giantess
whose name is unknown, but who was a personification
of the raging sea. He is the god of martial honour,
and one of the twelve principal deities of Asgard.
Although he appears to have had no special dwelling
there, he was always welcome to Vingolf or Valhalla,
and occupied one of the twelve thrones in the great
council hall of Glads-heim.
“The hall Glads-heim, which
is built of gold;
Where are in circle, ranged twelve golden chairs,
And in the midst one higher, Odin’s Throne.”
Balder Dead (Matthew Arnold).
As the God of courage and of war,
Tyr was frequently invoked by the various nations
of the North, who cried to him, as well as to Odin,
to obtain victory. That he ranked next to Odin
and Thor is proved by his name, Tiu, having been given
to one of the days of the week, Tiu’s day, which
in modern English has become Tuesday. Under the
name of Ziu, Tyr was the principal divinity of the
Suabians, who originally called their capital, the
modern Augsburg, Ziusburg. This people, venerating
the god as they did, were wont to worship him under
the emblem of a sword, his distinctive attribute,
and in his honour held great sword dances, where various
figures were performed. Sometimes the participants
forming two long lines, crossed their swords, point
upward, and challenged the boldest among their number
to take a flying leap over them. At other times
the warriors joined their sword points closely together
in the shape of a rose or wheel, and when this figure
was complete invited their chief to stand on the navel
thus formed of flat, shining steel blades, and then
they bore him upon it through the camp in triumph.
The sword point was further considered so sacred that
it became customary to register oaths upon it.
“... Come hither, gentlemen,
And lay your hands again upon my sword; Never
to speak of this that you have heard, Swear by
my sword.”
Hamlet (Shakespeare).
A distinctive feature of the worship
of this god among the Franks and some other Northern
nations was that the priests called Druids or Godi
offered up human sacrifices upon his altars, generally
cutting the bloody- or spread-eagle upon their victims,
that is to say, making a deep incision on either side
of the back-bone, turning the ribs thus loosened inside
out, and tearing out the viscera through the opening
thus made. Of course only prisoners of war were
treated thus, and it was considered a point of honour
with north European races to endure this torture without
a moan. These sacrifices were made upon rude
stone altars called dolmens, which can still be
seen in Northern Europe. As Tyr was considered
the patron god of the sword, it was deemed indispensable
to engrave the sign or rune representing him upon
the blade of every sword an observance which
the Edda enjoined upon all those who were desirous
of obtaining victory.
“Sig-runes thou must know,
If victory (sigr) thou wilt have,
And on thy sword’s hilt rist them;
Some on the chapes,
Some on the guard,
And twice name the name of Tyr.”
Lay of Sigdrifa (Thorpe’s
tr.).
Tyr was identical with the Saxon god
Saxnot (from sax, a sword), and with Er, Heru, or
Cheru, the chief divinity of the Cheruski, who also
considered him god of the sun, and deemed his shining
sword blade an emblem of its rays.
“This very sword a ray of
light
Snatched from the Sun!”
Valhalla (J. C. Jones).
Tyr’s Sword
According to an ancient legend, Cheru’s
sword, which had been fashioned by the same dwarfs,
sons of Ivald, who had also made Odin’s spear,
was held very sacred by his people, to whose care he
had entrusted it, declaring that those who possessed
it were sure to have the victory over their foes.
But although carefully guarded in the temple, where
it was hung so that it reflected the first beams of
the morning sun, it suddenly and mysteriously disappeared
one night. A Vala, druidess, or prophetess, consulted
by the priests, revealed that the Norns had decreed
that whoever wielded it would conquer the world and
come to his death by it; but in spite of all entreaties
she refused to tell who had taken it or where it might
be found. Some time after this occurrence a tall
and dignified stranger came to Cologne, where Vitellius,
the Roman prefect, was feasting, and called him away
from his beloved dainties. In the presence of
the Roman soldiery he gave him the sword, telling
him it would bring him glory and renown, and finally
hailed him as emperor. The cry was taken up by
the assembled legions, and Vitellius, without
making any personal effort to secure the honour, found
himself elected Emperor of Rome.
The new ruler, however, was so absorbed
in indulging his taste for food and drink that he
paid but little heed to the divine weapon. One
day while leisurely making his way towards Rome he
carelessly left it hanging in the antechamber to his
pavilion. A German soldier seized this opportunity
to substitute in its stead his own rusty blade, and
the besotted emperor did not notice the exchange.
When he arrived at Rome, he learned that the Eastern
legions had named Vespasian emperor, and that he was
even then on his way home to claim the throne.
