The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2010, Qupperneq 40

The Icelandic connection - 01.06.2010, Qupperneq 40
38 ICELANDIC CONNECTION Vol. 63 #1 by the sons of Ivaldi. The dwarves take this bet and make a bore with bristles of gold, a 7 c gold ring called Draupnir' and iron hammer called Mjollnir. While these treasures were being created Loki disguised as a fly tries to thwart the dwarves so he may win the bet, yet fails in his attempt and all that is done by his thwarting is the hammer came out with a short handle. Loki ends up keeping his head that he lost in the bet by further trickery in saying he hadn’t bet his neck so there was no way they could cut it off. Mjollnir is thought to be of the utmost importance to the AEsir gods because it is what ‘holds Asgard secure against the giants’ (Davidson, Gods and Myths 80) and is the all that can keep Loki at bay, as we see in vs. 55 of Loki’s Quarrel (Larrington 94): ‘All the mountains shake; I think Thor must be on his way home; He’ll bring peace to those who quarrel here, all the gods and men’ As the Aisir greatly value Mjollnir, Thor too prizes it above all else. In Thrym’s poem Thor awakens to find his hammer stolen and sends Loki to find its whereabouts. Loki returns to tell that the giant Thrym has hidden it eight leagues below the earth and will not return it unless Freyja is brought as his wife. Thor commands Freyja to go to Thrym so that he may have his hammer back, yet she refus- es with the other AEsir on her side. Then Heimdall suggests that Thor should dress up as Freyja to retrieve his hammer himself and although Thor is less than pleased with this idea he agrees to do it, ‘because he knew that the moment was bound to come when the hammer would be brought out and laid upon his lap, and he would thus get it back into his own hands’ (Davidson, Gods and Myths 80). The poem ends with Thor being brought the hammer whilst in disguise and then killing Thrym for his treachery. Early Icelanders thought of Thor in the highest degree and showed their loyalty to him by wearing pendants in the shape of Thor’s hammer around their necks. These pendants were also believed to be good luck charms. The Christians tried to convert the Icelanders to their religion, but many stayed true to their Pegan beliefs and continued to worship Thor. In early 1200 a new Thor’s hammer was designed that resembled an upside down Christian cross (see figure 2). Perhaps this was simply a sign of Christianity merging into Iceland or maybe it was the Pegan’s way of holding on to what they believed in while still having the respect of those around them that believed in only one God. Though Mjollnir helps Thor defeat giants, defend Asgard and restrain Loki, let us not forget it is Thor himself who accomplish- es these tasks. Thor is extremely audacious and although hot tempered at times he is well loved and appreciated by all the AEsir. In chapter 3: The Giant Hrungnir of skaldska- parmal in Snorri’s Edda we see just how dependable Thor is when the AEsir grow tired of the giant Hrungnir’s boasting that he is going to ‘lift up Valhalla and take it to Giant Land, bury Asgard, and kill all the gods except Freyja and Sif, whom he wanted to take home with him’ (Sturluson 87). Thor enters Valhalla with his hammer quickly after the AEsir call upon him and asks who allowed the giant to drink there and why Freyja is serving him. The giant replies that it was Odinn who invited him there. Thor then tells Hrungnir that he would be sorry that he accepted that invitation and although the giant is very cunning and tries to trick Thor into defeat by allowing him to return to Giant Land and retrieve weapons and a giant man made of clay, Thor still whole heartedly defeats the giant for the AEsir. Amongst Thor’s ability to stand up for the AEsir, he is also known to be able to eat and drink an impressive amount. As Snorri shows us in chapters 46 and 47 of Gylfaginning, Thor takes part in a contest to prove to Utgarda-Loki ^ how much he can drink. He is brought a horn from which he is to drink as much as he can from, and although with each drink he takes, Thor only slightly lowers the level of liquid in the horn, we later learn that Utgarda-Loki has tricked Thor and the horn he has been drinking out of is in fact the ocean so the fact that Thor even lowered the amount of liquid at all is a very impressive 7 The bore with Bristles of Gold becomes Freyja’s and The ring called Draupnir becomes Odinn’s. It is said that Draupnir has the ability to multiply itself. 8 Utgarda-Loki is the King of Utgard which is a fortress in Giant Land

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