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WODEN , a deity of the Anglo- See also: Saxons, the name being the Anglo-Saxon counterpart of the Scandinavian See also: Odin (q.v.)
.
In See also: German the same See also: god was called Wodan or Wuotan
.
Owing
to the very small amount of information which has come down to us regarding the gods of See also: ancient See also: England and See also: Germany, it cannot be determined how far the character and adventures attributed to Odin in Scandinavian See also: mythology were known to other Teutonic peoples
.
It is clear, however, that the god was credited with See also: special skill in magic, both in England and Germany, while the See also: story of the Langobardic See also: migration (see See also: LOMBARDS) represents him as the dispenser of victory
.
From Woden also most of the anglo-Saxon royal families traced their descent
.
By the See also: Romans he was identified at an early date with Mercurius, whence our name " Wednesday " (Woden's See also: day) as a See also: translation of See also: dies Mercurii
.
Tacitus states that the ancient Germans worshipped Mercurius more than any other god, and that they offered him human sacrifices
.
Many scholars connect the origin of the deity with the popular German and See also: Swedish belief in a raging See also: host (in Germany called das wutende Heer or Wutes Heer, but in Sweden Odens Jagt), which passes through the forests an stormy nights
.
There is evidence, however, that deities similar to Woden were known to some of the ancient peoples of central See also: Europe, e.g. the Gauls and Thracians
.
See TEUTONIC PEOPLES, ad fin
.
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