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Jötunn

A jötunn (also jotun; in the normalised scholarly spelling of Old Norse, jǫtunn /ˈjɔːtʊn/;[1] Old Norse pronunciation: [ˈjɔtonː]; plural jötnar/jǫtnar [ˈjɔtnɑz̠]) or, in Old English, eoten (plural eotenas) is a type of supernatural being in Germanic mythology. In Norse mythology, they are often contrasted with gods (Æsir and Vanir) and other non-human figures, such as dwarfs and elves, although the groupings are not always mutually exclusive. The entities themselves are referred to by several other terms, including risi, þurs (or thurs) and troll if male and gýgr or tröllkona if female. The jötnar typically dwell across boundaries from the gods and humans in lands such as Jötunheimr.

10th-century picture stone from the Hunnestad Monument that is believed to depict a gýgr riding on a wolf with vipers as reins, which has been proposed to be Hyrrokkin.

The jötnar are frequently attested throughout the Old Norse record, with eotenas also featuring in the Old English epic poem Beowulf. The usage of the terms is dynamic, with an overall trend that the beings become portrayed as less impressive and more negative as Christianity becomes more influential. Although the term "giant" is sometimes used to gloss the word "jötnar" and its apparent synonyms in some translations and academic texts, jötnar are not necessarily notably large.

The terms for the beings also have cognates in later folklore such as the British Yotun and Danish Jætte which can share some common features such as being turned to stone in the day and living on the periphery of society.

Origin, appearance and terminology

 
The word eotenas in the manuscript of Beowulf

Old Norse jötnar (also jǫtunn) and Old English eoten developed from the Proto-Germanic masculine noun *etunaz.[2] Philologist Vladimir Orel says that semantic connections between *etunaz with Proto-Germanic *etanan ('to eat') makes a relation between the two nouns likely.[2] Proto-Germanic *etanan is reconstructed from Old Norse etall 'consuming', Old English etol 'voracious, gluttonous', and Old High German filu-ezzal 'greedy'.[2] The word is cognate with ettin, an archaic word for giant.[3] Old Norse risi and Old High German riso derive from the Proto-Germanic masculine noun *wrisjon. Orel observes that the Old Saxon adjective wrisi-līk 'enormous' is likely also connected.[4] Old Norse þurs, Old English þyrs, and Old High German duris 'devil, evil spirit' derive from the Proto-Germanic masculine noun *þur(i)saz, itself derived form Proto-Germanic *þurēnan, which is etymologically connected to Sanskrit turá- 'strong, powerful, rich'.[5] Several terms are used specifically to refer to female entities that fall into this wider category, including íviðja (plural íviðjur), gýgr (plural gýgjar) and tröllkona (plural tröllkonur).[6][7][8]

The cognates jötunn (ON) and eoten (OE), and þurs (ON) and þyrs (OE) have been equated by scholars such as J. R. R. Tolkien and Rudolf Simek, with the word being used to describe the being when in either Old Norse or Anglo-Saxon mythology respectively.[9][10]

In the Eddas, jötnar are beings typically with similar power to the gods and may also be referred to by the negative terms troll and þurs.[11][12] The harmful nature of þursar is also described in the Icelandic and Norwegian rune poems, where they are identified for causing strife to women.[13][14] Despite the terms used to refer to male and female jötnar often being glossed as 'giant' and 'giantess' respectively, in Eddic sources they are often not described as notably large and are thus sometimes anglicised or left untranslated in translations and academic texts.[15][16][17] Descriptions of the appearance of jötnar are uncommon however the progenitor of the jötnar is described as having the form of a man.[18] Some female jötnar are described as being beautiful, such as Gerðr and Hymir's partner while others are described as monstrous and having many heads.[19] Some dwarfs are described as jötnar such as Regin and Fáfnir, while in Alvíssmál, the eponymous dwarf is noted for having the likeness of a þurs.[15][20]

As the influence of Christianity grew, jötnar became demonised and typically portrayed as less intelligent, easier to outwit and more monstrous, as is common with giants in later Germanic folklore.[21] In some later sagas, such as Bárðar saga Snæfellsáss, risar are clearly distinct from jötnar however in others the terms are used interchangeably, albeit with an overall trend that jötnar have begun to be seen negatively relative to risar.[12]

Troll has a much wider semantic scope in Old Norse literature than solely jötnar, also including individuals with unusual or supernatural traits such as witches, abnormally strong, large or ugly people, ghosts and berserkers.[22]

Notable jötnar

Mythological origin

In a stanza of Völuspá hin skamma (found in the poem "Hyndluljóð") all jötnar descend from Ymir.[31] Gylfaginning elaborates on this, describing that the primordial jötunn Ymir formed in the warm waters that arose in Ginnungagap when the rime of Niflheim was melted by the heat of Muspelheim. He lay there asleep, fed by milk from Auðumbla, whereupon from his left armpit he sweated a male and a female, and his legs begat a son with one another. Together, these children became the ancestors of all other jötnar.[29][32]

Later, he was killed by the first gods, resulting in a flood of Ymir's blood, in which all jötnar drowned except Bergelmir and his family, who survive this event by way of sailing upon a luðr.[33] This has been linked to a runic inscription on a sword hilt in Beowulf which describes the eotenas being killed in an ancient flood and has been proposed to derive from Germanic and wider Indo-European mythology.[34][35][36]

According to Gylfaginning, after Ymir was killed, his body was wrought into the world and a sea surrounded it. The gods then gave the surviving families jötnar lands along the shore to settle, placing them in the periphery. Ymir's brows were then used to build Midgard and protect it from the jötnar due to their known aggression.[18][32]

Attributes and themes

Position as the "Other"

 
The Gotlandic image stone Stora Hammars III is believed to depict Odin in the form of an eagle (note the eagle's beard), Gunnlöð holding the mead of poetry, and Suttungr.

