Friday, 13 March 2020

Germanic Folklore (6): Sacrifices




SACRIFICE.

The word opfer, a sacrifice, was introduced into German by Christianity, being derived from the Latin offero.  Everywhere the original heathen terms disappeared. The oldest term, and one universally spread, for the notion to worship (God) by sacrifice, was Blôtan.  It is plain that here the word has more of a heathen look, and wasn’t at that time used of Christian worship; with the thing, the words for it soon die out. But its universal use in Norse heathendom leaves no doubt remaining, that it was equally in vogue among Goths, Alamanni, Saxons, before their conversion to Christianity.

We shall besides have to separate more exactly the ideas vow and sacrifice, closely as they border on one another: the vow is, as it were, a private sacrifice.

Sacrifice rested on the supposition that human food is agreeable to the gods, that intercourse takes place between gods and men. The god is invited to eat his share of the sacrifice, and he really enjoys it. Not till later is a separate divine food placed before him. The motive of sacrifices was everywhere the same: either to render thanks to the gods for their kindnesses, or to appease their anger; the gods were to be kept gracious, or to be made gracious again. Hence the two main kinds of sacrifice: thank-offerings and sin-offerings.

When a meal was eaten, a head of game killed, the enemy conquered , a firstling of the cattle born, or grain harvested, the gift-bestowing god had a first right to a part of the food, drink, produce, the spoils of war or of the chase (the same idea on which tithes to the church were afterwards grounded).

If on the contrary a famine, a failure of crops, a pestilence had set in among a people, they hastened to present propitiatory gifts. These sin-offerings have by their nature an occasional and fitful character, while those performed to the propitious deity readily pass into periodically recurring festivals.

There is a third species of sacrifice, by which one seeks to know the issue of an enterprise, and to secure the aid of the god to whom it is presented . Divination however could also be practiced without sacrifices.

Besides these three, there were special sacrifices for particular occasions, such as coronations, births, weddings and funerals, which were also for the most part coupled with solemn banquets.

As the gods show favor more than anger, and as men are oftener cheerful than oppressed by their sins and errors, thank offerings were the earliest and commonest, sin-offerings the more rare and impressive. Whatever in the world of plants can be laid before the gods is gay, innocent, but also less imposing and effective than an animal sacrifice. The streaming blood, the life spilt out seems to have a stronger binding and atoning power. Animal sacrifices are natural to the warrior, the hunter, the herdsman, while the husbandman will offer up grain and flowers.

The great anniversaries of the heathen coincide with popular assemblies and assizes. In the Ynglinga saga chap. 8 they are specified thus: “On winter day there should be blood-sacrifice for a good year, and in the middle of winter for a good crop; and the third sacrifice should be on summer day, for victory in battle. “

Halfdan the Old held a great midwinter sacrifice for the long duration of his life and kingdom. But the great general blot held at Uppsala every winter included sacrifices.  

Easter-fires, Mayday-fires, Midsummer-fires, with their numerous ceremonies, carry us back to heathen sacrifices; especially such customs as rubbing the sacred flame, running through the glowing embers, throwing flowers into the fire, baking and distributing large loaves or cakes, and the circular dance. Dances passed into plays and dramatic representations. Afzelius describes a sacrificial play still performed in parts of Gotland, acted by young fellows in disguise, who blacken and rouge their faces. One, wrapped in fur, sits in a chair as the victim, holding in his mouth a bunch of straw-stalks cut fine, which reach as far as his ears and have the appearance of sow bristles: by this is meant the boar sacrificed at Yule.

The great sacrificial feast of the ancient Saxons was on Oct. 1, and is traced to a victory gained over the Thuringians in 534; in documents of the Mid. Ages this high festival stills bears the name of the gemeinwoche or common week.  Zisa’ s day was celebrated on Sept. 29, St. Michael s on the 28th; so that the holding of a harvest-offering must be intended all through. In addition to the great festivals, they also sacrificed on special occasions, particularly when famine or disease was rife; sometimes for long life: or for favour with the people.

