- In
Norse mythology,
Þjazi (Old Norse: [ˈθjɑt͡se];
anglicized as Thiazi, Thiazzi,
Thjazi, Tj****e or Thi****i) was a jötunn. He was a son of the jötunn Ölvaldi...
-
forced by the jötunn
Þjazi to lure Iðunn out of
Asgard and into a wood with the
promise of
apples even
fairer than her own.
Þjazi, in the form of an eagle...
- of the
deceased Þjazi, and Skaði
married the god Njörðr as part of the
compensation provided by the gods for
killing her
father Þjazi. In Heimskringla...
-
chapter 2. The
giant Þjazi carried off Iðunn,
chapter 3. Loki
secured Iðunn and the
slaying of
Þjazi. Skáldskaparmál (ON), 2.
Þjazi jötunn rænti Iðunni...
-
giant Þjazi is said to be the son of All-valdi [Harbardsljód 19] or Öl-valdi [Skaldskaparmal 42]. I-valdi may be
another form of the name.
Þjazi is said...
-
stories in the Skáldskaparmál include: How
Idunn was
captured by the
giant Thjazi, with Loki
involved in both her
kidnapping and her recovery. The origin...
-
daughter of
Þjazi and
later wife of Njörðr.
Goddess ****ociated with
skiing and
claimed as a
mythical ancestor of
Haakon Sigurdsson.
Þjazi, a jötunn who...
- 'all-powerful') is a jötunn in
Norse mythology,
presented as the
father of
Þjazi. Saturn's moon
Alvaldi is
named after him. The Old
Norse name
Alvadi means...
- to some
extent is
modelled on a Sámi woman. The name for Skaði's
father Þjazi is
known in Sámi as Čáhci, "the waterman"; and her son with Odin, Sæmingr...
- It was the
residence of a jötunn,
Þjazi, and was
inherited by his
daughter Skaði,
later the wife of Njörðr.
Þjazi, the jötunn who
originally owned Þrymheimr...