Most stories in Old Norse mythology show a clear division between "This World", pertaining to that of gods and men, and "The Other", which is inhabited by jötnar and beings associated with them.[37][38]

A common motif is the journeying to obtain secret knowledge from the jötnar. In the Eddic poem Hyndluljóð, Freyja travels to the gýgr Hyndla to obtain understanding of the lineage of Ottar, and the "ale of remembrance" (Old Norse: minnisǫl) so that he does not forget it.[39] In the Eddic poem Vafþrúðnismál, Óðinn travels to the jötunn Vafþrúðnir whereupon they engage in a wisdom contest.[40] He also travels to the jötnar to obtain from Suttungr the Mead of poetry, which imparts skill in poetry to any who drink it.[41] The völva who tells the Völuspá prophecy to Óðinn, while not explicitly described as a jötunn but was raised by them. [42]

Cosmology in Germanic mythology, as with other oral cultures, has many apparent contradictions when viewed from a naturalistic standpoint.[43] Despite this, a system of motifs repeat when travelling to the jötnar. In the Prose Edda that the jötnar dwell in Jötunheimr which is at points located in the North or East and in Þrymskviða can only be reached by air, however jötnar are also found South and across water.[18][44] Jötnar such as Suttungr and Skaði live in mountains, which is further reflected in the terms Old Norse: bergrisar (mountain risar) and Old Norse: bergbúi (mountain dweller), a kenning for jötunn. Their lands of inhabitation are not restricted to this, also including forests, underground, and the shore.[18][44] Sometimes they are referred to as living in specific geographical locations such as Ægir on Læsø.[44] These motifs are also seen in the section of Beowulf concerning the fight with mother of the eoten Grendel which has been noted by scholars to closely resemble the fight between a trollkona and Grettir in his eponymous saga, wherein the female beings may only be reached by crossing through water.[45][46] The seemingly ununified location of the jötnar has been suggested to be an outcome of their intrinsically chaotic nature.[18] Even within the same story, what seem like contradictions have been noted by scholars, prompting the proposal of a model that the otherworld where the jötnar dwell can be reached from a number of passages or boundaries that cannot be traversed under normal conditions, such as the mountains, darkness and "flickering flame" crossed by Skírnir in Skírnismál.[44]

In Eddic sources, jötnar present a constant threat to gods and humans, often leading them to confrontation with Thor. In Hárbarðsljóð and Þrymskviða tell that if it was not for Thor and Mjöllnir, jötnar would soon overrun Midgard and Asgard respectively.[47] Nonetheless, Thor also has a positive relationship with some gýgjar, such as Gríðr and the unnamed wife of Hymir, who provide magical items and council that enable him to overcome other jötnar.[48]

Ancestors of gods and humans

 
A bergrisi ("mountain risi") — the traditional protector of southwestern Iceland—appears as a supporter on the coat of arms of Iceland.

The distinction between gods and jötnar is not clearly defined and they should be seen as different culturally rather than biologically, with some gods, such as Odin, Thor and Loki being the descendants of jötnar.[49] A common motif that often forms the core storyline of Eddic narratives is the unsuccessful attempts of jötnar to marry one of the goddesses, be it through either trickery or force.[21] In contrast, the female jötunn Skaði chooses the male Vanr Njörðr as a husband. According to Ynglinga saga, she later had children with Odin, from whom kings such as Earl Hakon were descended. The Vanr Freyr also marries Gerðr, who are the claimed ancestors of the Ynglings.[50][51] Odin also seduces the jötnar Gunnlöð and Rindr and marries Jörð.[52] In the cases when gods marry jötnar, they appear to be fully incorporated into the gods and are referred to as Ásynjur in Nafnaþulur. Consistent with this, reference to Skaði's vés in Lokasenna and toponyms such as Skedevi in Sweden suggests that despite being a jötunn, she was worshipped in Old Norse religion.[53][54]

Association with animals

One of the tröllkonur who dwell in the wood Járnviðr is a mother of jötnar in the forms of wolves and from whom are descended all wolves.[26] This tröllkona has been suggested to be Angrboða, the gýgr who begat with Loki the monstrous wolf Fenrir and venomous worm Jörmungandr who become enemies of the gods.[55] Also in Járnviðr dwells the jötunn Eggþér who has been interpreted as either a guardian of the gýgjar who live there or a herdsman of the wolves.[56][57] Wolves are also taken as mounts by gýgjar such as Hyndla and Hyrrokkin, the latter of which using snakes as reins.[47] This is further attested in skaldic poetry in which "wolf" is described by the kennings "Leikn's horse", "Gjálp's horse", "Gríðr's horse", while a group of wolves is referred to as "Gríðr's grey herd of horses".[47][58] Wolf-riding gýgjar are referred to as myrkriður ("riders in the night") or kveldriður ("dusk riders").[58][20]

Hræsvelgr is told in Vafþrúðnismál (37) and Gylfaginning (18) to be a jötunn in an arnarhamr (eagle-guise) who creates the wind by beating his wings.[59] Other jötnar, such as Þjazi and Suttungr are able to become eagles by wearing their arnarhamir,[60][61][62] or resemble them like Griðr in Illuga saga Gríðarfóstra who has hands like eagle talons.[63]

