fbpx
Wikipedia

Óðr

In Norse mythology, Óðr ([ˈoːðz̠]; Old Norse for the "Divine Madness, frantic, furious, vehement, eager", as a noun "mind, feeling" and also "song, poetry"; Orchard (1997) gives "the frenzied one"[1]) or Óð, sometimes anglicized as Odr or Od, is a figure associated with the major goddess Freyja. The Prose Edda and Heimskringla, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson, both describe Óðr as Freyja's husband and father of her daughter Hnoss. Heimskringla adds that the couple produced another daughter, Gersemi. A number of theories have been proposed about Óðr, generally that he is a hypostasis of the deity Odin due to their similarities.

Óðr again leaves the grieving Freyja in Odur verläßt abermals die trauernde Gattin (1882), Carl Emil Doepler 'The Elder'.

Etymology

The Old Norse theonym Óðr derives from an identical noun, meaning 'mind, wit, soul, sense' but also 'song, poetry', which in turn stems from Proto-Germanic *wōðaz, a substantive of an adjective meaning 'possessed, inspired, delirious, raging'. It is cognate with other nouns from medieval Germanic languages, such as Old English wōð (‘sound, noise; voice, song’), Old High German wuot ('thrill, violent agitation') and Middle Dutch woet ('rage, frenzy'). Óðr is also etymologically related to the Old Norse theonym Óðinn, itself deriving from the stem *wōđa- attached to the suffix *-naz ('master of').[2][3]

Philologist Jan de Vries has argued that the Old Norse deities Óðinn and Óðr were probably originally connected (as in the doublet Ullr–Ullinn), with Óðr (*wōđaz) being the elder form and the ultimate source of the name Óðinn (*wōđa-naz). He further suggested that the god of rage Óðr–Óðinn stood in opposition to the god of glorious majesty Ullr–Ullinn in a similar manner to the Vedic contrast between Varuna and Mitra.[4]

The adjective *wōđaz ultimately stems from a Pre-Germanic form *uoh₂-tós, which is related to the Proto-Celtic terms *wātis, meaning 'seer, sooth-sayer' (cf. Gaulish wāteis, Old Irish fáith 'prophet') and *wātus, meaning 'prophesy, poetic inspiration' (cf. Old Irish fáth 'prophetic wisdom, maxims', Old Welsh guaut 'prophetic verse, panegyric').[3][5][6] According to some scholars, the Latin term vātēs ('prophet, seer') is probably a Celtic loanword from the Gaulish language, making *uoh₂-tós ~ *ueh₂-tus ('god-inspired') a shared religious term common to Germanic and Celtic rather than an inherited word of earlier Proto-Indo-European (PIE) origin.[3][5] In the case a borrowing scenario is excluded, a PIE etymon *(H)ueh₂-tis ('prophet, seer') can also be posited as the common ancestor of the attested Germanic, Celtic and Latin forms.[7]

Attestations

Óðr is attested in the following sources:

Poetic Edda

Óðr is mentioned in stanza 25 of the Poetic Edda poem Völuspá. The name appears in a kenning for the major goddess Freyja; "Óð's girl" (Old Norse Óðs mey gefna), pointing to a relation with the goddess.[8]

Stanza 47 of the poem Hyndluljóð contains mention of a figure by the name of Œdi. There, Hyndla taunts Freyja, stating that Freyja had run to Œdi, "always full of desire". Scholar Carolyne Larrington says that the identity of Œdi is uncertain; it has been theorized that this may simply be Óðr, or that the figure may be another lover of Freyja's.[9] Scholar John Lindow describes this reference as "puzzling" as no other information is provided regarding the situation referred to by Hyndla.[10] Scholar Britt-Mari Näsström says that this reference likely does not refer to Óðr, rather being the product of the amendments of Sophus Bugge, and that the line simply points to Freyja's lust. Näsström comments that "perhaps the philologists of the nineteenth century were misled by their romantic intentions".[11]

