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Skaði

In Norse mythology, Skaði (/ˈskɑːði/; Old Norse: [ˈskɑðe]; sometimes anglicized as Skadi, Skade, or Skathi) is a jötunn and goddess associated with bowhunting, skiing, winter, and mountains. Skaði is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources; the Prose Edda and in Heimskringla, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson, and in the works of skalds.

Skadi Hunting in the Mountains (1901) by H. L. M.

Skaði is the daughter of the deceased Þjazi, and Skaði married the god Njörðr as part of the compensation provided by the gods for killing her father Þjazi. In Heimskringla, Skaði is described as having split up with Njörðr and as later having married the god Odin, and that the two produced many children together. In both the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda, Skaði is responsible for placing the serpent that drips venom onto the bound Loki. Skaði is alternately referred to as Öndurguð (Old Norse 'ski god') and Öndurdís (Old Norse 'ski dís').

The etymology of the name Skaði is uncertain, but may be connected with the original form of Scandinavia. Some place names in Scandinavia refer to Skaði. Scholars have theorized a potential connection between Skaði and the god Ullr (who is also associated with skiing), a particular relationship with the jötunn Loki, and that Scandinavia may be related to the name Skaði (potentially meaning 'Skaði's island') or the name may be connected to Old Norse nouns meaning either 'shadow' or 'harm'. Skaði has inspired various works of art.

Etymology

The Old Norse name Skaði, along with Sca(n)dinavia and Skáney, may be related to Gothic skadus, Old English sceadu, Old Saxon scado, and Old High German scato (meaning 'shadow') - compare also the Irish Scáthach, a famous woman warrior known as 'the shadowy one'. Scholar John McKinnell comments that this etymology suggests Skaði may have once been a personification of the geographical region of Scandinavia or associated with the underworld.[1]

Georges Dumézil disagrees with the notion of Scadin-avia as etymologically 'the island of the goddess Skaði'. Dumézil comments that the first element Scadin must have had—or once had—a connection to "darkness" "or something else we cannot be sure of". Dumézil says that, rather, the name Skaði derives from the name of the geographical region, which was at the time no longer completely understood. In connection, Dumézil points to a parallel in Ériu, a goddess personifying Ireland that appears in some Irish texts, whose name he says comes from Ireland rather than the other way around.[2]

Alternatively, Skaði may be connected with the Old Norse noun skaði ('harm'),[3] source of the Icelandic and Faroese skaði ('harm, damage') and cognate with English scathe (unscathed, scathing).[4]

Attestations

Skaði is attested in poems found in the Poetic Edda, in two books of the Prose Edda and in one Heimskringla book.

Poetic Edda

 
Njörðr, Skaði, and Freyr as depicted in The Lovesickness of Frey (1908) by W. G. Collingwood.

In the Poetic Edda poem Grímnismál, the god Odin (disguised as Grímnir) reveals to the young Agnarr the existence of twelve locations. Odin mentions the location Þrymheimr sixth in a single stanza. In the stanza, Odin details that the jötunn Þjazi once lived there, and that now his daughter Skaði does. Odin describes Þrymheimr as consisting of "ancient courts" and refers to Skaði as "the shining bride of the gods".[5] In the prose introduction to the poem Skírnismál, the god Freyr has become heartsick for a fair girl (the jötunn Gerðr) he has spotted in Jötunheimr. The god Njörðr asks Freyr's servant Skírnir to talk to Freyr, and in the first stanza of the poem, Skaði also tells Skírnir to ask Freyr why he is so upset. Skírnir responds that he expects harsh words from their son Freyr.[6]

In the prose introduction to the poem Lokasenna, Skaði is referred to as the wife of Njörðr and is cited as one of the goddesses attending Ægir's feast.[7] After Loki has an exchange with the god Heimdallr, Skaði interjects. Skaði tells Loki that he is "light-hearted" and that Loki will not be "playing [...] with [his] tail wagging free" for much longer, for soon the gods will bind Loki to a sharp rock with the ice-cold entrails of his son. Loki responds that, even if this is so, he was "first and foremost" at the killing of Þjazi. Skaði responds that, if this is so, "baneful advice" will always flow from her "sanctuaries and plains". Loki responds that Skaði was more friendly in speech when Skaði was in his bed—an accusation he makes to most of the goddesses in the poem and is not attested elsewhere. Loki's flyting then turns to the goddess Sif.[8]

