Topic Archive

Myths about Gram

Explore myths connected by the recurring theme of Gram across cultures, characters, and sacred places.

10 myths currently featured for Gram.

Sun Wukong Surviving 49 Days in Laozi's Eight Trigrams Furnace and Gaining Fiery Golden Eyes

🐉 Chinese MythologyMount Lao, Shandong, ChinaSun Wukong • Laozi (Lord Lao) • Jade Emperor

After consuming the Peaches of Immortality and Laozi's Golden Pills, Sun Wukong is sentenced to be refined in the Eight Trigrams Furnace to extract the elixirs and destroy his indestructible body. However, the clever Monkey King survives the forty-nine-day ordeal by hiding in the wind-protected corner of the vessel. He emerges with increased strength and the Fiery Golden Eyes, a mystical...

The Curse of Tulsi and the Origin of the Shaligram

🕉️ Hindu MythologyGandaki River, Muktinath, NepalVishnu • Tulsi • Vrinda

This myth describes how the goddess Tulsi, originally a mortal woman named Vrinda, cursed Lord Vishnu to transform into the black Shaligram stones found in the Gandaki River. The curse was born of a divine deception where Vishnu disguised himself as Vrinda's husband to break her vow of chastity, which was the only way to defeat the invincible demon king Jalandhara. Consequently, Vishnu turned...

Drona Cruelly Demanding Ekalavya's Right Thumb as His Teacher's Fee

🕉️ Hindu MythologyEkalavya Temple, Khandsa, GurugramEkalavya • Dronacharya • Arjuna

Ekalavya, a young tribal prince, was rejected by the master archer Drona but continued to learn in secret by practicing before a clay statue of the teacher. When Drona discovered that Ekalavya had surpassed his royal students, he demanded the boy's right thumb as Guru Dakshina to ensure his favorite pupil, Arjuna, remained the greatest. Ekalavya unhesitatingly severed his thumb, demonstrating...

The Legendary Giant Starkad Slain, His Torso Running Without a Head

🪓 Norse MythologyUppsala, SwedenStarkad • Odin • Thor

Starkad the Old, a legendary giant and warrior cursed by Thor and blessed by Odin, reaches the end of his three unnaturally long lifespans. Seeking a warrior's death, he provokes the young nobleman Hatherus into beheading him, resulting in a supernatural display where his headless body continues to move with terrifying vitality.

Hadding's Descent into the Underworld

🪓 Norse MythologyLake Tissø, DenmarkHadding • Mysterious Guide • Gram

The legendary Danish king Hadding is led by a mysterious woman from the underworld beneath the earth during a winter feast. They traverse a landscape of mist, cross a river of weapons, and witness the eternal battle of fallen warriors. Upon reaching a high wall that separates the living from the dead, Hadding witnesses a miracle of rebirth before returning to the mortal realm with a deep...

Guttorm's Betrayal and the Final Stroke of Gram

🪓 Norse MythologyRoskilde, DenmarkSigurd • Guttorm • Gudrun

Following a complex web of deceit involving the valkyrie Brynhild and the Burgundian kings, the legendary hero Sigurd is assassinated in his bed by Guttorm. Despite being mortally wounded, Sigurd uses his final moments to hurl his magical sword, Gram, at his fleeing murderer, splitting the assassin in two. This tragic event marks the end of the greatest dragon-slayer of the Völsung lineage...

Hiordis Gathering the Shards of the Shattered Sword Gram

🪓 Norse MythologyHedebyHiordis • Sigmund • Odin

Following the catastrophic battle where King Sigmund fell, his wife Hiordis sought him out among the dead. She found him mortally wounded by the intervention of Odin, who had shattered Sigmund's divine sword, Gram. Hiordis carefully collected the fragments of the blade, preserving them as a legacy for their unborn son, Sigurd, who would eventually reforge the weapon to slay the dragon Fafnir.

Sigmund Fighting in His Final Battle Against King Lyngvi

🪓 Norse MythologyHedeby, Schleswig-Holstein, GermanySigmund • King Lyngvi • Hjordis

In his final days, the legendary Völsung king Sigmund faces the vengeful King Lyngvi in a massive battle near the coastal settlement of Hedeby. Despite his advanced age, Sigmund remains undefeated until the god Odin intervenes, shattering Sigmund's magical sword, Gram, with a spear. This act marks the hero's death but secures the legacy of the shards for his unborn son, Sigurd the dragon-slayer.

Sigurd Beheading the Treacherous Smith Regin

🪓 Norse MythologyRamsund, Södermanland, SwedenSigurd • Regin • Fafnir

After slaying the dragon Fafnir, the hero Sigurd tastes the creature's blood and gains the ability to understand the language of birds. These birds warn him that his foster father, the master smith Regin, intends to betray and murder him for the dragon's cursed gold. Acting swiftly, Sigurd uses the sword Gram to behead Regin, ending the cycle of treachery within the Volsung cycle.

Sigmund Pulling Odin’s Sword from the Branstock Tree

🪓 Norse MythologyBorg Chieftain's Hall, Lofoten, NorwaySigmund • Odin • Völsung

During a wedding feast in the hall of King Völsung, a mysterious one-eyed stranger thrusts a magnificent sword into the Branstock tree, declaring that only the one who can pull it out may keep it. While many powerful men fail, Völsung's son Sigmund successfully retrieves the blade, sparking a bitter rivalry with the envious King Siggeir. This event marks the beginning of the legendary lineage...