March 9, 2026 9:07 pm

Valravn Mythology: The Raven of the Slain in Danish Folklore and Norse Myth

Valravn mythology preserves a most fascinating creature found in Danish folklore.

The valravn, whose name comes from the Old Danish val (the slain in battle) and ravn (raven), literally means “raven of the slain.”

This eerie bird appears in medieval ballads, mythic stories, and later interpretations of Scandinavian legend.

Studying the valravn reveals how folklore blends battlefield imagery, supernatural transformation, and moral warning.

The valravn is one of the most striking figures in Danish folklore.

Its name comes from the Old Danish val (slain in battle) and ravn (raven), literally “raven of the slain.”

In Danish folklore, the valravn is a supernatural raven, a strange creature believed to originate from ravens who eat the bodies of the dead on the battlefield.

Unlike a normal raven, the valravn transforms through consuming the body of a king or chieftain who was killed in battle.

Through this grim act the bird may gain unusual intelligence and supernatural ability, turning it into something far more dangerous than an ordinary scavenger.

As Danish historian and scholar Gudmund Schütte explains in Dänisches Heidentum (1923, pp. 174–176), the belief was that if a raven could gain magical powers, sometimes even the intelligence of a human.

Valravn Mythology

Ravens in Norse Mythology and Scandinavian Belief

Ravens appear throughout traditional Danish and Scandinavian folklore. The deity Odin kept two famous birds, Huginn and Muninn, who would fly across Midgard gathering knowledge of the world.

These ravens were often associated with death, wisdom, and the aftermath of war. Their presence on the battlefield connected them closely to the fallen warrior, whose body might lie among the slain.

In this mythic framework, the raven was both messenger and scavenger. Yet within valravn mythology, the bird becomes something far darker than Odin’s watchful companions.


The Dark Transformation of the Valravn

The valravn is a creature both feared and respected in Danish folklore.

According to traditional stories, the raven could transform as a shapeshifter. Some legends describe the creature gaining its power after it eat the heart, allowing the supernatural raven to take human form.

Schütte describes how the creature could free itself from its animal countenance, as a shapeshifter with the intelligence of a human.

In doing so, it could appear in the form of a knight, sometimes described as a wandering stranger or a cursed figure. The knight might approach travelers or maidens, hiding the sinister nature beneath a human appearance.

This dark transformation reflects a recurring theme in folklore: the danger of creatures who cross the boundary between animal and human.


The Valravn in Traditional Danish Ballads

The Danmarks gamle folkeviser (“Old Danish Ballads”) preserve early appearances of the valravn.

These versions of this ballad, especially those recorded in the Danske Ridderviser (“Danish Knightly Ballads”), reveal how deeply the creature had entered medieval storytelling.

Svend Grundtvig collected many of these songs in the nineteenth century, preserving stories that had circulated orally for centuries (Grundtvig, 1856).

In one ballad, the valravn appears as a deceptive knight who wins a maiden’s trust. In another tale, the creature offers help to a traveler but demands a terrible price in return.

Some verses describe the ravnen as a restless being, a soul cursed to wander after feeding on the slain.


Symbolism and Interpretation in Danish Folklore

The valravn carries several layers of symbolic interpretation.

On one level it represents the corruption of noble qualities. In this sense, a battlefield scavenger becomes a manipulative monster, hiding behind a human face.

For folklorists, this creature may also reflect anxieties about war and death. The raven, feeding on the fallen, becomes a symbol of the consequences of conflict.

The valravn also belongs to a wider family of mythic shapeshifters, creatures able to move between animal and human states.

In that sense the valravn shares distant similarities with other European figures such as the werewolf or stories of humans transforming into wolves or birds.

Valravn Mythology

Between the Raven and the Knight

Many stories emphasize the tension between the creature’s raven form and its human appearance.

The valravn begins as a bird, circling above the fallen and feeding on the body of the slain.

After its terrible transformation, it may appear in human form. Some legends describe the creature attempting to free itself from its curse, while others portray it as a malicious deceiver.

In these tales the valravn is both creepy and sinister, a being caught between two worlds.


The Valravn in Scandinavian Folk Tradition

Beyond Denmark, echoes of the creature appear in recent Scandinavian folklore and popular culture.

The Danish musical group Sorten Muld famously revived medieval ballads about the valravn, bringing these ancient stories to modern audiences.