In the prose section at the end of Lokasenna, the gods catch Loki and bind him with the innards of his son Nari, while they turn his son Váli into a wolf. Skaði places a venomous snake above Loki's face. Venom drips from the snake and Loki's wife Sigyn sits and holds a basin beneath the serpent, catching the venom. When the basin is full, Sigyn must empty it, and during that time the snake venom falls onto Loki's face, causing him to writhe in a tremendous fury, so much so that all earthquakes stem from Loki's writhings.[9]

In the poem Hyndluljóð, the female jötunn Hyndla tells the goddess Freyja various mythological genealogies. In one stanza, Hyndla notes that Þjazi "loved to shoot" and that Skaði was his daughter.[10]

Prose Edda

In the Prose Edda, Skaði is attested in two books: Gylfaginning and Skáldskaparmál.

Gylfaginning

 
Njörd's desire of the Sea (1908) by W. G. Collingwood
 
Skadi's longing for the Mountains (1908) by W. G. Collingwood

In chapter 23 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning, the enthroned figure of High details that Njörðr's wife is Skaði, that she is the daughter of the jötunn Þjazi, and recounts a tale involving the two. High recalls that Skaði wanted to live in the home once owned by her father called Þrymheimr. However, Njörðr wanted to live nearer to the sea. Subsequently, the two made an agreement that they would spend nine nights in Þrymheimr and then the next three nights in Njörðr's sea-side home Nóatún (or nine winters in Þrymheimr and another nine in Nóatún according to the Codex Regius.[11]). However, when Njörðr returned from the mountains to Nóatún, he said:

"Hateful for me are the mountains,
I was not long there,
only nine nights.
The howling of the wolves
sounded ugly to me
after the song of the swans."[12]

Skaði responded:

"Sleep I could not
on the sea beds
for the screeching of the bird.
That gull wakes me
when from the wide sea
he comes each morning."[12]

The sources for these stanzas are not provided in the Prose Edda or elsewhere. High says that afterward Skaði went back up to the mountains and lived in Þrymheimr, and there Skaði often travels on skis, wields a bow, and shoots wild animals. High notes that Skaði is also referred to as "ski god" (Old Norse Öndurgud) or Öndurdis and the "ski lady" (Öndurdís). In support, the above-mentioned stanza from the Poetic Edda poem Grímnismál is cited.[11] In the next chapter (24), High says that "after this", Njörðr "had two children": Freyr and Freyja. The name of the mother of the two children is not provided here.[13]

At the end of chapter 51 of Gylfaginning, High describes how the gods caught and bound Loki. Skaði is described as having taken a venomous snake and fastening it above the bound Loki, so that the venom may drip on to Loki's face. Loki's wife Sigyn sat by his side and caught the venom in a bowl. But when the bowl becomes full, she must leave to empty it, and then Loki is burned by the acidic liquid and he writhes in extreme pain, causing the earth to shake and resulting in what we know as an earthquake.[14]

Skáldskaparmál

 
Skade (1893) by Carl Fredrik von Saltza

In chapter 56 of the Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, Bragi recounts to Ægir how the gods killed Þjazi. Þjazi's daughter, Skaði, took a helmet, a coat of mail, and "all weapons of war" and traveled to Asgard, the home of the gods. Upon Skaði's arrival, the gods wished to atone for her loss and offered compensation. Skaði provides them with her terms of settlement, and the gods agree that Skaði may choose a husband from among themselves. However, Skaði must choose this husband by looking solely at their feet. Skaði saw a pair of feet that she found particularly attractive and said "I choose that one; there can be little that is ugly about Baldr." However, the owner of the feet turned out to be Njörðr.[15]

Skaði also included in her terms of settlement that the gods must do something she thought impossible for them to do: make her laugh. To do so, Loki tied one end of a cord around the beard of a nanny goat and the other end around his testicles. The goat and Loki drew one another back and forth, both squealing loudly. Loki dropped into Skaði's lap, and Skaði laughed, completing this part of her atonement. Finally, in compensation to Skaði, Odin took Þjazi's eyes, plunged them into the sky, and from the eyes made two stars.[15]

