| Alias |
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| Thor | ||
| Nick Name | ||
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God of Thunder Immortal Lord of Storms Lord of Asgard Lord of the Living Lightning Master of the Storm Prince God of Thunder |
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| Civilian ID | ||
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Thor Odinson Aliases Dr. Donald Blake Sigurd Jarlson Eric Masterson Siegmund Siegfried Jake Olsen |
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| Occupation | ||
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Adventurer Prince of Asgard Norse God of Thunder |
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| Legal Status | ||
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Member of the royal family of Asgard. Honorary citizen of the United States with no criminal record. |
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| Nation or Planet of Origin | ||
| Asgard | ||
| Group Affiliation | ||
| Base of Operations | ||
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New York, New York |
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| Height | ||
| 6' 6" | ||
| Weight | ||
| 640 lbs. | ||
| Eye Color | ||
| Blue | ||
| Hair Color | ||
| Blonde | ||
| Skin Tone | ||
| Caucasian | ||
| Known Powers | ||
| Being
with god-like strength, speed, stamina, agility, and durability; immune
to all known diseases and environments for extended periods of time capable of
controlling the elements and flight by use of a
mystical war hammer. Excellent hand-to-hand combatant with training as a warrior. Working knowledge of human anatomy and medicine learned under the human guise of Dr. Donald Blake. Note: When Thor was in the guise of Dr. Donald Blake, he would revert to his mortal form when out of contact with his mystic war hammer Mjolnir for more than sixty seconds. |
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| Accessories | ||
| Asgardian Battle Armor:
Mystical armor that protects the wearer from all manners of harm.
Rarely used. Belt of Strength: Mystical belt that doubles the physical power of the wearer, but causes early fatigue. Rarely used. Flying Chariot: Single axle chariot drawn by two large enchanted goats known as Toothgrinder and Toothgnasher. Gauntlets of Strength: Mystical iron gloves that double the physical power of the wearer, but cause early fatigue. Rarely used. Mjolnir: Mystical Uru hammer crafted by dwarfs and enchanted with mystical ruins by Odin, king of the Norse gods, capable of granting its possessor the physical powers of Thor as well as control of the elements of weather (wind, rain, snow, fog, thunder and lightning), project or absorb mystical energies, open dimensional portals and enable flight when thrown without releasing the handle thong; always returning to the wielder when thrown and can not be lifted by any being deemed unworthy by Odin. |
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| Common Enemies | ||
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Dark Elves (The) Dark Gods Durok the Demolisher (The) Enchanters Fafnir Fenris Wolf Frost Giants Karnilla King Cobra Lava Man Malekith Midgard Serpent Mongoose Perrikus Stone Giants Titania II Trolls Uroc Ymir Wreaking Crew Zarrko the Tomorrow Man |
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| Regularly Appearing | ||
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Avengers Vol. 1, 2 & 3 Journey into Mystery Vol. 1 Loki Mighty Thor Vol. 1 & 2 Thor: Son of Asgard |
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| First Appearance | ||
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Journey
into Mystery Vol. 1 #83 (Aug. 1962) Note: Although it is generally agreed that the first Marvel Comics appearance of Thor was in Journey into Mystery, he had a previous appearance in Venus #12 (Feb. 1951) and some continuity references acknowledge teaming with the titular character Venus. |
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| Creator | ||
| Stan Lee & Jack Kirby | ||
| Origin | ||
| A
Norse god, the young and impetuous Thor nearly started a war by violating a truce with his race's
ancient enemies - the Frost Giants.
Odin, his father and king of the Norse
gods, banished the young prince to Earth without his memory, in order to teach him
humility as a mere mortal. After a decade as the earthly doctor Donald Blake, the ancient god was compelled to visit Norway where he encountering a race of warmongering stone-like aliens known as Kronan. Unaware of his true nature Dr. Blake hid in a cave where he found a mysterious wooden cane. The cane was actually the enchanted war-hammer Mjolnir, which when struck on the ground shed its mystical disguise and transformed Blake into the godly form of the mighty Thor. |
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