Everything about Heimdall totally explained
Heimdall (
Old Norse Heimdallr, the prefix
Heim- means
home, the affix
-dallr is of uncertain origin) is one of the
Æsir (gods) in
Norse mythology. Heimdall is the guardian of the gods and of the link between
Midgard and
Asgard, the
Bifrost Bridge. Legends foretell that he'll sound the
Gjallarhorn, alerting the
Æsir to the onset of
Ragnarök where the world ends and is reborn.
Heimdall is described as being so alert that he requires no sleep at all. He can hear the
grass grow and see to the end of the world; he can hear a leaf fall. Heimdall is described as a son of
Odin, perhaps a foster son. Heimdall was destined to be the last of the gods to perish at
Ragnarök when he and
Loki would slay one another.
Characteristics
Ægir, called billow maidens) and was called the
White God. His
hall was called
Himinbjörg (
Sky Mountain) and his
horse was
Gulltoppr (Gold-top).
Snorri Sturluson's
Prose Edda relates that a
kenning for
sword is
head of Heimdall because Heimdall was struck by a man's head and that this is treated in the poem
Heimdalargaldr, a poem unfortunately no longer extant. Similarly, a kenning for
head is
sword of Heimdall. The meaning may lie in Heimdall also being called "ram", the weapon of a ram being its head, including the horns.
Georges Dumézil (1959) suggested that this might also be why Heimdall is called White-god.
Heimdall's nickname
Hallinskíði ("Bent Stick") also appears as a kenning for "ram", perhaps referring to the bent horns on a ram's head. Heimdall's nickname
Gullintanni ("Golden-Toothed") would refer to the yellow coloring found in the teeth of old rams. A third name for Heimdall is
Vindhlér ("Wind Shelter"). Dumézil cites
Welsh folklore sources which tell how ocean waves come in sets of nine with the ninth one being the ram:
We understand that whatever his mythical value and functions were, the scene of his birth made him, in the sea's white frothing, the ram produced by the ninth wave. If this is the case, then it's correct to say that he's nine mothers, since one alone doesn't suffice, nor two, nor three.
Old Welsh practice, modern
French practice and modern
Basque practice is to refer to white-capped waves as sheep.
Poetic Edda
Völuspá
The first stanza of the Poeic Edda poem
Völuspá proclaims:
I ask for a hearing of all the holy races
Greater and lesser, kinsman of Heimdall.
The Eddic poem
Rígsthula explains in what way these races are kinsmen of Heimdall, explaining who the god
Ríg, identified with Heimdall in a short prose introduction, apparently fathered the three classes of humankind as understood by the poet, the youngest of which fathered in turn Kon the Young (Old Norse
Kon ungr) understood as the first immortal king (Old Norse
konungr).
Þrymskviða
H. R. Ellis Davidson proposes a link between Heimdall and the
Vanir
as do some others, partly based on stanza 15 of the Poetic Edda poem
Þrymskviða:
Then Heimdall spoke, whitest of the Æsir,
Like the other Vanir he knew the future well.
However
other can be also translated
even, which would mean instead that Heimdall had foresight "even" as do the Vanir.
Davidson also notes a connection with
Freyja, given that one of her names,
Mardoll, matches his, with
mar meaning "sea" and
heim meaning "earth".
Dumézil suggested that the Hindu counterpart was the god
Dyaus, one of the eight
Vasus, who reincarnated as the
frame hero Bhishma in the epic
Mahabharata, he and his seven brothers being born to a mortal king by the River
Ganges who herself had taken on mortal form. But the seven other brothers are returned to their immortal forms by being drowned by their mother immediately after birth.
[
Only Dyaus was compelled to live a full life on earth in the form of Bhishma. Bhishma is destined to never hold power himself or have any direct descendants but acts as an ageless uncle on behalf of the line of lords that tortuously descend from his half-brothers, including finally the five Pandava brothers who represent four classes of society: royalty, noble warrior, lower class club-bearing warrior, and herdsmen. Bhishma is the last to die in the great battle of Kurukshetra.][
However Branston (1980) considers Heimdall to be cognate with the Vedic Agni god of fire, who is in many Vedic texts is born from the waters or hides within the waters and who is born from two, seven, nine, and ten mothers in various sources, the ten mothers being sometimes explained as the ten fingers which can manipulate a bore-stick to produce fire. This accords with Viktor Rydberg's theories on Heimdall.]
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