Fjalar y Galar — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda En la mitología nórdica, Fjalar y Galar (cuyos nombres significan impostor y gritón , respectivamente)[1] eran enanos hermanos mencionados en Skáldskaparmál, en la Edda poética. Se relata que mataron al sabio vanir… … Wikipedia Español
Fjalar — In Norse mythology, Fjalar refers to two different beings.#One is a dwarf, brother of Galar, see Fjalar and Galar. #The other is a rooster that will crow to signify the beginning of Ragnarok, the end of the world.For the Icelandic name Fjalar ,… … Wikipedia
Fjalar — In Nordic myth one of the dwarfs the other being Galar who murdered Kvasir and the giant Gilling. Suttung, the son of the giant, was going to drown them in the sea when they purchased their lives with the secret of the beverage made from the… … Who’s Who in non-classical mythology
Galar — In Nordic myth one of the dwarfs the other being Fjalar who murdered Kvasir and the giant Gilling … Who’s Who in non-classical mythology
Gilling — In Norse mythology, Gilling was one of the Jotuns and father of Suttung. He and his wife were murdered by Fjalar and Galar.Gilling was said to be a foolish giant. Two dwarves, Fjalar and Galar, convinced him to row them out to the middle of a… … Wikipedia
Kvasir — In Norse mythology, the wisest of all men. He was born from the saliva from two rival groups of gods, the Aesir and the Vanir. As a teacher, he never failed to answer a question correctly. Two dwarfs, Fjalar and Galar, became tired of his great… … Universalium
Suttung — In Norse mythology, Suttung was a Jotun, son of Gilling, who (along with Suttung s mother) had been murdered by Fjalar and Galar.Suttung searched for his parents and threatened the dwarven brothers (Fjalar and Galar), tying them and some other… … Wikipedia
Norse dwarves — Dvergar or Norse dwarves (Old Norse dvergar , sing. dvergr ) are highly significant entities in Norse mythology, who associate with stones, the underground, deathliness, luck, magic, and technology, especially forging. They are identified with… … Wikipedia
Wōdanaz — The 6th century Vadstena bracteate, showing a horse, a bird and a human head commonly identified as an early form of Scandinavian Odin … Wikipedia
Mead of poetry — Chased by Suttungr, Odin spits the mead of poetry into several vessels. Some of it accidentally goes out the other end. Illustration by Jakob Sigurðsson, an 18th century Icelandic artist. In Norse mythology, the Poetic Mead or Mead of Poetry (Old … Wikipedia