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226

Odin is said to ride around on an eight-legged horse, Sleipnir (slippy; the sliding one), which he rode to the underworld to try to bring his son Baldur back for the dead.

In my readings I came across the suggestion that the 8-legged horse might have symbolized the funeral bier carried by four pallbearers.

It would make sense then that this horse is capable of bringing the rider into the underworld. It's fitting for Odin because he seems to be as much a god of death as he is a god of war, magic or justice. (He determines the fate of battles and the fallen warriors join him in Valhalla. Sometimes the better side loses if Odin determines he needs them at his side in the battle of the world's end.)

And I hear in many shamanic traditions throughout the world an eight-legged horse is the vehicle by which the shaman travels to the spirit worlds.

The more I learn about pagan religions the more examples I see of purposeful symbolism in the myths. So it seems they were intended to be taken a lot less literally than those of the Abrahamic faiths.

The story of Sleipnir's origins is amusing as well. Someday I'll write it up here.

Odin is said to ride around on an eight-legged horse, Sleipnir (*slippy; the sliding one)*, which he rode to the underworld to try to bring his son Baldur back for the dead. In my readings I came across the suggestion that the 8-legged horse might have symbolized the funeral bier carried by four pallbearers. It would make sense then that this horse is capable of bringing the rider into the underworld. It's fitting for Odin because he seems to be as much a god of death as he is a god of war, magic or justice. (He determines the fate of battles and the fallen warriors join him in Valhalla. Sometimes the better side loses if Odin determines he needs them at his side in the battle of the world's end.) And I hear in many shamanic traditions throughout the world an eight-legged horse is the vehicle by which the shaman travels to the spirit worlds. The more I learn about pagan religions the more examples I see of purposeful symbolism in the myths. So it seems they were intended to be taken a lot less literally than those of the Abrahamic faiths. The story of Sleipnir's origins is amusing as well. Someday I'll write it up here.

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Cool theory. Sleipnir is the product of loki getting pregnant by a mare he distracted to stop an ice giant from winning a bet if iremember right

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In a book series called everworld they actually have those eight legged horses. The writer took it as literal. She got many things wrong and probably that as well.

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I find it interesting how a lot of religions around the world share a ton of things in common, even the New World religions, that have been separated from the rest of the world for 15,000 years. And yet, the Abrahamic religons are alway the odd one out, and what little they do share, they blatantly stole from surrounding religions.