Further in Skáldskaparmál, a work by the skald Þórðr Sjáreksson is quoted. The poem refers to Skaði as "the wise god-bride" and notes that she "could not love the Van". Prose below the quote clarifies that this is a reference to Skaði's leaving of Njörðr.[16] In chapter 16, names for Loki are given, including "wrangler of Heimdall and Skaði".[17] In chapter 22, Skaði is referenced in the 10th century poem Haustlöng where the skald Þjóðólfr of Hvinir refers to an ox as "bow-string-Var's [Skaði's] whale".[18] In chapter 23, the skald Bragi Boddason refers to Þjazi as the "father of the ski-dis".[19] In chapter 32, Skaði is listed among six goddesses who attend a party held by Ægir.[20] In chapter 75, Skaði is included among a list of 27 ásynjur names.[21]

Heimskringla

In chapter 8 of the Heimskringla book Ynglinga saga, Skaði appears in an euhemerized account. This account details that Skaði had once married Njörðr but that she would not have sex with him, and that later Skaði married Odin. Skaði and Odin had "many sons". Only one of the names of these sons is provided: Sæmingr, a king of Norway. Two stanzas are presented by the skald Eyvindr skáldaspillir in reference. In the first stanza, Skaði is described as a jötunn and a "fair maiden". A portion of the second stanza is missing. The second stanza reads:

Of sea-bones,
and sons many
the ski-goddess
gat with Óthin[22]

Lee Hollander explains that "bones-of-the-sea" is a kenning for "rocks", and believes that this defective stanza undoubtedly referred to Skaði as a "dweller of the rocks" in connection with her association with mountains and skiing.[22]

Theories

Völsunga saga

 
A light snowdrift in the mountains of Norway

Another figure by the name of Skaði who appears in the first chapter of Völsunga saga. In the chapter, this Skaði—who is male—is the owner of a thrall by the name of Breði. Another man, Sigi—a son of Odin—went hunting one winter with the thrall. Sigi and the thrall Breði hunted throughout the day until evening, when they compared their kills. Sigi saw that the thrall's kills outdid his own, and so Sigi killed Breði and buried Breði's corpse in a snowdrift.[13]

That night, Sigi returned home and claimed that Breði had ridden out into the forest, that he had lost sight of Breði, and that he furthermore did not know what became of the thrall. Skaði doubted Sigi's explanation, suspected that Sigi was lying, and that Sigi had instead killed Breði. Skaði gathered men together to look for Breði and the group eventually found the corpse of Breði in a snowdrift. Skaði declared that henceforth the snowdrift should be called "Breði's drift," and ever since then people have referred to large snow drifts by that name. The fact that Sigi murdered Breði was evident, and so Sigi was considered an outlaw. Led by Odin, Sigi leaves the land, and Skaði is not mentioned again in the saga.[13]

Scholar Jesse Byock notes that the goddess Skaði is also associated with winter and hunting, and that the episode in Völsunga saga involving the male Skaði, Sigi, and Breði has been theorized as stemming from an otherwise lost myth.[23]

Other

Scholar John Lindow comments that the episode in Gylfaginning detailing Loki's antics with a goat may have associations with castration and a ritual involving making a goddess laugh. Lindow notes that Loki and Skaði appear to have had a special relationship, an example being Skaði's placement of the snake over Loki's face in Lokasenna and Gylfaginning.[24]

Due to their shared association with skiing and the fact that both place names referring to Ullr and Skaði appear most frequently in Sweden, some scholars have proposed a particular connection between the two gods.[24] On the other hand, Skaði may potentially be a masculine form and, as a result, some scholars have theorized that Skaði may have originally been a male deity.[25]

Scholar Hilda Ellis Davidson proposes that Skaði's cult may have thrived in Hålogaland, a province in northern Norway, because "she shows characteristics of the Sami people, who were renowned for skiing, shooting with the bow and hunting; her separation from Njord might point to a split between her cult and that of the Vanir in this region, where Scandinavians and the Sami were in close contact."[26]