Prose Edda

In chapter 35 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning, the enthroned figure of High says that the goddess Freyja "was married to someone named" Óðr. High details that the two produced a daughter, Hnoss, and that this daughter was so fair that the term hnossir (meaning "treasures") derives from her name and is applied to whatever is "beautiful and precious." High adds that Óðr would go off traveling for extended periods, all the while Freyja would stay behind weeping tears of red gold. However, Freyja would travel "among strange peoples" while looking for Óðr, and so had many names.[12] In chapter 36 of Gylfaginning, the stanza of Völuspá mentioning Óðr is quoted.[13]

In chapter 20 of the Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, poetic names for the goddess Freyja are listed, including "wife of Óðr".[14] In chapter 36, a prose narrative points out than an excerpt of a work by the skald Einarr Skúlason refers to Freyja as the wife of Óðr ("Óðr's bedfellow").[15] The same excerpt appears in chapter 49.[16] In chapter 75, Óðr is mentioned a final time in the Prose Edda, where Freyja is cited as having "wept gold" for Óðr.[17]

Heimskringla

In chapter 1 of the Heimskringla book Ynglinga saga, Snorri Sturluson refers to the two in an euhemerized account, stating that Freyja had a husband named Óðr, two daughters named Hnoss and Gersemi, and that they were so beautiful that their names were used for "our most precious possessions" (both of their names literally mean "jewel").[18]

Theories

The name Óðr for Freyja's husband appears prominently in Völuspá 25, where it is said that "Óðs mey" was given to the giants. Nothing else is stated of him by this name in the Eddic poems. In Gylfaginning, Snorri briefly states that Óðr traveled to many nations and that Freyja searched for him in earnest, weeping as she went. Óðr is often theorized as somehow connected to Odin (Old Norse: Óðinn), the head of the Óðr Æsir in Norse mythology, by way of etymological similarities between the two names (Lindow states that the linguistic relationship is identical to that of Ullr and Ullin—often considered as variant names of a single god), and the fact that both are described as going on long journeys, though Lindow points out that Snorri is careful to keep them apart.[10] All theories regarding him must remain speculative, due to the limited accounts contained in the sources.

Scholar Viktor Rydberg proposed that Freyja's husband Oðr is identical with the hero Svipdag from the eddic poems Grougaldr and Fjölsvinsmál. Jacob Grimm and others have long identified Menglad ("the neck-lace lover"), Svipdag's love interest in that poem, with Freyja the owner of Brísingamen.[19]

Scholar Hilda Ellis Davidson proposes that a cult of the Vanir may have influenced a cult of the Æsir in the waning days of Norse paganism during the Christianization of Scandinavia, potentially resulting in the figure of Óðr in Norse mythology, which she refers to as a "strange double of Odin".[20]

Scholar Rudolf Simek says that since Óðr appears in a kenning employed by the 11th century skald Einarr Skúlason (in Skáldskaparmál) and in the Poetic Edda poems Völuspá and Hyndluljóð, Óðr is not a late invention. Simek says that "the most obvious explanation is to identify Óðr with Odin," noting the similarity between their names (and agreeing with the Ullr/Ullin parallel), the long absences (comparing them to Odin's exile in Gesta Danorum), and Óðr's marriage with Freyja.[21]

Simek adds that although these similarities exist, there are things that speak against it, such as that "Freyja's tears for Odin and her search are unmotivated," and that "the reference to Hnoss as their only child is surprising - why, for example, should Baldr not be mentioned?" Simek notes that these issues have resulted in sometimes very different explanations; Sophus Bugge and Hjalmar Falk saw a reflection of the Greek god Adonis in Óðr, Rudolf Much saw a reflection in the god Attis, and Lee Hollander theorizes a reflection of the folktale of Amor and Psyche in Snorri's Prose Edda account of Óðr and Freyja.[21]

