A calendar is one of the first things people look for, and one of the easiest places to get handed somebody’s guess as if it were ancient fact. So this page draws the line clearly: a few festivals are attested; a lot of modern calendars adapt, rebuild, or borrow. Both can be meaningful. Only one of them is old, and you deserve to know which is which.
The three attested festivals
The clearest historical anchor is Ynglinga saga (chapter 8), which describes three great sacrifices in the year: one at the start of winter for a good season, one at midwinter, and one at the start of summer for victory. Modern Heathens generally know these as Winter Nights, Yule, and Sigrblót. Even here, the sources tell us that they happened far more than exactly how, so reconstructions vary and honest practitioners say so.
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Winter Nights
Mid–late October AttestedAlso called Vetrnætr or Winterfylleth — the start of winter and the end of the harvest. Historically linked in various sources to offerings to the female ancestral spirits (the dísir, in a dísablót) and to the elves (álfablót), the latter a notably private, household rite led within the home. It marks turning inward: harvest gathered, accounts settled, the dark half of the year begun.
Portable practice: a quiet ancestor remembrance. Set out water or a share of your meal, name those you come from or those you have lost, and write one thing from the past year you are ready to set down. A windowsill and a cup are enough. -
Yule (Jól)
Around the winter solstice; often 12 nights AttestedThe best-attested and most widely kept festival — a midwinter feast tied to the returning sun, the dead, and (in later folklore) the Wild Hunt. Historically it likely fell on the full moon of the lunar month after the solstice rather than a fixed date, and it was a season, not a single day. Many of its customs survived into modern midwinter and Christmas traditions of northern Europe.
Portable practice: keep a light burning through the longest night (a lamp or LED candle counts). Toast — with anything in your cup — to the returning sun, to the dead, and to the year ahead. If you keep only one festival, keep this one. -
Sigrblót
Around mid-April (start of summer) AttestedThe "victory sacrifice" at the start of summer, named in Ynglinga saga and connected in the sources to seeking a fortunate season ahead — for voyages, work, and undertakings. It marks the year turning outward again: light lengthening, effort beginning.
Portable practice: name one undertaking for the coming season and one honest first step toward it. Pour out a small offering of water and keep the vow small enough to actually finish.
The modern wheel of the year
Many Heathens observe a fuller eight-festival cycle — solstices, equinoxes, and the cross-quarter points. It is worth being clear: this eightfold wheel is a modern construction. It was assembled in twentieth-century Paganism, and several of its familiar names (Ostara, Litha, Mabon) were popularized by Wiccan authors in the 1970s, not drawn from Norse sources. That does not make it worthless — many find real meaning in marking the sun's turning — but presenting it as ancient Norse practice would be false, and this site won't.
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Midsummer
Around the summer solstice Modern / folkMidsummer bonfire and feast customs are genuinely old and widespread across northern Europe as folk practice, even where a formal "festival" is not named in the Norse sources. A natural high point of the light half of the year.
Portable practice: get outside at the day's longest light, even briefly. Name what has grown since Sigrblót and give thanks for it. -
Spring & autumn equinoxes
March & September ModernWidely marked in modern Heathenry as points of balance — light and dark in equal measure — and often folded into planting and harvest themes. The specific festival names attached to them are modern rather than attested.
Portable practice: a balance-check. Write one thing to grow and one thing to release, and act on each in a small way.
Days of remembrance
Beyond the seasonal turns, many modern Heathens keep days of remembrance for figures from the Eddas, the sagas, and history. These are modern devotional additions — a way of keeping memory, which is itself a deeply Heathen value (Völuspá is, after all, a poem of remembering). Choose your own with care, and be aware that some published "remembrance" calendars originate with folkish groups; you are free to build your own around figures and values you actually admire.
A portable rule for the whole year
You do not need a kindred, a calendar app, or a perfect date to keep the year. Watch your own sky. When the light collapses toward its shortest day, keep Yule. When it returns and summer opens, keep Sigrblót. When the harvest ends and the cold begins, keep Winter Nights. Between them, mark what your own life turns on. The wheel is real wherever you are standing on it.
