Norse Imports

Norse Imports Follow for the REAL history! Products and content inspired by the historical sources and archeological finds.
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03/28/2026

Mic drop šŸŽ¤

03/25/2026

I built a research assistant for Norse & Germanic history. šŸ“œāš”ļø
It’s now live on Patreon — Norse Magic Beliefs — and available to all members.
This isn’t your typical AI pulling from random blogs and recycled misinformation. I’ve trained it to focus ONLY on primary sources—
• saga literature
• chronicles
• early texts and historical material
So instead of guessing or repeating surface-level takes, it helps you go straight to the sources.
Whether you’re an author, student, content creator, or just someone serious about understanding the past, this tool is built to save you time and give you real material to work with.
This is just the first version—there’s a lot more coming.
šŸ‘‰ Check it out on Patreon/norsemagicandbeliefs if you’re interested.

03/19/2026

✨ OSTARA — THE LIGHT RETURNS ✨

The wheel turns…�The days grow longer…�and the ancient fire is lit once more šŸ”„

You are invited to step beyond the ordinaryļæ½and into a living ritual of music, movement, and myth.

🌿 Honor the return of the Lightļæ½šŸ”„ Gather with tribe under the starsļæ½šŸ’ƒ Dance in rhythm with the Ancestors�✨ Enter the circle of renewal

This is not just a party…�This is a threshold.

āš”ļø Boulder, CO
ļæ½šŸ—“ March 20
ļæ½ā° 6:30PM – 4:20AM

šŸ”„ Two sacred fires burning through the nightļæ½šŸŽ§ Ecstatic dance & immersive sound�🌿 Ceremony, elixirs, vendors & community

Space is limited.ļæ½Those who feel the call… will be there.
šŸŽŸ Tickets in bio .the.light





03/19/2026

Tomorrow is the Equinox event in Boulder, CO šŸŒøāš”ļø
See my pinned post or profile for tickets. I’ll be there DJing—bringing northern sounds to the night.
The equinox is likely one of the oldest celebrations we have.
We don’t have written records going back much further than the Middle Ages… but we do have archaeological evidence thousands of years older—stone monuments and ancient sites aligned perfectly with the rising and setting sun on the equinox.
This tells us something important:
long before written history, people were already marking this moment—the balance of light and dark, the return of warmth, the victory of the sun.
Even the word Easter is tied to this idea.
Derived from Ostara or related names, it points to the east, the dawn, the rising sun—a symbol of renewal found across northern European traditions.
So whether through ritual, celebration, or simply gathering together…
this has always been a time to welcome the light back into the world.
See you there āš”ļø

03/17/2026

Boulder, Colorado — March 20th šŸŒøāš”ļø
Join us for a Spring Equinox gathering & ceremony—I’ll be DJing and bringing northern sounds to the dance floor.
Check the link in my pinned post or visit Uba’s page for tickets and details.
The spring equinox has long been seen as a moment of balance, rebirth, and renewal—and many have asked whether this time of year has deeper pagan roots tied to what we now call Easter.
Our earliest written source comes from 8th-century England, where Bede describes a spring month named after a goddess often linked to fertility and the returning light. Beyond that, we find archaeological evidence of seasonal solar alignments, as well as parallels across Indo-European traditions that celebrate this exact turning point of the year.
Does this prove that Easter is pagan? Not exactly.
But it does show that this season was already sacred long before later traditions took shape.
This video explores the sources, the archaeology, and the wider connections across Europe.
See you in Boulder āš”ļø

