The Helm Of Awe Explained (Ægishjálmur) Pagan Symbols

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A basic explanation of the Helm of Awe symbol! Norse Mythology and Viking Culture show this symbol often!

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More pagan symbols coming soon!

#pagan #helmofawe #paganism #norsepagan #Ægishjálmur #vikings #viking #pagansymbols

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Please educate me if I'm wrong im new to this but very interested isn't this 17th century Icelandic Christian folk Magic symbol nothing to do with vikings different culture .I read that the helm of awe was an actual object like a Helmet not a symbol . I'm sorry if I offended anybody But please educate me this is very important subject I'm learning on about thank you

bravos
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Very cool knowledge & History Brother !

shawnwheeler
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I dont know anything about symbols
During meditation this symbol appeared to me and led me to see this video.
Do you have any reliable accurate sources information to go deeper into the meaning of this? Im trying to get some ideas of why it was shown to me
Thank you!

kelcee
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That's just the icelandic version of one of the Solomon Seals. And no, it's not a viking age symbol.

oversipelio
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The only factual thing you can say about it is that it’s a Nordic symbol. You can’t necessarily put it in the Viking Age

thmaswright
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I would pronounce it like Aegisyalmur.

MonogoMango
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That is a pagan symbol in the video. But paganism is far older than the viking culture and was practiced far and wide, not just the Nordic regions. The vikings have no solitary claim to paganism. There were many different versions of it all across Europe by the time the vikings made their marks in history.
There were also different clans of vikings with varying practices. Some were peaceful farmers, some were hunter-gatherers, some were violent and ruthless. To lump them all together under a specific characteristic is unrealistic.

deek
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First appeared in a Kabalistic book in the 1500s that's full of CHRISTIAN incantations. Final rendition appeared in in the Huld Manuscript in the 1800s (along side the vegvisir). POST Viking age.

Aegishjalmur as a word appears twice in writing that are also post viking age as an ACTUAL HELMET, not a symbol.

The only pagan time frame the word appears is on as rune stone, described as a helmt, not a symbol.

NOT a pagan symbol. It's kabalistic.

Now, if it works for you, great, have at it. But do NOT LIE about what it is or where it comes form.

franzwohlgemuth
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I'm taking no information from someone that bleaches a streak in their beard and hair. Your roots are showing. Better freshen that up

deek