Simek concurs that, if the two gods were identical, Snorri would not have kept them so apart; yet that the names Odin and Óðr are so close that a lack of connection between the two gods isn't possible. Some scholars have examined the relationship between the two in an attempt to find "older" and "younger" layers in the figures of Óðr and Odin, but Simek says that this approach has yet to yield any results that are convincing due to the sparsity of sources that mention Óðr.[21]

Scholar Stephan Grundy comments that while it is conceivable that Óðr may have been invented as a separate figure from Odin after Christianization, the notion is implausible because a separate, independent figure by the name of Wod survives in folklore involving the Wild Hunt in areas as far south from Scandinavia as Switzerland. Grundy notes that Óðr appears to date to at least before the Viking Age. Grundy opines that "as pointed out by Jan de Vries and others, there is little doubt" that Óðr and Odin were once the same figure. Grundy says that Óðinn is an adjectival form of Óðr, and that Óðr may be the elder form of the two.[22]

Grundy theorizes that the goddesses Frigg and Freyja did not stem from a single goddess. If they did not, Grundy says, the question of explaining the relationship between Freyja and Óðr becomes central, which has been one of the strongest points made in favor of the descent of Frigg and Freyja from a common goddess. Grundy notes that it is rarely mentioned that the Germanic peoples sometimes practiced polygamy, and cites chapter 18 of Tacitus' 1st century AD work Germania, where Tacitus records that while monogamy has very few exceptions in Germanic society, there are those who actively seek a polygamous marriage "for the sake of high birth." Grundy contrasts this with accounts of polygynous marriages among the Merovingians and Carolingians, points out that the only Germanic law-code that expressly forbids such relationships is that of the Visigoths, and notes that while polygynous marriages are rarely attested in Scandinavian sources, Harald I of Norway was married to seven wives simultaneously. Grundy concludes that, as "gods tend to reflect the social norms of their worshippers," it very possible that Odin/Óðr originally "could have rejoiced in Frigg and Freyja simultaneously". Grundy posits that, over time polygynous marriages dwindled during the Viking Age and into the Christianization of the North Germanic territories and, as a result, such a relationship was less easily reflected in the deities of the people.[23]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Orchard (1997:121).
  2. ^ Orel 2003, p. 469.
  3. ^ a b c Kroonen 2013, p. 592.
  4. ^ de Vries 1970b, p. 104.
  5. ^ a b Koch 2020, p. 140.
  6. ^ Matasović, Ranko (2009). Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Celtic. Brill. pp. 404–405. ISBN 978-90-04-17336-1.
  7. ^ de Vaan, Michiel (2018). Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages. Brill. p. 656. ISBN 978-90-04-16797-1.
  8. ^ Larrington (1996:7).
  9. ^ Larrington (1999:297).
  10. ^ a b Lindow (2001:246—247).
  11. ^ Näsström (1998:69).
  12. ^ Faulkes 1987, pp. 29–30.
  13. ^ Faulkes 1987, p. 36.
  14. ^ Faulkes 1987, p. 86.
  15. ^ Faulkes 1987, p. 98.
  16. ^ Faulkes 1987, p. 119.
  17. ^ Faulkes 1987, p. 157.
  18. ^ Hollander (1964:14).
  19. ^ Rydberg, Undersökningar i Germanisk Mytologi, v. 1, 1886.
  20. ^ Davidson (1965:154).
  21. ^ a b c Simek (2007:250).
  22. ^ Grundy (1998:56 and 58-59).
  23. ^ Grundy (1998:66).

References

External Links

  • MyNDIR (My Norse Digital Image repository) illustrations of Óðr. Clicking on the thumbnail will give you the full image and information concerning it.

