(Redirected from Þunraz):''For other uses, see
Thor (disambiguation).''
'Thor' (
Old Norse: 'Þórr', also known as Tor) is the red-haired and bearded
god of
thunder and
war in
Norse Mythology and more generally
Germanic mythology (
Old English: 'Þunor',
Old Dutch and
Old High German: 'Donar', from
Proto-Germanic ''
★ Þunraz'').
Thor is the son of
Odin and
Jörd. During
Ragnarök, Thor and
Jörmungandr kill each other.
Characteristics
Thor features strongly in the
Prose Edda of
Snorri Sturluson, in which Thor's many conflicts with the race of giants are a main source of plots. Thor is the most physically powerful Norse god. He uses his superior physical power to protect
Asgard and
Midgard.
Family
Thor is the son of
Odin and the giantess
Jörd (Jord, the Earth). His wife is called
Sif, and little is known of her except that she has golden hair, which was made for her by the
dwarves after
Loki had cut off her hair. With his mistress, the giantess
Járnsaxa, Thor had a son
Magni and with
Sif he had his daughter
Thrud. There is nothing in the myths that states the identity of the mother of his son
Modi. The
euhemeristic prologue of the Prose Edda also indicates he has a son by Sif named
Lóriði, along with an additional 17 generations of descendants but the prologue is apocryphal and was meant to give a plausible explanation on how the Aesir came to be worshipped even though they were not gods in order to appease the church. Thor also has a stepson called
Ullr who is a son of
Sif. ''
Skáldskaparmál'' mentions a figure named Hlóra who was Thor's foster mother, corresponding to Lora or Glora from Snorre's prologue, although no additional information concerning her is provided in the book.
Possessions
Thor travels in a chariot drawn by the
goats
Tanngrisnir and Tanngnjóstr and with his servant and messenger
Þjálfi and his sister
Röskva. The
skaldic poem ''
Haustlöng'' relates that the earth was scorched and the mountains cracked as Thor travelled in his wagon. According to the Prose Edda, when Thor is hungry he can roast the goats for a meal. When he wants to continue his travels, Thor only needs to touch the remains of the goats and they will be instantly restored to full health to resume their duties, assuming that the bones have not been broken.
Thor owns a short-handled
war hammer,
Mjolnir, which, when thrown at a target, returns magically to the owner. His Mjolnir also has the power to throw lightning bolts. To wield Mjölnir, Thor wears the belt
Megingjord, which boosts the wearer's strength and a pair of special iron gloves, Jarn Griepr, to lift the hammer.
The old
Germanic tribes knew Thor as Donner and the German word for thunder is ''Donnerschlag'' (i.e. Thor's strike). It is the strike of the hammer that causes thunderclaps; ''schlagen'' meaning to hit in
German.
Mjolnir is also his main weapon when fighting giants.
Thor lives in the palace
Bilskirnir in the kingdom
Þrúðheimr or
Þrúðvangr.
Surviving representations
Stories and myths
Most of the surviving myths centre on Thor's exploits, and from this and inscriptions on monuments we can deduce that Thor was the favorite deity of ancient
Scandinavians.
According to one myth in the Prose Edda,
Loki was flying as a
hawk one day and was captured by
Geirrod. Geirrod, who hated Thor, demanded that Loki bring his enemy (who did not yet have his magic belt and hammer) to Geirrod's castle. Loki agreed to lead Thor to the trap.
Grid was a giantess at whose home they stopped on the way to Geirrod's. She waited until Loki left the room then told Thor what was happening and gave him her
iron gloves and magical belt and staff. Thor killed Geirrod and all other frost giants he could find (including Geirrod's daughters,
Gjálp and Greip).
According to
Alvíssmál, Thor's daughter was promised to
Alvis, a dwarf. Thor devised a plan to stop Alvis from marrying his daughter. He told Alvis that, because of his small height, he had to prove his wisdom. Alvis agreed and Thor made the tests last until after the sun had risen--all dwarves turned to stone when exposed to sunlight, so Alvis was petrified.
