Fenrir & Ammit Statue — Norse and Egyptian Mythology Wood Carving

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$125.00
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$125.00
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$120.00
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Two worlds of myth collide in this hand-carved wooden statue — Fenrir, the great wolf of Norse legend destined to devour Odin at Ragnarök, and Ammit, the Egyptian devourer of unworthy souls in the Hall of Two Truths. Together they form a singular, powerful composition: chaos and judgment, destruction and consequence, the end of worlds and the weight of the heart. Hand-carved from ecological ash wood with a varnish finish.

Each piece is individually crafted — no two are identical.

Details

  • Material: Ash wood
  • Finish: Varnish
  • Height: 8.0 in / 20.5 cm
  • Width: 4.4 in / 11.2 cm
  • Depth: 1.7 in / 4.5 cm
  • Available in: Natural brown | Multicolor (hand-painted)
  • Easy to clean with a dry cloth

Fenrir & Ammit in Mythology

  • Fenrir (Norse): Son of Loki and the giantess Angrboda, Fenrir is the monstrous wolf of Norse mythology — bound by the gods but prophesied to break free at Ragnarök and slay Odin himself. He embodies uncontrollable chaos, primal power, and the inevitability of cosmic destruction
  • Ammit (Egyptian): A composite creature — head of a crocodile, body of a lioness, hindquarters of a hippopotamus — Ammit dwells in the Hall of Two Truths and devours the hearts of the unworthy after judgment. She is the embodiment of divine justice and the consequence of a life lived without honour
  • Mythic Duality: Together, Fenrir and Ammit represent the twin forces of destruction and judgment — chaos from without and reckoning from within
  • Asatru & Kemetism: Both figures hold deep significance in modern Norse paganism (Asatru) and Egyptian reconstructionism (Kemetism), making this statue a powerful dual-tradition altar piece
  • Symbolism: A meditation on mortality, consequence, and the raw power of mythological forces that transcend culture and time

Ideal For

  • Norse pagan and Asatru altar spaces
  • Egyptian mythology and Kemetic practice collectors
  • Mythology enthusiasts drawn to cross-cultural symbolism and dark art

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