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Fjölnir

Fjölnir (Old Norse: Fjǫlnir [ˈfjɔlnez̠]) is a legendary king in Norse mythology said to have been the son of Freyr (Frey) and his consort Gerðr (Gertha).[1] The name appears in a variety of forms, including Fiolnir, Fjölner, Fjolner, and Fjolne. He was claimed as the progenitor of the Swedish Yngling dynasty, reigning from Gamla Uppsala. According to the Grottasöngr, Fjölnir lived from the 1st century BC to the early 1st century AD.

King Fjolner prepares to drown in the vessel of mead. He exclaims: I hope that the historian Odhner will describe this as an accident.
(Caricature by Albert Engström)
Fjölnir
Legendary King of Sweden
PredecessorYngvi-Frey
SuccessorSveigder
DiedLejre, Roskilde, Zealand, Denmark (fell in a vessel of mead and drowned)
Issue
Detail
Sveigder
DynastyHouse of Yngling
FatherYngvi-Frey

Fjölnir was said to have drowned in a vat of mead while visiting Peace-Fróði, a similarly-legendary king of Zealand, the Danish island. Fjölnir was then succeeded by his son Sveigðir.

Name edit

The etymology of the Old Norse name Fjǫlnir is unclear.[2][3] It could stem from the verb fela ('to hide'), with Fjǫlnir as 'the concealer [of the mead of poetry]', or it may have emerged as an abbreviation of fjǫlviðr ('the very wise').[2][1] A derivation from fjǫl ('crowd') has also been proposed, with Fjǫlnir as the 'manifold' or the 'multiplier',[4] although such an adverbial formation has no attested parallel.[2] According to Lindow, the second etymology may be more fitting for a name of Odin, but the meaning remains uncertain in any case.[3]

Fjölnir is indeed also frequently mentioned as a name of Odin.[1] In Grímnismál ('The Lay of Grímnir'), Odin mentions it to Geirröðr as one of his many names that constitute the beginning of his epiphany. In Reginsmál ('The Lay of Reginn'), a man who is clearly Odin uses Fjölnir to refer to himself as he is standing on a mountain addressing Sigurd and Regin. In Gylfaginning ('The Beguiling of Gylfi'), Fjölnir appears among the 12 names given for Alfödr, another name of Odin.[3]

Attestations edit

Grottasöngr edit

Grottasöngr informs that Fjölnir was the contemporary of Caesar Augustus (63 BC – AD 14). He was a mighty king and the crops were bountiful and peace was maintained. At his time, King Fróði, the son of Friðleifr, ruled in Lejre in Zealand. Grottasöngr relates that when Fróði once visited Uppsala he brought two giantesses, Fenja and Menja:

Fróði konungr sótti heimboð í Svíþjóð til þess konungs, er Fjölnir er nefndr. Þá keypti hann ambáttir tvær, er hétu Fenja ok Menja. Þær váru miklar ok sterkar.[5]

However, the two giantesses were to be his undoing (see Grottasöngr).

Ynglinga saga edit

The Ynglinga saga tells that Fjölnir was the son of Freyr himself and his wife Gerd, but he was the first of his house who was not to be deified.


Freyr tók þá ríki eptir Njörð; var hann kallaðr dróttinn yfir Svíum ok tók skattgjafir af þeim; hann var vinsæll ok ársæll sem faðir hans. Freyr reisti at Uppsölum hof mikit, ok setti þar höfuðstað sinn; lagði þar til allar skyldir sínar, lönd ok lausa aura; þá hófst Uppsala auðr, ok hefir haldizt æ síðan. Á hans dögum hófst Fróða friðr, þá var ok ár um öll lönd; kendu Svíar þat Frey. Var hann því meir dýrkaðr en önnur goðin, sem á hans dögum varð landsfólkit auðgara en fyrr af friðinum ok ári. Gerðr Gýmis dóttir hét kona hans; sonr þeirra hét Fjölnir.[6][7]

Frey took the kingdom after Njord, and was called drot by the Swedes, and they paid taxes to him. He was, like his father, fortunate in friends and in good seasons. Frey built a great temple at Upsal, made it his chief seat, and gave it all his taxes, his land, and goods. Then began the Upsal domains, which have remained ever since. Then began in his days the Frode- peace; and then there were good seasons, in all the land, which the Swedes ascribed to Frey, so that he was more worshipped than the other gods, as the people became much richer in his days by reason of the peace and good seasons. His wife was called Gerd, daughter of Gymir, and their son was called Fjolne.[8][9]

Then Snorri tells that after Freyr's death, Fjölnir became the king of Sweden. However, he drowned in a vat of mead visiting Peace-Fróði (Friðfróði), the king of Zealand.


