ótt
Átt is an Old Norse term meaning “magic, sorcery, or a spell,” and it continues to appear in modern Icelandic with a similar sense. The word is cognate with Old English *geald* (“incantation”) and Old High German *magâ* (“magic”), reflecting a shared Germanic heritage. In the medieval Icelandic sagas and Eddic poetry, átt denotes the practice of influencing events through supernatural means, often associated with seiðr, a form of shamanistic magic performed primarily by women. Examples occur in the Poetic Edda, where the goddess Freyja is described as a practitioner of magic, and in the Íslendinga saga, where characters employ spells to protect property or to curse rivals.
Scholars distinguish between “átt” as a neutral term for magical technique and the moral connotations that
In contemporary Icelandic, átt is used mainly in literary or historical discussions of pre‑Christian Norse culture;