Modern influence

 
Njörðr and Skaði on the Way to Nóatún (1882) by Friedrich Wilhelm Heine

Modern works of art depicting Skaði include Skadi und Niurd (illustration, 1883) by K. Ehrenberg and Skadi (1901) by Emil Doepler the Younger. Skaði also appears in Adam Oehlenschläger's poem (1819) Skades Giftermaal.[27]

Art deco depictions of both the god Ullr (1928) and Skaði (1929) appear on covers of the Swedish ski annual På Skidor, both skiing and wielding bows. E. John B. Allen notes that the deities are portrayed in a manner that "give[s] historical authority to this most important of Swedish ski journals, which began publication in 1893".[28]

A moon of the planet Saturn (Skathi) and a mountain on Venus (Skadi Mons) are named after the goddess.[29]

Named after the goddess, Skadi is the main character in a web comic by Katie Rice and Luke Cormican on the weekly webcomic site Dumm Comics.[30]

The Rowing Club of Rotterdam is named after Skaði.[31]

Skadi appears in the Japanese smartphone game Fate/Grand Order, summonable as a Caster-class Servant, where she is fused with Scáthách.[32]

An operator and her alter in the mobile video game Arknights is named after the goddess.[33]

In the 2002 Ensemble Studios game Age of Mythology, Skadi is one of nine minor Norse gods Norse players can worship.[34][35][36] Skadi is also one of the playable gods in the third-person multiplayer online battle arena game Smite.[37]

In 2017 video game Vikings: Wolves of Midgard, Skathi is one of the patron deities player can choose. She provides skills and bonuses for archers and her shrines grant environmental resistance.

References

Citations

  1. ^ McKinnell (2005:63).
  2. ^ Dumézil (1973:35).
  3. ^ Davidson (1993:62).
  4. ^ "scathe". Online Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. from the original on 28 March 2018. Retrieved 25 February 2014. Middle English skathe, from Old Norse skathi; akin to Old English sceatha 'injury', Greek askēthēs 'unharmed'
  5. ^ Larrington (1999:53).
  6. ^ Larrington (1999:61).
  7. ^ Larrington (1999:84).
  8. ^ Larrington (1999:93, 276).
  9. ^ Larrington (1999:95–96).
  10. ^ Larrington (1999:257).
  11. ^ a b Byock (2006:141)
  12. ^ a b Byock (2006:33–34).
  13. ^ a b c Byock (2006:35).
  14. ^ Byock (2006:70).
  15. ^ a b Faulkes (1995:61).
  16. ^ Faulkes (1995:75).
  17. ^ Faulkes (1995:77).
  18. ^ Faulkes (1995:87).
  19. ^ Faulkes (1995:89).
  20. ^ Faulkes (1995:95).
  21. ^ Faulkes (1995:157).
  22. ^ a b Hollander (2007:12).
  23. ^ Byock (1990:111).
  24. ^ a b Lindow (2001:268–270).
  25. ^ Davidson (1993:61).
  26. ^ Davidson (1993:61–62).
  27. ^ Simek (2007:287).
  28. ^ Allen (2007:16).
  29. ^ "Skadi Mons". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. from the original on 2019-09-16. Retrieved 2016-03-21.
  30. ^ "Dumm Comics". from the original on 2011-10-25. Retrieved 2011-10-25.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on February 5, 2016. Retrieved February 9, 2016.
  32. ^ "Fate: Skadi". Gamepress.gg. from the original on 2021-12-28. Retrieved 2022-01-04.
  33. ^ "Arknights: Skadi". Gamepress.gg. from the original on 2021-06-19. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
  34. ^ "The Minor Gods: Norse – Age of Mythology Wiki Guide – IGN". from the original on 2021-08-01. Retrieved 2021-08-02.
  35. ^ "Age of Mythology".
  36. ^ "Age of Mythology Reference Manual".
  37. ^ "Smite: Gods". from the original on 2021-07-31. Retrieved 2021-08-01.