Human Sacrifices are from their nature and origin purging; some great disaster, some heinous crime can only be purged and blotted out by human blood. With all nations of antiquity they were an old-established custom; the following evidences place it beyond a doubt for Germany: “Of all the Gods, Mercury is he whom they worship most. To him on certain stated days it is lawful to offer even human victims.” (Tacitus Germ. 9)
 “Of all the Suevians, the Semnones recount themselves to be the most ancient and most noble. The belief of their antiquity is confirmed by religious mysteries. At a stated time of the year, all the several people descended from the same stock, assemble by their deputies in a wood; consecrated by the idolatries of their forefathers, and by superstitious awe in times of old. There by publicly sacrificing a man, they begin the horrible solemnity of their barbarous worship.” (Tacitus Germ. 39)
“In the neighbouring groves stood the savage altars at which they had slaughtered the tribunes and chief centurions.” (Tacitus Ann. 1, 61)
The same summer a great battle was fought between the Hermunduri and the Chatti, (…) The war was a success for the Hermunduri, and the more disastrous to the Chatti because they had devoted, in the event of victory, the enemy's army to Mars and Mercury, a vow which consigns horses, men, everything indeed on the vanquished side to destruction. And so the hostile threat recoiled on themselves. (Tacitus Ann. 13, 57)
“the (kings of the Goths), One Eadagaisus. . . Attacking Italy, and during the ferocity of the war, he promised that the blood of the Christians would be used to make offering,  worshiping their gods, if he should conquer the country.” (Isidori chron. Goth., aera 446)
“On the god Mars of the Goths, who has always cruel rites and culture, his victims were prisoners of war. Offers of human blood are more readily accepted.” (Jornandes ch. 5)
“It is their usage (…) to abandon every tenth captive to the slow agony of a watery end, casting lots with perfect equity among the damned crowd in execution of this iniquitous sentence of death.  These men are bound by vows which have to be paid in victims, they conceive it as a religious act to perpetrate this horrible slaughter (…). Masters were allowed to sell slaves, and Christians sold them to heathens for sacrifice.” (Sidonius Apollinaris 8, 6 of the Saxons)



The first fruits of war, the first prisoner taken, was supposed to bring luck. In folk-tales we find traces of the immolation of children ; they are killed as a cure for leprosy, they are walled up in basements; and a feature that particularly points to a primitive sacrificial rite is, that toys and victuals are handed in to the child, while the roofing-in is completed. Among the Greeks and Romans likewise the victims fell amid noise and flute-playing, that their cries might be drowned, and the tears of children are stilled with caresses. (Epist. Bonif. 25)

Extraordinary events might demand the death of kings sons and daughters, nay, of kings themselves. Thoro offers up his son to the gods; King Oen the Old sacrificed nine sons one after the other to Odin for his long life; Ynglinga saga ch. 29: Of King On, Jorund's Son.
On or Ane was the name of Jorund's son, who became king of the Swedes after his father.  He was a wise man, who made great sacrifices to the gods; but being no warrior, he lived quietly at home.  In the time when the kings we have been speaking of were in Upsal, Denmark had been ruled over by Dan Mikellati, who lived to a very great age; then by his son, Frode Mikellati, or the Peace-loving, who was succeeded by his sons Halfdan and Fridleif, who were great warriors.  Halfdan was older than his brother, and above him in all things.  He went with his army against King On to Sweden, and was always victorious.  At last King On fled to Wester Gotland when he had been king in Upsal about twenty-five years, and was in Gotland twenty-five years, while Halfdan remained king in Upsal.  King Halfdan died in his bed at Upsal, and was buried there in a mound; and King On returned to Upsal when he was sixty years of age.  He made a great sacrifice, and in it offered up his son to Odin.  On got an answer from Odin, that he should live sixty years longer; and he was afterwards king in Upsal for twenty-five years.  Now came Ole the Bold, a son of King Fridleif, with his army to Sweden, against King On, and they had several battles with each other; but Ole was always the victor.  Then On fled a second time to Gotland; and for twenty-five years Ole reigned in Upsal, until he was killed by Starkad the Old.  After Ole's fall, On returned to Upsal, and ruled the kingdom for twenty-five years.  Then he made a great sacrifice again for long life, in which he sacrificed his second son, and received the answer from Odin, that he should live as long as he gave him one of his sons every tenth year, and also that he should name one of the districts of his country after the number of sons he should offer to Odin.  When he had sacrificed the seventh of his sons he continued to live; but so that he could not walk, but was carried on a chair.  Then he sacrificed his eighth son, and lived thereafter ten years, lying in his bed. Now he sacrificed his ninth son, and lived ten years more; but so that he drank out of a horn like a weaned infant.  He had now only one son remaining, whom he also wanted to sacrifice, and to give Odin Upsal and the domains thereunto belonging, under the name of the Ten Lands, but the Swedes would not allow it; so there was no sacrifice, and King On died, and was buried in a mound at Upsal.  Since that time it is called On's sickness when a man dies, without pain, of extreme old age. Thjodolf tell of this:

