Nine Noble Virtues
The Nine Noble Virtues or NNV are a set of moral and situational ethical guidelines codified by John Yeowell (a.k.a. Stubba) and John Gibbs-Bailey (a.k.a. Hoskuld) of the Odinic Rite in the 1970s.[1]
They are based on virtues found in historical Norse paganism, gleaned from various sources including the Poetic Edda (particularly the Hávamál and the Sigrdrífumál),[2] and as evident in the Icelandic Sagas).
Variants
|
|
Nine Charges
The Nine Charges were, like the Nine Noble Virtues, codified by the Odinic Rite in the 1970s.[3]
- To maintain candour and fidelity in love and devotion to the tried friend: though he strike me I will do him no scathe.
- Never to make wrongsome oath: for great and grim is the reward for the breaking of plighted troth.
- To deal not hardly with the humble and the lowly.
- To remember the respect that is due to great age.
- To suffer no evil to go unremedied and to fight against the enemies of Faith, Folk and Family: my foes I will fight in the field, nor will I stay to be burnt in my house.
- To succour the friendless but to put no faith in the pledged word of a stranger people.
- If I hear the fool's word of a drunken man I will strive not: for many a grief and the very death groweth from out such things.
- To give kind heed to dead people: straw dead, sea dead or sword dead.
- To abide by the enactments of lawful authority and to bear with courage the decrees of the Norns.
The Six-Fold Goal
The Six-Fold Goal is another behavioral guideline discussed in A Book of Troth by Edred Thorsson (1989) and was adopted by certain Ásatrú groups in the USA like the Ring of Troth and the Asatru Free Assembly. The Six-Fold Goal is: Right, Wisdom, Might, Harvest, Frith and Love.
See also
References
- Thorsson, Edred (1992) [1989]. A Book of Troth. ISBN 0-87542-777-4.
- Heathen Ethics and Values - Internet Archive version because original download link is broken.