03/15/2026

Was Easter originally a Germanic tradition… or just Anglo-Saxon? 🌸
One of the most debated questions in European religious history is whether the spring celebration known as Easter was shared across the Germanic world—or whether it existed only in Anglo-Saxon England.
Our only written source for a goddess named Eostre comes from the 8th-century English historian Bede, who wrote that the Anglo-Saxons celebrated a spring month called Ēosturmōnaþ, named after a goddess associated with renewal and fertility.
But this raises the question: was this unique to England, or part of a wider Germanic tradition?
Some scholars believe it may have been more widespread. The name itself appears connected to a broader Indo-European root for ā€œdawnā€ or ā€œeastā€, and similar names appear in Germanic languages—such as the German Ostern and English Easter.
However, because Bede is the only direct source describing the goddess, historians remain cautious. It is possible the celebration was local to the Anglo-Saxons, or that the tradition was once wider but simply was not recorded elsewhere.
This video explores the sources, linguistic clues, and archaeological debates surrounding one of the most famous questions about the pagan past of Europe.
What do you think—was it a shared Germanic tradition, or an Anglo-Saxon one?

Join us March 20th in Boulder,CO for a Spring Equinox gathering, ceremony, and celebration as we welcome the turning of ...
03/10/2026

Join us March 20th in Boulder,CO for a Spring Equinox gathering, ceremony, and celebration as we welcome the turning of the seasons together.
There will be a ritual ceremony, great people, and music through the night—and I’ll be DJing as well, bringing some northern sounds and techno energy to the mountains for the evening. āš”šŸŽ¶
If you’re in Colorado and want to celebrate the equinox in a powerful way, come be part of it.
šŸ‘‰ Check for full details and the ticket link.
See you there.

03/10/2026

Join us for a pagan equinox celebration on March 20th in Boulder, Colorado. I will be there DJing
šŸ‘‰ See the link in the pinned post on my profile, or check Instagram for full details.
Now to a question many people ask this time of year:
Does Easter come from a pagan goddess?
The idea comes largely from the 8th-century historian Bede, who wrote that the Anglo-Saxons once celebrated a spring festival dedicated to a goddess named Eostre. According to Bede, the Christian holiday eventually took the name of this earlier festival.
For a long time, scholars debated whether Eostre was real or simply Bede’s interpretation. In recent decades, however, archaeological inscriptions to goddesses with similar names have been discovered in the Germanic world, suggesting that a deity connected to spring may indeed have existed.
But that doesn’t automatically prove that Easter itself is pagan. The history is complicated, and the sources are few. In this video, we go through the texts, archaeology, and scholarship to understand what we can actually say—and what we cannot.
History is rarely simple, but it’s always fascinating.

03/05/2026

Did Vikings bring Native Americans back to Iceland? DNA research suggests yes. šŸ§¬šŸŒ
Recent genetic studies have identified Native American DNA in around 80 individuals and families in Iceland, specifically traced through the female line. The genetic signature likely entered Iceland around the Viking Age, long before modern contact with the Americas.
Archaeology has already confirmed that Norse explorers reached North America around 1000 AD, with sites like L’Anse aux Meadows proving Viking presence there. But what’s fascinating is that the written sources told us this story more than 700 years ago.
In the Saga of Erik the Red and related Vinland accounts, we read about encounters between the Norse and the native peoples of North America. The sagas even mention children being taken back to Greenland, which could help explain how Native American ancestry eventually appeared in Icelandic families.
For centuries these stories were dismissed as legend.
Now genetics, archaeology, and the medieval sources are beginning to line up in a remarkable way.
Sometimes the old sagas knew more than we thought.

02/28/2026

NEW: The Complete Viking Age Battle Database is now live. āš”ļøšŸ“Š
šŸ‘‰ Check out our latest blog post on NorseImports.com to explore it.
We’ve compiled 80+ confirmed Viking Age battles, each with:
• a clear summary
• the recorded outcome
• and statistical breakdowns of the data
On top of that, we’ve run calculations on the overall trends of the Viking Age — win rates, regional patterns, and other key metrics.
Every battle included is supported by multiple historical sources, meaning historians broadly agree the conflict actually took place. No myths, no legendary-only material — just events with strong textual or documentary backing.
This is one of the most comprehensive battle overviews available in one place, and we’ll continue updating it as we refine the data.
If you’re serious about Viking history, this is worth your time.

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