     "In Upsal's town the cruel king
     Slaughtered his sons at Odin's shrine --
     Slaughtered his sons with cruel knife,
     To get from Odin length of life.
     He lived until he had to turn
     His toothless mouth to the deer's horn;
     And he who shed his children's blood
     Sucked through the ox's horn his food.
     At length fell Death has tracked him down,
     Slowly, but sure, in Upsal's town."

And the Swedes in a grievous famine, when other great sacrifices proved unavailing, offered up their own king Domaldi; Ynglinga saga ch. 18:
Of Domald, Visbur's Son.
Domald took the heritage after his father Visbur, and ruled over the land.  As in his time there was great famine and distress, the Swedes made great offerings of sacrifice at Upsal.  The first autumn they sacrificed oxen, but the succeeding season was not improved thereby.  The following autumn they sacrificed men, but the succeeding year was rather worse.  The third autumn, when the offer of sacrifices should begin, a great multitude of Swedes came to Upsal; and now the chiefs held consultations with each other, and all agreed that the times of scarcity were on account of their king Domald, and they resolved to offer him for good seasons, and to assault and kill him, and sprinkle the stalle of the gods with his blood.  And they did so.  Thjodolf tells of this: 

     "It has happened oft ere now,
     That foeman's weapon has laid low
     The crowned head, where battle plain,
     Was miry red with the blood-rain.
     But Domald dies by bloody arms,
     Raised not by foes in war's alarms --
     Raised by his Swedish liegemen's hand,
     To bring good seasons to the land."

Animal sacrifices were mainly thank-offerings, but sometimes also expiatory, and as such they not seldom, by way of mitigation, took the place of a previous human sacrifice. I will now quote the evidences . Hercules and Mars they appease with beasts usually allowed for sacrifice.  “Of the gods, Mercury  is the principal object of their adoration; whom, on certain days,  they think it lawful to propitiate even with human victims. To Hercules and Mars they offer the animals usually allotted for sacrifice. Some of the Suevi also perform sacred rites to Isis. What was the cause and origin of this foreign worship, I have not been able to discover; further than that her being represented with the symbol of a galley, seems to indicate an imported religion. They conceive it unworthy the grandeur of celestial beings to confine their deities within walls, or to represent them under a human similitude: woods and groves are their temples; and they affix names of divinity to that secret power, which they behold with the eye of adoration alone.” (Tacitus Germ. 9)

 I.e., with animals suitable for the purpose and only those animals were suitable, whose flesh could be eaten by men. It would have been unbecoming to offer food to the god, which the sacrificer himself would have disdained. At the same time these sacrifices appear to be also banquets; an appointed portion of the slaughtered beast is placed before the god, the rest is cut up, distributed and consumed in the assembly. The people thus became partakers in the holy offering, and the god is regarded as feasting with them at their meal . At great sacrifices the kings were expected to taste each kind of food, and down to late times the house-spirits and dwarfs had their portion set aside for them by the superstitious people. The heathen Langobards permitted or expected the captive Christians to share their sacrificial feast.

In the earliest period, the horse seems to have been the favorite animal for sacrifice; there is no doubt that before the introduction of Christianity its flesh was universally eaten. There was nothing in the ways of the heathen so offensive to the new converts, as their not giving up the slaughter of horses (hrossa-slâtr) and the eating of horseflesh. The Christian Northmen reviled the Swedes as hross-æturnar (horseflesh-eaters),  King Hakon, whom his subjects suspected of Christianity, was called upon at hann skyldi eta hrossaslâtr; to eat horseflesh. From Tacitus ann. 13, 57 we learn that the Hermunduri sacrificed the horses of the defeated Catti. As late as the time of Boniface the Thuringians are strictly enjoined to abstain from horseflesh. Later, witches also are charged with eating horseflesh .

