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List of places named after Odin

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List of places named after Odin

Many toponyms ("place names") contain the name of Odin (Norse Óðinn, Old English Wōden, proto-Germanic Wōdanaz).

Contents

Denmark

  • Odense
  • Onsberg - formally Othensberg, "Odin's Berg".
  • Onsbjerg
  • Onsholt - "Odin's Holt", located in Viby, Jutland. A marked hill now covered in corn fields that was, up until about the 18th century, covered in wetlands on all sides. It was covered by a wood (a "holt") during the Viking Age. Viby may mean "the settlement by the sacred site" and contains traces of sacrifices going back 2,500 years.
  • Onsild
  • Onsved
  • Othinshille
  • Vojens - from "Odin's Temple".
  • Estonia

  • Island of Osmussaar - "Odensholm" in Swedish, literally "Odin's islet".
  • Finland

  • Island of Odensö - also known as Udensö, literally "Odin's island". Probably a medieval transformation of an original Finnic name unrelated to Odin.
  • Norway

  • Óðinsøy ("Odin's island").
  • Sweden

  • Odensbacken - Odin's Slope
  • Odensberg, Schonen - "Odin's Berg".
  • Odensvi - Odin's Sanctuary, a place name appearing in Västmanland, Närke & Småland.
  • Odinslund, modern toponym
  • Onsjö, Odensjö & Odensjön - Odin Lake/The Odin Lake, several places in southern Sweden
  • Onslunda - Odin's Grove
  • Odenplan - "Odin's Square" in Stockholm.
  • Odengatan - "Odin Street"; running past Odenplan up to Valhallavägen "Valhalla Way" in Stockholm), modern toponyms
  • Odensåker, Skaraborg - Odin's Field
  • Odenssala Odin's Hall or Odin's Sala, originally Odhins Harg meaning Odin's Shrine
  • France

  • Northern France around Audresselles (Oderzell) district of Marquise:
  • Audinghen -
  • Germany

  • Bad Godesberg - originally spelt Wuodenesberg, which is "Wotan's mountain".
  • Gudensberg - originally spelt Wodenesberg which means the same as above.
  • Godensholt - formerly Wodensholt, Wotan's wood.
  • Odisheim - in Low German: Godshem (perhaps English: Wotan's home or God's home, respectively)
  • Wodensweg.
  • Netherlands

  • Woensdrecht.
  • Woensel
  • Wânswert
  • England

  • Odin Mine, Castleton, Derbyshire
  • Odin Sitch, Castleton, Derbyshire
  • Wambrook, Somerset - "Woden's Brook".
  • Wampool, Hampshire - "Woden's Pool".
  • Wanborough, Wiltshire - from Wôdnes-beorg, "Woden's Barrow".
  • Wanborough, Surrey.
  • Wansdyke - "Woden's dyke, embankment".
  • Wanstead, Essex - "Woden's Stead".
  • Wednesbury - "Woden's burgh".
  • Woden Road in Wednesbury.
  • Wednesfield - "Woden's field".
  • Wednesham, Cheshire - "Woden's Ham".
  • Wensley - "Woden's meadow".
  • Wembury, Devon - "Woden's Hill/Barrow" from the Old English "Wódnesbeorh".
  • Woden's Barrow - also Christianized as Adam's Grave or Walker's Hill, a barrow in Wiltshire. The Old English spelling was "Wodnes-beorh".
  • Woden Hill, Hampshire - a hill in Bagshot Heath.
  • A valley which the West OvertonAlton road runs through was called Wodnes-denu which means "Woden's Valley".
  • Wonston, Hampshire - "Woden's Town".
  • Woodbridge, Suffolk - Wodenbrycge ("Woden's Bridge").
  • Woodnesborough- also translates as "Woden's burgh", the centre of the town was known as "Woden's hill".
  • Woodway House - from the house on Woden's Way.
  • Wormshill - also derived from "Woden's hill".
  • Grimsdyke - from "Grim", which means both "hooded" and "fierce", another name used for Woden.
  • Grim's Ditch - a 5–6 mile section on the Berkshire Downs, the chalk escarpment above the Oxfordshire villages of Ardington, Hendred and Chilton.
  • Grim's Ditch (Harrow) - also known as Grimsdyke. A section of Anglo-Saxon era trenches in Harrow. Frederick Goodall's house Grim's Dyke and a local school are named after the area.
  • Grim's Ditch (Hampshire) - another set of earthworks.
  • Grim's Ditch (South Oxfordshire) - Iron Age/early Roman era earthworks in Oxfordshire.
  • Grimes Graves
  • Grimsbury, Oxfordshire.
  • Grimsbury Castle, Berkshire - hillfort occupied at least between the 3rd and 2nd Centuries B.C. Named after Woden by the Saxons.
  • Grimley, Worcestershire - from the Old English "Grimanleage", which means "the wood or clearing of Grim (Woden)"
  • Grimspound - an Iron Age settlement on Dartmoor.
  • Grimscote - a village in Northamptonshire, "Grim's Cott"
  • Grimsthorpe - a village in Lincolnshire, "Grim's Thorpe"
  • Roseberry Topping - Óðins bjarg ("Odin's rock or crag", plus "topping" added later).
  • The ford on the River Irwell which Regent's Bridge, Ordsall, now crosses, was traditionally called "Woden's Ford" and a nearby cave (no longer extant) was known as "Woden's Den".
  • Scotland

  • Edin's Hall Broch, Berwickshire, sometimes Odin's Hall Broch and originally Wooden's (Woden's) Hall
  • Grim's Dyke - another term used for the Antonine Wall
  • Woden Law - "Woden Hill", an Iron Age hillfort in the Cheviots.
  • Australia

  • Woden Valley, a district of Canberra.
  • Canada

  • Mount Odin, on Baffin Island Nunavut.
  • United States

  • Odin, Minnesota
  • Odin, Pennsylvania, in Potter County, PA.
  • Woden, Iowa
  • Woden, Texas, an unincorporated community in Nacogdoches County.
  • References

    List of places named after Odin Wikipedia