Norse Tradition
Blót
BLOAT (Old Norse blót)
The central ritual of Norse paganism — a formal offering made to the gods, landvættir, or ancestors, historically a sacrificial feast and today most often an offering of mead, food, or craft.
Blót (Old Norse blót, from the verb blóta, “to worship with sacrifice”) is the central act of Norse pagan religion: a formal offering given to the gods, the land-spirits (landvættir), or the ancestors. Where prayer asks, blót gives — the relationship between human beings and the Powers is kept alive the same way any friendship is, by the exchange of gifts.
What the sources describe
The fullest account survives in Snorri Sturluson’s Heimskringla. In “Hákonar saga góða,” Snorri describes the great blót at Lade in Norway: the folk gathered at the hof, cattle were offered, and the blood — called hlaut — was sprinkled on the altars and the walls with twigs, while the meat was boiled for the shared feast. Cups were then carried around the fire and blessed: Odin’s cup for victory and the king, Njörðr’s and Freyr’s cups for peace and good seasons (til árs ok friðar), then the minni — the memory-cup for kin who had gone before.
“Ynglinga saga” preserves the ritual calendar in one line: sacrifice at winter’s beginning for a good year, at midwinter for growth, and at summer for victory.
The logic of the gift
Blót runs on the old Germanic ethic of the gift: a gift demands a gift (as the Hávamál puts it). Nothing is bought and nothing is begged; something of worth is given openly, and the relationship itself is the return. This is why the offering matters more than its size — mead poured on the earth, bread, the first of a harvest, a thing made with your own hands.
Blót today
Modern Heathens and Ásatrú practitioners keep blót as the heart of practice, without animal sacrifice: an offering is hallowed, words are spoken to the god or wight being honored, the offering is given (poured out, burned, buried, or left at a ve or altar), and often a portion is shared by those gathered. The seasonal festivals — Winter Nights, Yule, Sigrblót — are each, at their core, a blót.
Related Terms
Ásatrú
Literally 'faith in the Æsir' — the modern revival of the pre-Christian Norse religion, publicly refounded in Iceland in the 1970s and now practiced worldwide.
norseHeathenry
The revival of the pre-Christian religions of the Germanic-speaking peoples — Norse, Anglo-Saxon, and continental — a polytheist tradition centered on the gods, the ancestors, and the exchange of gifts.
norseSumbel
The ritual drinking-round of the Norse and Anglo-Saxon world: a horn passed in formal rounds of toasts to the gods, honored dead, and oaths — words spoken over it carrying binding weight.