Here we must not overlook the cutting off of the head, which was not consumed with the rest, but consecrated by way of eminence to the god. When Caecina, on approaching the scene of Varus’s overthrow, saw horses heads fastened to the stems of trees (Tacitus ann. 1, 61), these were no other than the Roman horses, which the Germans had seized in the battle and offered up to their gods.  

But on horse-sacrifices among the heathen Norse we have further information of peculiar value. The St. Olaf s saga, ch. 113 , says:“that cattle and horses had been slain, and the altars sprinkled with their blood, and the sacrifices accompanied with the prayer that was made to obtain good seasons.” A tail-piece at the very end of the Hervararsaga mentions a similar sacrifice offered by the apostate Swedes at the election of king Svein (second half of 11th century):
“then was led forward a horse into the Thing, and hewed in sunder, and divided for eating, and they reddened with the blood the blot-tree, (…)”
Among all animal sacrifices, that of the horse was preeminent and most solemn. Our ancestors have this in common with several Slavic and Finnish nations, with Persians and Indians: with all of them the horse passed for a specially sacred animal.

The passage from Agathias proves the Alamannic custom, and that from the Olafssaga the Norse. A letter to Saint Boniface speaks of ungodly priests: “They sacrifice bulls, goats and civilian victims.”
And one from Gregory the Great affirms of the Angles: “They slaughter many in the sacrifices to demons.”

The Hack ox and Hack cow, which are not to be killed for the household, were they sacred sacrificial beasts? I will add a few examples from the Norse. Ynglinga saga, ch. 18: See above

Egils Saga, ch. 68 - Of Egil's journeyings:
“To the field was led forth a bull, large and old 'sacrificial beast' such was termed, to be slain by him who won the victory. Sometimes there was one such ox, sometimes each combatant had his own led forth.”

Boars, Pigs.
In the Salic Law, tit.2, a higher composition is set on the majalis sacrivus or votivus than on any other. This seems a relic of the ancient sacrifices of the heathen Franks ; else why the term sacrivus? True, there is no vast difference between 700 and 600 den. (17 and 15 sol.); but of animals so set apart for holy use there must have been a great number in heathen times, so that the price per head did not need to be high. Probably they were selected immediately after birth, and marked, and then reared with the rest till the time of sacrificing. In Frankish and Alamannic documents there often occurs the word friscing, usually for porcellus (piglet), but sometimes for agnus (lamb), occasionally in the more limited sense of porcinus and agninus; the word may by its origin express recens natus, new-born, but it now lives only in the sense of porcellus (frischling, piglet). How are we to explain then, that this OHG friscing in several writers translates precisely the Latin hostia (sacrifice, offering),  victima (victim), holocaustum (a burnt offering wholly consumed by fire) except as a reminiscence of heathenism? The Jewish paschal lamb would not suggest it, for in friscing the idea of porcellus was predominant. In the North, the expiatory boar, sonargoltr, offered to Freyr, was a periodical sacrifice; and Sweden has continued down to modern times the practice of baking loaves and cakes on Yule-eve in the shape of a boar.

This golden-bristled boar has left his track in inland Germany too. According to popular belief in Thuringia, whoever on Christmas eve abstains from all food till suppertime, will get sight of a young golden pig, i.e. in olden times it was brought up last at the evening banquet. A Lauterbach ordinance (weisthum) of 1589 decreed that unto a court hold on the day of the Three-kings, therefore in Yule time, the holders of farm-steads should furnish a clean goldferch (gold-hog) gelded while yet under milk; it was led round the benches, and no doubt slaughtered afterwards.

