The Old Norse names of the main ones are:
Odin
Tyr
Frigga
Thor
Loki
The names of some pre-christian Germanic Gods have survived more or less un-noticed into modern times:
Tiw
Woden (also known as Odin)
Donar (also known as Thor)
Frigg (also known as Freya)
These gods are all commorated in days of the week:
Tuesday (after Tiw, German Dienstag)
Wednesday (after Woden, German formerly Wodanstag)
Thursday (after Thor, Donar, German Donnerstag)
Friday (after Frigg, German Freitag)
The names of some pre-christian Germanic Gods have survived more or less un-noticed into modern times:
Tiw
Woden (also known as Odin)
Donar (also known as Thor)
Frigg (also known as Freya)
These gods are all commorated in days of the week:
Tuesday (after Tiw, German Dienstag)
Wednesday (after Woden, German formerly Wodanstag)
Thursday (after Thor, Donar, German Donnerstag)
Friday (after Frigg, German Freitag)
With German Muslims, Allah; for German Christians/Jews, Jehovah; however Germans try to remain secular about these things.
Woden - the German variant of Odin.
saxton religon was Irish German and spanish aswell as English
H. E. Westermeyer has written: 'The fall of the German gods'
die Gotter die Holle auf Erden regen
It literally means "twilight of the gods", but it is most often used in a historical or political context to mean the turbulent ending of a governing regime or institution.
When the German soldier beat them, they don't hate them, and even forgive them.
Odin, mythical Scandinavian king of the gods, was Wōdan or Woutan in old High German.
The king of the Anglo-Saxon gods was Woden, a German version of the Scandinavian god Odin, who had two pet wolves and a horse with eight legs. Other gods were Thunor, god of thunder; Frige, goddess of love; and Tiw, god of war. These four Anglo-Saxon gods gave their names to the days of the week.
The names of some pre-christian Germanic Gods have survived un-noticed into modern times:TiwWoden (also known as Odin)Donar (also known as Thor)Frigg (also known as Freya)These gods are all commorated in days of the week:Tuesday (after Tiw, German Dienstag)Wednesday (after Woden, German formerly Wodanstag)Thursday (after Thor, German Donnerstag)Friday (after Frigg, German Freitag)
four The king of the Anglo-Saxon gods was Woden, a German version of the Scandinavian god Odin, who had two pet wolves and a horse with eight legs. Other gods were Thunor, god of thunder; Frige, goddess of love; and Tiw, god of war. These four Anglo-Saxon gods gave their names to the days of the week.
they can be gods of different things