Poetic Edda The
Poetic Edda contains various references to : ======== , 1908) and
Surt'' (by
Emil Doepler, 1905) , 1882) , 1920) In the
Poetic Edda poem , references to begin from stanza 40 until 58, with the rest of the poem describing the aftermath. In the poem, a (a female seer) recites information to
Odin. In stanza 41, the says: The then describes three
roosters crowing: In stanza 42, the
herdsman Eggthér sits on a
mound and cheerfully plays his
harp while the crimson rooster Fjalar (
Old Norse "hider, deceiver") crows in the forest
Gálgviðr. The golden rooster
Gullinkambi crows to the
Æsir in
Valhalla, and the third, unnamed soot-red rooster crows in the halls of the underworld location of
Hel in stanza 43. After these stanzas, the further relates that the hound
Garmr produces deep howls in front of the cave of
Gnipahellir. Garmr's bindings break and he runs free. The describes the state of humanity: The "sons of
Mím" are described as being "at play," though this reference is not further explained in surviving sources. Heimdall raises the
Gjallarhorn into the air and blows deeply into it, and Odin converses with Mím's head. The world tree
Yggdrasil shudders and groans. The
Hrym comes from the east, his shield before him. The
Midgard serpent
Jörmungandr furiously writhes, causing waves to crash. "The
eagle shrieks, pale-beaked he tears the corpse," and the ship
Naglfar breaks free thanks to the waves made by Jörmungandr and sets sail from the east. The fire inhabitants of
Muspelheim come forth. The continues that
Jötunheimr, the land of the , is aroar, and that the Æsir are in council. The
dwarfs groan by their stone doors.
Surtr advances from the south, his sword brighter than the sun. Rocky cliffs open and the women sink. The gods then do battle with the invaders:
Odin is swallowed whole and alive fighting the wolf
Fenrir, causing his wife
Frigg her second great sorrow (the first being the death of her son, the god
Baldr). Odin's son
Víðarr avenges his father by rending Fenrir's jaws apart and stabbing it in the heart with his spear, thus killing the wolf. The serpent
Jörmungandr opens its gaping maw, yawning widely in the air, and is met in combat by
Thor. Thor, also a son of Odin and described here as protector of the earth, furiously fights the serpent, defeating it, but Thor is only able to take nine steps afterwards before collapsing dead from the Serpent's venom. The god
Freyr fights
Surtr and loses. After this, people flee their homes, and the sun becomes black while the earth sinks into the sea, the stars vanish, steam rises, and flames touch the heavens. The sees the earth reappearing from the water and an eagle over a waterfall hunting fish on a mountain. The surviving Æsir meet together at the field of
Iðavöllr. They discuss Jörmungandr, great events of the past, and the
runic alphabet. In stanza 61, in the grass, they find the golden game pieces that the gods are described as having once happily enjoyed playing games with long ago (attested earlier in the same poem). The reemerged fields grow without needing to be sown. The gods
Höðr and
Baldr return from Hel and live happily together. The says that the god
Hœnir chooses wooden slips for divination and that the sons of two brothers will widely inhabit the windy world. She sees a hall thatched with gold in
Gimlé, where nobility will live and spend their lives pleasurably. Stanzas 65, found in the version of the poem, refers to a "powerful, mighty one" that "rules over everything" and who will arrive from above at the court of the gods (Old Norse ), which has been interpreted as a
Christian addition to the poem. In stanza 66, the ends her account with a description of the dragon
Níðhöggr, corpses in his jaws, flying through the air. The then "sinks down." It is unclear if stanza 66 indicates that the is referring to the present time or if this is an element of the post- world. ======== , inspired by the
Gosforth Cross, 1908) , 1895) The
Vanir god
Njörðr is mentioned in relation to in stanza 39 of the poem
Vafþrúðnismál. In the poem, Odin, disguised as
Gagnráðr, faces off with the wise
Vafþrúðnir in a battle of wits. Vafþrúðnismál references Njörðr's status as a hostage during the earlier
Æsir–Vanir War, and that he will "come back home among the wise Vanir" at "the doom of men." In stanza 44, Odin poses the question to Vafþrúðnir as to who of mankind will survive the "famous" ("Mighty Winter"). Vafþrúðnir responds in stanza 45 that those survivors will be
Líf and Lífþrasir and that they will hide in the forest of , that they will consume the morning dew, and will produce generations of offspring. In stanza 46, Odin asks what sun will come into the sky after Fenrir has consumed the sun that exists. Vafþrúðnir responds that