Rams, Goats.
As friscing came to mean victima, so conversely a name for animal sacrifice, Goth. sauðs, seems to have given rise to the ON. name for the animal itself, sauðr= wether. This species of sacrifice was therefore not rare, though it is seldom expressly mentioned, probably as being of small value. Only the saga Hakonar goða ch.16 informs us: About Sacrifices.
Sigurd, earl of Hlader, was one of the greatest men for sacrifices, and so had Hakon his father been; and Sigurd always presided on account of the king at all the festivals of sacrifice in the Throndhjem country.  It was an old custom, that when there was to be sacrifice all the bondes should come to the spot where the temple stood and bring with them all that they required while the festival of the sacrifice lasted.  To this festival all the men brought ale with them; and all kinds of cattle, (it seems to include goats) as well as horses, were slaughtered, and all the blood that came from them was called "hlaut", and the vessels in which it was collected were called hlaut-vessels.  Hlaut-staves were made, like sprinkling brushes, with which the whole of the altars and the temple walls, both outside and inside, were sprinkled over, and also the people were sprinkled with the blood; but the flesh was boiled into savoury meat for those present.  The fire was in the middle of the floor of the temple, and over it hung the kettles, and the full goblets were handed across the fire; and he who made the feast, and was a chief, blessed the full goblets, and all the meat of the sacrifice.  And first Odin's goblet was emptied for victory and power to his king; thereafter, Niord's and Freyja's goblets for peace and a good season.  Then it was the custom of many to empty the brage-goblet (the brage-goblet, over which vows were made.); and then the guests emptied a goblet to the memory of departed friends, called the remembrance goblet. 

In the Swedish superstition, the water-sprite, before it will teach any one to play the harp, requires the sacrifice of a black lamb. Gregory the Great speaks once of she-goats being sacrificed; he says the Langobards offer to the devil, i.e., to one of their gods, the head of a goat, that he ran about a poem dedicated to horror. This head of a she-goat (or he-goat ?) was reared aloft, and the people bowed before it. The hallowing of a he-goat among the ancient Prussians is well known. The Slavonian god Triglav is represented with three goats heads. If that Langobardic poem had been preserved, we could judge more exactly of the rite than from the report of Gregory the Great, who viewed it with hostile eyes.

About other sacrificial beasts we cannot be certain. But even then, what of domestic poultry, fowls, geese, pigeons ? The dove was a Jewish and Christian sacrifice, the Greeks offered cocks to Asclepios, and in Touraine a white cock used to be sacrificed to St. Christopher for the cure of a bad finger.  An AS. name for November is expressly blôtmôneð. The common man at his yearly slaughtering gets up a feast, and sends meat and sausages to his neighbor’s, which may be a survival of the common sacrifice and distribution of flesh.

It is remarkable that in Servia too, at the solemn burning of the badnyak, which is exactly like the yule-log, a whole swine is roasted, and often a sucking pig along with it.

Of game, doubtless only those fit to eat were fit to sacrifice, stags, roes, wild boars, but never bears, wolves or foxes, who themselves possess a ghostly being, and receive a kind of worship. Yet one might suppose that for expiation uneatable beasts, equally with men, might be offered, just as slaves and also hounds and falcons followed the burnt body of their master. Here we must first of all place Adam of Bremen’s description of the great sacrifice at Uppsala: “It is usually celebrated at the solemn order of the end of nine years of nature shared by all Sveoniae of the provinces, to the exemption from taxes which none are given to the person; their kings, and the people, that all and every one of her gifts is likewise transmit to the Uppsala, and, more cruel than any punishment that is to say, those who have already accepted Christianity, and put on them, from the ceremonies would redeem themselves. The sacrifice, therefore, such is: the male, out of every living creature, that is to say, the heads of the nine are offered; their blood will appease the gods with it. But the bodies are suspended from a pole next to the temple. Every one of the trees that were believed to be those of the death of the divine (smeared) or with filth and gore of sacrificial lambs. There also are dogs who can hang with the human sacrifices, I was told by a certain person of the Christians themselves, of whom seventy-two hung up, he saw the bodies of a mixture of tar.”

The number nine is prominent in this Swedish sacrificial feast, exactly as in the Danish; but here also all is conceived in the spirit of legend. First, the heads of victims seem the essential thing again, as among the Franks and Langobards; at the same time remind us of the old judicial custom of hanging up wolves or dogs by the side of criminals . That only the male sex of every living creature is here to be sacrificed, is in striking accord with an episode in the Eeinardus, which was composed less than a century after Adam, and in its groundwork might well be contemporary with him. At the wedding of a king, the males of all quadrupeds and birds were to have been slaughtered, but the cock and gander had made their escape. It looks to me like a legend of the olden time, which still circulated in the 11th-12th centuries.

