If you want to use this site please update your browser!
0 0
  • $
  • C$
  • £
  • $
  • C$
  • £
  • $
  • C$
  • £
  • $
  • C$
  • £
  • $
  • C$
  • £
08.11.2019

The web of Wyrd, the matrix of fate (Skuld's Net)

The Web of Wyrd, a lesser-known Nordic symbol, holds significant meaning in Norse mythology as it represents the intricate interconnectedness of past, present, and future.

In Norse mythology, the Web of Wyrd is said to have been woven by the Norns, also known as the Nornir, who are the Shapers of Destiny. These mystical beings shape the fate of individuals and the world itself.

The symbol itself consists of nine staves and encompasses all the runes, symbolizing the encompassing nature of 'possibilities' inherent in the past, present, and future. It represents the idea that all actions and events are interwoven and have a profound impact on the course of destiny.

Additionally, the Web of Wyrd is sometimes referred to as 'Skuld's net,' as Skuld is believed to be one of the Norns responsible for weaving this intricate web of fate.

The web of Wyrd, the matrix of fate (Skuld's Net)

The Web of Wyrd is a metaphor for fate and destiny derived from women's spinning. As the individual fibers turn round the spindle, or are woven together as the warp and the woof, by the Norns at the foot of Yggdrasil, they become the thread of our lives, or so Norse mythology tells us. After all what else is the umbilical cord but the thread between spindle and distaff? What else is the human genome?

Weaving is just as appealing a metaphor as anything other religions have been able to come up with to explain the meaning of life - the past in the present (and the present in the past). Henry James uses it in his novella The Figure in the Carpet (1896) and of course nowadays it applies to the www.

The web of Wyrd, the matrix of fate (Skuld's Net)

Wyrd refers to more than individual lives but to the universe, a vast spider's web where everything is connected and analogically related, so that vast galaxies can resemble cell structures and the genome of living creatures. Macrocosm and microcosm. While science remains fascinated by structural and functional analysis, the old Norse and Germanic world might say that it's the time and purpose that matter too.

The Web of Wyrd can be associated easily enough with runes - in Hávamál, the runes appear to have the power to bring the dead back to life. Odin recounts a spell: "if I see/up in a tree/a dangling corpse in a noose/I can so carve and color the runes/that the man walks/And talks with me."

The web of Wyrd, the matrix of fate (Skuld's Net)    The web of Wyrd, the matrix of fate (Skuld's Net)

I have always interpreted these things as totems, which means they depend on the ability to inspire the imagination, whether that be spiritual or secular. Nothing more... Above left is a modern synthesis of all the runes which some today think of as a totem for the Web of Wyrd. It's a fanciful design but pagan ideas have a much more integrated world view than the one bequeathed us by the newer religions. Think of the simplicity of the cross or the crescent moon. To its right is Fehu, one of the ancient runes.

The web of Wyrd, the matrix of fate (Skuld's Net)

UP