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Tarot Fellow

Thor Bust 14 Inch Cold Cast Resin Norse Thunder God Statue

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Short description:

Thor Bust Statue 14″ — a fourteen-inch bust statue of Thor, the Norse god of thunder, lightning, storms, strength, and hallowing protection. Crafted in cold cast resin with detailed sculpting, this imposing bust is a commanding altar presence for Asatru practitioners, Norse pagans, and those working with Thor’s energy for protection, courage, and elemental power. A devotional centerpiece for any Viking or Norse shrine.

Description:

Quick Specs

  • Format: Cold cast resin bust statue
  • Height: 14 inches tall
  • Pose: Head and shoulders with one arm raised across the chest, gripping Mjolnir
  • Tradition: Norse heathenry, Asatru, Forn Sidr, broader Germanic pagan devotion
  • Best for: Protection rites, hallowing of land and home, oath work, blessing of new beginnings

Thor in the Eddas and the Viking Age

Thor, son of Odin and Jord, husband of Sif, father of Magni and Modi, is the god the Eddas treat as the steady hand of Asgard. Where Odin walks the long road in disguise and Loki bends the world sideways, Thor stands in the middle of it with red beard, iron gloves, the belt Megingjord, and the hammer Mjolnir, defending gods and mortals from the forces that would tear the cosmos apart. He is the god farmers prayed to for rain, sailors trusted on rough crossings, and householders called on when oaths needed weight.

The Poetic Edda preserves several of his most famous tales. In Thrymskvida, the giant Thrymr steals Mjolnir and demands Freyja as bride price, so Thor disguises himself in her wedding clothes to retrieve the hammer in person. The poem reveals something the histories often miss, that Mjolnir was not only a weapon but a sacred object brought out to bless and sanctify the bride by being laid in her lap, the hand of the goddess Var binding the vow. The hammer hallows. That ritual function is older and deeper than the lightning.

Mjolnir as Sacred Sign

Hundreds of Mjolnir pendants have been recovered from Viking-Age graves, hoards, and settlements across Northern Europe, with the oldest known example dating to the 8th or early 9th century from a woman's burial at Immenstedt in Old Saxon territory. Most of these pendants come from the period when Christianity was beginning to push north, and many archaeologists read them as a deliberate response, a marker of heathen identity worn against the rising Christian cross. Several were found in women's graves, paired with strings of coloured beads, attesting that Thor's protection was sought across every part of life and across genders.

Modern heathens carry that thread forward. Mjolnir is signed over food and drink in blot, traced over land and threshold to hallow them, and called upon when oaths are sworn on the ring. The runes Thurisaz and Sowelo are tied to him, the oak is his tree, and his colours are sky-blue, cloud-white, lightning-gold, and red. Goats, his Tanngrisnir and Tanngnjostr who pull his cart, sit on many altars in figurine form alongside the hammer.

The Bust on Your Altar

This bust gives Thor a fixed presence in your sacred space at fourteen inches tall, hammer raised at his shoulder. Cold cast resin holds the texture of the beard, the line of the helm, and the carving of Mjolnir cleanly enough to read across an altar from the other side of the room. I keep this piece listed under altar statues and Viking and Celtic devotional supplies because it earns its weight in either tradition, and it pairs well with oak leaves, a horn or chalice for mead, and a small bowl set aside for grain or dark bread.

How to Set Up a Thor Altar With This Bust

A simple devotional setup for those building or refreshing an altar to Thor in the Norse heathen tradition.

  1. Cleanse and welcome

    Wipe the resin with a soft cloth and pass it through the smoke of mugwort or juniper. Speak a welcome that names Thor, son of Odin and Jord, hallower of land and oath, and invite him to take his seat at your altar.

  2. Build the protection focus

    Place the bust at the back of the cloth with a red or sky-blue candle on one side and a horn or chalice on the other. Add an oak twig or acorn, the rune Thurisaz, and a small Mjolnir pendant if you have one to anchor the protective field.

  3. Make the first hallowing

    Pour mead, ale, or fresh water into the horn and offer hearty bread or grain on a small plate. Trace Mjolnir in the air over the offering, name your intention, and let the candle burn before sharing the libation outside on the earth.

The Tarot Fellow Standard

I write these listings to honor the deity. The Thor here is the Eddic god of thunder, the hallower of marriage and oath, the protector of farmers and sailors. You can find this piece alongside the rest of my altar statues, and if you are building a heathen shrine from scratch I keep a curated selection of Viking and Celtic devotional supplies ready to browse.

Frequently Asked Questions

What tradition does this Thor bust belong to?

The bust serves Norse heathenry, Asatru, Forn Sidr, and broader Germanic pagan altars rooted in the Poetic Edda and Prose Edda. It also fits any pagan shrine that honors thunder, hammer, and protector deities of the Northern world.

What offerings does Thor traditionally accept?

Devotees offer mead, beer, meat dishes, breads and grain porridges, garlic, leek, onion, oak leaves, and rainwater. Service offerings such as helping someone move heavy work or protecting the vulnerable are also recorded among heathens.

How is this Thor bust constructed?

The bust is sculpted in cold cast resin, mixing resin with mineral or metal powder so it takes fine detail and feels weighty. It stands fourteen inches tall, finished for indoor altar display, with one arm raised across the chest gripping Mjolnir.

Why is Mjolnir treated as a sacred sign in heathen practice?

In Thrymskvida the hammer is brought out to bless the bride, not only to fight. Heathens trace Mjolnir over food, land, and oaths because the lore presents the hammer as a hallowing tool, sanctifying the rite and binding the speaker to their word.

Fourteen inch Thor Norse god of thunder bust statue in cold cast resin for Asatru altar Norse pagan shrine and Viking mythology devotion