#midgard serpent

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One of the symbols used to represent Loki is that of two snakes, circling one another to form an ‘S’ shape, and biting the tail of the other (years of archaeological evidence; see Rundkvist below).

Loki is connected to the snake in a number of ways.

      

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Jormungandr, the giant serpent of Loki’s offspring, is said to be so big that he/she can circle the world and bite his/her own tail (Gylfaginning 34), (Thorsdrapa 1).

In an older version of the myth about Idunn’s kidnapping by Thjassi, Loki turns into a snake at one point to wriggle into the room in which the potion of longevity (similar to Idunn and her apples) is being kept (Skaldskaparmal 5).

A snake was also used to punish Loki after the events of Lokasenna.  Loki was tied down, and the snake was tied above Loki’s head, so that its venom dripped directly onto Loki (final prose section of Lokasenna).

Another notable serpent in Norse mythology is the Nidhogg, a being that feeds on the roots of the world tree Yggdrasil.  However, Nidhogg is not directly associated with Loki in any significant manner (Grimnismal 32-35), (Gylfaginning 15).

Sources:
-Rundkvist, Martin. “Snake Brooches of South Scandinavia.” <http://www.academia.edu/313476>
-image used with permission from <http://aomiarmster.tumblr.com/post/27782533517>
-Gylfaginning, Prose Edda. <http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/pre/pre04.htm>
-Thorsdrapa, Prose Edda. <http://www.nordic-life.org/nmh/thoreng.html>
-Skaldskaparmal, Prose Edda. <http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/pre/pre05.htm>
-Lokasenna, Poetic Edda. <http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/poe/poe10.htm>
-Grimnismal, Poetic Edda. <http://www.sacred-texts.com/neu/poe/poe06.htm>

Many of the figures in Norse mythology are known by several different names, as well as different phrases that describe them (called kennings).  The following is a list of some that refer to Loki, and I will update the post accordingly as I find or am informed of others.  A lot of the kennings provided by Snorri are found nowhere else, and are somewhat inconsistent, so I only included a few.  

Loki’s Names: Bekki, Blind, Gammleid (leader of amusement), Haloge, Hvedrung (roarer), Lodur, Logaþore, Loge, Lôgna, Logi, Lokkji, Lopt (lofty), Sataere

Loki’s Kennings: brother of Byleistr, brother of Helblindi, blood brother of Odin, confidant of Thor, friend of Odin, friend of Thor, fromkveda flaerdanna (seductive speaking), gift bearer, harmer of Sif’s hair, laugaz (blazing god), laugatjanaz (blazing one), prisoner of Geirrodr, rogur (slanderer), scar lip, sea thread’s father (the sea thread is a kenning for the Midgard serpent), sky walker, slaegi (sly), slaegurtyr (sly god), staunch friend of Hoenir, thief of brisingamen, thief of giants, thief of Idunn’s apples, vaelandi (debasing), villi-eldr (blazing), wolf’s father

Bonus: One kenning used to identify Thor is bragdmilldr Loka (compassionate to Loki)

A Jotunn called Rasvalg once caused a great deal of trouble for Midgard.  In the form of an eagle, he fanned great gusts of wind across the land, causing plants, animals, and men to die.  Loki and Thor resolved to put an end to this mischief, and set out for Jotunnheimr in Thor’s goat-drawn chariot.  While passing through Midgard, they stopped to rest one night in the home of a poor farmer with a wife and two children.  The family did not have enough food to properly accommodate their guests, so Thor slaughtered his two goats to feed the group.  Thor asked that the bones be laid on the skins when the meal was finished, and that no one break the bones.

Sensing an opportunity for mischief, Loki suggested to the farmer’s son, Tjalfe, that he should break open the bone to eat the marrow inside, reasoning that it was the best part, and contained magical properties.  Tjalfe agreed with Loki’s logic, and did as was suggested.  In the morning, Thor resurrected his two goats from their bones and skin, using his hammer.  But one of the goats was lame, because of Tjalfe’s actions.

Thor was furious at the insubordination, but the father eventually managed to quell Thor’s temper by offering his two children, Tjalfe and Roskva, as servants.  They would accompany Thor and Loki to Jotunnheimr, and the group would return after their mission to retrieve Thor’s two goats.

They set off once more, and that night they found a cave that contained five different passages.  Startled by roaring sounds outside, they hid themselves in the back of the smallest passage and stayed there for the night.  When they awoke and emerged from the cave, they found that the sound had been the snoring of a giant Jotunn, and the passage of what they thought was a cave was actually the thumb of the giant’s glove.  The giant introduced himself as Skrymir, and offered to accompany the group.  He took it upon himself to carry their provisions, but the giant’s strides were so long that the group could not stop to rest at all, and they were not able to eat all that day.

When Skrymir finally stopped to sleep for the night, the group was famished.  They attempted to open the bag to their provisions, but they could not untie the knots with which the giant had sealed it.  Even Thor’s immense strength was no match.  Frustrated, Thor attempted to wake Skrymir, but the task seemed impossible.  Thor threw his hammer three times at the giant’s head, each time with more force than the last.  But Skrymir only mumbled that a leaf or an acorn must have fallen on him, and he promptly returned to sleeping each time.

