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Hrungnir

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Thor slays Hrungnir, illustration byLudwig Pietsch(1865)

Hrungnir(Old Norse:[ˈhruŋɡnez̠],'brawler') is ajötunninNorse mythology.He is described as made of stone and is ultimately killed in a duel with thethunder godThor.

Prior to his demise, Hrungnir engaged in a wager withOdinin which Odin stakes his head on his horse,Sleipnir,being faster than Hrungnir's steedGullfaxi.During the race, which Sleipnir wins, Hrungnir entersÁsgard,and there becomes drunk and abusive. After they grow weary of him, the gods call on the godThorto battle Hrungnir. He is slain by Thor's hammerMjölnir.

Hrungnir is comparable to theHurrianUllikummi,a stone-giant who grew so quickly that he reached the heavens. He was slain by the thunder-godTeshubwho is equivalent also to theLuwianTarḫunzandHittiteTarḫunna.

Name[edit]

The Old Norse name Hrungnir has been translated as 'brawler',[1]or as 'big person, strong man', 'noise-maker'.[2]

Attestations[edit]

Prose Edda[edit]

InSkáldskaparmál(The Language of Poetry), written in the 13th century CE bySnorri Sturluson,the god Odin is portrayed as riding his horseSleipnirintoJötunheimwhen he meets the jötunn Hrungnir, mounted on his horseGullfaxi(Gold-mane).[3]They have a short verbal exchange about the quality of their respective horse, during which Odin states his willingness to bet his head (his life) on the result. Hrungnir declares that he has "a horse that must be much longe-paced, it [is] called Gullfaxi." Then Hrungnir gets angry, leaps upon his horse and follows Odin in a race towardsÁsgard,"intending to pay him back for his boasting".[4]AlthoughSleipnirturns out to be the fastest horse, the race is very close and Odin is not able to keep Hrungnir out of the place of gods, Ásgard. There, the Æsir (gods) invites Hrungnir for a drink.[5]

Hrungnir becomes so intoxicated that he threatens to remove "Val-hall and take it to Giantland" and to "bury Asgard and kill all the gods", besides the beautiful goddessesFreyjaandSifwhom he intends to keep for himself. The gods then call the thunder-god Thor to expel the unwanted guest, and the two of them agree to a duel.[1][3]Thor arrives at the appointment with his servantÞjálfi,and Hrungnir is escorted by Mokkurkálfi ('Mist-calf'), a mighty creature made of clay, and with the heart of a mare. But the giant Mokkurkálfi is said to be "quite terrified" and he "wets himself" at the sight of Thor, whereas Hrungnir, whose heart, head and shield appear to be made of stone, is "standing unguardedly". After the fight is over and Hrungnir eventually defeated, Thor turns out to be stuck under thejötunn's leg. Thor's three-year-old son Magni is the only one able to lift up the gigantic leg among all the present Æsir (gods). As a reward, Thor offers him Hrungnir's horseGullfaxi.[6][3]

Then he saw Thor in an As-rage, he was travelling at an enormous rate and swung his hammer and threw it from a great distance at Hrungnir. Hrungnir raised the whet stone with both hands, threw it in return. It met the hammer in flight, the whetstone, and the whetstone broke in two. One piece fell to the ground, and from it have come all whetstone rocks. The other piece crashed into Thor’s head so that he fell forwards to the ground, but the hammer Miollnir hit the middle of Hrungnir’s head and shattered his skull into small fragments, and he fell forwards over Thor so that his leg lay across Thor’s neck. Thialfi attacked Mokkurkalfi, and he fell with little glory.

— Skáldskaparmál,17, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.

Skaldic poetry[edit]

Haustlöng(Autumn-long,14–20), a poem written by the early 10th-centuryskaldÞjóðólfr of Hvinirand from which Snorri claims to derive his own account, depicts Thor's journey to the duel while the cosmological elements are reacting: the "ground all low" (earth) is "battered with hail" and "all the hawk's sanctuaries" (the skies) are in flame; "Svolnir’s widow" (Odin's consort,Jörð[Earth]) practically split apart ".[7][8]Then Hrungnir and Thor fight by hurling their weapons at each other (the jötunn's whetstone andThor's hammer), and the poem alludes to the removal of the piece of whetstone from Thor's head.[3]

Baldr’s brother [Thor] did not spare there the greedy enemy of men [Hrungnir], Mountains shook and rocks smashed; heaven above burned. I have heard that the watcher [Hrungnir] of the dark bone [rock] of the land [sea] of Haki’s carriages [ships] moved violently in opposition when he saw his warlike slayer.