Demonisation

In later material composed during the Christian period such as the legendary sagas, jötnar are often portrayed as uncivilised and cannibalistic. In the case of Bárðar saga Snæfellsáss and Hálfdanar saga Brönufóstra they specifically eat both human and horse meat, the latter of which was directly associated with heathen practices.[64] The post-Christian association between jötnar and pre-Christian practices is also seen in Beowulf, in which the man-eating eoten Grendel is described as having a "heathen soul" and "heathenish hand-spurs".[65] Female jötnar are explicitly described as being heathen in some later sources such as Orms þáttr Stórólfssonar, in which religion prevents her from being with the hero, and the legendary saga Þorsteins þáttr bæjarmagns, in which she must be baptised before marrying the hero.[48]

Post-medieval folklore

 
Figures of Grýla and her husband Leppalúði on the main street of Akureyri, Iceland

Giants with names cognate to terms for jötnar are found in later Northern European folklore, such as the English ettin or yotun, thurse and hobthrust, Danish jætte and Swedish jätte.[66][67] In Germanic folklore, giants often share traits with jötnar, particularly as depicted in legendary sagas, combined with motifs from other European giants and are often interchangeable with trolls.[21][15][68]

As with jötnar, Germanic giants live outside of human communities, in woods and mountains.[15] They commonly show an aversion to Christianity, often showing a disdain for the ringing of church bells.[69] Similarities are also both seen in their role in the construction of stoneworks. Akin to the Old Norse tale of the jötunn who built the wall of Ásgarðr, giants often enter into wagers involved in the building of churches which they later lose, as with the tale of Jätten Finn who is attributed with the construction of Lund Cathedral.[15][70] Ruins are also attributed to the works of both beings, as in the Old English poem The Ruin and the aetiological story of Wade's Causeway in Yorkshire.[67][71][72]

Some standing stones in northern Europe are explained as petrified giants such as the Yetnasteen in Orkney which derives its name from Old Norse: Jǫtna-steinn (Jötunn's stone).[73] According to folklore, it awakens every New Year at midnight whereupon it visits the Loch of Scockness to drink.[74] Orcadian folklore also explains the Ring of Brodgar as dancing giants who were turned to stone by the morning sun.[75] This motif is also seen in Helgakviða Hjörvarðssonar, in which the gýgr Hrímgerðr engages in a senna with Helgi Hundingsbane until the sun rises and she is turned to stone.[76]

The Orcadian tradition of Gyro Night derives its name from Old Norse: gýgr and consisted of two older boys dressing up as masked old women one night in February and chasing smaller boys with ropes.[77] Similar to this are the Faroese and Shetlandic popular customs of dressing up as giantesses referred to as Grýla (plural grýlur), or other similar terms, in costumes traditionally made from a combination of animal skins, tattered clothes, seaweed, straw and sometimes featuring masks. Grýla is a female creature described in Sturlunga saga as having fifteen tails, and listed as a tröllkona in the Nafnaþulur section of the Prose Edda who features in folklore throughout the North Atlantic islands settled by Scandinavians.[78][79]

Toponomy

Placenames derived from þurs or cognate:

England

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "Jotun". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ a b c Orel (2003:86).
  3. ^ "Ettin". Online Etymology Dictionary.
  4. ^ Orel (2003:472).
  5. ^ Orel (2003:429–430).
  6. ^ "íviðja". Wiktionary. 8 January 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  7. ^ "gýgr". Wiktionary. 8 January 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  8. ^ "Trollkona". Old Icelandic Dictionary. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  9. ^ Tolkien 2011.
  10. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 107, 334.
  11. ^ Simek 2008, p. 33.
  12. ^ a b Jakobsson 2009.
  13. ^ Dickins (1915:28–33)
  14. ^ "Rune poems". Wikisource. Retrieved 25 April 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e Motz 1982, pp. 70–84.
  16. ^ Ásdísardóttir 2018.
  17. ^ Some translators of the Poetic Edda do not render the word jötunn to giant. For example, in the Foreword to Jeramy Dodds's translation of the Poetic Edda, Terry Gunnell says that jötnar is "sometimes wrongly translated as 'giants'" and instead uses jötunns. (Dodds 2014:9).
  18. ^ a b c d e Jakobsson 2006.
  19. ^ Orchard tr. 2011, pp. 59–66, 76–82, För Skírnis: Skírnir's journey, Hymiskvida: The song of Hymir.
  20. ^ a b Bellows, Henry Adam (2018). The poetic Edda. [Place of publication not identified]: Digireads.com Publishing. ISBN 978-1420957051.
  21. ^ a b c Simek 2008, p. 107.
  22. ^ Ármann Jakobsson (2008).
  23. ^ Simek 2008, p. 105.
  24. ^ Simek 2008, p. 78.
  25. ^ Simek 2008, p. 120.
  26. ^ a b Simek 2008, p. 179.
  27. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 286–287.
  28. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 314–315.
  29. ^ a b Simek 2008, pp. 377–378.
  30. ^ The article Nornor in Nordisk familjebok (1913).
  31. ^ Bellows (1923:229) and Thorpe (1866:111).
  32. ^ a b Sturluson 2018, Gylfaginning.
  33. ^ Simek 2008, p. 377.
  34. ^ Taylor 1998, Chapter 8.
  35. ^ Schneider 1986, pp. 170–171.
  36. ^ Slade 2007, pp. 18–21.
  37. ^ McKinnell 2005, pp. 1–10, Chapter 1.
  38. ^ Lummer 2021, pp. 57–85.
  39. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 169–170.
  40. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 344–345.
  41. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 208–210.
  42. ^ Orchard tr. 2011, pp. 5–14, Völuspá: The prophecy of the seeress.
  43. ^ Brink 2004.
  44. ^ a b c d Heide 2014.
  45. ^ McKinnell 2005, pp. 109–110, Chapter 8.
  46. ^ Fox 2020, p. 30.
  47. ^ a b c McKinnell 2005, pp. 109–125, Chapter 8.
  48. ^ a b McKinnell 2005, pp. 172–180, Chapter 11.
  49. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 78, 240, 316.
  50. ^ Simek 2008, p. 91.
  51. ^ Laing 1961, pp. 14–15, Ynglinga saga, Chapter 12.
  52. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 240–245.
  53. ^ Gunnell 2018, p. 121.
  54. ^ "Nafnaþulur – heimskringla.no". heimskringla.no. Retrieved 4 May 2022.
  55. ^ Lindow 2002, p. 204.
  56. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 69–70.
  57. ^ Salus & Taylor 1969.
  58. ^ a b McKinnell 2005, pp. 147–171, Chapter 10.
  59. ^ Simek 2008, p. 158.
  60. ^ "Skáldskaparmál – heimskringla.no". heimskringla.no.
  61. ^ Sturluson 2018, Skáldskaparmál.
  62. ^ Simek 2008, pp. 304, 314–315.
  63. ^ Lavender, Philip (2015). Illuga saga Gríðarfóstra = The saga of Illugi, Gríður's foster-son. London. ISBN 9780903521918.
  64. ^ Maraschi 2020, pp. 3, 11–13.
  65. ^ Beowulf, Chapters 8 & 14.
  66. ^ "ettin". Wiktionary. 5 October 2019. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  67. ^ a b Westwood 2006.
  68. ^ Simpson 2004, p. 16.
  69. ^ Simpson 2004, p. 81.
  70. ^ Simpson 2004, pp. 48–49.
  71. ^ "The Ruin, Old English Poetry Project, Rutgers University". oldenglishpoetry.camden.rutgers.edu. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
  72. ^ Leslie 1961, pp. 23–27.
  73. ^ Ljosland 2013.
  74. ^ Clarke 2020.
  75. ^ Muir 2014, pp. 34–35.
  76. ^ Orchard 1997, p. 11.
  77. ^ Davidson 1970, p. 180.
  78. ^ Simpson 2004, pp. 102–104.
  79. ^ Gunnell 2001, p. 32-54.
  80. ^ "Key to English Place-names, Thursford". kepn.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  81. ^ "Thursgill :: Survey of English Place-Names". epns.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  82. ^ "Thursgill ' :: Survey of English Place-Names". epns.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  83. ^ "Thruss Pits :: Survey of English Place-Names". Survey of English Place-Names. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  84. ^ "Thrispin Gate, Thrispin Head :: Survey of English Place-Names". epns.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  85. ^ "Trusey Hill :: Survey of English Place-Names". epns.nottingham.ac.uk. Retrieved 24 April 2022.