Thor was once outwitted by a giant king,
Útgarða-Loki. The king, using his magic, tricked Thor. The king raced Thought itself against Thor's fast servant,
Þjálfi (nothing being faster than thought, which can leap from land to land, and from time to time, in an instant). Then, Loki (who was with Thor) was challenged by
Útgarða-Loki to an eating contest with one of his servants, Logi. Loki lost, eventually. The servant even ate up the trough containing the food. The servant was an illusion of "Wild-Fire", no living thing being able to equal the consumption rate of fire. He called Thor weak when he only lifted the paw of a cat, the cat being the illusion of the
Midgard Serpent. Thor was challenged to a drinking contest, and could not empty a
horn which was filled not with mead but was connected to the ocean. This action started tidal changes. And here, Thor wrestled an old woman, who was Old Age, something no one could beat, to one knee. It was only later that Thor was told that he had in fact performed impressively doing as well as he did with those challenges.
Þunor gave his name to the
Old English day ''Þunresdæg'', meaning the day of Þunor, known in
Modern English as
Thursday. Þunor is also the source of the modern word
thunder. Many writers (
Saxo,
Adam of Bremen,
Snorre Sturlason,
Ælfric of Eynsham) identified Thor with
Jupiter. The comparison can be borne: both are gods of the sky that control thunder and lightning, are children of the
mother Earth and were at some time considered the most powerful of the gods. The oak tree was sacred to both gods and they had mysterious powers. Thor is to kill the
Midgard Serpent and Jupiter, the dragon
Typhon.
Tacitus identified Thor with the Greco-Roman hero-god
Hercules because of his force, aspect, weapon and his role as protector of the world.
Another noted story of Thor was the time when Thrym, King of the Thurse (Giants), stole his hammer, Mjölnir. Thor went to Loki in hopes to find the culprit responsible for the theft. Loki and Thor went to Freyja for council. She gave Loki the Feather-robe so he could travel to the land of the giants to speak to their king. The king admitted to stealing the hammer and would not give it back unless Freyja gave her hand in marriage.
Freyja refused when she heard the plan so the gods decided to think of a way to trick the King. Heimdall, the fairest of the gods (and possibly one of the prophetic
Vanir), suggested dressing up Thor in a bridal gown so he can take Freyja's place. Thor at first refused to do such a thing as it would portray him as a coward and womanish, but Loki insisted that he do so or the Giants would attack Asgard and win it over if he were not to retrieve the hammer in time. Thor reluctantly agreed in the end and took Freyja's place.
Odin rode Thor to the land of the Giants and a celebration ensued. The king noticed a few odd things that his bride was committing. He noted that she ate and drank more than what he would expect from a bride. Loki whom was in disguise as the false Freyja's servant commented that she rode for 8 full nights without food eager to take his hand. He then asked why his bride's eyes so terrifying, they seemed to be aglow with fire, again Loki responded with the fact that she did not sleep for 8 full nights eager for his hand. Then the giant commanded that the hammer be brought to his wife and placed on her lap. Once it was in Thor's possession he threw off his disguise and attacked all the giants in the room. Due to this ruse the giants were careful not to make the same mistake again.
Norse literature
The two biggest works are the Elder Edda (or Poetic Edda) and the Younger Edda (also Snorre's Edda, Prose Edda). Thor is a very common figure, probably more common than Odin.
Thor appears as the central figure in the following works of Norse literature:
★
Þórsdrápa (summarised by
Snorre Sturlason in
Skáldskaparmál)
★
Hárbarðsljóð which details a contest between Thor and
Odin in the guise of Harbarth as to who is the most accomplished.
Thor also appears in:
★
Gylfaginning
★
Grímnismál
★
Hymiskviða
★
Þrymskviða
★
Alvíssmál
★
Lokasenna
★
Völuspá
★
Njáls saga
★
Gautreks saga
★
Eiríksmál
★
Ragnarsdrápa
★
Eyrbyggja saga
★
Húsdrápa
★
Kjalnesinga saga
★
Haustlöng
★
Fóstbrœðra saga
★
Fljótsdæla saga
★
Hallfreðar saga
★
Heimskringla
★
Landnámabók
★
Flateyjarbók
★
Gesta Danorum
★
Nordendorf fibula
★
Saxon baptismal vow
★
Gesta Hammaburgensis Ecclesiae Pontificum
Archaeological finds

A reproduction of a statue of Thor from the 10th century found in Iceland.
A seated bronze statue of Thor (about 2.5 in, 6.4 cm) from about AD
1000 was recovered at a farm near
Akureyri, Iceland and is a featured display at the
National Museum of Iceland. Thor is holding
Mjolnir, sculptured in the typically Icelandic cross-like shape.
Personal names
The name of the god Thor is the first element in many names:
★ Norwegian male names: Tor, Toralv, Torbjørn, Tore, Torfinn, Torgeir, Torgils, Torgny, Torgrim, Torkjell, Torlak, Torleif, Tormod, Torodd, Torolv, Torstein and Torvald.