Fjölnir, son Yngvifreys, réð þá fyrir Svíum ok Uppsala auð; hann var ríkr ok ársæll ok friðsæll. Þá var Friðfróði at Hleiðru; þeirra í millum var heimboð ok vingan. Þá er Fjölnir fór til Fróða á Selund, þá var þar fyrir búin veizla mikil ok boðit til víða um lönd. Fróði átti mikinn húsabœ; þar var gert ker mikit margra alna hátt, ok okat með stórum timbrstokkum; þat stóð í undirskemmu, en lopt var yfir uppi, ok opit gólfþilit, svá at þar var niðr hellt leginum, en kerit blandit fult mjaðar; þar var drykkr furðu sterkr. Um kveldit var Fjölni fylgt til herbergis í hit næsta lopt, ok hans sveit með honum. Um nóttina gékk hann út í svalir at leita sér staðar, var hann svefnœrr ok dauðadrukkinn. En er hann snerist aptr til herbergis, þá gékk hann fram eptir svölunum ok til annarra loptdura ok þar inn, missti þá fótum ok féll í mjaðarkerit, ok týndist þar.[6][7]

Fjolne, Yngve Frey's son, ruled thereafter over the Swedes and the Upsal domains. He was powerful, and lucky in seasons and in holding the peace. Fredfrode ruled then in Leidre, and between them there was great friendship and visiting. Once when Fjolne went to Frode in Sealand, a great feast was prepared for him, and invitations to it were sent all over the country. Frode had a large house, in which there was a great vessel many ells high, and put together of great pieces of timber; and this vessel stood in a lower room. Above it was a loft, in the floor of which was an opening through which liquor was poured into this vessel. The vessel was full of mead, which was excessively strong. In the evening Fjolne, with his attendants, was taken into the adjoining loft to sleep. In the night he went out to the gallery to seek a certain place, and he was very sleepy and exceedingly drunk. As he came back to his room he went along the gallery to the door of another left, went into it, and his foot slipping, he fell into the vessel of mead and was drowned.[8][9]

Ynglingatal edit

Snorri also quoted some lines of Ynglingatal, composed in the 9th century:

Varð framgengt,
þars Fróði bjó,
feigðarorð,
es at Fjǫlni kom.
Ok sikling
svigðis geira
vágr vindlauss
of viða skyldi.[10]

Translation: ‘The word of doom that fell upon Fjǫlnir was fulfilled where Fróði lived. And the windless wave of the spears of the bull [HORNS > BEER] was to destroy the prince.’[10]

The Historia Norwegiæ provides a Latin summary of Ynglingatal, which precedes Snorri's quotation. It also informs that Fjölnir was the son of Freyr, the father of Svegder and that he drowned in a vat of mead:

Froyr vero genuit Fiolni, qui in dolio medonis dimersus est, cujus filius Swegthir [...][11]

Frøy engendered Fjolne, who was drowned in a tun of mead. His son, Sveigde, [...][12]

The even earlier source Íslendingabók cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and also gives Fjölnir as the successor of Freyr and the predecessor of Svegðir. In addition to this it summarizes that Fjölnir died at Friðfróði's (i.e. Peace-Fróði): iii Freyr. iiii Fjölnir. sá er dó at Friðfróða. v Svegðir:.[13]

Gesta Danorum edit

In Gesta Danorum, Book 1, Frodi corresponds to Hadingus and Fjölnir to Hundingus, but the story is a little different. It relates how King Hundingus of Sweden believed a rumor that King Hadingus of Denmark had died and held his obsequies with ceremony, including an enormous vat of ale. Hundingus himself served the ale, but accidentally stumbled and fell into the vat, choked, and drowned. When word came to King Hadingus of this unfortunate death, King Hadingus publicly hanged himself (see Freyr).

Ballad of Veraldur edit

Dumézil (1973, Appendix I) cites a Faroese ballad recorded in 1840 about Odin and his son Veraldur. It is believed that this Veraldur is related to Fjölnir and Freyr, as per Snorri's statement that Freyr was veraldar goð ("god of the world").

In this ballad Veraldur sets off to Zealand to seek the king's daughter in marriage despite Odin's warnings. The king of Zealand dislikes Veraldur and tricks him into falling into a brewing vat in a "hall of stone" where Veraldur drowns. When Odin hears the news, he decides to die and go to Asgard where his followers will also be welcomed after death.

