- Norse: [ˈskinˌfɑkse]) and
Hrímfaxi [ˈhriːmˌfɑkse] are the
horses of Dagr (day) and Nótt (night). The
names Skinfaxi and
Hrímfaxi mean "shining mane" and...
- name of Nörvi (with
variant spellings) and is ****ociated with the
horse Hrímfaxi,
while the
Prose Edda
features information about Nótt's ancestry, including...
- and poet
James Shirley's play The
Triumph of
Peace (1663).
Skinfaxi and
Hrímfaxi, the
horses that pull Day and
Night in
Norse mythology Alcis (gods) Ashvins...
- Garðrofa, the
parents of Hófvarpnir Hófvarpnir,
horse of the
goddess Gná
Hrímfaxi, Nótt's
horse Skinfaxi, Dagr's
horse Sleipnir, Odin's eight-legged horse...
-
across the sky
every day,
their manes emitting daylight.
Skinfaxi and
Hrímfaxi ("Shining mane" and "Mane of frost") are,
according to
Snorri Sturluson...
- of
clerks and
workmen respectively c.
early 20th century.
Skinfaxi and
Hrímfaxi (meaning shining-mane and rime-mane; two
horses in
Norse mythology) are...
-
reprisal attacks and
sinking a
second Yuktobanian submersible carrier, the
Hrimfaxi, but
during the court-martial
proceedings it is
revealed that the 8492nd...
- og Kvad, Norway.
Hermann Pálsson:
Hrímfaxi. Bókaútgáfan á Hofi 1995. ISBN 9979-9140-3-3.
Hermann Pálsson:
Hrímfaxi. Bókaútgáfan á Hofi 1995. ISBN 9979-9140-3-3...
-
influence in Iceland. He died at
Bourgas in
Bulgaria on 11
August 2002.
Hrímfaxi. Hestanöfn frá
fyrri tíð til
vorra daga og
litir íslenska
hestsins (1995)...
- malfeti, Blóðhófr, Hamskarpr, brúnn, Hófvarpnir, viggr, Skinfaxi, virfill,
Hrímfaxi.
Brown one, horse,
fettered one, Móðnir, gelding, all-black one, foal,...