Prose Edda
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Assorted References
- classification of elves
- In elf
In the Prose, or Younger, Edda, elves were classified as light elves (who were fair) and dark elves (who were darker than pitch); these classifications are roughly equivalent to the Scottish seelie court and unseelie court. The notable characteristics of elves were mischief and volatility. They were…
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- In elf
- discussed in biography
- In Snorri Sturluson
The Prose Edda is a handbook on poetics. In this work Snorri arranges and recounts the legends of Norse mythology in an entertaining way. He then explains the ornate diction of the ancient skaldic poets and explains the great variety of poetic metres used in skaldic…
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- In Snorri Sturluson
- division of Edda
- Germanic mythology
- In Germanic religion and mythology: Scandinavian literary sources
…the most memorable was his Prose Edda, written circa 1220. It is to this book that the title Edda, whatever its meaning, originally belonged.
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- In Germanic religion and mythology: Scandinavian literary sources
- Icelandic literature
- In Icelandic literature: The sagas
…commonly referred to as the Prose Edda, or Younger Edda. He twice visited Norway, and a large part of his work consists of lives of its early kings: he combined his Ólafs saga with lives of other Norwegian kings to form the Heimskringla (c. 1220; “Orb of the World”; Eng.…
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- In Icelandic literature: The sagas
description of
- Ragnarök
- In Ragnarök
…century, and in the 13th-century Prose Edda of Snorri Sturluson (d. 1241), which largely follows the Völuspá. According to those two sources, the Ragnarök will be preceded by cruel winters and moral chaos. Giants and demons approaching from all points of the compass will attack the gods, who will meet…
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- In Ragnarök
- Ull