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External links

  •   Media related to Jötnar at Wikimedia Commons

lang, jötunn, frost, giant, redirects, here, other, uses, frost, giant, disambiguation, jötunn, also, jotun, normalised, scholarly, spelling, norse, jǫtunn, ɔː, norse, pronunciation, ˈjɔtonː, plural, jötnar, jǫtnar, ˈjɔtnɑz, english, eoten, plural, eotenas, ty. Frost giant redirects here For other uses see Frost Giant disambiguation A jotunn also jotun in the normalised scholarly spelling of Old Norse jǫtunn ˈ j ɔː t ʊ n 1 Old Norse pronunciation ˈjɔtonː plural jotnar jǫtnar ˈjɔtnɑz or in Old English eoten plural eotenas is a type of supernatural being in Germanic mythology In Norse mythology they are often contrasted with gods AEsir and Vanir and other non human figures such as dwarfs and elves although the groupings are not always mutually exclusive The entities themselves are referred to by several other terms including risi thurs or thurs and troll if male and gygr or trollkona if female The jotnar typically dwell across boundaries from the gods and humans in lands such as Jotunheimr 10th century picture stone from the Hunnestad Monument that is believed to depict a gygr riding on a wolf with vipers as reins which has been proposed to be Hyrrokkin The jotnar are frequently attested throughout the Old Norse record with eotenas also featuring in the Old English epic poem Beowulf The usage of the terms is dynamic with an overall trend that the beings become portrayed as less impressive and more negative as Christianity becomes more influential Although the term giant is sometimes used to gloss the word jotnar and its apparent synonyms in some translations and academic texts jotnar are not necessarily notably large The terms for the beings also have cognates in later folklore such as the British Yotun and Danish Jaette which can share some common features such as being turned to stone in the day and living on the periphery of society Contents 1 Origin appearance and terminology 2 Notable jotnar 3 Mythological origin 4 Attributes and themes 4 1 Position as the Other 4 2 Ancestors of gods and humans 4 3 Association with animals 4 4 Demonisation 5 Post medieval folklore 6 Toponomy 7 See also 8 Citations 9 Bibliography 9 1 Primary 9 2 Secondary 10 External linksOrigin appearance and terminology Edit The word eotenas in the manuscript of Beowulf Old Norse jotnar also jǫtunn and Old English eoten developed from the Proto Germanic masculine noun etunaz 2 Philologist Vladimir Orel says that semantic connections between etunaz with Proto Germanic etanan to eat makes a relation between the two nouns likely 2 Proto Germanic etanan is reconstructed from Old Norse etall consuming Old English etol voracious gluttonous and Old High German filu ezzal greedy 2 The word is cognate with ettin an archaic word for giant 3 Old Norse risi and Old High German riso derive from the Proto Germanic masculine noun wrisjon Orel observes that the Old Saxon adjective wrisi lik enormous is likely also connected 4 Old Norse thurs Old English thyrs and Old High German duris devil evil spirit derive from the Proto Germanic masculine noun thur i saz itself derived form Proto Germanic thurenan which is etymologically connected to Sanskrit tura strong powerful rich 5 Several terms are used specifically to refer to female entities that fall into this wider category including ividja plural ividjur gygr plural gygjar and trollkona plural trollkonur 6 7 8 The cognates jotunn ON and eoten OE and thurs ON and thyrs OE have been equated by scholars such as J R R Tolkien and Rudolf Simek with the word being used to describe the being when in either Old Norse or Anglo Saxon mythology respectively 9 10 In the Eddas jotnar are beings typically with similar power to the gods and may also be referred to by the negative terms troll and thurs 11 12 The harmful nature of thursar is also described in the Icelandic and Norwegian rune poems where they are identified for causing strife to women 13 14 Despite the terms used to refer to male and female jotnar often being glossed as giant and giantess respectively in Eddic sources they are often not described as notably large and are thus sometimes anglicised or left untranslated in translations and academic texts 15 16 17 Descriptions of the appearance of jotnar are uncommon however the progenitor of the jotnar is described as having the form of a man 18 Some female jotnar are described as being beautiful such as Gerdr and Hymir s partner while others are described as monstrous and having many heads 19 Some dwarfs are described as jotnar such as Regin and Fafnir while in Alvissmal the eponymous dwarf is noted for having the likeness of a thurs 15 20 As the influence of Christianity grew jotnar became demonised and typically portrayed as less intelligent easier to outwit and more monstrous as is common with giants in later Germanic folklore 21 In some later sagas such as Bardar saga Snaefellsass risar are clearly distinct from jotnar however in others the terms are used interchangeably albeit with an overall trend that jotnar have begun to be seen negatively relative to risar 12 Troll has a much wider semantic scope in Old Norse literature than solely jotnar also including individuals with unusual or supernatural traits such as witches abnormally strong large or ugly people ghosts and berserkers 22 Notable jotnar EditMain article List of jotnar in Norse mythology Gerdr a daughter of Gymir and wife of Freyr Usually regarded as an earth goddess 23 Farbauti the jotunn father of Loki with Laufey 24 Fenja and Menja sisters who turn the mill Grotti to produce gold and Frodi s Peace 25 Jord the mother of Thor with Odin 26 Skadi a daughter of THjazi and later wife of Njordr Goddess associated with skiing and claimed as a mythical ancestor of Haakon Sigurdsson 27 THjazi a jotunn who once kidknapped Idunn and her apples of youth He was later killed by the gods and his eyes made into stars 28 Ymir the progenitor of the jotnar 29 Urdr Wyrd Verdandi Verthandi and Skuld the primary Norns 30 Mythological origin EditIn a stanza of Voluspa hin