Video games such as Hellblade also feature the valravn as a dark guardian figure. In these interpretations the creature is portrayed as a mythical monster standing between worlds.

Such portrayals emphasize the eerie nature of the legend, often depicting the creature as malicious or mysterious.


Origins and Mythological Context

The origin of the valravn legend lies in battlefield imagery common in medieval Scandinavia.

Ravens gathering above fallen warriors were a familiar sight after war. Over time, this natural behavior may have inspired stories about ravens gaining supernatural power by feeding on the dead.

Within Scandinavian folklore, the raven thus became more than a scavenger. It became a figure of mythic imagination, connected with death, transformation, and as a warning.

Valravn Mythology

Why the Valravn Endures

From medieval ballads to modern fantasy, the valravn continues to fascinate readers and scholars alike.

The creature stands at the crossroads of Danish folklore, myth, and historical imagination.

It embodies the fear of conflict and the unsettling possibility that something ordinary such as a raven out in nature might conceal something supernatural.

For those studying valravn mythology, the legend offers a vivid example of how folklore transforms simple natural observations into powerful stories that endure across centuries.



References

Bataković, D. T., Delić, L., & Detelić, M. (Eds.). (2015). Epic formula: A Balkan perspective. Belgrade: Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.

Schütte, G. (1923). Dänisches Heidentum [Danish Paganism]. Copenhagen: Levin & Munksgaard.

Svend Grundtvig (Ed.). (1856). Danmarks gamle folkeviser: dl. VI–IX, 1–2: Danske ridderviser [Old Danish ballads: Vols. VI–IX, 1–2: Danish knightly ballads]. Copenhagen: Samfund til den danske literaturs fremme.

994 Posts
25.4K Followers

Pagan, Viking, Witchy Jewelry

ᛉ 100% handcrafted artisan pagan , viking, witchcraft and shamanic inspired jewelry.
ᛉ Runes, Symbolism & European Folklore
Get 20% off👇🏻

Leave a comment with your result ❤️
Bavarian Folklore says that you might just cross paths with a Wolpertinger in the alpine forest.

The forest animal of all animals – a representation of all, or Urviech in German.The Wolpertinger is a rabbit with fangs, wings and antlers.

Come to my neck of the woods and you might just catch one! ❤️
Buy Now
🐇🌲✨
He finally stepped out of the forest…

The Wolpertinger Pendant has arrived. 

Inspired by old Bavarian tales of the antlered hare who moves silently through shadow and moss, this piece carries a little wild magic wherever it goes. 

Strange, story-filled, and made for those who feel at home in myth and woodland twilight.
Buy Now
I really like the star ring in brass, suits it so well ☺️

I showed the casting process in my stories yesterday, if you were interested in seeing.

Shown here are a few other items I’m preparing to pack up for shipping this morning.
Buy Now
It’s getting to be about that time again 💜
Buy Now
Make some raven rings with me ❤️
Buy Now
A couple pendants shipping this morning ❤️

Sköll & Hati + Acorn with Eihwaz Rune
Buy Now
I don’t often sell them, but love it when I do!

Vinca symbol bracelets ❤️

And a custom rune inscription bracelet.
Rooted in strength + guarded by ravens
The serpent waits 🖤

(Handcrafted Jörmungandr ring made to order in my shop)
Stay warm, everyone ❤️
😑😑😑🤮
I thought I had closed the book on the Alice in Wonderland rings…

But you kept asking for more, so here they are.

Which one is your favorite??
Can this be over now, please?
In case you forgot 💜
5,445 days in, and I’m still doing the same thing.

Taking old stories and trying to give them weight.

Some days it works.
Some days it fights back.
Either way, this is the work. 🖤
Buy Now
Something I’ve been thinking about lately.

If there’s one thing I would’ve done differently early on, it’s this:

I would have invested in casting equipment much sooner.

When I started out in 2011, I spent years learning as many jewelry techniques as possible. 

And I don’t regret that, I loved it. 

It taught me patience, problem-solving, and respect for the process.

But casting was how I first learned jewelry back in a high school metals class in 1999/2000. 

If I’d trusted that foundation earlier and leaned into it, it would have saved me a lot of years of circling, experimenting, and hitting the same limits over and over.

The journey was wrong, just longer than it needed to be.

Every piece I make now carries all of that with it. 

