Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Frige> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 97 of
97
with 100 triples per page.
- Frige abstract "Frige, or Frig, was the "presumed" Old English name for a goddess found within Anglo-Saxon paganism, the religion that dominated Anglo-Saxon England from the 5th to the 7th centuries CE. There are no direct descriptions of this deity in surviving literary sources, but historians have drawn together indirect evidence from a variety of other sources, arguing that she was probably associated with sexuality and fertility by her worshippers. Since the 20th century, Frige has also been readopted as a goddess by adherents of several Contemporary Pagan new religious movements, such as Theodism and Seax-Wica.Following the Christianisation of England in the 7th and 8th centuries, Frige's worship was eradicated, but she left an influence on the English language. She lent her name to the Modern English word "Friday", which came from the Old English word Frigedæg, meaning "Frige's Day". She also provided the basis for a number of place names across the country, including villages like Froyle, Freefolk and Fretherne.The role of Frige in pre-Christian England has been evaluated by a variety of different historians and scholars of Old English, such as Brian Branston (1957), Richard North (1997) and Stephen Pollington (2011). Because very little information about Frige has survived from English literary sources, scholars have looked for comparisons within Norse mythology to elucidate more about this deity. In Norse mythology, there were two distinct goddesses who have been compared with the Anglo-Saxon Frige: Freyja, who was associated with sexuality, magic, fecundity and violent death, and also Frigg, who was associated with childbirth, wealth and power over the household. Archaeologists have also suggested that certain female figurines found from Anglo-Saxon England might have represented the goddess Frige.".
- Frige thumbnail Franks_Casket_vorne_links.jpg?width=300.
- Frige wikiPageID "35476465".
- Frige wikiPageLength "12955".
- Frige wikiPageOutDegree "64".
- Frige wikiPageRevisionID "679591950".
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Academic_paper.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Academic_publishing.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxon_England.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxon_paganism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxon_rune_poem.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Archaeology.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Category:Anglo-Saxon_goddesses.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_legendary_creatures.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Category:Germanic_legendary_creatures.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Category:Germanic_mythology.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Category:Germanic_paganism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Derbyshire.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Freefolk.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Fretherne.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Freyja.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Friday.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Frigg.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Froyle.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Germanic_neopaganism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Gloucestershire.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Hampshire.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Heathenry_(new_religious_movement).
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink History_of_Anglo-Saxon_England.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Loki.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Modern_English.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Modern_paganism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Neil_Price_(archaeologist).
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink New_religious_movement.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Norse_mythology.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Norse_paganism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Norse_religion.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Norsemen.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Odin.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Old_English.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Old_English_rune_poem.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Paganism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Paganism_(contemporary).
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Polaris.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Polytheism.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Raymond_Buckland.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Ronald_Hutton.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Scandinavia.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Seax-Wica.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Seiðr.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Snorri_Sturluson.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Stephen_Pollington.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink The_Pagan_Religions_of_the_Ancient_British_Isles.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Thor.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Tiwaz_rune.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Tyr.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Týr.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Umbrella_term.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink University_of_Uppsala.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Uppsala_University.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Vanir.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Venus_(mythology).
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Viking_Age.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Wicca.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Woden.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Ynglinga_saga.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Ynglingasaga.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Æsir.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink Æsir–Vanir_War.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink File:Franks_Casket_vorne_links.jpg.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLink File:Freya_(1901)_by_Anders_Zorn.jpg.
- Frige wikiPageWikiLinkText "Frige".
- Frige wikiPageWikiLinkText "Frijja".
- Frige wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fríge".
- Frige hasPhotoCollection Frige.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Anglo-SaxonPaganism.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_news.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Distinguish.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refbegin.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refend.
- Frige wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Frige subject Category:Anglo-Saxon_goddesses.
- Frige subject Category:English_legendary_creatures.
- Frige subject Category:Germanic_legendary_creatures.
- Frige subject Category:Germanic_mythology.
- Frige subject Category:Germanic_paganism.
- Frige type Thing.
- Frige comment "Frige, or Frig, was the "presumed" Old English name for a goddess found within Anglo-Saxon paganism, the religion that dominated Anglo-Saxon England from the 5th to the 7th centuries CE. There are no direct descriptions of this deity in surviving literary sources, but historians have drawn together indirect evidence from a variety of other sources, arguing that she was probably associated with sexuality and fertility by her worshippers.".
- Frige label "Frige".
- Frige differentFrom Frigg.
- Frige differentFrom Refrigerator.
- Frige sameAs m.0j9pnh2.
- Frige wasDerivedFrom Frige?oldid=679591950.
- Frige depiction Franks_Casket_vorne_links.jpg.
- Frige isPrimaryTopicOf Frige.