The Ancient Gods have returned!

Articles by "Magic"

Did you know that the Valkyries are able to do a ‘hamr’ (shapeshift) of a raven to gain the ability to fly.

 

In Völsunga saga, it is described how Óðinn sends an ‘óskmey’ (wish maiden) to king Sigi’s wife. In the story, it is told that she puts on a ‘krákuhamr’ (raven’s skin) to fly.

 

Among other magic that the Valkyries have is that they can speak and understand the language of birds, which was considered extraordinary in ancient times. This is how Þorbjörn Hornklofi talks about a conversation between a valkyrie and a raven in his Haraldskvæði (Harald’s poem), which is also called Hrafnsmál (Raven’s speech) for this reason.

 

There the valkyrie asks about the course of the great battle on Hafursfjörður, the raven answers her and the conversation goes well because she knows the speech of birds.



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Heka"He Who Activates the Ka"

 Alternative Names: Hike

 

Role & Function: The personification of magic, the power of word.

 

Status:  Heka was a member of the Triad of Latopolis, consisting of Neith, Khnum and Heka

 

Symbols:              The side lock, Hemhem crown, ankh, flail and scepter

 

Cult Center:        Hermopolis (Khmunu) in the Nile Delta lands of Lower Egypt

 

Titles:   

 

Heka, the Egyptian god of Magic and Medicine.. Heka, also known by the name of Hike, the god with magic powers and spells was the personification of divine magic that the ancient Egyptians believed produced the magical power of the sun and of life. As the god of magic he was also associated with medicine and healing and the power of the written and spoken words. The priests of Heka invoked his magical powers when practicing their arts, called themselves 'Priests of Heka'. Ancient Egyptian temples included a type of hospital where the priest practised their form of medicine and magic.

At the beginning of time, the god Atum emerged from the swirling waters of chaos to stand on the first dry land, the primordial ben-ben, to begin the act of creation.

 

The universe was created and given form by magical means, and magic sustained both the visible and invisible worlds. Heka was thought to have been present at creation and was the generative power the gods drew upon in order to create life.

To me belonged the universe before you gods came into being. You have come afterwards because I am Heka" (Spell, 261).

 

Heka was linked to the creative aspects of the heart and the tongue. The heart was considered the seat of one's individual personality, thought, and feeling, while the tongue gave expression to these aspects. Sia was a personification of the heart, Hu of the tongue, and Heka the power which infused both.

 

 

Heka was depicted as a young, beautiful and healthy child god. In ancient Egyptian art children were illustrated with a finger pointing towards their mouth (sucking their thumb) or pointing towards the lips. The Hieroglyphic Symbol for a child was indicated by a finger inserted in mouth. Heka was also depicted wearing a side lock, as worn by ancient Egyptian boys and the style of headdress called a Hemhem crown. He forms a Triad with Khnum and Neith. Hermopolis (Khmunu) in the Nile Delta lands of Lower Egypt

 

 

Magic was considered present at the birth of creation - was, in fact, the operative force in the creative act - and so Heka is among the oldest gods of Egypt, recognized as early as the Predynastic Period in Egypt (c. 6000 - c. 3150 BCE) and appearing in inscriptions in the Early Dynastic Period (c. 3150 - 2613 BCE).

 

He is frequently seen in funerary texts and inscriptions guiding the soul of the deceased to the afterlife and is often mentioned in medical texts and spells. The Pyramid Texts and the Coffin Texts both claim Heka as their authority (the god whose power makes the texts true)

 

Heka was honored throughout Egypt's history from the earliest times through the Ptolemaic Dynasty (332-30 BCE) and into Roman Egypt. There was a statue of him in the temple of the city of Esna where his name was inscribed on the walls. He was regularly invoked for the harvest, and his statue was taken out and carried through the fields to ensure fertility and a bountiful crop.

 

 

 


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