Angrboða (Old Norse:[ˈɑŋɡz̠ˌboðɑ]; alsoAngrboda) is ajötunn inNorse mythology. She is the mate ofLoki and the mother of monsters.[1] She is only mentioned once in thePoetic Edda (Völuspá hin skamma) as the mother ofFenrir byLoki. TheProse Edda (Gylfaginning) describes her as "a giantess inJötunheimar" and as the mother of three monsters: the wolfFenrir, theMidgard serpentJörmungandr, and the ruler of the deadHel.[1]
TheOld Norse nameAngrboða has been translated as 'the one who brings grief',[2] 'she-who-offers-sorrow',[1] or 'harm-bidder'.[3] The first element is related to the English word "anger", but means "sorrow" or "regret" in Old Norse, the later meaning is retained in Scandinavian languages. In Norwegian and Danish the word is rendered as "anger" while Icelandic and Faroese has "angur" and Swedish "ånger". The second element "boða" is cognate with the English wordbode as in "this does not bode well".
According to some scholars, the nameAngrboða is probably a late invention dating from no earlier than the 12th century, although the tradition of the three monsters born of Loki and ajötunn may be of greater age.[2][3]
InVöluspá hin skamma (ShortVöluspá; a poem ofHyndluljóð), Angrboða is mentioned as the mate of Loki and mother of the wolf (Fenrir).[1]
Loki sired the wolf on Angrboda,
and got Sleipnir on Svadilfari;
the witch alone seemed most evil
the one that came from the brother of Byleipt.
— Völuspá hin skamma, 40, trans.J. Lindow, 2002.
Gylfaginning (Beguiling ofGylfi) mentions the three monstrous children of Angrboða: the wolf Fenrir, the Midgard serpent Jörmungand, and the ruler of the dead Hel.[1][4]
There was a giantess called Angrboda in Giantland [Jötunheimr]. With her Loki had three children. One was Fenrir, the second Iormungand [the Midgard serpent], the third is Hel. And when the gods realized that these three siblings were being brought up in Giantland, and when the gods traced prophecies stating that from these siblings great mischief and disaster would arise for them, then they all felt evil was to be expected from them, to begin with because of their mother’s nature, but still worse because of their father's.
— Gylfaginning, 27–34, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.
Völuspá (Prophecy of theVölva) also mentions ajötunn living inJárnvid (Ironwood, the forest where femalejötnarlive), most likely identified with Angrboða.[5]
To the east sat the old lady in Járnvid
And raised there the kinfolk of Fenrir.
— Völuspá, 40, trans.J. Lindow, 2002.
Thisstanza is paraphrased bySnorri Sturluson inGylfaginning:[6]
Then spoke Gangleri: ‘What is the origin of the wolves?’
High said: ‘A certain giantess lives east of Midgard in a forest called Ironwood. In that forest live trollwives called Iarnvidiur. The ancient giantess breeds as sons many giants and all in wolf shapes, and it is from them that these wolves are descended. And they say that from this clan will come a most mighty one called Moongarm. He will fill himself with the lifeblood of everyone that dies, and he will swallow heavenly bodies and spatter heaven and all the skies with blood. As a result the sun will lose its shine and winds will then be violent and will rage to and fro. Thus it says inVoluspa:
In the east lives the old one, in Ironwood, and breeds there Fenrir’s kind. Out of them all comes one in particular, sun’s snatcher in troll’s guise.
He gorges the life of doomed men, reddens gods' halls with red gore. Dark is sunshine for summers after, all weathers hostile. Know you yet, or what?’
— Gylfaginning, 12–14, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.
In the stanza 42 ofVöluspá,Eggþér is portrayed as theherder of thejötunn who lives inJárnviðr (Ironwood).[7]Peter H. Salus and Paul B. Taylor argue that he may have been Angrboða's wolf-herder.[8]
InGod of War Ragnarök (2022), Angrboða (in-game spelt as Angrboda) appears as a recurring character in the story.[9]
Saturn's moonAngrboda is named after her.