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-   -   What is a Gode? (http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/showthread.php?t=41259)

Kristoffer O November 15th, 2008 03:32 AM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Asmegs are the (more human) descendants of the dead Aesir that will populate the new world after Ragnarök, according to some reference.

Singularity24601 November 16th, 2008 07:32 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by lch (Post 652770)
I think you can find those in the Edda. Vanir live in Vanaheimr. Skrattinn seems to be another name for Satan, yes.

Van seems to mean something like "the Glamorous", "the Habituals", "the familiar gods of fields and meadows".

Edit: the others are right, goði is a priest. And the hersir was a military commander.

(I'd render 'ð' as 'th' instead of 'd'.)

I couldn't find any references to Asmegs on the Googlosphere. Anyone know of any resources or alternative spellings?

lch November 16th, 2008 08:44 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Singularity24601 (Post 653411)
(I'd render 'ð' as 'th' instead of 'd'.)

Well, if you want. The english 'th' is being pronounced too closely to 's' for me though, while 'ð' is phonetically equivalent to the greek delta and was mostly replaced by 'd' according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ð

Quote:

Originally Posted by Singularity24601 (Post 653411)
I couldn't find any references to Asmegs on the Googlosphere. Anyone know of any resources or alternative spellings?

Maybe ásmegin. I don't speak norse, but that's what you can find in the norse Gylfaginning and Skáldskaparmál versions of the younger Edda. Wikipedia unfortunately only lists a band of the same name. Literally As-strength or Áss-power, the Wikipedia article says that it means "by/with the might of the gods".

vfb November 17th, 2008 01:00 AM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Hey, how did "Áss-power" make it through the Shrapnel obscenity filter! :)

lch November 17th, 2008 02:54 AM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Because it is a magnificent Áss-power.

sector24 November 17th, 2008 12:37 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
I've got some more, not -heim specific though:

Galderman
Hangadrott - "The Hanging God" referring to Odin
Vanadrott - ?
Enarie
Ambibate - (Actually any website that might clue me into the Maverni units would be nice)
Shura
Onaqui

Kristoffer O November 17th, 2008 01:03 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Drott is a king, more or less. Hangatyr (tyr=god) is a more common Odin name, although I think hangadrott was used at times.

Enarie is used by Herodotos to name the transvestite soothsayers of the scythians.

Ambibates was one of the gaul tribes IIRC. Their specifics in dominions are of my design IIRC. Their specifics are probably not historical.

The Shura is a warrior ghost according to the old but beautiful Bushido RPG. Bushido is by western fiction standards a remarkably good portrayal of Japanese medieval culture. Although it makes some strange creations to fit spirits and stuff into a fantasy setting. The Shikome of nihongi have turned into some kind of stone eating goblins, but the game is still a nice source on yokai, obake and japanese folk religion.

The Onaqui is a tribute to the old pen and paper RPG 'Chill', or rather it's swedish version 'Chock'. There was an entity named Onaqui in an adventure that later on was adopted and remade in the monster-book of the most widespread swedish fantasy RPG 'Drakar och Demoner'. Thus the Onaqui is probably not a nahuatl or mayan name. Some of it's aspects on the other hand can be found in gods such as Camazotz, the bat. I was fond of the Onaqui in the swedish RPG milieu when I was 12-15 years of age so I couldn't resist my nostalgia and used the name, even though it might be inaccurate. Coming to think about it it might be a good idea to rename the beast bat to camazotz or zotz, since the jaguar fiend is called Ozelotl (jaguar).

Edit: Galderman is a singer of Galdrar, spell songs. Thus a Galderman is a spellsinger or a sorcerer able to conjure mists, turn arrows and cause fear to grow in the hearts of the enemies. Galdr and seith/sejd were the two magic traditions mentioned in norse myth. Hmm, inscriptions of runes as well, but that would probably be something galdermen did. Seith was different. It was declared unmanly and forbidden by Odin. He was the only male god that was allowed to use it's dangerous powers. Seith was used to perceive the past, present and the future, as well as sending curses, death and disease on people and livestock.

archaeolept November 17th, 2008 02:37 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
"galdr" is cognate with english "yell", though any sense of singing is long lost.

"Seith" (i'm pretty sure) is cognate w/ Sooth, so derived from old IE for truth, *es, and related to sanskrit terms for being like "sat"

the "kona" in seithkona just means woman; cognate w/ gr. "gyne"



Bushido brings back memories - an offshoot of the old Chivalry and Sorcery rpg; which was noted for having the world's most obtuse magic system :)

Gregstrom November 17th, 2008 03:50 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Further to Seith/Sooth... in words like Soothsayer, I believe the Sooth part is implied to mean truth about the future.

Afterthought: Not knowing much about the nordic languages, I'd assumed kon was similar to the scots ken, meaning roughly 'to know', and therefore a seithkonur was 'one who knows the future'. It's nice to know better.

sector24 November 18th, 2008 01:27 PM

Re: What is a Gode?
 
Three more today:
Kunshu
Uba
Nushi

I think they're all Japanese but I didn't see them on obakemono.com


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