General and cited references

External links

  •   Media related to Skaði at Wikimedia Commons

skaði, other, uses, skadi, disambiguation, norse, mythology, ɑː, norse, ˈskɑðe, sometimes, anglicized, skadi, skade, skathi, jötunn, goddess, associated, with, bowhunting, skiing, winter, mountains, attested, poetic, edda, compiled, 13th, century, from, earlie. For other uses see Skadi disambiguation In Norse mythology Skadi ˈ s k ɑː d i Old Norse ˈskɑde sometimes anglicized as Skadi Skade or Skathi is a jotunn and goddess associated with bowhunting skiing winter and mountains Skadi is attested in the Poetic Edda compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources the Prose Edda and in Heimskringla written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson and in the works of skalds Skadi Hunting in the Mountains 1901 by H L M Skadi is the daughter of the deceased THjazi and Skadi married the god Njordr as part of the compensation provided by the gods for killing her father THjazi In Heimskringla Skadi is described as having split up with Njordr and as later having married the god Odin and that the two produced many children together In both the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda Skadi is responsible for placing the serpent that drips venom onto the bound Loki Skadi is alternately referred to as Ondurgud Old Norse ski god and Ondurdis Old Norse ski dis The etymology of the name Skadi is uncertain but may be connected with the original form of Scandinavia Some place names in Scandinavia refer to Skadi Scholars have theorized a potential connection between Skadi and the god Ullr who is also associated with skiing a particular relationship with the jotunn Loki and that Scandinavia may be related to the name Skadi potentially meaning Skadi s island or the name may be connected to Old Norse nouns meaning either shadow or harm Skadi has inspired various works of art Contents 1 Etymology 2 Attestations 2 1 Poetic Edda 2 2 Prose Edda 2 2 1 Gylfaginning 2 2 2 Skaldskaparmal 2 3 Heimskringla 3 Theories 3 1 Volsunga saga 3 2 Other 4 Modern influence 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 General and cited references 6 External linksEtymology EditThe Old Norse name Skadi along with Sca n dinavia and Skaney may be related to Gothic skadus Old English sceadu Old Saxon scado and Old High German scato meaning shadow compare also the Irish Scathach a famous woman warrior known as the shadowy one Scholar John McKinnell comments that this etymology suggests Skadi may have once been a personification of the geographical region of Scandinavia or associated with the underworld 1 Georges Dumezil disagrees with the notion of Scadin avia as etymologically the island of the goddess Skadi Dumezil comments that the first element Scadin must have had or once had a connection to darkness or something else we cannot be sure of Dumezil says that rather the name Skadi derives from the name of the geographical region which was at the time no longer completely understood In connection Dumezil points to a parallel in Eriu a goddess personifying Ireland that appears in some Irish texts whose name he says comes from Ireland rather than the other way around 2 Alternatively Skadi may be connected with the Old Norse noun skadi harm 3 source of the Icelandic and Faroese skadi harm damage and cognate with English scathe unscathed scathing 4 Attestations EditSkadi is attested in poems found in the Poetic Edda in two books of the Prose Edda and in one Heimskringla book Poetic Edda Edit Njordr Skadi and Freyr as depicted in The Lovesickness of Frey 1908 by W G Collingwood In the Poetic Edda poem Grimnismal the god Odin disguised as Grimnir reveals to the young Agnarr the existence of twelve locations Odin mentions the location THrymheimr sixth in a single stanza In the stanza Odin details that the jotunn THjazi once lived there and that now his daughter Skadi does Odin describes THrymheimr as consisting of ancient courts and refers to Skadi as the shining bride of the gods 5 In the prose introduction to the poem Skirnismal the god Freyr has become heartsick for a fair girl the jotunn Gerdr he has spotted in Jotunheimr The god Njordr asks Freyr s servant Skirnir to talk to Freyr and in the first stanza of the poem Skadi also tells Skirnir to ask Freyr why he is so upset Skirnir responds that he expects harsh words from their son Freyr 6 In the prose introduction to the poem Lokasenna Skadi is referred to as the wife of Njordr and is cited as one of the goddesses attending AEgir s feast 7 After