Topic Archive

Myths about Norse

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

155 myths currently featured for Norse.

Angrboða and the Birth of the Monstrous Brood

🪓 Norse MythologyTiveden National Park, SwedenAngrboða • Loki • Fenrir

In the dark heart of the Ironwood, the giantess Angrboða and the trickster god Loki conceived three children who would eventually bring about the end of the world. These three—the wolf Fenrir, the serpent Jörmungandr, and the death-queen Hel—were born of fire and frost, embodying the chaotic forces of the universe. Their birth and subsequent removal by the Aesir gods set the stage for the...

Gudrun Inciting Her Sons to Avenge Svanhild

🪓 Norse MythologyReykholt, IcelandGudrun • Svanhild • Hamdir

After the brutal death of her daughter Svanhild at the hands of King Jormunrek, the legendary figure Gudrun Gjúkadóttir goads her remaining sons, Hamdir and Sorli, into a desperate and final mission of vengeance. This story serves as the tragic conclusion to the Volsung cycle, exploring the themes of inescapable fate and the heavy price of family honor. The narrative follows the brothers'...

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.

King Harald Wartooth Sacrificed to Odin

🪓 Norse MythologyUppsala Mounds, SwedenHarald Wartooth • Odin • Sigurd Hring

King Harald Wartooth, an aged and nearly blind ruler of Denmark, sought a glorious death in battle to avoid the shame of a 'straw death' in bed. Orchestrating the massive Battle of Brávellir against his nephew Sigurd Hring, Harald was ultimately sacrificed to Odin by the god himself, ensuring his passage to Valhalla.

Gefjon Demanding Land from the Swedish King Gylfi

🪓 Norse MythologyOdense, Funen, DenmarkGefjon • King Gylfi • Oxen Sons

The goddess Gefjon, disguised as a wandering traveler, tricked the Swedish King Gylfi into granting her as much land as four oxen could plow in a single day and night. Using her giant-born sons transformed into massive oxen, she tore a vast portion of Sweden's earth away and dragged it into the sea, forming the island of Zealand. The remaining cavity in the Swedish landscape became Lake...

Thor Kicking the Dwarf Litr into Baldr's Funeral Pyre

🪓 Norse MythologyBorre Mound Cemetery, NorwayThor • Baldr • Litr

During the monumental funeral of the beloved god Baldr, the gods gathered in deep mourning to send his body to Helheim upon his great ship, Hringhorni. As Thor stood before the pyre to hallow the flames with his mighty hammer Mjölnir, a dwarf named Litr ran across his feet. Consumed by grief and a sudden flash of divine temper, Thor kicked the dwarf into the blazing fire, where Litr perished...

The Legendary Battle of Brávellir and Odin’s Intervention

🪓 Norse MythologyBråvalla, Östergötland, SwedenHarald Wartooth • Sigurd Hring • Odin (as Bruni)

An epic and legendary clash between the Danish King Harald Wartooth and the Swedish King Sigurd Hring, orchestrated by the god Odin to collect the souls of heroes for Valhalla. The battle is renowned for its massive scale, featuring thousands of ships and legendary champions from across the North. It culminated in the death of the aged Harald and the rise of Sigurd as a dominant northern ruler.

Egil Skallagrimsson Raising a Cursed Nithing Pole

🪓 Norse MythologyBorg á Mýrum, IcelandEgil Skallagrímsson • Erik Bloodaxe • Queen Gunnhild

Following a bitter legal dispute and the loss of his property rights in Norway, the legendary warrior-poet Egil Skallagrimsson performed a powerful ritual of scorn known as the nithing pole. By mounting a horse's head on a hazel pole and carving runes of power, he cursed King Erik Bloodaxe and Queen Gunnhild, invoking the land spirits to drive them from the country. This act of spiritual and...

Forseti: The Radiant Justice of Glitnir

🪓 Norse MythologyLögberg (Law Rock), Thingvellir, IcelandForseti • Baldr • Nanna

Forseti, the son of Baldr and Nanna, serves as the Norse god of justice, peace, and reconciliation from his radiant hall, Glitnir. Unlike other gods who might seek vengeance, Forseti specializes in resolving the most difficult disputes, ensuring that all parties leave his presence satisfied and at peace. His myth serves as the divine foundation for the Icelandic legal tradition established at...

The Witches of Ironwood Breeding the Wolves of Ragnarök

🪓 Norse MythologyKolmården Forest, SwedenAngrboða • Loki • Fenrir

Deep within the mythic Járnviðr, or Ironwood, the giantess Angrboða and her kin breed a monstrous brood of wolves destined to devour the sun, the moon, and the gods themselves. This dark forest, mirrored in the vast Swedish wilderness of Kolmården, serves as the nursery for the heralds of Ragnarök, including the celestial hunters Sköll and Hati. The myth highlights the inevitable cycle of...