Sól will bear a daughter before Fenrir assails her and that after this daughter will continue her mother's path. In stanza 51, Vafþrúðnir states that, after Surtr's flames have been sated, Odin's sons
Víðarr and
Váli will live in the temples of the gods, and that Thor's sons
Móði and Magni will possess the hammer Mjolnir. In stanza 52, the disguised Odin asks the about his fate. Vafþrúðnir responds that "the wolf" will consume Odin, and that Víðarr will avenge him by sundering its cold jaws in battle. Odin ends the duel with one final question: what did Odin say to
his son before preparing his funeral pyre? With this, Vafþrúðnir realizes that he is dealing with none other than Odin, whom he refers to as "the wisest of beings," adding that Odin alone could know this. Odin's message has been interpreted as a promise of resurrection to Baldr after . ======== is briefly referenced in stanza 40 of the poem . Here, the
valkyrie Sigrún's unnamed maid is passing the deceased hero
Helgi Hundingsbane's
burial mound. Helgi is there with a retinue of men, surprising the maid. The maid asks if she is witnessing a delusion since she sees dead men riding, or if has occurred. In stanza 41, Helgi responds that it is neither.
Prose Edda Snorri Sturluson's
Prose Edda quotes heavily from and elaborates extensively in prose on the information there, though some of this information conflicts with that provided in .
Gylfaginning chapters 26 and 34 In the
Prose Edda book
Gylfaginning, various references are made to . is first mentioned in chapter 26, where the throned figure of
High, king of the hall, tells
Gangleri (King
Gylfi in disguise) some basic information about the goddess
Iðunn, including that her apples will keep the gods young until . In chapter 34, High describes the binding of the wolf Fenrir by the gods, causing the god
Týr to lose his right hand, and that Fenrir remains there until . Gangleri asks High why, since the gods could only expect destruction from Fenrir, they did not simply kill Fenrir once he was bound. High responds that "the gods hold their sacred places and sanctuaries in such respect that they chose not to defile them with the wolf's blood, even though the prophecies foretold that he would be the death of Odin." As a consequence of his role in the death of the god Baldr, Loki (described as father of Fenrir) is bound on top of three stones with the internal organs of his son
Narfi (which are turned into iron) in three places. There,
venom drops onto his face periodically from a snake placed by the
Skaði. Loki's wife
Sigyn collects the venom into a bucket, but whenever she leaves to empty it, the drops reach Loki's face, and the pain he experiences causes convulsions, resulting in
earthquakes. Loki is further described as being bound this way until the onset of .
chapter 51 Chapter 51 provides a detailed account of interspersed with various quotes from , while chapters 52 and 53 describe the aftermath of these events. In Chapter 51, High states that the first sign of will be , during which time three winters will arrive without a summer, and the sun will be useless. High details that, before these winters, three earlier winters will have occurred, marked with great battles throughout the world. During this time, greed will cause brothers to kill brothers, and fathers and sons will suffer from the collapse of kinship bonds. High then quotes stanza 45 of . Next, High describes that
the wolf will swallow the sun, then
his brother will swallow the moon, and mankind will consider the occurrence as a great disaster resulting in much ruin. The stars will disappear. The earth and mountains will shake so violently that the trees will come loose from the soil, the mountains will topple, and all restraints will break, causing Fenrir to break free from his bonds. High relates that the great serpent
Jörmungandr, also described as a child of Loki in the same source, will breach land as the sea violently swells onto it. The ship Naglfar, described in the
Prose Edda as being made from the
human nails of the dead, is released from its
mooring and sets sail on the surging sea, steered by a named
Hrym. At the same time, Fenrir, eyes and nostrils spraying flames, charges forward with his mouth wide open, his upper jaw reaching to the heavens, and his lower jaw touching the earth. At Fenrir's side, Jörmungandr sprays venom throughout the air and the sea. During all of this, the sky splits into two. From the split, the "sons of
Muspell" ride forth.
