• Thumbnail for Haddingjar
    The Haddingjar (Old Norse: [ˈhɑdːeŋɡjɑz̠]) refers on the one hand to Germanic heroic legends about two brothers by this name, and on the other hand to...
    4 KB (578 words) - 07:25, 26 December 2023
  • Haddings (Haddingjar) took power, that they ruled one after the other, and that Helgi Hadding-prince (Haddingjaskati) was one of them. The Haddingjar are otherwise...
    12 KB (1,637 words) - 08:58, 21 March 2024
  • kingdom at Carthage. Look up Hasdingi in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Haddingjar, who appear to be late reflections of the Hasdingi in Norse mythology...
    2 KB (314 words) - 12:08, 26 June 2024
  • (Old Norse: [ˈhelɡe ˈhɑdːeŋɡjɑˌskɑte], meaning "Helgi the lord of the Haddingjar") was a legendary Norse hero of whom only fragmentary accounts survive...
    3 KB (275 words) - 05:24, 26 December 2023
  • Thumbnail for List of early Germanic peoples
    narrow sense, the descendants of the Mauri) Asdingi / Astingi / Hasdingi (Haddingjar?) Helvecones / Helveconae / Aelvaeones / Elouaiones (possibly the Ilwan...
    105 KB (6,520 words) - 17:18, 3 July 2024
  • Helgi Sigmundsson was reborn as Helgi Haddingjaskati (prince of the Haddingjar) and Sigrún as Kara Hálfdanardóttir. Conversely in "Sigurðarkviða hin...
    7 KB (994 words) - 07:39, 25 September 2023
  • Thumbnail for Hallingdal
    first element seems to be the genitive case of the name of the people Haddingjar or of the male name Haddingi. In Flateyjarbók, a man named Haddingr is...
    10 KB (997 words) - 17:53, 11 February 2024
  • understanding of the etymological issue. Grevensvænge figurines Hengist and Horsa Haddingjar Divine twins Aśvins brothers of Hindu mythology As per Grimm's Law, the...
    9 KB (1,060 words) - 00:55, 2 March 2023
  • Thumbnail for List of Old Norse exonyms
    trading post of the merchants from Visby (in Gotland) in Veliky Novgorod. Haddingjar Related to Old Icelandic haddr meaning "woman's hair". The Hasdingi Vandals...
    18 KB (1,786 words) - 13:53, 25 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Divine twins
    (Angel), described in the Gesta Danorum by scholar Saxo Grammaticus. The Haddingjar were two brothers who appear in many versions of Germanic legends. Amphion...
    52 KB (6,225 words) - 16:12, 1 December 2023