Horses of the Æsir explained

The Horses of the Æsir are horses present in Norse mythology which are ridden by the Æsir. Their main purpose is to be ridden daily to Yggdrasil in order for their riders to pass judgements.[1] They are said to cross Bifröst along their journey. Among them is the famous Sleipnir which is the strongest one. They are mentioned in the Poetic Edda and the Prose Edda.

Listing

The horses of Æsir are listed twice:

In the Eddic poem Grímnismál the following names are listed:

Snorri Sturluson the author of the Gylfaginning paraphrases this stanza in his Gylfaginning:

Apart from Odin's eight-legged horse Sleipnir, and Gulltoppr, who belongs to Heimdallr according to the Prose Edda,[2] nothing is known about these horses, especially their owner other than that they are ridden by the Æsir. These names aren't listed in the þulur.

Other horses are mentioned elsewhere: Gullfaxi, which originally belonged to Hrungnir. Who was given by Thor to his son Magni after he killed the jötunn (Skáldskaparmál, 17), Blóðughófi, which belongs to Freyr (Kálfsvísa) and Hófvarpnir, which is ridden by Gná (Gylfaginning, 35).

Meanings

See also

Notes and References

  1. PhD . Bourns. Timothy J.S. . 2017. Between Nature and Culture: Animals and Humans in Old Norse Literature . St John’s College, University of Oxford.
  2. Gylfaginning (27, 49), Skaldskaparmal (8).
  3. In the manuscripts of the Prose Edda, Glær is mentioned in the Codex Regius only. The Codex Wormianus and the Codex Trajectinus have the alternate name of Glenr.
  4. Gyllir is also the name of a jötunn in the þulur, whose name means "Yeller".