There is considerable evidence that the dísir were worshipped in Scandinavia in pagan times. Firstly, a sacrificial festival (
blót) honouring them, the
dísablót, is mentioned in one version of
Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks konungs and in
Víga-Glúms saga,
Egils saga, and the
Heimskringla. According to
Víga-Glúms saga it was held at
Winter Nights (at the onset of winter). In
Hervarar saga, the dísablót is also held in autumn, and is performed by a woman, the daughter of King Álfr of Álfheim, who "reddens the
hörgr with sacrifices and is subsequently rescued by the god
Thor after she has been abducted.
John Lindow suggests that, on its face the text depicts a mythological model for human behavior. In western Scandinavia, dísablót appears to have been a private observance. Even the large gathering in
Víga-Glúms saga was for family and friends. In contrast, according to the
Saga of St. Olaf in
Heimskringla, at
Gamla Uppsala the dísablót was celebrated during the month of Gói, i.e. in late February or early March, and accompanied by a
popular assembly known as the
Thing of all Swedes or
Dísaþing and a yearly fair. When
Christianity arrived, the assembly and market were moved to a Christian feast at the beginning of February: At the time when heathendom still prevailed in Sweden, it was an old custom there that the main sacrifices were held in Uppsala in the month of Gói... Sacrifices were to be made at that time for peace and victory for the king, and people from all over Sweden were to resort there. At that place and time also was to be the assembly of all Swedes, and there was also a market and a fair which lasted a week. Now when Christianity was introduced, the general assembly and the market were still held there. But at present, when Christianity is general in Sweden and the kings have ceased residing at Uppsala, the market has been shifted to meet at
Candlemas... but now it lasts only three days. The general assembly of the Swedes is there. The name Dísaþing (now
Disting) remained in use, however, and the Fair is still held every year in
Uppsala on the first Tuesday in February. It may be one of the oldest in Sweden. The stated purpose of the dísablót at Uppsala is to sacrifice for peace and victory. Norwegian places called
Disin, from Old Norse
Dísavin, "meadow of the dísir", and the possible relationship of the word to the Indian
dhīsanas have suggested to some scholars that the dísir were fertility deities. There are two mentions of a hall or temple of a dís. Hollander translates
dísarsálr as "the hall of the goddess". In the
Ynglinga saga part of
Heimskringla,
Aðils, the
king of Sweden, dies when he rides one of his horses around the
dísarsálr at the time of Dísablót and he is thrown and brains himself on a rock, perhaps suggesting a ritual killing. It also appears in
Hervarar saga where Helga becomes so infuriated over the death of her father at the hands of
Heiðrekr, her husband, that she hangs herself in the shrine. Although Snorri Sturluson does not mention the dísir in the
Prose Edda, he does list
Vanadís—'dís of the
Vanir'— as a name for
Freyja, and
öndurdís—'snow-shoe dís'—as a name for
Skaði. He notes that in both cases the compound using dís immediately follows one using
goð, 'deity':
Vanagoð,
öndurgoð.
Lotte Motz suggested that dís was the original Old Norse word for 'goddess' and that it had been replaced later by
ásynja, which is simply the feminine of
áss. ==Relationship to other female figures==