skamma found in the poem Hyndluljod all jotnar descend from Ymir 31 Gylfaginning elaborates on this describing that the primordial jotunn Ymir formed in the warm waters that arose in Ginnungagap when the rime of Niflheim was melted by the heat of Muspelheim He lay there asleep fed by milk from Audumbla whereupon from his left armpit he sweated a male and a female and his legs begat a son with one another Together these children became the ancestors of all other jotnar 29 32 Later he was killed by the first gods resulting in a flood of Ymir s blood in which all jotnar drowned except Bergelmir and his family who survive this event by way of sailing upon a ludr 33 This has been linked to a runic inscription on a sword hilt in Beowulf which describes the eotenas being killed in an ancient flood and has been proposed to derive from Germanic and wider Indo European mythology 34 35 36 According to Gylfaginning after Ymir was killed his body was wrought into the world and a sea surrounded it The gods then gave the surviving families jotnar lands along the shore to settle placing them in the periphery Ymir s brows were then used to build Midgard and protect it from the jotnar due to their known aggression 18 32 Attributes and themes EditPosition as the Other Edit The Gotlandic image stone Stora Hammars III is believed to depict Odin in the form of an eagle note the eagle s beard Gunnlod holding the mead of poetry and Suttungr Most stories in Old Norse mythology show a clear division between This World pertaining to that of gods and men and The Other which is inhabited by jotnar and beings associated with them 37 38 A common motif is the journeying to obtain secret knowledge from the jotnar In the Eddic poem Hyndluljod Freyja travels to the gygr Hyndla to obtain understanding of the lineage of Ottar and the ale of remembrance Old Norse minnisǫl so that he does not forget it 39 In the Eddic poem Vafthrudnismal odinn travels to the jotunn Vafthrudnir whereupon they engage in a wisdom contest 40 He also travels to the jotnar to obtain from Suttungr the Mead of poetry which imparts skill in poetry to any who drink it 41 The volva who tells the Voluspa prophecy to odinn while not explicitly described as a jotunn but was raised by them 42 Cosmology in Germanic mythology as with other oral cultures has many apparent contradictions when viewed from a naturalistic standpoint 43 Despite this a system of motifs repeat when travelling to the jotnar In the Prose Edda that the jotnar dwell in Jotunheimr which is at points located in the North or East and in THrymskvida can only be reached by air however jotnar are also found South and across water 18 44 Jotnar such as Suttungr and Skadi live in mountains which is further reflected in the terms Old Norse bergrisar mountain risar and Old Norse bergbui mountain dweller a kenning for jotunn Their lands of inhabitation are not restricted to this also including forests underground and the shore 18 44 Sometimes they are referred to as living in specific geographical locations such as AEgir on Laeso 44 These motifs are also seen in the section of Beowulf concerning the fight with mother of the eoten Grendel which has been noted by scholars to closely resemble the fight between a trollkona and Grettir in his eponymous saga wherein the female beings may only be reached by crossing through water 45 46 The seemingly ununified location of the jotnar has been suggested to be an outcome of their intrinsically chaotic nature 18 Even within the same story what seem like contradictions have been noted by scholars prompting the proposal of a model that the otherworld where the jotnar dwell can be reached from a number of passages or boundaries that cannot be traversed under normal conditions such as the mountains darkness and flickering flame crossed by Skirnir in Skirnismal 44 In Eddic sources jotnar present a constant threat to gods and humans often leading them to confrontation with Thor In Harbardsljod and THrymskvida tell that if it was not for Thor and Mjollnir jotnar would soon overrun Midgard and Asgard respectively 47 Nonetheless Thor also has a positive relationship with some gygjar such as Gridr and the unnamed wife of Hymir who provide magical items and council that enable him to overcome other jotnar 48 Ancestors of gods and humans Edit A bergrisi mountain risi the traditional protector of southwestern Iceland appears as a supporter on the coat of arms of Iceland The distinction between gods and jotnar is not clearly defined and they should be seen as different culturally rather than biologically with some gods such as Odin Thor and Loki being the descendants of jotnar 49 A common motif that often forms the core storyline of Eddic narratives is the unsuccessful attempts of jotnar to marry one of the goddesses be it through either trickery or force 21 In contrast the female jotunn Skadi chooses the male Vanr Njordr as a husband According to Ynglinga saga she later had children with Odin from whom kings such as Earl Hakon were descended The Vanr Freyr also marries Gerdr who are the claimed ancestors of the Ynglings 50 51 Odin also seduces the jotnar Gunnlod and Rindr and marries Jord 52 In the cases when gods marry jotnar they appear to be fully incorporated into the gods and are referred to as Asynjur in Nafnathulur Consistent with this reference to Skadi s ves in Lokasenna and toponyms such as Skedevi in Sweden suggests that despite being a jotunn she was worshipped in Old Norse religion 53 54 Association with animals Edit One of the trollkonur who dwell in the wood Jarnvidr is a mother of jotnar in the forms of wolves and from whom are descended all wolves 26 This trollkona has been suggested to be Angrboda the gygr who begat with Loki the monstrous wolf Fenrir and venomous worm Jormungandr who become enemies of the gods 55 Also in Jarnvidr dwells the jotunn Eggther who has been interpreted as either a guardian of the gygjar who live there or a herdsman of the wolves 56 57 Wolves are also taken as mounts by gygjar such as Hyndla and Hyrrokkin the latter of which using snakes as reins 47 This is further attested