Paganism
Review: Our Troth Vol. 3 is a hefty toolbox to forge the faith
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Lyonel Perabo reviews the newly released volume of The Troth’s mammoth work, Our Troth, 3rd Edition, which focuses on Heathen living.
The Wild Hunt (https://wildhunt.org/tag/ben-waggoner)
Lyonel Perabo reviews the newly released volume of The Troth’s mammoth work, Our Troth, 3rd Edition, which focuses on Heathen living.
Lyonel Perabo reviews the newly published second volume of Our Troth, which covers Heathen deities, spirits, and other mythological figures.
Lyonel Perabo reviews the first volume of the new edition of Our Troth, “Heathen History.”
Lyonel Perabo reviews the book “Heathen Garb and Gear: Ritual Dress, Tools, and Art for the Practice of Germanic Heathenry” by Ben Waggoner and Kveldulf Gunnarson with Diana Paxson.
Pagan Perspectives
Back in 2013 and 2014, when I was getting ready to start gathering sources for my masters’ thesis in Old Norse Religion, I realized something: while the vast majority of medieval Norse-Icelandic sagas were readily accessible in Old Icelandic, quite a few of them were hard to get a hold of in translation. Sure, I could have soldiered on, armed with only my trusty Old Icelandic-English dictionary and go through every single saga in the original language, but it would have taken such a long time that, had I done so, I’d probably still be at it today. What I needed were more general editions and translations, with enough notes and index-entries to quickly find relevant information. When it came to the more popular sagas, such as the so-called “family-sagas” (Íslendingasögur), I had little problem finding good versions. In my excessive exhaustiveness, however, I found a severe lack of material related to the more obscure sagas.