Freya

Freya, or Freyal, was an ajami deity, worshiped by the efreet of the City of Brass of the Elemental Plane of Fire and a Vanir member of the Norse pantheon; however, there was no evidence she had worshipers on Toril.

Description
Freya was a goddess of sensual love and magic.

Personality
As a goddess of love, Freya was a patron of romantic arts and poetry was the deity's favorite. She spilled tears of gold in sorrow and sadness every time her husband Odur left Freya on his many voyages.

Freya never hesitated to use the magical waters of Evergold to maintain her beauty. Some considered that to be vain, however, Freya cared not for others' opinions and was free to choose her own path. Her passionate nature was complemented by the goddess's fierce intelligence. All these qualities made Freya quite desirable by mortals and divine beings alike, gaining her numerous male allies among various pantheons and not just the Norse.

Possessions
Freya owned the Necklace of the Brisings, also called Brisingamen, a masterfully crafter piece of precious jewelry made for her by the Ysgardian dwarves. The goddess rode a chariot pulled by two lions into battle.

Along with other deities of love and beauty, Hanali Celanil, Aphrodite, and Sune, Freya had access to the divine charisma-enhancing pool of enchanted waters – Evergold.

Divine Realm
Freya's realm – a grand hall of Sessrumnir in Ysgard, received the half of the souls slain in battle, as well as all woman who fell in combat. The Alfheim region itself was a majestic sunlit land of love and joy populated by petitioners of Frey and Freya, mostly elves. Along with her twin brother, Freya lived in the realm of Asgard to promote peace between Aesir and Vanir. Freya's own realm – Vanaheim, where Sessrumnir stood near the center of Folkvang has home to most of the goddess petitioners and few einheriar warrior-spirits. Twice per year, her hall was consumed by fertility festivals, one celebrating planting of crop and another – harvest. Sessrumnir was a spacious hall of glowing white beechwood with hanging rafters and silver roof. The hall's pillars were trees that grew up through Sessrumnir's ceiling. The half of the threes were living, signifying the fact that Freya spent only half of a year in Sessrumnir. The hall was filled with walnut tables. The hall of Sessrumnir was a gift from the Aesir and was completely impregnable unless the doors were opened by the goddess herself.

Worshipers
The goddess granted her followers clerican abilities and divine spells. Ferya's clergy honored their deity by practicing arts of war and arcane magics in equal share. Many of her priests also were sorcerers or wizards.

Temples and shrines dedicated to Freya were often richly decorated with gold – the deity's gift to the planes. The buildings that housed her temples and shrines always had their main entrances facing the setting sun, signifying Odur's return to Freya at every sunset. Temples usually held a secure display of expensive jewelry – offerings to Freya. To celebrate the deity of battle, temples often contained armories, training grounds, as well as libraries of the arcane lore and laboratories.

All visitors of the temples were eagerly and warmly greeted by priests and attending worshipers. Visitors were expected to provide an offering of jewelry or show truthful reverence and passion. Other types of offerings accepted by the temples included arcane lore, magic items, and songs.

Most of Freya's proxies were female. Lhana Tomsdallihr was one of the goddess's favorites in the 14 century DR.

Dogma
Freya's worshipers we organized into highly-enthusiastic cults that operated in exuberance and revered passions. The faith welcomed diversity, both racial and culturally, and was aimed at promoting beauty in magic, and finding magic in beauty. Those who sought to join one of Freya's cults had to demonstrate passion and ardor for the elements of the goddess' portfolio and their physical appearance or physical beauty mattered not.

Festivals
The inhabitants of Alfheim who worshipped Freya and her twin brother, celebrated Freya's Fest, an autumn festival that celebrated rebirth of land and fertility. The celebration consisted of a feast with wild revelries and dances that lasted through the night.

Relationships
Freya's twin brother was named Frey and father – Njord. According to some myths, she taught Aesir the Vanir witchcraft. Freya's husband was Odur.