Anyhow, in heathen times vide animals seem to be in special demand for sacrifice. As for killing one of every species, it would be such a stupendous affair, that its actual execution could never have been conceivable ; it can only have existed in popular tradition. It is something like the old Mirror of Saxony and that of Swabia assuring us that every living creature present at a deed of rapine, whether oxen, horses, cats, dogs, fowls, geese, swine or men, had to be beheaded, as well as the actual delinquent (in real fact, only when they were his property); or like the Edda relating how oaths were exacted of all animals and plants, and all beings were required to weep. The creatures belonging to a man, his domestic animals, have to suffer with him in case of cremation, sacrifice or punishment.

Next to the kind, stress was undoubtedly laid on the color of the animal, white being considered the most favorable. White horses are often spoken of:  “Certain of these animals, milk-white, and untouched by earthly labor, are pastured at the public expense in the sacred woods and groves.” (Tacitus Germ. 10) The friscing of sacrifice was probably of a spotless white; and in later law records snow-white pigs are pronounced inviolable. The Votiaks sacrificed a red stallion, the Tcheremisses a white. When under the old German law dun or pied cattle were often required in payment of fines and tithes, this might have some connection with sacrifices. For witchcraft also, animals of a particular hue were requisite. The water-sprite demanded a black lamb, and the huldres have a black lamb and Hack cat offered up to them. We may suppose that cattle were garlanded and adorned for sacrifice. A passage in the Edda requires gold-horned cows, (Saem. 141) and in the village of Fienstadt in Mansfeld a coal-black ox with a white star and white feet, and a he-goat with gilded horns were imposed as dues. There are indications that the animals, before being slaughtered, were led round within the circle of the assembly that is how I explain the leading round the benches, and about to run (Eyrbyggja saga, p. 10. And none should they kill neither beast nor man, unless of itself it ran a-tilt.), perhaps, as among the Greeks and Komans, to give them the appearance of going voluntarily to death.  Probably care had to be taken also that the victim should not have been used in the service of man, e.g., that the ox had never drawn plough or wagon. For such colts and bullocks are required in our ancient law-records at a formal transfer of land, or the ploughing to death of removers of landmarks.

On the actual procedure in a sacrifice, we have scarcely any information except from Norse authorities. While the animal laid down its life on the sacrificial stone, all the streaming blood (ON. hlauf) was caught either in a hollow dug for the purpose, or in vessels. With this gore they smeared the sacred vessels and utensils, and sprinkled the participants.  (Saga Hakonar goða ch.16.  (see above)
 “On the stall should also stand the blood-bowl, and therein the blood-rod was, like unto a sprinkler, and therewith should be sprinkled from the bowl that blood which is called "Hlaut", which was that kind of blood which flowed when those beasts were smitten who were sacrificed to the Gods. But round about the stall were the Gods arrayed in the Holy Place.” Eyrbyggja saga, ch.4. )

Apparently divination was performed by means of the blood, perhaps a part of it was mixed with ale or mead, and drunk. In the North the bloodbowls (hlautbollar, blôtbollar) do not seem to have been large; some nations had big cauldrons made for the purpose. The Swedes were taunted by Olafr Tryggvason with sitting at home and licking their sacrificial pots. A cauldron of the Cimbri is noticed in Strabo 7, 2. Another cauldron of the Suevi, in the Life of St. Columban: These are the seeds which it is out of the neighboring nations of the Suevi and the Vandals; And when he was a long time there and found them the sacrifice of what was commonly called a strong liqor, which lasted more or less, and then contain the six measures of, beer in the middle. To which he asked them to whom they offered. They say their god, Wotan, whom we call Mercury. (Jonas Bobbiensis, vita Columb.) Here we are expressly told that the cauldron was filled with ale, and not that the blood of a victim was mixed with it; unless the narrative is incomplete, it may have meant only a drink-offering.