The learning, the detours, the slow build.

Just something I wanted to share, artist to artist. 🖤
This year, we’re not buying things just to keep up.

If you need the reminder:

✔️ You don’t need what’s trending
✔️ You don’t need to explain your symbols
✔️ What you choose to wear can mean something

Which one of these are you carrying into 2026? 🖤
My husband is from Bavaria (southern Germany) and I originally made this Krampus pendant for him.

The Krampusnacht traditions belong to his culture, and it was so important to me to really bring this pendant alive and make it as accurate as possible.

When I added him to my shop, I couldn’t believe how many of you loved him as much as I do!

He’s super-small lost wax cast in my home studio (only 3 at a time).
Some of the items I’m shipping out today ❤️

Please forgive my dirty nails 😂
I just got done polishing and it was either film now or not at all.
A few items shipping out today 🥰
This mornings rings shipping out ❤️
A few of the rjngs I’m shipping out this morning ❤️

How do you like the Freya ring in copper?
Krampus is coming 🫶🏻
Getting ready to pack up these pretties and ship to their owners ❤️
Freya, cats and pentacles. Doesn’t get any better ❤️
You all got me going crazy making all these fairytale + storybook rings.

But I’ll keep them coming ❤️
Just launched these pretties ❤️

Size 9 amethyst ring + size 7.25 green kyanite
What would you trade to learn Baba Yaga’s secrets?
It *finally* looks, feels and smells like October!

And here are some items I’m packing up to ship to their new owners this morning 🎃
This mornings pretties getting ready to ship :)
Getting ready to pack up these pretties and ship to their owners ❤️
You bet I’m hopping on this trend 😂

Thank you @shes_sinister for the prompt!
While I welcome the seasonal darkness…it sure is going to make my morning quick videos before I pack up orders very difficult.

So, cheers to what’s left of daylight ❤️
Finally finished the rings I’ve been working on in my stories ❤️

I think I want to keep the amethyst one 🥰
Was going to post this update to my stories but it’s too long.
“How do you know I’m mad?” said Alice.

“You must be,” said the Cat, “or you wouldn’t have come here.”
Some of this mornings orders getting ready to ship. Those little bats are so cute ❤️
Here is the finished ring I was working on in my stories yesterday, along with some other treasures shipping out this morning ❤️
A few of today’s orders shipping out this morning ❤️
The two silver raven rings I was working on in my stories yesterday.

…as well as the star / pentacle rings that I’ve just added to my shop ✨
Eeeek! I’m so happy to add these to my shop ❤️

I’ve gotten so many requests for other fairy tales since I made the red riding hood ring, so here are some more.

I do hope you love them 🥰

If you’d like to have any, check my stories today.
I had 6 clamshells ready to ship this morning but I dropped and lost my last labradorite cabochon 🙄😫

Woe is me. 

But damn I love these little clamshell labradorite + Vegvisir lockets…
Not the story you were told.

The girl didn’t run.
The wolf didn’t win.
This is the version they tried to forget.

🖤 Now in the shop: the Red Riding Hood witchy ring.
I love these raven rings so much 🖤

This mornings pretties shipping out. 

All items handmade by me to order for you 😉
Sleek + minimal Mjölnir ring ⚒️
Today’s orders getting ready to ship.

…And I finally got some time to work on a ring for myself! What an accomplishment 😂

I’ll post that when it’s done. If it works out, that is.
That ant ring is so out of place 😂

Not that the mail is coming today, but here are this mornings orders I’m packing up to ship 😉
If you had this, which runes would you choose? Or would you accept the runes that chose you?
I love making these fun Halloween coffin pendants 🎃

All items you see are always available and handmade by myself to order ❤️

About the author Jacqueline Fatica

 The Wicked Griffin is my heartfelt venture, where I pour my creativity into crafting jewelry that not only stands out but also embodies the essence of nature, the allure of Runes, and the profound narratives of European history.


Every piece is designed to be a symbol of personal expression, carefully woven with my passion for the natural world and a unique artistic vision.


Additionally, the Wicked Griffin blog is a cherished space where I share the enchanting inspirations behind the jewelry and the captivating myths from European folklore, inviting you into a realm where artistry and legend converge.


👉 I don't mind usage of my images so long as credit to The Wicked Griffin is given and provide links when possible 😉


More About Me

Contact Me