The goddess who extradites the souls of the dead in Norse mythology

Is this it?

Valkyria (valklyrs), special waitresses of Odin and Iron, they are ordered to run around the battlefield to collect the souls of fallen warriors. , brought to "Valhalla" and resurrected to cope with the final battle of "Twilight of the Gods" between the gods and the giants. The Valkyries are highly skilled in martial arts and are the protectors of mankind.

Valhall Palace

Five hundred and forty gates,

Built in the splendid Valhall Palace;

Eight hundred Two armored warriors stepped out of a door simultaneously,

and entered the war with the Fenrisian wolf.

— "Song of Grimmni"

In the entire Asaph Garden, the most magnificent and largest building is undoubtedly a huge roof made of countless arrow clusters and shields. Valhall Palace. At that time, Walhar Palace was also the largest building in the world.

There are 540 gates in Valhall Palace. Each gate is extremely wide and can allow eight hundred armored warriors to enter and exit at the same time.

Those who live in Valhall Palace are all the heroic warriors who have sacrificed their lives in the wars of the world - only the strong warriors who have died in the war are eligible to be selected to live in this magnificent palace. , and other people who died due to disease and aging in the human world can only be sent to the Kingdom of Death controlled by Haier, the Lord of Death.

The kings, chiefs and warriors who died in the war were resurrected in Valhall Palace. They put on the armor given to them by the Asaph gods, wielded sharp weapons, and once again lived the life of warriors.

Because Odin is a god who likes war, he causes constant wars in the world. Therefore, more and more death warriors come to Valhall Palace. In the end, there are fifty million of them. So many names. However, there was still plenty of room for them in the grand Walhar Palace.

These numerous death warriors begin training every morning in the square in Valhall Palace. Their training is a life-and-death struggle with each other, and many warriors will die in fierce battles. However, when dusk falls those dead warriors will rise again. The next day, they will engage in fierce battle again.

In the evening, all these death warriors, after a day of hard fighting and even death, sat in the huge banquet hall and enjoyed a sumptuous dinner together.

The beautiful maids of the god Odin, holding giant goblets made of animal horns, serve the sweetest mead to the death warriors. These maidens, called Valkyrie, are the goddesses sent by Odin to choose the dead warriors among the victims when a war breaks out in the world. Sometimes, when they arrive on the human battlefield, if the war has not yet decided the winner, they will also decide the course of the war according to their preferences.

The death warriors can always drink from the mead served by the Walkerans, for it is squeezed directly from the udders of the she-goat Hedron. Hedron was the only goat in Valhall, but she fed on the leaves of the cosmic tree Yugatrasi, so her breasts were always filled with fragrant mead.

In order to feed the death warriors who were extremely hungry after a day of fighting, there was a skilled chef in Valhall Palace to cook food for them. Every morning, the chef named Andrimenr pulled the wild boar Mountain Limer from the pig pen, killed it, and cooked it into delicious pork. Wild boar mountain Rimr is extremely large, and its meat is enough to satisfy all death warriors. However, Shanlimur is immortal, and the chef Andrimenr can drag a wild boar out of the pigsty and resurrect it to its original appearance every morning.

Odin, the Lord of the Gods, often goes to the banquet hall of Valhall Palace to have dinners with his battle-hardened death warriors. However, Odin only drank some mead squeezed from the goat Hedron at the banquet, but never ate the delicacies cooked with the meat of the wild boar mountain Rimr - the great god Odin no longer needed to eat Just average food. But Odin would often give the wild boar on the table to the two wolves that surrounded his feet, if he pleased.

Odin, the Lord of the Gods, collected the dead warriors among humans in the Valhall Palace and continued to train them. This is related to a huge secret in the Asa Garden of the Kingdom of God.

The magnificent kingdom of God has a shadow of tragedy behind its grandeur. It is a prophecy that must be verified, an ending that is slowly coming, the final fate of the gods and the entire world. This fate is called Regaruk and represents the end of the gods and all living things.

In the Garden of Asaph, only the almighty wise man Odin and his wife Frigg, who can predict the future, know the existence and arrival of the tragic Regaruk. In addition to them, the wise giant Mimir gained insight because he drank from the spring of knowledge and wisdom for many years.

However, whether it is a god or a giant, prophecy has always been taboo. At that time, Odin, Frigg, and Mimir could not tell the gods or other creatures anything about Regaruk. At the same time, they also felt extremely worried about the existence and gradual arrival of Regaruk.

Frigg then became very taciturn, sitting in front of the spinning wheel all day long spinning the mysterious golden thread.

Odin, the Lord of the Gods, is always worried about the coming of Regaruk, because he knows that his heavenly power, coupled with the power of the gods, is not enough to fight against such a kind of monster. Fate resisted; all he could do was to do everything in his power to delay its eventual arrival.

For the sake of all kind creatures in the world, Odin made the greatest efforts and sacrifices to achieve this goal. Odin worked tirelessly to enhance his powers, especially his wisdom and insight. At the Mimir Spring guarded by the old giant, Odin sacrificed his right eye in order to increase knowledge and wisdom; at the same time, he built the magnificent Valhall Palace and let his maids Valhalla go to the human world. The bravest death warriors are selected on the battlefield and undergo arduous training every day. Everything is so that one day when Regaruk finally arrives, they can help the gods fight a desperate battle with the enemies of gods and humans and the demons who destroy the world.

In the process of pursuing knowledge, wisdom and insight, Odin constantly sacrifices himself; because truly powerful knowledge usually requires sacrifice.

On one occasion, through a mysterious foreshadowing, Odin stabbed himself with a spear and hung upside down from a tree. He hung like this on the tree for nine days and nine nights, without a sip of mead or a piece of bread.

On the ninth day, Odin looked down and shouted in surprise. He discovered the magical runes under the tree. But the loud cry caused him to fall heavily from the tree.

Odin's sacrifice of hanging upside down in a tree for nine days and nights earned him the powerful runes. After that, his grandfather, the father of the giantess Pestra, taught him nine more powerful songs and gave him a magical mead to drink. In this way, Odin can sing spells using runic songs, and this kind of spell is almost omnipotent. Later, Odin taught this spell to the Asaph gods and human heroes.

Odin said: "Learn to sing them, sons,

though the learning will be long;

and when you understand them Magical,

They are useful when you use them,

They are necessary when you need them.”

Before the tragic fate comes, Odin lets everyone know. The gods studied the poems written in runic letters, hoping that they could gain wisdom and strength from them and protect themselves in the final battle.

Odin, because of his rich knowledge and outstanding wisdom, is also the god of knowledge and wisdom worshiped by humans.