There are a total of 100 Norse gods that have been compiled and organized in this comprehensive list. The selection includes only deities attested in the Poetic and Prose Eddas, sagas, skaldic poems, or reputable scholarly sources.

Norse gods are the named supernatural beings of Old Norse religion and medieval Scandinavian literature. They range from major Æsir and Vanir such as Odin, Thor and Freyja to local or rarely attested figures. Their roles cover war, fertility, craft, fate and natural forces. Scholars, writers and creators draw on them for historical study, storytelling and game design.

Interesting and little-known facts about Norse gods:
– About two dozen gods are well attested across Eddic and skaldic sources, while many other names appear only once.
– Snorri Sturluson compiles the Prose Edda around 1220, preserving much older oral material now known only through his work.
– Archaeology yields hundreds of Thor‑hammer pendants and amulets across Scandinavia, showing wide popular use of Thor’s symbol.
– Freyja receives half of the slain warriors in some Old Norse sources, with the other half offered to Odin.
– Many deity names survive only in kennings, single skaldic lines or place‑names, which complicates modern reconstruction.

The alphabetical index lets readers browse entries by initial letter and follow internal links to adjacent letters and the full index. Each entry shows two columns: Domain (one-line role, 1–6 words) and Symbols (1–3 concise iconography items).