- Fróði (Old Norse: Frōði; Old English:
Frōda;
Middle High German: Vruote) is the name of a
number of
legendary Danish kings in
various texts including...
-
literature without a name. It is
called Froda's theorem in some
recent works; in his 1929 dissertation,
Alexandru Froda stated that the
result was previously...
- the help of
Thorir Houndsfoot and
Queen Yrsa's army, led by Vöggr. Elg-
Fróða þáttr (The Tale of Elgfróði) is
referenced in Hrólfs saga
kraka as describing...
-
earthly paradise of Valinor. Frodo's name
comes from the Old
English name
Fróda,
meaning "wise by experience".
Commentators have
written that he combines...
-
further than
treating his
relationship with Hroðgar and
their animosity with
Froda and Ingeld, the
Scandinavian sources expand on his life as the king at Lejre...
- Lumley. OCLC 314195407 Thorpe,
Benjamin (Trans.) (1866). Edda Sæmundar
Hinns Frôða: The Edda of Sæmund the
Learned Archived 5
April 2023 at the
Wayback Machine...
-
between the
Scyldings Hroðgar and Hroðulf on one side, and the Heaðobards
Froda and
Ingeld on the other,
appears both in
Beowulf and in Widsith. Scholars...
-
Alexandru Froda (July 16, 1894 –
October 7, 1973) was a
Romanian mathematician with
contributions in the
field of
mathematical analysis, algebra, number...
- with the Heaðobards,
whose king
Froda had been
killed in a war with the Danes,
Hrothgar sent
Freawaru to
marry Froda's son Ingeld, in an
unsuccessful attempt...
- Skjöldunga saga, such as the many Fróðis and
Halfdans (corresponding to only one
Froda and one
Healfdene in the
older Beowulf), may be
treated in the same entry...