The Poetic Edda on Guthrunarhvot
The > part in a few of the Eddic poems. > Introductory Note
attestation: The stanza describes death or destruction involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The First Lay of Guthrun, entitled in the Codex Regius simply Guthrunarkvitha, immediately follows the remaining fragment of the "long" Sigurth lay in that manuscript. Unlike the poems dealing with"
attestation: The stanza describes travel or movement involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The First Lay of Guthrun, entitled in the Codex Regius simply Guthrunarkvitha, immediately follows the remaining fragment of the "long" Sigurth lay in that manuscript. Unlike the poems dealing with"
attestation: The stanza describes an act of creation involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The First Lay of Guthrun, entitled in the Codex Regius simply Guthrunarkvitha, immediately follows the remaining fragment of the "long" Sigurth lay in that manuscript. Unlike the poems dealing with"
relationship: The stanza implies enmity between Guthrunarhvot and Brynhild.
"The First Lay of Guthrun, entitled in the Codex Regius simply Guthrunarkvitha, immediately follows the remaining fragment of the "long" Sigurth lay in that manuscript. Unlike the poems dealing with"
relationship: The stanza references alliance or oath between Guthrunarhvot and Brynhild.
"The First Lay of Guthrun, entitled in the Codex Regius simply Guthrunarkvitha, immediately follows the remaining fragment of the "long" Sigurth lay in that manuscript. Unlike the poems dealing with"
attestation: The stanza describes death or destruction involving Guthrunarhvot.
"It has already been pointed out (introductory note to Guthrunarkvitha I) that the tradition of Guthrun's lament was known wherever the Sigurth story existed, and that this lament was probably one of the"
attestation: The stanza references rulership or authority involving Guthrunarhvot.
"It has already been pointed out (introductory note to Guthrunarkvitha I) that the tradition of Guthrun's lament was known wherever the Sigurth story existed, and that this lament was probably one of the"
relationship: The stanza references alliance or oath between Guthrunarhvot and Oddrun.
"It has already been pointed out (introductory note to Guthrunarkvitha I) that the tradition of Guthrun's lament was known wherever the Sigurth story existed, and that this lament was probably one of the"
attestation: The stanza describes death or destruction involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The title "Guthrunarhvot," which appears in the Codex Regius, really applies only to stanzas 1–8, all presumably borrowed from the "old" ballad of Hamther. The rest of the poem is simply another Guthrun"
attestation: The stanza describes travel or movement involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The title "Guthrunarhvot," which appears in the Codex Regius, really applies only to stanzas 1–8, all presumably borrowed from the "old" ballad of Hamther. The rest of the poem is simply another Guthrun"
attestation: The stanza describes an act of creation involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The title "Guthrunarhvot," which appears in the Codex Regius, really applies only to stanzas 1–8, all presumably borrowed from the "old" ballad of Hamther. The rest of the poem is simply another Guthrun"
attestation: Guthrunarhvot is associated with the location Iceland.
"The title "Guthrunarhvot," which appears in the Codex Regius, really applies only to stanzas 1–8, all presumably borrowed from the "old" ballad of Hamther. The rest of the poem is simply another Guthrun"
attestation: The stanza references rulership or authority involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The title "Guthrunarhvot," which appears in the Codex Regius, really applies only to stanzas 1–8, all presumably borrowed from the "old" ballad of Hamther. The rest of the poem is simply another Guthrun"
relationship: The stanza references alliance or oath between Guthrunarhvot and Brynhild.
"The title "Guthrunarhvot," which appears in the Codex Regius, really applies only to stanzas 1–8, all presumably borrowed from the "old" ballad of Hamther. The rest of the poem is simply another Guthrun"
attestation: The stanza describes death or destruction involving Guthrunarhvot.
"The Hamthesmol, the concluding poem in the Codex Regius, is on the whole the worst preserved of all the poems in the collection. The origin of the story, the relation of the Hamthesmol to the"
attestation: Guthrunarhvot is characterized by age in the verse.
"The Hamthesmol, the concluding poem in the Codex Regius, is on the whole the worst preserved of all the poems in the collection. The origin of the story, the relation of the Hamthesmol to the"
relationship: The stanza references alliance or oath between Guthrunarhvot and Sorli.
"The Hamthesmol, the concluding poem in the Codex Regius, is on the whole the worst preserved of all the poems in the collection. The origin of the story, the relation of the Hamthesmol to the"