Surtr rides first, surrounded by flames, his sword brighter than the sun. High says that "Muspell's sons" will ride across
Bifröst, described in as a rainbow bridge, and that the bridge will then break. The sons of Muspell (and their shining battle troop) advance to the field of
Vígríðr, described as an expanse that reaches "a hundred leagues in each direction," where Fenrir, Jörmungandr, Loki (followed by "Hel's own"), and Hrym (accompanied by all frost ) join them. While this occurs, Heimdallr stands and blows the
Gjallarhorn with all his might. The gods awaken at the sound, and they meet. Odin rides to
Mímisbrunnr in search of counsel from Mímir. Yggdrasil shakes, and everything, everywhere fears. High relates that the Æsir and the
Einherjar dress for war and head to the field. Odin, wearing a gold helmet and an intricate
coat of mail, carries his spear
Gungnir and rides before them. Odin advances against Fenrir, while Thor moves at his side, though Thor is unable to assist Odin because he has engaged Jörmungandr in combat. According to High,
Freyr fights fiercely with Surtr, but falls because he lacks the sword he once gave to his messenger,
Skírnir. The hound
Garmr (described here as the "worst of monsters") breaks free from his bonds in front of
Gnipahellir, and fights the god Týr, resulting in both of their deaths. Thor kills Jörmungandr but is poisoned by the serpent, and manages to walk only nine steps before falling to the earth dead. Fenrir swallows Odin, though immediately afterwards his son
Víðarr kicks his foot into Fenrir's lower jaw, grips the upper jaw, and rips apart Fenrir's mouth, killing the great wolf. Loki fights Heimdallr and the two kill each other. Surtr covers the earth in fire, causing the entire world to burn. High quotes stanzas 46 to 47 of , and additionally stanza 18 of (the latter relating information about the battlefield Vígríðr).
Gylfaginning chapters 52 and 53 At the beginning of chapter 52, Gangleri asks "what will be after heaven and earth and the whole world are burned? All the gods will be dead, together with the Einherjar and the whole of mankind. Didn't you say earlier that each person will live in some world throughout all ages?" The figure of Third, seated on the highest throne in the hall, responds that there will be many good places to live, but also many bad ones. Third states that the best place to be is
Gimlé in the heavens, where a place exists called
Okolnir that houses a hall called
Brimir—where one can find plenty to drink. Third describes a hall made of
red gold located in
Niðafjöll called
Sindri, where "good and virtuous men will live." Third further relates an unnamed hall in
Náströnd, the beaches of the dead, that he describes as a large repugnant hall facing north that is built from the spines of snakes, and resembles "a house with walls woven from branches"; the heads of the snakes face the inside of the house and spew so much venom that rivers of it flow throughout the hall, in which oath breakers and murderers must wade. Third here quotes stanzas 38 to 39, with the insertion of original prose stating that the worst place of all to be is in
Hvergelmir, followed by a quote from to highlight that the dragon Níðhöggr harasses the corpses of the dead there. Chapter 53 begins with Gangleri asking if any of the gods will survive and if there will be anything left of the earth or the sky. High responds that the earth will appear once more from the sea, beautiful and green, where self-sown crops grow. The field Iðavöllr exists where Asgard once was, and, there, untouched by Surtr's flames, Víðarr and
Váli reside. Now possessing their father's hammer
Mjölnir, Thor's sons
Móði and Magni will meet them there, and, coming from
Hel, Baldr and Höðr also arrive. Together, they all sit and recount memories, later finding the gold game pieces the Æsir once owned. stanza 51 is then quoted. High reveals that two humans,
Líf and Lífþrasir, will have also survived the destruction by hiding in the wood
Hoddmímis holt. These two survivors consume the morning dew for sustenance, and from their descendants, the world will be repopulated. stanza 45 is then quoted. The personified sun, Sól, will have a daughter at least as beautiful as she, and this daughter will follow the same path as her mother. stanza 47 is quoted, and so ends the foretelling of in . File:After Ragnarök by Doepler.jpg|The new world that rises after , as described in
Völuspá (depiction by
Emil Doepler, 1905) File:Líf and Lífthrasir by Lorenz Frølich.jpg|A depiction of Líf and Lífthrasir (by
Lorenz Frølich, 1895) ==Archaeological record==