Loki has an exchange with the god Heimdallr Skadi interjects Skadi tells Loki that he is light hearted and that Loki will not be playing with his tail wagging free for much longer for soon the gods will bind Loki to a sharp rock with the ice cold entrails of his son Loki responds that even if this is so he was first and foremost at the killing of THjazi Skadi responds that if this is so baneful advice will always flow from her sanctuaries and plains Loki responds that Skadi was more friendly in speech when Skadi was in his bed an accusation he makes to most of the goddesses in the poem and is not attested elsewhere Loki s flyting then turns to the goddess Sif 8 In the prose section at the end of Lokasenna the gods catch Loki and bind him with the innards of his son Nari while they turn his son Vali into a wolf Skadi places a venomous snake above Loki s face Venom drips from the snake and Loki s wife Sigyn sits and holds a basin beneath the serpent catching the venom When the basin is full Sigyn must empty it and during that time the snake venom falls onto Loki s face causing him to writhe in a tremendous fury so much so that all earthquakes stem from Loki s writhings 9 In the poem Hyndluljod the female jotunn Hyndla tells the goddess Freyja various mythological genealogies In one stanza Hyndla notes that THjazi loved to shoot and that Skadi was his daughter 10 Prose Edda Edit In the Prose Edda Skadi is attested in two books Gylfaginning and Skaldskaparmal Gylfaginning Edit Njord s desire of the Sea 1908 by W G Collingwood Skadi s longing for the Mountains 1908 by W G Collingwood In chapter 23 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning the enthroned figure of High details that Njordr s wife is Skadi that she is the daughter of the jotunn THjazi and recounts a tale involving the two High recalls that Skadi wanted to live in the home once owned by her father called THrymheimr However Njordr wanted to live nearer to the sea Subsequently the two made an agreement that they would spend nine nights in THrymheimr and then the next three nights in Njordr s sea side home Noatun or nine winters in THrymheimr and another nine in Noatun according to the Codex Regius 11 However when Njordr returned from the mountains to Noatun he said Hateful for me are the mountains I was not long there only nine nights The howling of the wolves sounded ugly to me after the song of the swans 12 Skadi responded Sleep I could not on the sea beds for the screeching of the bird That gull wakes me when from the wide sea he comes each morning 12 The sources for these stanzas are not provided in the Prose Edda or elsewhere High says that afterward Skadi went back up to the mountains and lived in THrymheimr and there Skadi often travels on skis wields a bow and shoots wild animals High notes that Skadi is also referred to as ski god Old Norse Ondurgud or Ondurdis and the ski lady Ondurdis In support the above mentioned stanza from the Poetic Edda poem Grimnismal is cited 11 In the next chapter 24 High says that after this Njordr had two children Freyr and Freyja The name of the mother of the two children is not provided here 13 At the end of chapter 51 of Gylfaginning High describes how the gods caught and bound Loki Skadi is described as having taken a venomous snake and fastening it above the bound Loki so that the venom may drip on to Loki s face Loki s wife Sigyn sat by his side and caught the venom in a bowl But when the bowl becomes full she must leave to empty it and then Loki is burned by the acidic liquid and he writhes in extreme pain causing the earth to shake and resulting in what we know as an earthquake 14 Skaldskaparmal Edit Skade 1893 by Carl Fredrik von Saltza In chapter 56 of the Prose Edda book Skaldskaparmal Bragi recounts to AEgir how the gods killed THjazi THjazi s daughter Skadi took a helmet a coat of mail and all weapons of war and traveled to Asgard the home of the gods Upon Skadi s arrival the gods wished to atone for her loss and offered compensation Skadi provides them with her terms of settlement and the gods agree that Skadi may choose a husband from among themselves However Skadi must choose this husband by looking solely at their feet Skadi saw a pair of feet that she found particularly attractive and said I choose that one there can be little that is ugly about Baldr However the owner of the feet turned out to be Njordr 15 Skadi also included in her terms of settlement that the gods must do something she thought impossible for them to do make her laugh To do so Loki tied one end