- In
Norse mythology,
Sessrúmnir (Old
Norse "seat-room" or "seat-roomer") is both the
goddess Freyja's hall
located in Fólkvangr, a
field where Freyja receives...
- Sturluson.
According to the
Prose Edda,
within Fólkvangr is Freyja's hall
Sessrúmnir.
Scholarly theories have been
proposed about the
implications of the location...
- go to the god Odin's hall, Valhalla.
Within Fólkvangr lies her hall,
Sessrúmnir.
Freyja ****ists
other deities by
allowing them to use her
feathered cloak...
-
Kormet Midgard Muspelheim Náströnd Niðavellir
Niflheim Ormet Reidgotaland Sessrúmnir Slidr River Svartálfaheim Útgarðar
Valhalla Vanaheim Vimur Yggdrasil Æsir–Vanir...
- from west to east,
Mount Baldr,
Mount Thor,
Koenig Valley,
Mount Freys,
Sessrumnir Valley,
Oliver Peak,
Njord Valley,
Osgard Peak,
Jotunheim Valley, Nibelungen...
- sea, at
least in the eyes of the late
Viking Age
Icelandic seafarers."
Sessrúmnir, the hall of the
goddess Freyja,
which may have been
conceived of as a...
-
slain heroes who have died on the battlefield, and that her
house is
Sessrumnir (which she
translates as "filled with many seats"), a
dwelling that Näsström...
- a field' that the
goddess Freyja's
afterlife locations Fólkvangr and
Sessrúmnir produce when
considered together.
According to
Hopkins and Haukur, "'A...
- the dead lost in battle. Freyja, in turn,
receives the
other half at
Sessrúmnir. In fiction, mead
halls usually appear in
works that take
place during...
-
earthly life;
these include the hall of Valhalla,
ruled over by Odin, or
Sessrúmnir, the hall of Freyja.
Beliefs regarding reincarnation vary
widely among...