The tale is similar to that of the death of Fjölnir, son of Freyr, who accidentally fell into a vat of mead and drowned while paying a friendly visit to Fridfródi the ruler of Zealand.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c Orchard 1997, p. 44.
  2. ^ a b c de Vries 1962, p. 125.
  3. ^ a b c Lindow 2001, p. 116.
  4. ^ McKinnell 2005, p. 70.
  5. ^ Gróttasöngr at Norrøne Tekster og Kvad Archived 2007-05-08 at the National and University Library of Iceland
  6. ^ a b Ynglinga saga at Norrøne Tekster og Kvad
  7. ^ a b A second online presentation of Ynglingatal September 28, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ a b Laing's translation at the Internet Sacred Text Archive
  9. ^ a b Laing's translation at Northvegr 2006-11-26 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ a b Edith Marold (ed.) 2012, ‘Þjóðólfr ór Hvini, Ynglingatal 1’ in Diana Whaley (ed.), Poetry from the Kings’ Sagas 1: From Mythical Times to c. 1035. Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 1. Turnhout: Brepols, p. 9. https://skaldic.org/m.php?p=verse&i=4367
  11. ^ Storm, Gustav (editor) (1880). Monumenta historica Norwegiæ: Latinske kildeskrifter til Norges historie i middelalderen, Monumenta Historica Norwegiae (Kristiania: Brøgger), p. 97
  12. ^ Ekrem, Inger (editor), Lars Boje Mortensen (editor) and Peter Fisher (translator) (2003). Historia Norwegie. Museum Tusculanum Press. ISBN 8772898135, p. 75.
  13. ^ Guðni Jónsson's edition of Íslendingabók

Bibliography edit

  • de Vries, Jan (1962). Altnordisches Etymologisches Worterbuch (1977 ed.). Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-05436-3.
  • Lindow, John (2001). Norse Mythology: A Guide to Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-983969-8.
  • McKinnell, John (2005). Meeting the Other in Norse Myth and Legend. DS Brewer. ISBN 978-1-84384-042-8.
  • Orchard, Andy (1997). Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend. Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-34520-5.

See also edit

External links edit

  • (Text of the ballad of Veraldur).

