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Laufey (mythology)

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Template:Short description

Laufey or Nál is a figure in Norse mythology and the mother of Loki. The latter is frequently mentioned by the matronymic Loki Laufeyjarson (Old Norse 'Loki Laufey's son') in the Poetic Edda, rather than the expected traditional patronymic Loki Fárbautason ('son of Fárbauti'), in a mythology where kinship is usually reckoned through male ancestry.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Name

The meaning of the Old Norse name Laufey is not clear, but it is generally taken to be related to lauf ('leaves, foliage'),Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn perhaps attached to the suffix -ey (found in female personal names like Bjargey, Þórey), or deriving from an hypothetical tree-goddess named *lauf-awiaz ('the leafy').Template:SfnTemplate:Efn

Since the name of her spouse Fárbauti means "dangerous hitter", a possible natural mythological interpretation has been proposed by some scholars, with lightning hitting the leaves, or needles of a tree to give rise to fire.[1][2]

Attestations

In Gylfaginning ('The Beguiling of Gylfi'), High introduces Loki as the son of Fárbauti, that "Laufey or Nál" is his mother, and that his brothers are Býleistr and Helblindi.Template:Sfn Elsewhere in the same poem, Loki is referred to by the matronymic Laufeyson ('Laufey's son').Template:Sfn This occurs twice more in Gylfaginning and once in Skáldskaparmál.Template:Sfn

Skaldskaparmal ('The Language of Poetry') mentions Loki as 'son of Fárbauti' or 'son of Laufey'.Template:Sfn

Laufey is listed among Ásynjar (goddesses) in one of the þulur,[1] an ancestry that perhaps led her son Loki to be "enumerated among the Æsir", as Snorri Sturluson puts it in Gylfaginning.Template:Sfn

Nál is mentioned twice in the Prose Edda as "Laufey or Nál"; once in Gylfaginning and once in Skáldskaparmál.Template:Sfn

In the poem Sörla tháttr, Nál and Laufey are portrayed as the same person: "She was both slender and weak, and for that reason she was called Nál [Needle]."[3] According to scholar John Lindow, however, "the late date of the text makes this piece of information suspect."Template:Sfn

See also

  • Louhi, the Mistress of the North and the Witch Queen of Pohjola

References

Footnotes

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Citations

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Bibliography

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  1. Axel Kock, "Etymologisch-mythologische Untersuchungen", Indogermanische Forschungen 10 (1899) 90-111; summary in Jahresbericht über die Erscheinungen auf dem Gebiete der germanischen Philologie 21 (1899) p. 37 Template:In lang
  2. Template:Harvnb, but p. 227 he doubts that Nál is the same person as Laufey, and considers relating the latter name to death, as in Naglfar.
  3. bæði mjó ok auðþreiflig, ed. Carl Christian Rafn, Fornaldar Sögur Norðrlanda Volume 1, Copenhagen, 1829, p. 392.