HrímnirHrímnir (Old Norse: [ˈhriːmnez̠]) is a jǫtunn in Norse mythology. He is the father of Hljód.[1] NameThe Old Norse name Hrímnir has been translated as 'frosty',[1] 'the one covered with hoarfrost', or 'the sooty one.' Probably intended to evoke the frost giants or hrímþursar (jǫtunn).[2][3] AttestationsIn the Völsunga saga, Hrímnir is mentioned as the father of Hljóð, who is sent by Frigg as a "wish-maid" to Rerir with the apple of fertility that will provide his wife offspring.[4] Hrímnir himself sends his daughter Hljóð to be the wife of one of the children, Völsung.[3] Hrímnir is listed among the jǫtnar in the þulur section of the Prose Edda.[5][6] In Hyndluljóð (32), Hrímnir is the father of Heiðr and Hrossþjófr,[5] but that may be just for the purpose of alliteration.[2] He is also mentioned in Skírnismál (28),[2] probably as a typical jötunn.[7] In Gríms saga loðinkinna, Hrímnir is the father of the giantesses Feima and Kleima; his wife's name is Hyrja.[8] TheoriesScholars have argued that the story of Hrímnir in the Völsunga saga resembles that of Peredur in the Matter of Britain, and the modern folktale "The Sea-Maiden."[9] References
Bibliography
|