Freyja was the daughter of Njörðr, and was Odin's concubine. Odin deeply loved Freyja, and she was "the fairest of woman of that day".
Frigg is the Queen of Asgard and the highest of the goddesses. Her home is called Fensalir, which means “hall of the marshlands”. She is married to Odin and her father is called Fjorgynn.
However Odin has numerous extramarital affairs, most famously his affair with Jord, with whom he fathered another prominent Norse God, Thor. There was also speculation that Odin had an affair with Sif, who as Thor's wife, and is actually the father of their child, Ullr.
Odin, the chief god in Norse mythology, was not known for being faithful to just one wife. He is believed to have had two wives; the first was Frigg, the goddess of marriage, and the second was the giantess (Jötunn) named Jörð, who was the mother of Thor.
Although Frigg loved Odin, she was known to have had an occasional affair. Odin was not a faithful husband, either; Frigg's rivals included Rind, Gunnlod, and Grid. Frigg was also a seeress who knew the future but never spoke of it, not even to Odin, though he knew she had this power.
Freyja was the daughter of Njörðr, and was Odin's concubine. Odin deeply loved Freyja, and she was "the fairest of woman of that day". Freyja had a beautiful bower, and when the door was shut no one could enter without Freyja's permission.
Out of fear and feeling deeply betrayed, Odin cursed her to prevent her from ever leaving Midgard in order to stop her making amends to her own kind as many of the Vanir saw her marriage to Odin as a betrayal, and the curse also made it impossible for her to harm any living creature — through either physical or magical ...
Odin (/ˈoʊdɪn/; from Old Norse: Óðinn) is a widely revered god in Germanic paganism.
Odin was a male god of berserkers and also of the out-of-body ecstasy usually associated with women's magic. He displays shamanistic characteristics through his journeys to various otherworlds in search of this wisdom.
Incidentally, despite him being married to Frigg a lot of these sons are from different mothers and Odin appears in many stories as a womaniser, even boasting of his affairs, reminiscent of (and perhaps inspired by?) Zeus from Greek mythology.
In God of War Ragnarok, it is revealed that Odin has been obsessed with a mask and a tear in reality that he thinks will give him infinite knowledge, including how to beat fate. Odin employs Atreus in the hopes that he can keep a closer eye on him and use his Jotnar abilities to uncover the truth of the mask.
He loves Odin. Despite where he came from, he is Odin's son, and that line of dialogue proves it. Perhaps even more than power, he wants Odin's love and respect.
All things considered, Zeus is certainly on Odin's level, so as long as Marvel portrays him accurately, he should be one of the MCU's most powerful characters.
Though she cheated on him and loved many different men she was heartbroken when she found out he left Valhalla/Asgard because of her actions. She endlessly searches for him while still doing her duties as a goddess.
Balder, Old Norse Baldr, in Norse mythology, the son of the chief god Odin and his wife Frigg. Beautiful and just, he was the favourite of the gods.
in Norse mythology, the wife of the thunder god, Thor. Sif was a giantess, goddess of grain and fertility, and one of the Asynjur. She was the mother of Ull, god of archery, skiing, and single combat.
To answer the question right away, Zeus and Odin are not the same, nor have they ever been thought to be the same entity at any point throughout history. Zeus is the king of the gods in Greek mythology, whilst Odin is the king in Norse mythology.
Is Odin Good or Evil? Odin, the god of wisdom, death, battle magic and more is neither entirely good nor is he fully evil in Norse mythology. Odin is a warmonger and as such a bringer of death on the battlefield. In contrast, Odin created the first humans from which all life was on Midgard (Earth).
Odin was one of the most powerful and revered of all the Norse gods and subsequently associated with several themes including wisdom, knowledge, healing, death and war. He also ruled over the 'hall of the slain' known as Valhalla.
Odin, also called Wodan, Woden, or Wotan, one of the principal gods in Norse mythology.
In Thor: The Dark World, Odin makes it clear that they “are born, they live, they die, just as humans do”, to which Loki replies that “give or take, 5000 years” – so taking that into account, Odin was at least 5000 years old when he died in Ragnarok.
He has two sons, Balder by his first wife Frigg and Thor by Jord. Odin also has several animals. His two ravens Hugin and Munin (thought and memory) fly around the world and report back what they see. Sleipnir the eight-legged horse can run through all the worlds.
Frejya, the Goddess of Marriage, has lived on Asgard through a soap opera's worth of family drama. This week on Marvel 101, find out how Freyja went from daughter of Odin's enemy to Thor's step-mother and Queen of the Asgardians. Freyja, like all Asgardian gods, is near immortal and resistant to disease and illness.
Greedy and lascivious, Freyja was also credited with the evil act of teaching witchcraft to the Aesir (a tribe of gods).
Mimir basically convinced Freya to marry Odin to broker a peace between Vanir and Aesir. And she agreed despite the fact that she hated his guts, she thought (again convinced by Mimir) she would save her poeple from Aesir with that action.