Codex Saemundar
Contents
Introduction
Authored in the last years of the 11th century the Codex Saemundar defies simple
classification, but due to the unique nature of the work and its mythological occult
overtones, the manuscript is most easily understood as a antithetical catechism to
the ancient Scandinavian religion.
In accepted Norse mythology, the three sons of Borr: Odin, Vili, and Vé tricked Ymir
into a trap and thereafter dismembered him to form the Nine Worlds. Later with leftovers
the Aesir created other lesser races including humanity. As Ymir was the primordial being
and the first entity to exist it bore a singular ability to spontaneously create life without
the need of a mate or outside force.
The Codex differs from the accepted telling in that it tells the Norse creation myth from the
point of view of the giants, a race spawned by Ymir in the age before its fall. Further the Codex
is purported to reveal details of creation not mentioned in the Aesir account that paint the Norse
gods in a less than impressive light and speaks of an eventual resurrection of Ymir after Ragnarök.
Description
Authorship
Layout
is broken into three parts.
one part mythography, infernal grimoire
History
the masterwork of Sæmundr fróði, better know as Sæmundr the Learned.
Sjö mörk Ymis -- The Seven Symbols of Ymir
Prophesies