of a cord around the beard of a nanny goat and the other end around his testicles The goat and Loki drew one another back and forth both squealing loudly Loki dropped into Skadi s lap and Skadi laughed completing this part of her atonement Finally in compensation to Skadi Odin took THjazi s eyes plunged them into the sky and from the eyes made two stars 15 Further in Skaldskaparmal a work by the skald THordr Sjareksson is quoted The poem refers to Skadi as the wise god bride and notes that she could not love the Van Prose below the quote clarifies that this is a reference to Skadi s leaving of Njordr 16 In chapter 16 names for Loki are given including wrangler of Heimdall and Skadi 17 In chapter 22 Skadi is referenced in the 10th century poem Haustlong where the skald THjodolfr of Hvinir refers to an ox as bow string Var s Skadi s whale 18 In chapter 23 the skald Bragi Boddason refers to THjazi as the father of the ski dis 19 In chapter 32 Skadi is listed among six goddesses who attend a party held by AEgir 20 In chapter 75 Skadi is included among a list of 27 asynjur names 21 Heimskringla Edit In chapter 8 of the Heimskringla book Ynglinga saga Skadi appears in an euhemerized account This account details that Skadi had once married Njordr but that she would not have sex with him and that later Skadi married Odin Skadi and Odin had many sons Only one of the names of these sons is provided Saemingr a king of Norway Two stanzas are presented by the skald Eyvindr skaldaspillir in reference In the first stanza Skadi is described as a jotunn and a fair maiden A portion of the second stanza is missing The second stanza reads Of sea bones and sons many the ski goddess gat with othin 22 Lee Hollander explains that bones of the sea is a kenning for rocks and believes that this defective stanza undoubtedly referred to Skadi as a dweller of the rocks in connection with her association with mountains and skiing 22 Theories EditVolsunga saga Edit A light snowdrift in the mountains of Norway Another figure by the name of Skadi who appears in the first chapter of Volsunga saga In the chapter this Skadi who is male is the owner of a thrall by the name of Bredi Another man Sigi a son of Odin went hunting one winter with the thrall Sigi and the thrall Bredi hunted throughout the day until evening when they compared their kills Sigi saw that the thrall s kills outdid his own and so Sigi killed Bredi and buried Bredi s corpse in a snowdrift 13 That night Sigi returned home and claimed that Bredi had ridden out into the forest that he had lost sight of Bredi and that he furthermore did not know what became of the thrall Skadi doubted Sigi s explanation suspected that Sigi was lying and that Sigi had instead killed Bredi Skadi gathered men together to look for Bredi and the group eventually found the corpse of Bredi in a snowdrift Skadi declared that henceforth the snowdrift should be called Bredi s drift and ever since then people have referred to large snow drifts by that name The fact that Sigi murdered Bredi was evident and so Sigi was considered an outlaw Led by Odin Sigi leaves the land and Skadi is not mentioned again in the saga 13 Scholar Jesse Byock notes that the goddess Skadi is also associated with winter and hunting and that the episode in Volsunga saga involving the male Skadi Sigi and Bredi has been theorized as stemming from an otherwise lost myth 23 Other Edit Scholar John Lindow comments that the episode in Gylfaginning detailing Loki s antics with a goat may have associations with castration and a ritual involving making a goddess laugh Lindow notes that Loki and Skadi appear to have had a special relationship an example being Skadi s placement of the snake over Loki s face in Lokasenna and Gylfaginning 24 Due to their shared association with skiing and the fact that both place names referring to Ullr and Skadi appear most frequently in Sweden some scholars have proposed a particular connection between the two gods 24 On the other hand Skadi may potentially be a masculine form and as a result some scholars have theorized that Skadi may have originally been a male deity 25 Scholar Hilda Ellis Davidson proposes that Skadi s cult may have thrived in Halogaland a province in northern Norway because she shows characteristics of the Sami people who were renowned for skiing shooting with the bow and hunting her separation from Njord might point to a split between her cult and that of the Vanir in this region where Scandinavians and the Sami were in close contact 26 Modern influence Edit Njordr and