Sökkmímir or Søkkmímir was a jotun who appears in two sources from Norse mythology, suggesting that he was once a well-known giant in Scandinavia.
In Grímnismál, stanza 50, it appears that Odin killed the giant:
- Sviðurr ok Sviðrir
- er ek hét at Søkkmímis,
- ok dulða ek þann inn alda iötun,
- þá er ek Miðviðnis vark
- ins mæra burar
- orðinn einbani.[1]
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- So. I deceived the giant
- Sokkmimir old
- As Svithur and Svithrir of yore;
- Of Mithvitnir's son
- the slayer I was
- When the famed one found his doom.[2]
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- Svidur and Svidrir
- I was at Sökkmimir's called,
- and beguiled that ancient Jötun,
- when of Midvitnir's
- renowned son
- I was the sole destroyer.[3]
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He notably appears in Ynglingatal, where subterranean abodes of giants are called S��kkmímir's halls:
- En dagskjarr
- Dúrnis niðja
- salvörðuðr
- Sveigði vétti,
- þá er í stein
- enn stórgeði
- Dusla konr
- ept dvergi hljóp,
- ok salr bjartr
- þeira Sökmímis
- jötunbyggðr
- við jöfri gein.[4][5]
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- By Diurnir's elfin race,
- Who haunt the cliffs and shun day's face,
- The valiant Swegde was deceived,
- The elf's false words the king believed.
- The dauntless hero rushing on,
- Passed through the yawning mouth of stone:
- It yawned – it shut – the hero fell,
- In Saekmime's hall, where giants dwell.[6][7]
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Notes[]
Norse paganism and mythology |
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Norse deities dwarfs, jötnar, and other figures | |
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Locations | Underworld | |
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Rivers | |
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Other locations | |
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Events | |
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Sources |
- Gesta Danorum
- Poetic Edda
- Runestones
- Sagas
- Snorri Sturluson
- Tyrfing Cycle
- Völsung Cycle
- Old Norse language
- Orthography
- Later influence
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Society | Cultic practice | |
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Festivals and holy periods | |
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Other | |
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See also |
- Germanic paganism
- Heathenry (new religious movement)
- Nordic Bronze Age
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