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  2. Heitstrenging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heitstrenging

    Heitstrenging (pl. heitstrengingar) is an Old Norse practice of swearing of a solemn oath to perform a future action. They were often performed at Yule and other large social events, where they played a role in establishing and maintaining good relationships principally between members of the aristocratic warrior elite.

  3. Sonargöltr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonargöltr

    It was formerly usual to spell the word sónargǫltr and to interpret it as "atonement-boar" (the rare element sónar-can also mean "sacrifice"). [ 10 ] [ 18 ] However, following Eduard Sievers , it is usually now spelled with a short o and taken as meaning "herd boar, leading boar", as Lombardic sonarþair is defined in the Edictus Rothari as ...

  4. Hræsvelgr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hræsvelgr

    This article relating to a Norse myth or legend is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  5. Völsung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Völsung

    Völsung (Old Norse: Vǫlsungr [ˈvɔlsuŋɡr̩], Old English: Wæls) is a figure in Germanic mythology, where he is the eponymous ancestor of the Völsung family (Old Norse: Vǫlsungar, Old English: Wælsings), which includes the hero Sigurð. [1]

  6. Einherjar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Einherjar

    Valhalla (1905) by Emil Doepler. In Norse mythology, the einherjar (singular einheri; literally "army of one", "those who fight alone") [1] [2] are those who have died in battle and are brought to Valhalla by valkyries.

  7. Symbel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbel

    Symbel and sumbl are Germanic terms for "feast, banquet".. Accounts of the symbel are preserved in the Anglo-Saxon Beowulf (lines 489–675 and 1491–1500), Dream of the Rood (line 141) and Judith (line 15), Old Saxon Heliand (line 3339), and the Old Norse Lokasenna (stanza 8) as well as other Eddic and Saga texts, such as in the Heimskringla account of the funeral ale held by King Sweyn, or ...

  8. Lævateinn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lævateinn

    Lævateinn has variously been asserted to be a dart (or some projectile weapon), or a sword, or a wand, by different commentators and translators. It is glossed as literally meaning a "wand" causing damage by several sources, yet some of these same sources claim simultaneously that the name is a kenning for sword.

  9. Hervararkviða - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hervararkviða

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