English citations of theod

  • 1899, Bernard Quaritch (Firm), Catalogue of the Literature and History of the British Islands ...: Offered at the Net Prices Affixed
    They soon became the most powerful and prosperous division of the Theods, while their conquest of the British kingdom of Strathclyde simply served to set hordes of Cumbrian warriors free to move southward into Wales   []
    From that moment the remaining Theods throughout England, [the] Saxons and Jutes []
  • 2005, Galina Krasskova, Exploring the Northern Tradition: A Guide to the Gods, Lore, Rites, and Celebrations From the Norse, German, and Anglo-Saxon Traditions, Red Wheel/Weiser (→ISBN), page 25:
    So while all Theods are Tribalist, the latter does not hold true. [...] It may also be referred to as a Mot, if one is of Anglo-Saxon belief.
  • 2008, Galina Krasskova, Raven Kaldera, Northern Tradition for the Solitary Practitioner: A Book of Prayer, Devotional Practive, and the Nine Worlds of Spirit, Red Wheel/Weiser (→ISBN)
    Theods exist in small groups bound by oath to a single leader. [...] of practice and focuses extensively on Anglo-Saxon, Norman, and Frisian cultural models.
    • 2019 12, Galina Krasskova, A Modern Guide to Heathenry: Lore, Celebrations, and Mysteries of the Northern Traditions, Weiser Books, →ISBN, page 8:
      [] So while all Theods are Tribalist, one may be Tribalist without being Theodish.
  • (Can we date this quote?), The Odinic Rite, Odinism in the Modern World, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 19:
    In a very real sense the Northern Gods are partners with the members of their theod on Earth.
  • 2019 October 8, Ryan Smith, The Way of Fire and Ice: The Living Tradition of Norse Paganism, Llewellyn Worldwide, →ISBN:
    Theodism is very hierarchical and believes the leaders of their groups, known as theods, are the intermediaries [... Because] being part of an active community is essential to practice; it is not possible to be Theodish without being a part of a Theod.
  • 2013 May 7, Edmund Curtis, A History of Medieval Ireland (Routledge Revivals): From 1086 to 1513, Routledge, →ISBN, page 213:
    ... shows strikingly how the English line was recoiling in Ormond, which had been widely enfeoffed early in the Conquest. At Nenagh there was a castle with five towers, and the chief manor contained seven and a half theods (tuatha), []