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Gunnlöð

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(Redirected fromGunnlod)
Norse mythical character
"Gunnlod" redirects here. For the moon of Saturn, seeGunnlod (moon).
Gunnlöð byAnders Zorn (1886).

Gunnlǫð (Old Norse:[ˈɡunːlɔð]; alsoGunnlöd) is ajötunn inNorse mythology. She is the daughter ofSuttungr, for whom she guards themead of poetry.Saturn's moonGunnlod is named after her.

Name

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TheOld Norse nameGunnlǫð has been translated as 'war-invitation',[1] or 'battle-invitation'.[2] It stems from Old Norsegunnr ('battle').[3]

Attestations

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Skáldskaparmál (The Language of Poetry) mentions that thejötunnSuttungr has entrusted his daughter Gunnlöð to the guard of themead of poetry:

Suttung took the mead home with him and put it for safe keeping in a place called Hnitbiorg, setting his daughter Gunnlod in charge of it.

— Skáldskaparmál, 57–58, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987

ButOdin, in the form of a snake, manages to gain access to the chamber within theHnitbjörg mountain where the mead is kept. The god seduces the guardian Gunnlöð, and sleeps with her three nights.[4][2] In return, Gunnlöð allows Odin to obtain three drinks of the mead, after which he immediately flies himself out of the cavern as an eagle.[2]

Bolverk [Odin] went to where Gunnlod was and lay with her for three nights and then she let him drink three draughts of the mead. In the first draught he drank everything out of Odrerir, and in the second out of Bodn, in the third out of Son, and then he had all the mead. Then he turned himself into the form of an eagle and flew as hard as he could.

— Skáldskaparmál, 58, trans. A. Faulkes, 1987

InHávamál (Sayings of the High One), the account given by Odin differs in a number of details, and the narrative pays most attention to Gunnlöð herself.[4]

Gunnlöd gave me, on the golden throne, a drink of the dear-won mead.
In return I gave her bad recompense,
for her whole heart,
for her sorrowful soul.

— Hávamál, 105, trans.A. Orchard, 1997.

I doubt I would have returned
back from the giants’ domain,
if I hadn’t had Gunnlöd, that fine woman
whom I laid in my arms.

— Hávamál, 108, trans.A. Orchard, 1997.

References

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toGunnlöð.
  1. ^Orchard 1997, p. 68.
  2. ^abcLindow 2002, p. 156.
  3. ^de Vries 1962, p. 195.
  4. ^abOrchard 1997, p. 69.

Bibliography

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