Searching for the sacred weapon to
defend his rights, Vitellius now discovered the
theft, and, overcome by superstitious fears, did not
even attempt to fight. He crawled away into a
dark corner of his palace, whence he was ignominiously
dragged by the enraged populace to the foot of the
Capitoline Hill. There the prophecy was duly fulfilled,
for the German soldier, who had joined the opposite
faction, coming along at that moment, cut off Vitellius’
head with the sacred sword.
The German soldier now changed from
one legion to another, and travelled over many lands;
but wherever he and his sword were found, victory
was assured. After winning great honour and distinction,
this man, having grown old, retired from active service
to the banks of the Danube, where he secretly buried
his treasured weapon, building his hut over its resting-place
to guard it as long as he might live. When he
lay on his deathbed he was implored to reveal where
he had hidden it, but he persistently refused to do
so, saying that it would be found by the man who was
destined to conquer the world, but that he would not
be able to escape the curse. Years passed by.
Wave after wave the tide of barbarian invasion swept
over that part of the country, and last of all came
the terrible Huns under the leadership of Attila,
the “Scourge of God.” As he passed
along the river, he saw a peasant mournfully examining
his cow’s foot, which had been wounded by some
sharp instrument hidden in the long grass, and when
search was made the point of a buried sword was found
sticking out of the soil.
Attila, seeing the beautiful workmanship
and the fine state of preservation of this weapon,
immediately exclaimed that it was Cheru’s sword,
and brandishing it above his head he announced that
he would conquer the world. Battle after battle
was fought by the Huns, who, according to the Saga,
were everywhere victorious, until Attila, weary of
warfare, settled down in Hungary, taking to wife the
beautiful Burgundian princess Ildico, whose father
he had slain. This princess, resenting the murder
of her kin and wishing to avenge it, took advantage
of the king’s state of intoxication upon his
wedding night to secure possession of the divine sword,
with which she slew him in his bed, once more fulfilling
the prophecy uttered so many years before.
The magic sword again disappeared
for a long time, to be unearthed once more, for the
last time, by the Duke of Alva, Charles V.’s
general, who shortly after won the victory of Muehlberg
(1547). The Franks were wont to celebrate yearly
martial games in honour of the sword; but it is said
that when the heathen gods were renounced in favour
of Christianity, the priests transferred many of their
attributes to the saints, and that this sword became
the property of the Archangel St. Michael, who has
wielded it ever since.
Tyr, whose name was synonymous with
bravery and wisdom, was also considered by the ancient
Northern people to have the white-armed Valkyrs, Odin’s
attendants, at his command, and they thought that
he it was who designated the warriors whom they should
transfer to Valhalla to aid the gods on the last day.
“The god Tyr sent
Gondul and Skogul
To choose a king
Of the race of Ingve,
To dwell with Odin
In roomy Valhal.”
Norse Mythology (R.
B. Anderson).
The Story of Fenris
Tyr was generally spoken of and represented
as one-armed, just as Odin was called one-eyed.
Various explanations are offered by different authorities;
some claim that it was because he could give the victory
only to one side; others, because a sword has but one
blade. However this may be, the ancients preferred
to account for the fact in the following way:
Loki married secretly at Joetun-heim
the hideous giantess Angur-boda (anguish boding),
who bore him three monstrous children the
wolf Fenris, Hel, the parti-coloured goddess of death,
and Ioermungandr, a terrible serpent. He kept
the existence of these monsters secret as long as
he could; but they speedily grew so large that they
could no longer remain confined in the cave where
they had come to light. Odin, from his throne
Hlidskialf, soon became aware of their existence,
and also of the disquieting rapidity with which they
increased in size. Fearful lest the monsters,
when they had gained further strength, should invade
Asgard and destroy the gods, Allfather determined to
get rid of them, and striding off to Joetun-heim, he
flung Hel into the depths of Nifl-heim, telling her
she could reign over the nine dismal worlds of the
dead. He then cast Ioermungandr into the sea,
where he attained such immense proportions that at
last he encircled the earth and could bite his own
tail.
“Into mid-ocean’s dark
depths hurled,
Grown with each day to giant size,
The serpent soon inclosed the world,
With tail in mouth, in circle-wise;
Held harmless still
By Odin’s will.”
Valhalla (J. C. Jones).
None too well pleased that the serpent
should attain such fearful dimensions in his new element,
Odin resolved to lead Fenris to Asgard, where he hoped,
by kindly treatment, to make him gentle and tractable.
But the gods one and all shrank in dismay when they
saw the wolf, and none dared approach to give him food
except Tyr, whom nothing daunted. Seeing that
Fenris daily increased in size, strength, voracity,
and fierceness, the gods assembled in council to deliberate
how they might best dispose of him. They unanimously
decided that as it would desecrate their peace-steads
to slay him, they would bind him fast so that he could
work them no harm.
