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Hilda (also known as Hildafolk [1]) is a British children's graphic novel series written and illustrated by Luke Pearson and published by Nobrow Press. A television series adaptation was released on Netflix on 21 September 2018.
Hilda is an animated television series based on the graphic novel series of the same name by Luke Pearson.Produced by Silvergate Media and Mercury Filmworks, the series follows the adventures of fearless Hilda, an 11-year-old [a] blue-haired girl who, along with her mother Johanna and her deerfox [b] Twig, moves to the fictional city of Trolberg after their old residency in the outskirts of a ...
Hildr or Hild is one of the Valkyries in Norse mythology, a personification of battle; Hild or Hilda of Whitby is a Christian saint who was a British abbess and nun in the Middle Ages; Hild (Oh My Goddess!), the ultimate Demon in Hell known as the Daimakaichō in the Oh My Goddess! series; Hild, a 2013 novel about Hilda of Whitby by Nicola Griffith
Hilda. Rating: TV-Y7. ... That said, there’s no way to entirely remove violence from Greek mythology and the peril is persistent, so more sensitive viewers should proceed with caution.
"Brunnhild" (1897) by Gaston Bussière. Brunhild, also known as Brunhilda or Brynhild (Old Norse: Brynhildr [ˈbrynˌhildz̠], Middle High German: Brünhilt, Modern German: Brünhild or Brünhilde), is a female character from Germanic heroic legend.
Hilda Roderick Ellis Davidson FSA (born Hilda Roderick Ellis; 1 October 1914 – 12 January 2006) was an English folklorist. She was a scholar at the University of Cambridge and The Folklore Society , and specialized in the study of Celtic and Germanic religion and folklore.
Hilda is one of several feminine given names derived from the name Hild, formed from Old Norse hildr, meaning 'battle'. Hild , a Nordic-German Bellona , [ 1 ] was a Valkyrie who conveyed fallen warriors to Valhalla .
In her 1948 work on death in Norse mythology and religion, The Road to Hel, Hilda Ellis Davidson argued that the description of Hel as a goddess in surviving sources appeared to be literary personification, the word hel generally being "used simply to signify death or the grave", which she states "naturally lends itself to personification by ...