in skaldic poetry in which wolf is described by the kennings Leikn s horse Gjalp s horse Gridr s horse while a group of wolves is referred to as Gridr s grey herd of horses 47 58 Wolf riding gygjar are referred to as myrkridur riders in the night or kveldridur dusk riders 58 20 Hraesvelgr is told in Vafthrudnismal 37 and Gylfaginning 18 to be a jotunn in an arnarhamr eagle guise who creates the wind by beating his wings 59 Other jotnar such as THjazi and Suttungr are able to become eagles by wearing their arnarhamir 60 61 62 or resemble them like Gridr in Illuga saga Gridarfostra who has hands like eagle talons 63 Demonisation Edit In later material composed during the Christian period such as the legendary sagas jotnar are often portrayed as uncivilised and cannibalistic In the case of Bardar saga Snaefellsass and Halfdanar saga Bronufostra they specifically eat both human and horse meat the latter of which was directly associated with heathen practices 64 The post Christian association between jotnar and pre Christian practices is also seen in Beowulf in which the man eating eoten Grendel is described as having a heathen soul and heathenish hand spurs 65 Female jotnar are explicitly described as being heathen in some later sources such as Orms thattr Storolfssonar in which religion prevents her from being with the hero and the legendary saga THorsteins thattr baejarmagns in which she must be baptised before marrying the hero 48 Post medieval folklore Edit Figures of Gryla and her husband Leppaludi on the main street of Akureyri Iceland Giants with names cognate to terms for jotnar are found in later Northern European folklore such as the English ettin or yotun thurse and hobthrust Danish jaette and Swedish jatte 66 67 In Germanic folklore giants often share traits with jotnar particularly as depicted in legendary sagas combined with motifs from other European giants and are often interchangeable with trolls 21 15 68 As with jotnar Germanic giants live outside of human communities in woods and mountains 15 They commonly show an aversion to Christianity often showing a disdain for the ringing of church bells 69 Similarities are also both seen in their role in the construction of stoneworks Akin to the Old Norse tale of the jotunn who built the wall of Asgardr giants often enter into wagers involved in the building of churches which they later lose as with the tale of Jatten Finn who is attributed with the construction of Lund Cathedral 15 70 Ruins are also attributed to the works of both beings as in the Old English poem The Ruin and the aetiological story of Wade s Causeway in Yorkshire 67 71 72 Some standing stones in northern Europe are explained as petrified giants such as the Yetnasteen in Orkney which derives its name from Old Norse Jǫtna steinn Jotunn s stone 73 According to folklore it awakens every New Year at midnight whereupon it visits the Loch of Scockness to drink 74 Orcadian folklore also explains the Ring of Brodgar as dancing giants who were turned to stone by the morning sun 75 This motif is also seen in Helgakvida Hjorvardssonar in which the gygr Hrimgerdr engages in a senna with Helgi Hundingsbane until the sun rises and she is turned to stone 76 The Orcadian tradition of Gyro Night derives its name from Old Norse gygr and consisted of two older boys dressing up as masked old women one night in February and chasing smaller boys with ropes 77 Similar to this are the Faroese and Shetlandic popular customs of dressing up as giantesses referred to as Gryla plural grylur or other similar terms in costumes traditionally made from a combination of animal skins tattered clothes seaweed straw and sometimes featuring masks Gryla is a female creature described in Sturlunga saga as having fifteen tails and listed as a trollkona in the Nafnathulur section of the Prose Edda who features in folklore throughout the North Atlantic islands settled by Scandinavians 78 79 Toponomy EditPlacenames derived from thurs or cognate England Thursford THyrs ford Village in Norfolk 80 Thursgill THurs gill Gill in West Riding of Yorkshire field in Cumbria 81 82 Thruss Pits THyrs pit Field in Derbyshire 83 Thrispin Head THurs fen Wetland in West Riding of Yorkshire 84 Trusey Hill THyrs hill Hill in East Riding of Yorkshire 85 See also EditAsura a comparable class of deities in Indian mythology Div a comparable class of beings in Islamic Persian lore Ents Giants Marvel Comics Giant Dungeons amp Dragons Titan a comparable class of deities in Greek mythologyCitations Edit Jotun Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary a b c Orel 2003 86 Ettin Online Etymology Dictionary Orel 2003 472 Orel 2003 429 430 ividja Wiktionary 8 January 2022 Retrieved 18 April 2022 gygr Wiktionary 8 January 2022 Retrieved 18 April 2022 Trollkona Old Icelandic Dictionary Retrieved 18 April 2022 Tolkien 2011 Simek 2008 pp 107 334 Simek 2008 p 33 a b Jakobsson 2009 Dickins 1915 28 33 Rune poems Wikisource Retrieved 25 April 2022 a b c d e Motz 1982 pp 70 84 Asdisardottir 2018 Some translators of the Poetic Edda do not render the word jotunn to giant For example in the Foreword to Jeramy Dodds s translation of the Poetic Edda Terry Gunnell says that jotnar is sometimes wrongly translated as giants and instead uses jotunns Dodds 2014 9 a b c d e Jakobsson 2006 Orchard tr 2011 pp 59 66 76 82 For Skirnis Skirnir s journey Hymiskvida The song of Hymir a b Bellows Henry Adam 2018 The poetic Edda Place of publication not identified Digireads com Publishing ISBN 978 1420957051 a b c Simek 2008 p 107 Armann Jakobsson 2008 Simek 2008 p 105 Simek 2008 p 78 Simek 2008 p 120 a b Simek 2008 p 179 Simek 2008 pp 286 287 Simek 2008 pp 314 315 a b Simek 2008 pp 377 378 The article Nornor in Nordisk familjebok 1913 Bellows 1923 229 and Thorpe 1866 111 a b Sturluson 2018 Gylfaginning Simek 2008 p 377 Taylor 1998 Chapter 8 Schneider 1986 pp 170 171 Slade 2007 pp 18 21 McKinnell 2005 pp 1 10 Chapter 1 Lummer 2021 pp 57 85 Simek 2008 pp 169 170 Simek 2008 pp 344 345 Simek 2008 pp 208 210 Orchard tr 2011 pp 5 14 Voluspa The prophecy of the seeress Brink 2004 a b c d Heide 2014 McKinnell 