With that purpose in view, they obtained
a strong chain named Laeding, and then playfully proposed
to Fenris to bind this about him as a test of his
vaunted strength. Confident in his ability to
release himself, Fenris patiently allowed them to
bind him fast, and when all stood aside, with a mighty
effort he stretched himself and easily burst the chain
asunder.
Concealing their chagrin, the gods
were loud in praise of his strength, but they next
produced a much stronger fetter, Droma, which, after
some persuasion, the wolf allowed them to fasten around
him as before. Again a short, sharp struggle
sufficed to burst this bond, and it is proverbial
in the North to use the figurative expressions, “to
get loose out of Laeding,” and “to dash
out of Droma,” whenever great difficulties have
to be surmounted.
“Twice did the AEsir strive to
bind,
Twice did they fetters powerless find;
Iron or brass of no avail,
Naught, save through magic, could prevail.”
Valhalla (J. C. Jones).
The gods, perceiving now that ordinary
bonds, however strong, would never prevail against
the Fenris wolf’s great strength, bade Skirnir,
Frey’s servant, go down to Svart-alfa-heim and
bid the dwarfs fashion a bond which nothing could
sever.
By magic arts the dark elves manufactured
a slender silken rope from such impalpable materials
as the sound of a cat’s footsteps, a woman’s
beard, the roots of a mountain, the longings of the
bear, the voice of fishes, and the spittle of birds,
and when it was finished they gave it to Skirnir,
assuring him that no strength would avail to break
it, and that the more it was strained the stronger
it would become.
“Gleipnir, at last,
By Dark Elves cast,
In Svart-alf-heim, with strong spells wrought,
To Odin was by Skirnir brought:
As soft as silk, as light as air,
Yet still of magic power most rare.”
Valhalla (J. C. Jones).
Armed with this bond, called Gleipnir,
the gods went with Fenris to the Island of Lyngvi,
in the middle of Lake Amsvartnir, and again proposed
to test his strength. But although Fenris had
grown still stronger, he mistrusted the bond which
looked so slight. He therefore refused to allow
himself to be bound, unless one of the AEsir would
consent to put his hand in his mouth, and leave it
there, as a pledge of good faith, and that no magic
arts were to be used against him.
The gods heard the decision with dismay,
and all drew back except Tyr, who, seeing that the
others would not venture to comply with this condition,
boldly stepped forward and thrust his hand between
the monster’s jaws. The gods now fastened
Gleipnir securely around Fenris’s neck and paws,
and when they saw that his utmost efforts to free
himself were fruitless, they shouted and laughed with
glee. Tyr, however, could not share their joy,
for the wolf, finding himself captive, bit off the
god’s hand at the wrist, which since then has
been known as the wolf’s joint.
Loki.
“Be silent, Tyr!
Thou couldst never settle
A strife ’twixt two;
Of thy right hand also
I must mention make,
Which Fenris from thee took.
Tyr.
I of a hand am wanting,
But thou of honest fame;
Sad is the lack of either.
Nor is the wolf at ease:
He in bonds must abide
Until the gods’ destruction.”
Saemund’s Edda (Thorpe’s
tr.).
Deprived of his right hand, Tyr was
now forced to use the maimed arm for his shield, and
to wield his sword with his left hand; but such was
his dexterity that he slew his enemies as before.
The gods, in spite of the wolf’s
struggles, drew the end of the fetter Gelgia through
the rock Gioll, and fastened it to the boulder Thviti,
which was sunk deep in the ground. Opening wide
his fearful jaws, Fenris uttered such terrible howls
that the gods, to silence him, thrust a sword into
his mouth, the hilt resting upon his lower jaw and
the point against his palate. The blood then began
to pour out in such streams that it formed a great
river, called Von. The wolf was destined to remain
thus chained fast until the last day, when he would
burst his bonds and would be free to avenge his wrongs.
“The wolf Fenrir,
Freed from the chain,
Shall range the earth.”
Death-song of Hakon (W.
Taylor’s tr.).
While some mythologists see in this
myth an emblem of crime restrained and made innocuous
by the power of the law, others see the underground
fire, which kept within bounds can injure no one, but
which unfettered fills the world with destruction
and woe. Just as Odin’s second eye is said
to rest in Mimir’s well, so Tyr’s second
hand (sword) is found in Fenris’s jaws.
He has no more use for two weapons than the sky for
two suns.
The worship of Tyr is commemorated
in sundry places (such as Tuebingen, in Germany),
which bear more or less modified forms of his name.
The name has also been given to the aconite, a plant
known in Northern countries as “Tyr’s
helm.”