Skadi on the Way to Noatun 1882 by Friedrich Wilhelm Heine Modern works of art depicting Skadi include Skadi und Niurd illustration 1883 by K Ehrenberg and Skadi 1901 by Emil Doepler the Younger Skadi also appears in Adam Oehlenschlager s poem 1819 Skades Giftermaal 27 Art deco depictions of both the god Ullr 1928 and Skadi 1929 appear on covers of the Swedish ski annual Pa Skidor both skiing and wielding bows E John B Allen notes that the deities are portrayed in a manner that give s historical authority to this most important of Swedish ski journals which began publication in 1893 28 A moon of the planet Saturn Skathi and a mountain on Venus Skadi Mons are named after the goddess 29 Named after the goddess Skadi is the main character in a web comic by Katie Rice and Luke Cormican on the weekly webcomic site Dumm Comics 30 The Rowing Club of Rotterdam is named after Skadi 31 Skadi appears in the Japanese smartphone game Fate Grand Order summonable as a Caster class Servant where she is fused with Scathach 32 An operator and her alter in the mobile video game Arknights is named after the goddess 33 In the 2002 Ensemble Studios game Age of Mythology Skadi is one of nine minor Norse gods Norse players can worship 34 35 36 Skadi is also one of the playable gods in the third person multiplayer online battle arena game Smite 37 In 2017 video game Vikings Wolves of Midgard Skathi is one of the patron deities player can choose She provides skills and bonuses for archers and her shrines grant environmental resistance References EditCitations Edit McKinnell 2005 63 Dumezil 1973 35 Davidson 1993 62 scathe Online Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam Webster Archived from the original on 28 March 2018 Retrieved 25 February 2014 Middle English skathe from Old Norse skathi akin to Old English sceatha injury Greek askethes unharmed Larrington 1999 53 Larrington 1999 61 Larrington 1999 84 Larrington 1999 93 276 Larrington 1999 95 96 Larrington 1999 257 a b Byock 2006 141 a b Byock 2006 33 34 a b c Byock 2006 35 Byock 2006 70 a b Faulkes 1995 61 Faulkes 1995 75 Faulkes 1995 77 Faulkes 1995 87 Faulkes 1995 89 Faulkes 1995 95 Faulkes 1995 157 a b Hollander 2007 12 Byock 1990 111 a b Lindow 2001 268 270 Davidson 1993 61 Davidson 1993 61 62 Simek 2007 287 Allen 2007 16 Skadi Mons Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature Archived from the original on 2019 09 16 Retrieved 2016 03 21 Dumm Comics Archived from the original on 2011 10 25 Retrieved 2011 10 25 Wil je lid worden bij Skadi Neem dan een kijkje op de website voor nieuwe leden Kom roeien bij Skadi Archived from the original on February 5 2016 Retrieved February 9 2016 Fate Skadi Gamepress gg Archived from the original on 2021 12 28 Retrieved 2022 01 04 Arknights Skadi Gamepress gg Archived from the original on 2021 06 19 Retrieved 2021 06 17 The Minor Gods Norse Age of Mythology Wiki Guide IGN Archived from the original on 2021 08 01 Retrieved 2021 08 02 Age of Mythology Age of Mythology Reference Manual Smite Gods Archived from the original on 2021 07 31 Retrieved 2021 08 01 General and cited references Edit Allen E John B 2007 The Culture and Sport of Skiing Amherst Mass University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 1 55849 601 7 Byock Jesse trans 1990 The Saga of the Volsungs The Norse Epic of Sigurd the Dragon Slayer University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 23285 3 Byock Jesse trans 2006 The Prose Edda Penguin Classics ISBN 0 14 044755 5 Davidson Hilda Ellis 1993 The Lost Beliefs of Northern Europe Routledge ISBN 0 203 40850 0 Dumezil Georges 1973 From Myth to Fiction the Saga of Hadingus University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 16972 3 Faulkes Anthony trans 1995 Edda Everyman ISBN 0 460 87616 3 Hollander Lee Milton trans 2007 Heimskringla History of the Kings of Norway Archived 2017 01 26 at the Wayback Machine University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 73061 8 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 Archived 2017 01 26 at the Wayback Machine Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515382 0 McKinnell John 2005 Meeting the Other in Norse Myth and Legend D S Brewer ISBN 1 84384 042 1 Simek Rudolf 2007 Dictionary of Northern Mythology Translated by Angela Hall D S Brewer ISBN 0 85991 513 1 External links Edit Media related to Skadi at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Skadi amp oldid 1125427002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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