Alvaldi (alsoÖlvaldi;Old Norse 'all-powerful') is ajötunn inNorse mythology, presented as the father ofÞjazi.[1][2]Saturn's moonAlvaldi is named after him.
TheOld Norse nameAlvadi means 'all-powerful'.[3][2] The nameÖlvadi, found inSkáldskaparmál, appears to be a variant form referring to the same character.[4]
InHárbarðsljóð (Lay of Hárbarðr), Alvadi is mentioned as the father of the jötunnÞjazi.[3][2]
InSkáldskaparmál (Language of Poetry), he is named Ölvadi and portrayed as the father of Þjazi,Gangr andIði. Described as "very rich in gold", Ölvadi divides the inheritance among his sons in such a way that each may take the same mouthful of gold.[4][2] According to philologistRudolf Simek, the story is probably the remnant of an old myth.[4]
Then spoke Ægir: ‘Thiassi seems to me to have been very powerful, what was his origin?’
Bragi replied: ‘His father was called Olvaldi, and you will find what I have to say about him remarkable. He was very rich in gold, and when he died and his sons had to divide their inheritance, they measured out the gold when they divided it by each in turn taking a mouthful, all of them the same number. One of them was Thiassi, the second Idi, the third Gang. And we now have this expression among us, to call gold the mouth-tale of these giants, and we conceal it in secret language or in poetry by calling it speech or words or talk of these giants.’— Skáldskaparmál, 56–57, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987.
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