★ Norwegian female names: Torbjørg, Tordis, Torfrid (Turid), Torgerd, Torgunn, Torhild (Toril), Torlaug, Torunn and Torveig.
★ Icelandic male names: Þór, Þórhallur, Þorbergur, Þorbjörn, Þorfinnur, Þorgeir, Þorgils, Þorgrímur, þorkell, Þorlákur, þorleifur, Þorsteinn, Þorvaldur, Þórarinn, Þórður and Þórólfur
★ Icelandic female names: Þorbjörg, Þorgerður, Þóra, Þórdís, Þórhildur, Þórunn and Þórgunnur
★ Danish male names: Tor, Torben, Torkil/Terkel, Torleif, Torsten, Torvald
★ Danish female names: Tora, Tove
★ Swedish male names: Tor, Torbjörn, Tord, Tore, Torgny, Torkel, Torleif, Torsten, Torvald
★ Swedish female names: Tora, Torunn, Tove
★ Scottish names: Torquil
★ English surnames: Thurkettle
★ German male names: Thorsten/Torsten, Toralf
Misc
★ "Thor's Day" is ''Þórsdagr'' in Old Norse, ''
Thursday'' in English, ''Donnerstag'' in German (meaning "Thunder's Day"), ''Donderdag'' in Dutch (meaning Thunder day), ''Torstai'' in Finnish, and ''Torsdag'' in Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian.
★ The
nebula NGC2359 is known as Thor's Helmet.
★ "
Thor's Oak" was an ancient tree near
Fritzlar in northern Hesse (Germany) and one of the most sacred of sites of the old Germans. In 723, St.
Boniface cut down the tree to demonstrate the superiority of the Christian god over Thor and the other Germanic/Nordic deities, an event that commonly marks the beginning of the Christianization of the non-Frankish Germans.
★
Thorium was named after the god Thor by
Jöns Jakob Berzelius, the chemist who discovered it.
★
THOR is the callsign of the THermal Operations and Resources position of the
International Space Station's
Mission Control room.
Homologues
Homologues in related religions
These are homologues that were created in religions of other speakers of
Indo-European languages.
★
Taranis
★
Indra
★
Perkūnas
★
Perun
★
Heracles
★
Jupiter
Homologues in other religions
★ Tiermes, Tordöm or Torum ("the golden light",
Finno-Ugric). Several Finno-Ugric peoples have thunder gods with names similar to Thor, like Finnish
Tuuri. Some, like Estonian
Taara even retain the connection with Thursday. One theory is that Thor is a loan from Finno-Ugric mythology, although the
Hittite Tarhunt and the
Vedic Indra seem to be cognates pointing to a basis in a
Proto-Indo-European religion, which suggests the opposite; that the god was borrowed from the Proto-Indo-Europeans by Finno-Ugric groups. It may even be seen as representing some common heritage between the two peoples. (The celtic
Taranis also seems to be linguistically related.)
Modern popular culture
Thor, under the German form of his name, "Donner", appears in
Richard Wagner's opera cycle, ''
Der Ring des Nibelungen''. This has led to many portrayals based on Wagner's interpretation, although some are closer to pre-Wagner models. Since Wagner's time, Thor has appeared, either as himself or as the namesake of characters,
in comic books, on television, in literature and in song lyrics.
THOR is the acronym of the Helicopter in the Movie ''
Blue Thunder'' and stands for Tactical Helicopter Offensive Response.
Thor is also a Supreme commander of the
Asgard Fleet on the sci-fi show
Stargate SG-1. Thor acts as the human-friendly god during the Middle Ages.
There is currently a feature film based on the Thor character from
Marvel Comics in it's pre-production stage to be directed by
Matthew Vaughn.
Modern symbolism
★ The City of
Sheffield's
coat of arms's
supporters are the Roman god
Vulcan and the Germanic god Thor, to represent heating and hammering of iron and steel in the area's
heavy industry.
See also
★
Almáttki áss
★
List of names of Thor
★
Yule Goat
External links
★
Viktor Rydberg's "Teutonic Mythology: Gods and Goddesses of the Northland" e-book
★
W. Wagner's "Asgard and the Home of the Gods" e-book
★
"Myths of Northern Lands" e-book by
H.A. Guerber
★
Peter Andreas Munch's "Norse Mythology: Legends of Gods and Heroes" e-book