>>513057350
Yeah no, Gremanics and Nordicks did it just as much

>Odin and Seiðr: Odin is the master of a form of magic called seiðr. However, practicing seiðr was considered deeply unmanly and associated with the female sphere. In the poem Lokasenna, Loki openly mocks Odin for this: accusing him of practicing women's magic and adopting a female role: "They say you practiced seiðr on Samsey... and you went about like a sorceress. That, I thought, was a perversion."

Roman historians, particularly Tacitus writing in his book Germania (c. 98 AD), provide some of our only contemporary glimpses into the practices of Germanic tribes on the continent.

>The Priests of the Naharvali: Tacitus describes a Germanic sub-tribe called the Naharvali. He notes their priests had a unique and significant gender presentation:
>"Their priest is a man in woman’s clothing (sacerdos muliebri ornatu)."