2005 pp 109 110 Chapter 8 Fox 2020 p 30 a b c McKinnell 2005 pp 109 125 Chapter 8 a b McKinnell 2005 pp 172 180 Chapter 11 Simek 2008 pp 78 240 316 Simek 2008 p 91 Laing 1961 pp 14 15 Ynglinga saga Chapter 12 Simek 2008 pp 240 245 Gunnell 2018 p 121 Nafnathulur heimskringla no heimskringla no Retrieved 4 May 2022 Lindow 2002 p 204 Simek 2008 pp 69 70 Salus amp Taylor 1969 a b McKinnell 2005 pp 147 171 Chapter 10 Simek 2008 p 158 Skaldskaparmal heimskringla no heimskringla no Sturluson 2018 Skaldskaparmal Simek 2008 pp 304 314 315 Lavender Philip 2015 Illuga saga Gridarfostra The saga of Illugi Gridur s foster son London ISBN 9780903521918 Maraschi 2020 pp 3 11 13 Beowulf Chapters 8 amp 14 ettin Wiktionary 5 October 2019 Retrieved 11 May 2022 a b Westwood 2006 Simpson 2004 p 16 Simpson 2004 p 81 Simpson 2004 pp 48 49 The Ruin Old English Poetry Project Rutgers University oldenglishpoetry camden rutgers edu Retrieved 14 May 2022 Leslie 1961 pp 23 27 Ljosland 2013 Clarke 2020 Muir 2014 pp 34 35 Orchard 1997 p 11 Davidson 1970 p 180 Simpson 2004 pp 102 104 Gunnell 2001 p 32 54 Key to English Place names Thursford kepn nottingham ac uk Retrieved 24 April 2022 Thursgill Survey of English Place Names epns nottingham ac uk Retrieved 24 April 2022 Thursgill Survey of English Place Names epns nottingham ac uk Retrieved 24 April 2022 Thruss Pits Survey of English Place Names Survey of English Place Names Retrieved 24 April 2022 Thrispin Gate Thrispin Head Survey of English Place Names epns nottingham ac uk Retrieved 24 April 2022 Trusey Hill Survey of English Place Names epns nottingham ac uk Retrieved 24 April 2022 Bibliography EditPrimary Edit Laing Samuel 1961 Heimskringla London Dent ISBN 0460008471 Leslie R F 1961 Three Old English Elegies 1 ed Manchester The University Press ISBN 9780859891844 The Elder Edda A Book of Viking Lore Translated by Orchard Andy London Penguin Books 2011 ISBN 9780141393728 Sturluson Snorri 2018 The Prose Edda Translated by Brodeur Arthur Gilchrist Franklin Classics Trade Press ISBN 9780344335013 Beowulf on Steorarume Beowulf in Cyberspace Bilingual Edition OE text amp translation heorot dk Retrieved 27 April 2022 Secondary Edit Asdisardottir Ingunn 2018 Jǫtnar in War and Peace the Jǫtnar in Old Norse mythology their nature and function University of Iceland School of Social Sciences OCLC 1113408226 Brink Stefan 2004 Mytologiska rum och eskatologiska forestallningar i det vikingatida Norden Ordning mot kaos Studier av nordisk forkristen kosmologi S 291 316 ill ISBN 9789189116634 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Clarke Jake 2020 Finding a place for old things The role of pre Norse features in constructing Norse conceptual landscapes in the Scottish Isles Lund University Retrieved 24 April 2022 Davidson Hilda R Ellis 1970 Scandinavian Folklore in Britain Journal of the Folklore Institute 7 2 3 177 186 doi 10 2307 3813871 ISSN 0015 5934 JSTOR 3813871 Retrieved 5 May 2022 Fox Michael 2020 Following the formula in Beowulf Orvar Odds saga and Tolkien Cham p 30 ISBN 978 3030481360 Gunnell Terry 2001 Gryla Grylur Groleks and Skeklers Medieval Disguise Traditions in the North Atlantic PDF notendur hi is pp 32 54 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 15 May 2022 Gunnell Terry 2018 Blotgydjur Godar Mimi Incest and Wagons Oral Memories of the Old Norse Mythology Comparative Perspectives Ed Pernille Hermann Stephen A Mitchell and Jens Peter Schjodt with Amber J Rose Retrieved 5 May 2022 Heide Eldar 2014 Contradictory cosmology in Old Norse myth and religion but still a system Maal og Minne in Norwegian 106 1 ISSN 1890 5455 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Jakobsson Armann 2006 Where Do the Giants Live Arkiv for nordisk filologi 121 101 112 Retrieved 6 May 2022 Jakobsson Armann 2009 Identifying the Ogre The Legendary Saga Giants Ljosland Ragnhild 2013 Old Norse Cultural Influence in the Work of Christina M Costie Journal of the North Atlantic 177 188 ISSN 1935 1984 JSTOR 26686980 Retrieved 24 April 2022 Lindow John 2002 Norse Mythology A Guide to Gods Heroes Rituals and Beliefs Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 983969 8 Lummer Felix 2021 Solitary Colossi and Not So Small Men Arv Nordic Yearbook of Folklore 77 1 57 85 Retrieved 6 May 2022 Maraschi Andrea 2020 Taboo or Magic Practice Cannibalism as Identity Marker for Giants and Human Heroes in Medieval Iceland Parergon 37 1 doi 10 1353 pgn 2020 0056 S2CID 226719907 McKinnell John 2005 Meeting the other in Norse myth and legend Woodbridge Suffolk UK D S Brewer ISBN 1843840421 Motz Lotte 1982 Giants in Folklore and Mythology A New Approach Folklore 93 1 70 84 doi 10 1080 0015587X 1982 9716221 ISSN 0015 587X JSTOR 1260141 Retrieved 6 May 2022 Muir Tom 2014 Orkney folk tales Stroud Gloucestershire History Press ISBN 9780752499055 Orchard Andy 1997 Dictionary of Norse myth and legend London Cassell ISBN 9780304345205 Salus Peter H Taylor Paul Beekman 1969 Eikinskjaldi Fjalarr And Eggther Neophilologus 53 1 76 81 doi 10 1007 BF01511692 ISSN 1572 8668 S2CID 162276325 Retrieved 23 April 2022 Schneider Karl 1986 Sophia Lectures on Beowulf Taishukan for the Japan Science Society pp 170 171 Slade Benjamin 2007 Untydras ealle Grendel Cain and V rtra Indo European sruti and Christian sm rti in Beowulf In Geardagum 27 1 32 Simek Rudolf 2008 A Dictionary of Northern Mythology Translated by Hall Angela BOYE6 ISBN 9780859915137 Simpson Jacqueline 2004 Icelandic folktales amp legends 2nd ed Stroud Tempus ISBN 9780752430454 Taylor Paul Beekman 1998 Sharing story Medieval Norse English literary relationships New York AMS Press pp 123 137 ISBN 0404641652 Tolkien J R R 2011 Beowulf and the critics Rev 2nd ed Tempe Ariz ACMRS ISBN 978 0866984508 Westwood Jennifer 2006 The lore of the land a guide to England s legends from Spring heeled Jack to the Witches of Warboys London Penguin ISBN 0141021039 External links Edit Media related to Jotnar at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jotunn amp oldid 1127584387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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