22/03/2026 19:07:31
Itβs a wyrd world
"Gaeth a wyrd swa hio scel."
(Wyrd goes ever as she shall.) β Beowulf
To understand the Saxon world, you have to move past the modern idea of "fate." While we often think of fate as a pre-written script, the Saxon concept of wyrd was far more fluid, interconnected, and, frankly, a bit more metal.
Derived from the Old English verb weorthan (to become), wyrd is the ancestor of our modern word "weird," but for the Saxons, it wasn't about being strangeβit was about the power of what happens.
1. The Web of Wyrd
The Saxons didn't see time as a straight line. They saw it as a tapestry. Every action you took was a thread woven into a massive, ever-growing web.
β’ Past is Present: Your wyrd wasn't just what would happen; it was the sum of everything that had happened. Your past actions dictated your present reality.
β’ Interconnectedness: Just as pulling one thread in a cloth shifts the others, your choices affected the wyrd of your family and your lord.
2. Wyrd vs. Free Will
This is where it gets interesting. The Saxons weren't total fatalists. They believed in a paradox: Your path is set, but how you walk it defines you.
β’ The Unstoppable Force: If it was your wyrd to die in a specific battle, you were going to die. No amount of hiding would save you.
β’ The Heroic Response: Since death was inevitable, the only thing you truly "owned" was your courage. Facing a grim wyrd with bravery earned you lof (praise) and dom (glory/judgment), which allowed your name to live on after your thread was cut.
3. The Three Weavers
While the Saxons shared roots with Norse mythology, the concept of the "Norns" (Urd, Verdandi, and Skuld) heavily mirrors the Saxon view of wyrd. These figures sat at the foot of the world tree, weaving the fates of men.
Gemini
βͺοΈ 260322/22
The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, states that Γlle arrived in Sussex with three ships and went on to fight at Cymenshore .
20/03/2026 09:21:28
Cymenshore was a place in Southern England where, according to the Chronicles Γlle landed in AD 477 and battled the local Britons with his three sons Cymen, Wlencing and Cissa..
The spelling Cymenshore in Old English CΘ³menes Εra, which is now lost. The location for CΘ³menes Εra is traditionally identified with Selsey Bill
Battle of Mercredesburne in 485..
Γlle became the first king of the South Saxons.
The villages of Ashburnham and Penhurst in East Sussex maintain a tradition that a pre-Saxon earthwork known as Town Creep, situated in Creep Wood which adjoins the two villages, was the site of Mercredsburn. Oral tradition surviving to the end of the 19th century referred to the earthworks as being the site of a town which was besieged and destroyed by the Saxons
The Kingdom of Sussex was eventually annexed by the Kingdom of Wessex in the 9th century and went on to become the county of Sussex, England.
Citation - Gary Hook - A Journey Through Time Facebook Group
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