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Týr (God)

Týr (God) 

 

 

Credit  | wikipedia.| Agamemnon

Týr , A Norse Jotun (deleted Jewish god) God is a Mountain Range in the (Judah) Mountains of Mauritania in the West African Joueïda, Mountains.  

Credit  | wikipedia.| Agamemnon

 

Tyr-brakteaten från Naglum, Trollhättan (SHM 1164) tecknad

Credit  | Wikipedia| Týr

The bracteate shows the Norse god Týr with Fenrir biting his hand. The gold bracteate is dated to the Migration period. The bracteate was found together with another gold bracteate by the farmer Anders Larsson in Ladugården, Ladugårdsbyn, Naglum Parish, now Trollhättan Municipality, Västergötland, Sweden.  

 

 

 

Credit  | Mapcarta | Agmâmîne

Týr , Mauritania sits on the VAN River one of the original names of the West African White River.  

 

Tyr the God of War is also known as The God Mars (Mhar(s)).  Kdeyyet el Mhār is a mountain named after Mars in the Tyr or Tyrian Mountains!

Kdeyyet el Mhār
Kdeyyet el Mhār is a peak in Tagant Region, Mauritania and has an elevation of 96 metres.

https://mapcarta.com/17101492

 

Sigtyr God of Victory Valtyr God of Valens Reida Tyr is a kenning for Thor 

tiver is plural for tyr! 

 

Proto-Germanic *Tiwaz  @Dyeus Sky God 

Hari- - gasti  *teiwaz *haragastiz 

 

Tyr's Day. 

Mars dies Martius.  

 

Garm Hel's Hellhound.  

 

Frenrir  Chain called Gleipnir   

Ntâkech Ahel el Grayer, Mauritania  Grayer means Rigging such as the rigging to tie down Frerir with Gleipnir   . 

 

Tyr is the Norse god of war, justice, and heroic endeavor. He is known for his bravery and is associated with the formalities of war, such as oaths and law. Tyr's most famous story is the sacrifice of his hand to the monstrous wolf Fenrir, which he did as a gesture of trust to bind the creature. This act cemented his reputation for honor and integrity, and he is also the deity for whom "Tuesday" (Tiw's day) is named.  

Tyr is a god of war, but he is more specifically associated with the principles of war, such as honor, law, and treaties.  

He presided over the "ting" or "thing",  a gathering for law-making and dispute resolution, and is a symbol of justice and integrity. 

He is the deity who sacrificed his hand to the wolf Fenrir as a pledge of trust.  

The name "Tyr" is the source of the English word "Tuesday," which comes from "Tiw's day," a name also used for the god.  

Tyr is a major figure in the world that Yggdrasil connects, making him a part of the same cosmic structure as the World Tree. 

 

Tyr's most famous story is his sacrifice of his hand to the wolf Fenrir, which was necessary to bind the monster. This story highlights his character and his role in the events that lead to Ragnarök. 


From an historical point of view, Tyr might actually be one of the Germanic deities more revered, he might even be the deity of the sky with the power over all the other gods because his name simply means “god”, and is related to the Old English Tiw, or the Old High German Ziu, the Middle Germanic god Tuisto, and the Proto-Indo-European Teiwaz, which has a rune of the same name.

 

These are also related to the Latin deus and the Sanskrit deva. So Tyr may once have been a “global” Sky God,  who eventually gained more personal characteristics and was “reborn” into the Norse pantheons as a War God and God of Honor. justice and law. 

Tyr’s origins, one is that he is one of the sons of Odin and an unknown mother, the other is that he is a Jotnar, or of Jotun blood, the son of Hymir and Hrod, but after he reached adulthood, he turned his allegiance to the Aesir tribe of gods, it is even said that Tyr himself stole his father’s own kettle so that the Aesir could have more beer while feasting in Aegir’s halls. 

There is some evidence that the Germanic version of Teiwaz had a consort, referred to as Zisu, which was simply a feminization of his name. 

Tyr is the one-handed god, this fact his his main myth aside to the one where he stole his family’s great cauldron, but the story of losing his hand is the story that confirmed his status as a God of Honor.
When the Aesir decided that the dangerous wolf-God of destruction, Fenrir, had to be chained, they created a magical chain to bind him, named Gleipnir.

They cornered Fenrir and told him that they wanted to see him snap that chain, as he had snapped all others, and the Wolf-God was naturally suspicious, and he told the Gods standing there that he would allow them to bind him, but one of them had to place his hand in his lethal jaws while the binding was being done.

Tyr had been a friend to the Fenrir since his kidnapping as a child, and was known to be honorable, so when Tyr stepped up and placed his hand in the wolf’s jaws, Fenrir trusted him. When the chain proved unbreakable, Fenrir flew into a rage and bit Tyr’s hand off, which in fact Tyr knew would happen. Since then, Tyr has been referred to as the One-Handed God, 

Tyr is the one-handed god, this fact his his main myth aside to the one where he stole his family’s great cauldron, but the story of losing his hand is the story that confirmed his status as a God of Honor. 

The symbol for the Norse god Tyr, who is also linked to the Tiwaz rune and is featured in stories involving the world tree Yggdrasil, is the Tiwaz rune (\(\)), which is often shaped like an upward-pointing spear or arrow. Yggdrasil itself is not a symbol for Tyr, but represents the cosmos, and Odin hung himself from it to gain the secrets of the runes, including Tiwaz. 

Týr is the god of war, law, valour, and glory in the Æsir pantheon. He may be the son of Óðin or of the jötunn Hymir.