Óðr, norse, mythology, ˈoːðz, norse, divine, madness, frantic, furious, vehement, eager, noun, mind, feeling, also, song, poetry, orchard, 1997, gives, frenzied, Óð, sometimes, anglicized, figure, associated, with, major, goddess, freyja, prose, edda, heimskri. In Norse mythology odr ˈoːdz Old Norse for the Divine Madness frantic furious vehement eager as a noun mind feeling and also song poetry Orchard 1997 gives the frenzied one 1 or od sometimes anglicized as Odr or Od is a figure associated with the major goddess Freyja The Prose Edda and Heimskringla written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson both describe odr as Freyja s husband and father of her daughter Hnoss Heimskringla adds that the couple produced another daughter Gersemi A number of theories have been proposed about odr generally that he is a hypostasis of the deity Odin due to their similarities odr again leaves the grieving Freyja in Odur verlasst abermals die trauernde Gattin 1882 Carl Emil Doepler The Elder Contents 1 Etymology 2 Attestations 2 1 Poetic Edda 2 2 Prose Edda 2 3 Heimskringla 3 Theories 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External LinksEtymology Edit Look up wod in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Old Norse theonym odr derives from an identical noun meaning mind wit soul sense but also song poetry which in turn stems from Proto Germanic wōdaz a substantive of an adjective meaning possessed inspired delirious raging It is cognate with other nouns from medieval Germanic languages such as Old English wōd sound noise voice song Old High German wuot thrill violent agitation and Middle Dutch woet rage frenzy odr is also etymologically related to the Old Norse theonym odinn itself deriving from the stem wōđa attached to the suffix naz master of 2 3 Philologist Jan de Vries has argued that the Old Norse deities odinn and odr were probably originally connected as in the doublet Ullr Ullinn with odr wōđaz being the elder form and the ultimate source of the name odinn wōđa naz He further suggested that the god of rage odr odinn stood in opposition to the god of glorious majesty Ullr Ullinn in a similar manner to the Vedic contrast between Varuna and Mitra 4 The adjective wōđaz ultimately stems from a Pre Germanic form uoh tos which is related to the Proto Celtic terms watis meaning seer sooth sayer cf Gaulish wateis Old Irish faith prophet and watus meaning prophesy poetic inspiration cf Old Irish fath prophetic wisdom maxims Old Welsh guaut prophetic verse panegyric 3 5 6 According to some scholars the Latin term vates prophet seer is probably a Celtic loanword from the Gaulish language making uoh tos ueh tus god inspired a shared religious term common to Germanic and Celtic rather than an inherited word of earlier Proto Indo European PIE origin 3 5 In the case a borrowing scenario is excluded a PIE etymon H ueh tis prophet seer can also be posited as the common ancestor of the attested Germanic Celtic and Latin forms 7 Attestations Editodr is attested in the following sources Poetic Edda Edit odr is mentioned in stanza 25 of the Poetic Edda poem Voluspa The name appears in a kenning for the major goddess Freyja od s girl Old Norse ods mey gefna pointing to a relation with the goddess 8 Stanza 47 of the poem Hyndluljod contains mention of a figure by the name of Œdi There Hyndla taunts Freyja stating that Freyja had run to Œdi always full of desire Scholar Carolyne Larrington says that the identity of Œdi is uncertain it has been theorized that this may simply be odr or that the figure may be another lover of Freyja s 9 Scholar John Lindow describes this reference as puzzling as no other information is provided regarding the situation referred to by Hyndla 10 Scholar Britt Mari Nasstrom says that this reference likely does not refer to odr rather being the product of the amendments of Sophus Bugge and that the line simply points to Freyja s lust Nasstrom comments that perhaps the philologists of the nineteenth century were misled by their romantic intentions 11 Prose Edda Edit In chapter 35 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning the enthroned figure of High says that the goddess Freyja was married to someone named odr High details that the two produced a daughter Hnoss and that this daughter was so fair that the term hnossir meaning treasures derives from her name and is applied to