Usually the cauldron served to cook, i.e. boil, the victim’s flesh; it never was roasted. From this seething, according to my conjecture, the ram was called sauþs, and those who took part in the sacrifice suđnautar (partakers of the sodden), the boiling, the cauldrons and pots of witches in later times may be connected with this. The distribution of the pieces among the people was probably undertaken by a priest ; on great holidays the feast was held there and then in the assembly, on other occasions each person might doubtless take his share home with him.  They also ate the strong broth and the fat swimming at the top.  The heathen offer their king Hakon, on his refusing the flesh, drecka soðit and eta flotit. (saga Hakonar goða.)  
They say the Cimbri had this custom, that their women marching with them were accompanied by priestess-prophetesses, gray-haired, white-robed, with a linen scarf buckled over the shoulder, wearing a brazen girdle, and bare-footed; these met the prisoners in the camp, sword in hand, and having crowned them, led them to a brass basin as large as 30 amphora? (180 gals); and they had a ladder, which the priestess mounted, and standing over the basin, cut the throat of each as he was handed up. With the blood that gushed into the basin, they made a prophecy. The trolds too, a kind of elves, have a copper kettle, the Christians long believed in a Saturni dolium (Devils bath), and in a large cauldron in hell.

That priests and people really ate the food: The Capitularies 7, 405 adopt the statement in Epist. Bonif. cap. 25 of a Christian priest “Jupiter slaying and eating the flesh victims”, only altering it to: “gods cost, so he was eating meat sacrificed.” We may suppose that private persons were allowed to offer small gifts to the gods on particular occasions, and consume a part of them; this the Christians called “to offer to both of the Gentiles, and for the glory of the demons”  (Capit. de part. Sax. 20.)

It is likely also, that certain nobler parts of the animal were assigned to the gods, the head, liver, heart, tongue. The head and skin of slaughtered game were suspended on trees in honor of them .
Whole burnt offerings, where the animal was converted into ashes on the pile of wood, do not seem to have been in use. Neither were incense-offerings used ; the sweet incense of the Christians was a new thing to the heathen.

While the sacrifice of a slain animal is more sociable, more universal, and is usually offered by the collective nation or community; fruit or flowers, milk or honey is what any household, or even an individual may give. These Fruit-offerings are therefore more solitary and paltry; history scarcely mentions them, but they have lingered the longer and more steadfastly in popular customs.
When the husbandman cuts his corn, he leaves a clump of ears standing for the god who blessed the harvest, and he adorns it with ribbons. To this day, at a fruit-gathering in Holstein, five or six apples are left hanging on each tree, and then the next crop will thrive. More striking examples of this custom will be given later, in treating of individual gods. But, just as tame and eatable animals were especially available for sacrifice, so are fruit-trees (frugiferae arbores, Tacitus Germ. 10), and grains; and at a formal transfer of land, boughs covered with leaves, apples or nuts are used as earnest of the bargain. The MHG. poet (Fundgr. II, 25) describes Cain’s sacrifice in the words: “A sheaf he took, he would offer it with ears and eke with spikes”: a formula expressing at once the upper part or beard (arista), and the whole ear and stalk (spica) as well. Under this head we also put the crowning of the divine image, of a sacred tree or a sacrificed animal with foliage or flowers; not the faintest trace of this appears in the Norse sagas, and as little in our oldest documents. From later times and surviving folk-tales I can bring forward a few things. On Ascension day the girls in more than one part of Germany twine garlands of white and red flowers, and hang them up in the dwelling room or over the cattle in the stable, where they remain till replaced by fresh ones the next year.

At the village of Questenberg in the Harz, on the third day in Whitsuntide, the lads carry an oak up the castle-hill which overlooks the whole district, and, when they have set it upright, fasten to it a large garland of branches of trees plaited together, and as big as a cartwheel. They all shout the quest (i.e. garland) hangs, and then they dance round the tree on the hill top; both tree and garland are renewed every year.

 Not far from the Meisner mountain in Hesse stands a high precipice with a cavern opening under it, which goes by the name of the Hollow Stone. Into this cavern every Easter Monday the youths and maidens of the neighboring villages carry nosegays, and then draw some cooling water. No one will venture down, unless he has flowers with him.  The lands in some Hessian townships have to pay a bunch of mayflowers (lilies of the valley) every year for rent.

In all these examples, which can easily be multiplied, a heathen practice seems to have been transferred to Christian festivals and offerings.  Beside cattle and grain, other valuables were offered to particular gods and in special cases, as even in Christian times voyagers at sea e.g. would vow a silver ship to their church as a votive gift; also articles of clothing, e.g. red shoes.

 Jacob Grimm,Teutonic mythology (Vol.1)