-
Bragi Boddason,
known as
Bragi the Old (Old Norse:
Bragi hinn gamli) was a
Norwegian skald active in the
first half of the 9th century, the
earliest known...
- Edda
Snorri Sturluson quotes many
stanzas attributed to
Bragi Boddason the old (Bragi
Boddason inn gamli), a
Norwegian court poet who
served several Swedish...
- is unknown. The
earliest known skald from whom
verses survive is
Bragi Boddason,
known as
Bragi the Old, a
Norwegian skald of the
first half of the 9th...
-
skaldic verse of the
ninth and
tenth centuries, with
poets such as
Bragi Boddason and
Eyvindr skáldaspillir. The
arrival of
Christianity around the year...
-
encounter between an
unnamed troll woman and the 9th-century
skald Bragi Boddason.
According to the section,
Bragi was
driving through "a
certain forest"...
- Þjóðólfr’s 10th-century version. In Ragnarsdrápa, the 9th-century
skald Bragi Boddason mentions "Hrungnir's skull-splitter". And the ugly ring [serpent] of the...
-
mention him and his kin. The Ragnarsdrápa,
ostensibly composed by
Bragi Boddason in the 9th century,
praises a Ragnar, son of Sigurd, for a
richly decorated...
- In
chapter 50, a
section of Ragnarsdrápa by the 9th
century skald Bragi Boddason is
quoted that
refers to Hel, the being, as "the
monstrous wolf's sister"...
-
literary references to the
world encircling water snake comes from
Bragi Boddason who
lived in the 9th century, in his Ragnarsdrápa (XIV). "Gyl****inning"...
- may not be true for
Bragi if
Bragi is
taken to be the
skaldic poet
Bragi Boddason made into a god. But Týr,
according to the
Eddic poem Hymiskviða, was son...