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The Lay of Hyndla or Hyndluljóð is an Old Norse poem of the same type as those in the Poetic Edda, but in corrupted form, and it is only preserved in Flateyjarbók. Old Norse or Danish tongue is the Germanic language once spoken by the inhabitants of the Nordic countries (for instance during the Viking Age). ...
The Poetic Edda is a collection of Old Norse poems from the Icelandic mediaeval manuscript Codex Regius. ...
The Flatey Book, (in Icelandic the Flateyjarbók Flat-island book) is one of the most important medieval Icelandic manuscripts. ...
In the Lay of Hyndla, the goddess Freya meets the völva Hyndla and they ride together towards Valhalla. Freya rides on her boar Hildisvini and Hyndla on a wolf. This article uses English names. ...
The völva, vala, wala (Old High German), seiðkona, or wicce was a female shaman in Norse mythology, and among the Germanic tribes. ...
In this illustration from a 17th century Icelandic manuscript Heimdallr is shown guarding the gate of Valhalla. ...
In Norse mythology, Hildisvino (battle boar) was Freyas boar. ...
Binomial name Canis lupus Linnaeus, 1758 The Grey Wolf (Canis lupus), also known colloquially as just the wolf, is a mammal of the Canidae family and the ancestor of the domestic dog. ...
The mission is to find out the pedigree of Ottar so that he can touch his inheritance, and the lay consists mostly of Hyndla reciting a number of names from Ottar's ancestry. A pedigree is a list of ancestors (usually implying distinguished), a list of ancestors of the same breed (usually in the case of animals), the purity of a breed, individual, or strain, or a document proving any of these things. ...
Ãttar, also known as Ãttar the Simple, was a protégé of Freya, and the subject of the Lay of Hyndla (Hyndluljóð). In this tale, she concealed him by transforming him into the boar named HildisvÃn the Battle-Swine, which she rode into battle. ...
External link
- The text in Old Norse
- A translation in English by W. H. Auden and P. B. Taylor
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