fjölnir, other, uses, disambiguation, norse, fjǫlnir, ˈfjɔlnez, legendary, king, norse, mythology, said, have, been, freyr, frey, consort, gerðr, gertha, name, appears, variety, forms, including, fiolnir, fjölner, fjolner, fjolne, claimed, progenitor, swedish,. For other uses see Fjolnir disambiguation Fjolnir Old Norse Fjǫlnir ˈfjɔlnez is a legendary king in Norse mythology said to have been the son of Freyr Frey and his consort Gerdr Gertha 1 The name appears in a variety of forms including Fiolnir Fjolner Fjolner and Fjolne He was claimed as the progenitor of the Swedish Yngling dynasty reigning from Gamla Uppsala According to the Grottasongr Fjolnir lived from the 1st century BC to the early 1st century AD King Fjolner prepares to drown in the vessel of mead He exclaims I hope that the historian Odhner will describe this as an accident Caricature by Albert Engstrom FjolnirLegendary King of SwedenPredecessorYngvi FreySuccessorSveigderDiedLejre Roskilde Zealand Denmark fell in a vessel of mead and drowned IssueDetailSveigderDynastyHouse of YnglingFatherYngvi FreyFjolnir was said to have drowned in a vat of mead while visiting Peace Frodi a similarly legendary king of Zealand the Danish island Fjolnir was then succeeded by his son Sveigdir Contents 1 Name 2 Attestations 2 1 Grottasongr 2 2 Ynglinga saga 2 3 Ynglingatal 2 4 Gesta Danorum 2 5 Ballad of Veraldur 3 Notes 3 1 Bibliography 4 See also 5 External linksName editThe etymology of the Old Norse name Fjǫlnir is unclear 2 3 It could stem from the verb fela to hide with Fjǫlnir as the concealer of the mead of poetry or it may have emerged as an abbreviation of fjǫlvidr the very wise 2 1 A derivation from fjǫl crowd has also been proposed with Fjǫlnir as the manifold or the multiplier 4 although such an adverbial formation has no attested parallel 2 According to Lindow the second etymology may be more fitting for a name of Odin but the meaning remains uncertain in any case 3 Fjolnir is indeed also frequently mentioned as a name of Odin 1 In Grimnismal The Lay of Grimnir Odin mentions it to Geirrodr as one of his many names that constitute the beginning of his epiphany In Reginsmal The Lay of Reginn a man who is clearly Odin uses Fjolnir to refer to himself as he is standing on a mountain addressing Sigurd and Regin In Gylfaginning The Beguiling of Gylfi Fjolnir appears among the 12 names given for Alfodr another name of Odin 3 Attestations editGrottasongr edit Grottasongr informs that Fjolnir was the contemporary of Caesar Augustus 63 BC AD 14 He was a mighty king and the crops were bountiful and peace was maintained At his time King Frodi the son of Fridleifr ruled in Lejre in Zealand Grottasongr relates that when Frodi once visited Uppsala he brought two giantesses Fenja and Menja Frodi konungr sotti heimbod i Svithjod til thess konungs er Fjolnir er nefndr THa keypti hann ambattir tvaer er hetu Fenja ok Menja THaer varu miklar ok sterkar 5 However the two giantesses were to be his undoing see Grottasongr Ynglinga saga edit The Ynglinga saga tells that Fjolnir was the son of Freyr himself and his wife Gerd but he was the first of his house who was not to be deified Freyr tok tha riki eptir Njord var hann kalladr drottinn yfir Svium ok tok skattgjafir af theim hann var vinsaell ok arsaell sem fadir hans Freyr reisti at Uppsolum hof mikit ok setti thar hofudstad sinn lagdi thar til allar skyldir sinar lond ok lausa aura tha hofst Uppsala audr ok hefir haldizt ae sidan A hans dogum hofst Froda fridr tha var ok ar um oll lond kendu Sviar that Frey Var hann thvi meir dyrkadr en onnur godin sem a hans dogum vard landsfolkit audgara en fyrr af fridinum ok ari Gerdr Gymis dottir het kona hans sonr theirra het Fjolnir 6 7 Frey took the kingdom after Njord and was called drot by the Swedes and they paid taxes to him He was like his father fortunate in friends and in good seasons Frey built a great temple at Upsal made it his chief seat and gave it all his taxes his land and goods Then began the Upsal domains which have remained ever since Then began in his days the Frode peace and then there were good seasons in all the land which the Swedes ascribed to Frey so that he was more worshipped than the other gods as the people became much richer in his days by reason of the peace and good seasons His wife was called Gerd daughter of Gymir and their son was called Fjolne 8 9 Then Snorri tells that after Freyr s death Fjolnir became the king of Sweden However he drowned in a vat of mead visiting Peace Frodi Fridfrodi the king of Zealand Fjolnir son Yngvifreys red tha fyrir Svium ok Uppsala aud hann var rikr ok arsaell ok fridsaell THa var Fridfrodi at Hleidru theirra i millum var heimbod ok vingan THa er Fjolnir for til Froda a Selund tha var thar fyrir buin veizla mikil ok bodit til vida um lond Frodi atti mikinn husabœ thar var gert ker mikit margra alna hatt ok okat med storum timbrstokkum that stod i undirskemmu en lopt var yfir uppi ok opit golfthilit sva at thar var nidr hellt leginum en kerit blandit fult mjadar thar var drykkr furdu sterkr Um kveldit var Fjolni fylgt til herbergis i hit naesta lopt ok hans sveit med honum Um nottina gekk hann ut i svalir at leita ser stadar var hann svefnœrr ok daudadrukkinn En er hann snerist aptr til herbergis tha gekk hann fram eptir svolunum ok til annarra loptdura ok thar inn missti tha fotum ok fell i mjadarkerit ok tyndist thar 