Runes & Jörmungandr circle incense dish
Runes & Jörmungandr circle incense dish
Runes & Jörmungandr circle incense dish
Runes & Jörmungandr circle incense dish

Runes & Jörmungandr circle incense dish

Regular price$24.95
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Adorn your altar space with handmade incense dishes. Add texture and create a set mood for your ritual workings and home. 

Benefits of using incense dishes:

  • Keeps ritual space clean and ash free
  • Made of solid pine
  • Adds unique personal texture to altar
  • Help you to interact with your chosen deities
  • Perfect addition as home décor item

Dimensions: 6 inches across

Learn more about pagan ritual tools here here:

https://oreamnosoddities.com/blogs/news/magical-tools-in-paganism

HANDMADE IN THE USA

This incense dish is adorned with Jörmungandr and within him are the 24 Elder Futhark runes.

In Norse mythology, Jörmungandr, also known as the Midgard Serpent, is a sea serpent, the middle child of the giantess Angrboða and Loki. According to the Prose Edda, Odin took Loki's three children by Angrboða—the wolf Fenrir, Hel, and Jörmungandr—and tossed Jörmungandr into the great ocean that encircles Midgard.

The Elder Futhark is the oldest form of the runic alphabets. It was a writing system used by Germanic tribes for Northwest Germanic dialects in the Migration Period. Its inscriptions are found on artifacts from the 2nd to the 8th centuries. In Scandinavia, from the late 8th century, the script was simplified to the Younger Futhark, and the Anglo-Saxons and Frisians extended the Futhark, which eventually became the Anglo-Saxon futhorc. Unlike the Anglo-Saxon furhorc and the Younger Futharks, which remained in use during the Early and the High Middle Ages respectively, knowledge of how to read the Elder Futhark was forgotten until 1865, when it was deciphered by Norwegian scholar Sophus Bugge.

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