Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!Welcome To Witchsey Marketplace! - Pull up a broomstick and stay awhile ✨Check out our Ritual Oils! Infused with intention, applied with power! What magic do you seek today?Next giveaway is June 1st for all qualifying purchases in April! Witchin' Good Thyme and Bit O'Magick are this months Sponsored Vendors!
The Gjallarhorn Norse Oracle Deck by Matt Hughes — 62 stunning Art Deco cards drawn from Norse mythology, featuring gods, creatures, runes, and symbols of the Nine Worlds. Named for the horn that will call the gods to Ragnarok, this deck bridges the visual language of vintage illustration with the depth of the Northern tradition. An essential oracle for the Spiritual Explorer drawn to Norse paganism and Viking heritage.
Best for: Norse mythology study, rune divination, daily guidance draws
Three Voices of the Norse Tradition
Gjallarhorn is named for the great horn of Heimdall, the Norse watchman of the gods whose call signals both warning and sacred summons. The deck honors that dual function: it can be a daily guidance tool or a deeper ritual instrument, depending on how you choose to work with it. What distinguishes this oracle from most Norse-themed decks is its deliberate tripartite structure. The 62 cards are divided into three distinct categories: Elder Futhark runes, Norse deities, and sigils. Each category can be used independently or in combination, which gives the deck unusual flexibility.
The production quality from U.S. Games Systems is high. Cards have gilt edges with gold foil embellishments, and the 80-page guidebook arrives in a hardcover binding with spot varnish and additional gold foil accents. Matt Hughes approaches the Norse cosmology as a living system rather than a museum piece, with card texts that connect mythological figures and symbols to contemporary situations. The rune cards work as a standalone oracle for practitioners already familiar with the Elder Futhark, while the deity and sigil cards add layers accessible to anyone new to Nordic tradition.
How to Use the Gjallarhorn Norse Oracle Deck
A practical guide to using the Gjallarhorn deck's three-category structure for daily draws, focused questions, and deeper Norse mythology study.
Choose Your Working Mode
Before drawing, decide whether to pull from the full 62-card deck, from a single category (runes, deities, or sigils only), or one card from each. The guidebook suggests single-category draws for focused questions and broader spreads for insight.
Draw and Read the Card Text
After shuffling with your question in mind, draw your card or cards. Read Hughes's guidebook entry for each card before forming your own interpretation. The texts provide mythological context and keywords that ground the reading in Norse tradition.
Create a Personal Spread Record
Hughes encourages developing your own spreads over time. Keep a notebook for Gjallarhorn readings, recording cards drawn, the context of the question, and how interpretations played out. This personal record deepens your use of the system.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I chose to carry Gjallarhorn because the Norse oracle market is crowded with decks that either reduce the mythology to pretty pictures or assume a level of scholarly background that most customers don't have. Hughes finds a middle path: the guidebook is substantive without being academic, and the three-category structure means the deck grows with the practitioner rather than becoming stale after a few months of use. The production values are genuine, not just marketing language. If you're drawn to Norse and Celtic traditions, you'll find related items in my Viking and Celtic collection.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the three types of cards in the Gjallarhorn oracle deck?
The 62 cards are divided into Norse runes (Elder Futhark), Norse deities, and sigils. Each category can be used independently or combined in multi-card spreads. The guidebook provides instructions for single-category and cross-category readings.
How many cards does the Gjallarhorn Norse Oracle Deck include?
The deck contains 62 gilt-edged oracle cards with gold foil embellishments. It comes with an 80-page hardcover guidebook with spot varnish and gold foil accents. The publisher is U.S. Games Systems, a leading tarot and oracle publisher.
Do I need to know the Norse runes to use this deck?
No prior rune knowledge is required. The 80-page hardcover guidebook provides context for each card, including rune meanings, deity descriptions, and sigil interpretations. Suitable for beginners and experienced Norse practitioners alike.
Who created the Gjallarhorn Norse Oracle Deck?
The deck was created by Matt Hughes and published by U.S. Games Systems. Hughes approaches Norse mythology as a living tradition, and the card texts connect ancient symbols and deities to practical questions of contemporary guidance and reflection.