whatever is beautiful and precious High adds that odr would go off traveling for extended periods all the while Freyja would stay behind weeping tears of red gold However Freyja would travel among strange peoples while looking for odr and so had many names 12 In chapter 36 of Gylfaginning the stanza of Voluspa mentioning odr is quoted 13 In chapter 20 of the Prose Edda book Skaldskaparmal poetic names for the goddess Freyja are listed including wife of odr 14 In chapter 36 a prose narrative points out than an excerpt of a work by the skald Einarr Skulason refers to Freyja as the wife of odr odr s bedfellow 15 The same excerpt appears in chapter 49 16 In chapter 75 odr is mentioned a final time in the Prose Edda where Freyja is cited as having wept gold for odr 17 Heimskringla Edit In chapter 1 of the Heimskringla book Ynglinga saga Snorri Sturluson refers to the two in an euhemerized account stating that Freyja had a husband named odr two daughters named Hnoss and Gersemi and that they were so beautiful that their names were used for our most precious possessions both of their names literally mean jewel 18 Theories EditThe name odr for Freyja s husband appears prominently in Voluspa 25 where it is said that ods mey was given to the giants Nothing else is stated of him by this name in the Eddic poems In Gylfaginning Snorri briefly states that odr traveled to many nations and that Freyja searched for him in earnest weeping as she went odr is often theorized as somehow connected to Odin Old Norse odinn the head of the odr AEsir in Norse mythology by way of etymological similarities between the two names Lindow states that the linguistic relationship is identical to that of Ullr and Ullin often considered as variant names of a single god and the fact that both are described as going on long journeys though Lindow points out that Snorri is careful to keep them apart 10 All theories regarding him must remain speculative due to the limited accounts contained in the sources Scholar Viktor Rydberg proposed that Freyja s husband Odr is identical with the hero Svipdag from the eddic poems Grougaldr and Fjolsvinsmal Jacob Grimm and others have long identified Menglad the neck lace lover Svipdag s love interest in that poem with Freyja the owner of Brisingamen 19 Scholar Hilda Ellis Davidson proposes that a cult of the Vanir may have influenced a cult of the AEsir in the waning days of Norse paganism during the Christianization of Scandinavia potentially resulting in the figure of odr in Norse mythology which she refers to as a strange double of Odin 20 Scholar Rudolf Simek says that since odr appears in a kenning employed by the 11th century skald Einarr Skulason in Skaldskaparmal and in the Poetic Edda poems Voluspa and Hyndluljod odr is not a late invention Simek says that the most obvious explanation is to identify odr with Odin noting the similarity between their names and agreeing with the Ullr Ullin parallel the long absences comparing them to Odin s exile in Gesta Danorum and odr s marriage with Freyja 21 Simek adds that although these similarities exist there are things that speak against it such as that Freyja s tears for Odin and her search are unmotivated and that the reference to Hnoss as their only child is surprising why for example should Baldr not be mentioned Simek notes that these issues have resulted in sometimes very different explanations Sophus Bugge and Hjalmar Falk saw a reflection of the Greek god Adonis in odr Rudolf Much saw a reflection in the god Attis and Lee Hollander theorizes a reflection of the folktale of Amor and Psyche in Snorri s Prose Edda account of odr and Freyja 21 Simek concurs that if the two gods were identical Snorri would not have kept them so apart yet that the names Odin and odr are so close that a lack of connection between the two gods isn t possible Some scholars have examined the relationship between the two in an attempt to find older and younger layers in the figures of odr and Odin but Simek says that this approach has yet to yield any results that are convincing due to the sparsity of sources that mention odr 21 Scholar Stephan Grundy comments that while it is conceivable that odr may have been invented as a separate figure from Odin after Christianization the notion is implausible because a separate independent figure by the name of Wod survives in folklore involving the Wild Hunt in