Gymir

Gymir is a jötunn in Norse mythology. He is the spouse of Aurboða, and the father of the giantess Gerðr, who married the god Freyr.[1][2]

Name

The meaning of the Old Norse name Gymir is unclear.[3][4] Proposed translations include 'the earthly' (from Old Norse gumi), 'the wintry one' (from gemla), or 'the protector', the 'engulfer' (from geyma).[3][4][1]

In Lokasenna (Loki's Flyting) and Skáldskaparmál (The Language of Poetry), Gymir is given by Snorri Sturluson as an alternative name for the divine personification of the sea Ægir.[2] Rudolf Simek argues that it may be an erroneous interpretation of kennings in which different giant-names are used interchangeably.[5]

Here it is implied that they are all the same, Ægir and Hler and Gymir ... What terms for sea are there? It is called mere, ocean (ægir), engulfer (gymir), roarer (hler), main, road, depth, salt, water, swell.

Skáldskaparmál, 25, 60–61, transl. A. Faulkes, 1987.

Attestations

Eddas

In both Skírnismál (The Lay of Skírnir) and Gylfaginning (The Beguiling of Gylfi), Gymir is portrayed as the spouse of Aurboða; and from their union was born Gerðr.[2]

There was someone called Gymir, and his wife Aurboda. She was of the race of mountain-giants. Gerd is their daughter, the most beautiful of all women.

Gylfaginning, 35–37, transl. A. Faulkes, 1987.

Viking Age

A verse from the 9th-century skald Ref Gestsson is quoted in the later Skáldskaparmál (The Language of Poetry).[1]

Gymir’s spray-cold spae-wife [Rán] often brings the twisted-rope-bear [ship] into Ægir’s jaws [under the waves] where the wave breaks.

Ref Gestsson, Skáld. 24–25, transl. A. Faulkes, 1987.

According to John Lindow, "the verse in question seems to say that the cold seeress of Gymir often transports the bear of twisted lines into the jaw of Ægir; that is, that the wave (Ægir’s daughters are the nine waves) often drives a ship deep into the water."[2]

Theories

Because of his identification with Ægir, Gymir has been regarded as a sea-giant.

He has also been seen as a chthonic deity,[6] and Magnus Olsen argued that he was an earth giant from his interpretation of Skírnismál in light of the hieros gamos.[7]

References

  1. Orchard 1997, p. 70.
  2. Lindow 2002, p. 156.
  3. de Vries 1962, p. 197.
  4. Simek 1996, p. 127.
  5. Simek 1996, p. 126.
  6. de Vries 1957, p. 180 (note 1).
  7. "Fra gammelnorsk myte og kultus", Maal og Minne 1 (1909) 17-36, p. 21 (in Norwegian); Jan de Vries, Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte, volume 1, 2nd ed. Berlin: de Gruyter, 1956, repr. 1970, p. 251, note 1 (in German)

Bibliography

  • de Vries, Jan (1957). Altgermanische Religionsgeschichte (in German). 2 (1970 ed.). Walter De Gruyter.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • de Vries, Jan (1962). Altnordisches Etymologisches Worterbuch (1977 ed.). Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-05436-3.
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