6 7 Fjolne Yngve Frey s son ruled thereafter over the Swedes and the Upsal domains He was powerful and lucky in seasons and in holding the peace Fredfrode ruled then in Leidre and between them there was great friendship and visiting Once when Fjolne went to Frode in Sealand a great feast was prepared for him and invitations to it were sent all over the country Frode had a large house in which there was a great vessel many ells high and put together of great pieces of timber and this vessel stood in a lower room Above it was a loft in the floor of which was an opening through which liquor was poured into this vessel The vessel was full of mead which was excessively strong In the evening Fjolne with his attendants was taken into the adjoining loft to sleep In the night he went out to the gallery to seek a certain place and he was very sleepy and exceedingly drunk As he came back to his room he went along the gallery to the door of another left went into it and his foot slipping he fell into the vessel of mead and was drowned 8 9 Ynglingatal edit Snorri also quoted some lines of Ynglingatal composed in the 9th century Vard framgengt thars Frodi bjo feigdarord es at Fjǫlni kom Ok sikling svigdis geira vagr vindlauss of vida skyldi 10 Translation The word of doom that fell upon Fjǫlnir was fulfilled where Frodi lived And the windless wave of the spears of the bull HORNS gt BEER was to destroy the prince 10 The Historia Norwegiae provides a Latin summary of Ynglingatal which precedes Snorri s quotation It also informs that Fjolnir was the son of Freyr the father of Svegder and that he drowned in a vat of mead Froyr vero genuit Fiolni qui in dolio medonis dimersus est cujus filius Swegthir 11 Froy engendered Fjolne who was drowned in a tun of mead His son Sveigde 12 The even earlier source Islendingabok cites the line of descent in Ynglingatal and also gives Fjolnir as the successor of Freyr and the predecessor of Svegdir In addition to this it summarizes that Fjolnir died at Fridfrodi s i e Peace Frodi iii Freyr iiii Fjolnir sa er do at Fridfroda v Svegdir 13 Gesta Danorum edit In Gesta Danorum Book 1 Frodi corresponds to Hadingus and Fjolnir to Hundingus but the story is a little different It relates how King Hundingus of Sweden believed a rumor that King Hadingus of Denmark had died and held his obsequies with ceremony including an enormous vat of ale Hundingus himself served the ale but accidentally stumbled and fell into the vat choked and drowned When word came to King Hadingus of this unfortunate death King Hadingus publicly hanged himself see Freyr Ballad of Veraldur edit Dumezil 1973 Appendix I cites a Faroese ballad recorded in 1840 about Odin and his son Veraldur It is believed that this Veraldur is related to Fjolnir and Freyr as per Snorri s statement that Freyr was veraldar god god of the world In this ballad Veraldur sets off to Zealand to seek the king s daughter in marriage despite Odin s warnings The king of Zealand dislikes Veraldur and tricks him into falling into a brewing vat in a hall of stone where Veraldur drowns When Odin hears the news he decides to die and go to Asgard where his followers will also be welcomed after death The tale is similar to that of the death of Fjolnir son of Freyr who accidentally fell into a vat of mead and drowned while paying a friendly visit to Fridfrodi the ruler of Zealand Notes edit a b c Orchard 1997 p 44 a b c de Vries 1962 p 125 a b c Lindow 2001 p 116 McKinnell 2005 p 70 Grottasongr at Norrone Tekster og Kvad Archived 2007 05 08 at the National and University Library of Iceland a b Ynglinga saga at Norrone Tekster og Kvad a b A second online presentation of Ynglingatal Archived September 28 2006 at the Wayback Machine a b Laing s translation at the Internet Sacred Text Archive a b Laing s translation at Northvegr Archived 2006 11 26 at the Wayback Machine a b Edith Marold ed 2012 THjodolfr or Hvini Ynglingatal 1 in Diana Whaley ed Poetry from the Kings Sagas 1 From Mythical Times to c 1035 Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages 1 Turnhout Brepols p 9 https skaldic org m php p verse amp i 4367 Storm Gustav editor 1880 Monumenta historica Norwegiae Latinske kildeskrifter til Norges historie i middelalderen Monumenta Historica Norwegiae Kristiania Brogger p 97 Ekrem Inger editor Lars Boje Mortensen editor and Peter Fisher translator 2003 Historia Norwegie Museum Tusculanum Press ISBN 8772898135 p 75 Gudni Jonsson s edition of Islendingabok Bibliography edit de Vries Jan 1962 Altnordisches Etymologisches Worterbuch 1977 ed Brill ISBN 978 90 04 05436 3 Lindow John 2001 Norse Mythology A Guide to Gods Heroes Rituals and Beliefs Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 983969 8 McKinnell John 2005 Meeting the Other in Norse Myth and Legend DS Brewer ISBN 978 1 84384 042 8 Orchard Andy 1997 Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 34520 5 See also editYnglingatal Ynglinga saga part of the Heimskringla Historia Norvegiae Grottasongr Gesta DanorumExternal links editGimle Hedniska ballader Balladen om Oden och Veraldur Fro Text of the ballad of Veraldur FjolnirHouse of YnglingPreceded byYngvi Freyr Mythological king of Sweden Succeeded bySveigdir Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fjolnir amp oldid 1086784209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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