They set out again the next day, and Skrymir announced that he was going on ahead, and they quickly lost sight of him.  Eventually, Thor, Loki, and Tjalfe arrived at the castle of the Jotunn Utgarda-Loki (no relation to Loki).  The group proceeded to attempt a series of contests, in order to prove themselves worthy of staying at the castle.  Loki, hungry from losing his provisions to Skrymir, offered that he could eat more than any Jotunn there, and thus, an eating contest was begun.  Loki and his opponent Logi began eating at opposite ends of a trough, and they both reached the exact middle at the same time.  However, Loki had only eaten the food, while Logi had eaten the food, the bones, the dishes, and the trough, so Loki lost.

Tjalfe fancied himself to be a swift runner, so he competed against one called Hugi in a footrace.  Although Tjalfe was indeed faster than most, he too was defeated by his opponent.  Thor then asserted that he could drain a drinking horn, and so a horn was provided for him.  Thor drank until he was about to burst, but could only lower the level by a small amount.  It was then suggested that Thor lift Utgarda-Loki’s cat, but in this task Thor could only lift one paw.  Finally, a feeble, elderly woman named Elli was called out to wrestle with Thor, and in this task too Thor was defeated.

Utgarda-Loki escorted the three humbled guests out of his castle, and once they were outside, he revealed to them that they had been tricked.  Fearing the strength of his visitors, Utgarda-Loki had disguised himself as Skrymir, and he had tied up their food so they would be weak with hunger when they arrived at his castle.  When Thor had attempted to strike Skrymir’s skull with his hammer, the hammer blows instead had fallen on a nearby mountain, and the force of the blows had created three deep valleys.  If any one of the blows had struck Utgarda-Loki, he would have died.

Loki’s eating contest had been against fire, which consumes everything in its path, so it was incredible that Loki was able to perform as well as he had against the flame.  Tjalfe’s footrace had been against thought, which works quicker than anyone can run.  Thor’s drinking horn had been attached to the sea itself, and Thor had actually managed to lower the level of Midgard’s oceans with the amount he drank.  The cat Thor was tasked with lifting was in fact Jormungandr, the Midgard serpent so large it encircled the world, so lifting its paw was an incredible feat of strength.  Finally, the old woman had been old age itself, and old age eventually brings everyone, even gods, to their knees.  That Thor had lasted as long as he did was better than anyone could have achieved.

Utgarda-Loki apologised for the trickery, but confessed that he was right to do so, because the strength of the group was terrifying, and he could never have beaten them through honest means.  Thor raised his hammer, frustrated that he had been made to look a fool, but before he could attack, both Utgarda-Loki and his castle had disappeared.  Tjalfe and Roskva returned with Loki and Thor, and served Thor from then on.

Angrboda was a Jotunn witch who sowed seeds of discord wherever she went.  She was responsible for provoking the lust for gold, and cheating and murders in Midgard.  Acting on behalf of the Jotunns who desired to destroy the Aesir and Vanir, she had used her trickery to create a vast divide between the two.  She was eventually discovered and burned for her actions, but she was not so easily destroyed.  Her body burned away, but her heart did not.  From these remains, Angrboda was able to resurrect herself in entirety.  As long as her heart was intact, she could continue to revivify.

The executors promptly attempted to burn the witch a second and third time, but each time, she resurrected, burned, and the heart remained.  Loki saw that this game would go on forever if they did not dispose of the heart, so before Angrboda could resurrect again, Loki rushed forward, pulled the heart from the flames, and swallowed it.

Loki consuming Angrboda's heart

But even with that, Angrboda’s evil was not completely destroyed.  From the heart he had swallowed, Loki gave birth to three beings: Fenriswulf, Midgardsormr (or Jormungandr, as it was called by the Jotunn), and Hela.  Fenriswulf, a large grey wolf, would go on to bite off the hand of the battle god Tyr, herald the beginning of Ragnarok by escaping his bonds, and destroy Odin in the final battle.  Midgardrsormr was a serpent who would grow so large he encircled the world, and in the final battle he would destroy the mighty Thor.  Hela, a normal woman on one half of her body and a corpse on the other, was the only one of the three who was not destined for evil.  She would go on to become caretaker for the dead who were not killed gloriously in battle, in the realm of Niflheim.

Fenriswulf, Midgardsormr, Hela

Angrboda’s evil also persisted in the tension she had introduced between the Aesir and Vanir.  Despite her death, her actions still resulted in a war between the two.  In this way, Angrboda had succeeded.

Soon there will be proof that our doctors have been giving death to all life, that so-called soldier

Soon there will be proof that our doctors have been giving death to all life, that so-called soldiers have been destroying the earth and instead of protecting her, and that the intellectual caged-birds have been devouring worms laced with truth and feeding the world shit instead.


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They are HERE and LIVE in the shop now! The StrandedInMidgard Yuletide postcard set for 2021 :)! Here’s my shop link if you want to purchase some! Theres a set and the cards are also sold seperately. Get som for you n your heathen friends <3

Set

Loki Family

Thor


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SOON

…theYule Cards will be available in myshop! I expect it to be early November, so there will be plenty of time to get it before Yule, ya filthy pagans <3

Ksenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured hKsenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.Featured h

Ksenia Svincova has created some dark and fantastical artwork inspired by Norse Mythology.

Featured here:
The Norns
Freyja
Idunn
Loki
Loki’s Children
The Wild Hunt
Skadi
The Punishment Of Loki


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