Swiftly flew the pale ring-ice [shield] beneath the soles of the rock-guarder [giant]. The bonds [gods] caused this, the ladies of the fray [valkyries] wished it. The rock-gentleman [giant] did not have to wait long after that for a swift blow from the tough multitude-smashing friend [Thor] of hammer-face-troll [Miollnir].

— Þjóðólfr of Hvinir,Haustlöng,16–17[Skáld 17],trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.

Compared to Snorri's account,Þjóðólfremphasizes more on Thor's journey to the battle, escorted by noise and flames, while Snorri makes relatively little of it and also describes Hrungnir's journey.[9]Thor's servantÞjálfiand Hrungnir's clay-made giant Mokkurkálfi are absent fromÞjóðólfr’s 10th-century version.[10]

InRagnarsdrápa,the 9th-century skaldBragi Boddasonmentions "Hrungnir's skull-splitter".[11]

And the ugly ring [serpent] of the side-oared ship’s road [sea] stared up spitefully at Hrungnir’s skull-splitter

— Bragi Boddason,Ragnarsdrápa,Skáld 4, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.

Bragi also refers to the shield as "Hrungnir's sole-blade" and refers to Hrungnir as the "thief ofÞrúðr",the daughter of Thor.[12]

Will you hear, Hrafnketil, how I shall praise the sole-blade of the thief of Thrud [Hrungnir], which has fine colour planted on it, and the prince?

— Bragi Boddason,Ragnarsdrápa,Skáld 49, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.

Theories[edit]

According to scholarJohn Lindow,the reaction of cosmological elements (the earth is cracking, the sky burning) during Thor's journey to the battle, as told inHaustlöng,"suggests the cosmic nature of Thor’s duel with Hrungnir".[13]The motivation for the duel, which is not mentioned by 10th-century skaldÞjóðólfrinHaustlöng,could have originally been the abduction of Thor's daughterÞrúðrby the stone-made giant Hrungnir, as suggested by an earlier kenning by 9th-century skaldBragi:'leaf of the soles of the thief of Þrúðr [SHIELD]' (blað ilja Þrúðar þjófs).[10]

Georges Dumézilargues that the story involves the initiation ofÞjálfiby Thor in the killing of the clay-made monster.[14]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^abOrchard 1997,p. 91.
  2. ^Lindow 1996,p. 13 (note 9).
  3. ^abcdLindow 2001,p. 185.
  4. ^Lindow 1996,p. 9.
  5. ^Lindow 1996,p. 10.
  6. ^Orchard 1997,p. 92.
  7. ^Faulkes 1987,p. 80.
  8. ^Lindow 1996,p. 3.
  9. ^Lindow 1996,pp. 4–5.
  10. ^abLindow 1996,p. 6.
  11. ^Faulkes 1987,p. 73.
  12. ^Faulkes 1987,p. 120.
  13. ^Lindow 1996,p. 5.
  14. ^Dumézil 1974,pp. 68–71.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Dumézil, Georges(1974).Gods of the Ancient Northmen.University of California Press.ISBN978-0-520-03507-2.
  • Faulkes, Anthony, trans. (1987).Edda(1995 ed.). Everyman.ISBN0-460-87616-3.
  • Lindow, John(1996)."Thor's Duel with Hrungnir"(PDF).Alvíssmál: Forschungen zur Mittelalterlichen Kultur Scandinaviens.6:3–18.
  • Lindow, John(2001).Norse Mythology: A Guide to Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs.Oxford University Press.ISBN978-0-19-983969-8.
  • Orchard, Andy(1997).Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend.Cassell.ISBN978-0-304-34520-5.