areas as far south from Scandinavia as Switzerland Grundy notes that odr appears to date to at least before the Viking Age Grundy opines that as pointed out by Jan de Vries and others there is little doubt that odr and Odin were once the same figure Grundy says that odinn is an adjectival form of odr and that odr may be the elder form of the two 22 Grundy theorizes that the goddesses Frigg and Freyja did not stem from a single goddess If they did not Grundy says the question of explaining the relationship between Freyja and odr becomes central which has been one of the strongest points made in favor of the descent of Frigg and Freyja from a common goddess Grundy notes that it is rarely mentioned that the Germanic peoples sometimes practiced polygamy and cites chapter 18 of Tacitus 1st century AD work Germania where Tacitus records that while monogamy has very few exceptions in Germanic society there are those who actively seek a polygamous marriage for the sake of high birth Grundy contrasts this with accounts of polygynous marriages among the Merovingians and Carolingians points out that the only Germanic law code that expressly forbids such relationships is that of the Visigoths and notes that while polygynous marriages are rarely attested in Scandinavian sources Harald I of Norway was married to seven wives simultaneously Grundy concludes that as gods tend to reflect the social norms of their worshippers it very possible that Odin odr originally could have rejoiced in Frigg and Freyja simultaneously Grundy posits that over time polygynous marriages dwindled during the Viking Age and into the Christianization of the North Germanic territories and as a result such a relationship was less easily reflected in the deities of the people 23 See also EditOdic force also known as OdNotes Edit Orchard 1997 121 Orel 2003 p 469 a b c Kroonen 2013 p 592 de Vries 1970b p 104 a b Koch 2020 p 140 Matasovic Ranko 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Celtic Brill pp 404 405 ISBN 978 90 04 17336 1 de Vaan Michiel 2018 Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages Brill p 656 ISBN 978 90 04 16797 1 Larrington 1996 7 Larrington 1999 297 a b Lindow 2001 246 247 Nasstrom 1998 69 Faulkes 1987 pp 29 30 Faulkes 1987 p 36 Faulkes 1987 p 86 Faulkes 1987 p 98 Faulkes 1987 p 119 Faulkes 1987 p 157 Hollander 1964 14 Rydberg Undersokningar i Germanisk Mytologi v 1 1886 Davidson 1965 154 a b c Simek 2007 250 Grundy 1998 56 and 58 59 Grundy 1998 66 References Editde Vries Jan 1970b Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte volume 2 2nd ed repr as 3rd ed Walter de Gruyter OCLC 466619179 Ellis Davidson H R 1965 Gods And Myths Of Northern Europe Penguin ISBN 0 14 013627 4 Faulkes Anthony trans 1987 Edda 1995 ed Everyman ISBN 0 460 87616 3 Grundy Stephan 1998 Freyja and Frigg In Billington Sandra Green Miranda eds The Concept of the Goddess Routledge ISBN 0 415 19789 9 Hollander Lee Milton 1964 Heimskringla History of the Kings of Norway University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 73061 6 Koch John T 2020 Celto Germanic Later Prehistory and Post Proto Indo European vocabulary in the North and West PDF Aberystwyth Canolfan Uwchefrydiau Cymreig a Cheltaidd Prifysgol Cymru University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies ISBN 9781907029325 Kroonen Guus 2013 Etymological Dictionary of Proto Germanic Brill ISBN 9789004183407 Larrington Carolyne Trans 1999 The Poetic Edda Oxford World s Classics ISBN 0 19 283946 2 Lindow John 2001 Norse Mythology A Guide to the Gods Heroes Rituals and Beliefs Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515382 0 Nasstrom Britt Mari 1998 Freyja a Goddess with Many Names In Billington Sandra Green Miranda eds The Concept of the Goddess Routledge ISBN 0 415 19789 9 Orchard Andy 1997 Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend Cassell ISBN 0 304 34520 2 Orel Vladimir E 2003 A Handbook of Germanic Etymology Brill ISBN 978 90 04 12875 0 Simek Rudolf 2007 Dictionary of Northern Mythology Translated by Angela Hall D S Brewer ISBN 978 0 85991 513 7 External Links EditMyNDIR My Norse Digital Image repository illustrations of odr Clicking on the thumbnail will give you the full image and information concerning it Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title odr amp oldid 1126868495, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.