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- Tyrfing abstract "Tyrfing, Tirfing or Tyrving (The name is of uncertain origin, possibly connected to the Terwingi) was a magic sword in Norse mythology, which figures in the Tyrfing Cycle, which includes a poem from the Poetic Edda called Hervararkviða, and the Hervarar saga. The name is also used in the saga to denote the Goths. The form Tervingi was actually recorded by Roman sources in the 4th century.Svafrlami was the king of Gardariki, and Odin's grandson. He managed to trap the dwarves Dvalinn and Durin when they had left the rock where they dwelt. Then he forced them to forge a sword with a golden hilt that would never miss a stroke, would never rust and would cut through stone and iron as easily as through clothes.The dwarves made the sword, and it shone and gleamed like fire. However, in revenge they cursed it so that it would kill a man every time it was drawn and that it would be the cause of three great evils. They finally cursed it so that it would also kill Svafrlami himself.When Svafrlami heard the curses he tried to slay Dvalin, but the dwarf disappeared into the rock and the sword was driven deep into it, though missing its victim.Svafrlami was killed by the berserker Arngrim who took the sword in his turn. After Arngrim, it was worn by Angantyr and his eleven brothers. They were all slain at Samsø, by the Swedish champion Hjalmar, and his Norwegian sworn brother Orvar-Odd; but Hjalmar, being wounded by Tyrfing (its first evil deed), has only time to sing his death-song before he dies, and asks Orvar-Odd to bring his body to Ingeborg, daughter of Yngvi at Uppsala. Angantyr's daughter, Hervor (by his wife Tófa) is brought up as a bond-maid, in ignorance of her parentage. When at last she learns it, she arms herself as a shieldmaiden, and goes to Munarvoe in Samsø, in quest of the dwarf-cursed weapon. She finds it and marries King Gudmund's son Höfund. They have two sons, Heidrek and Angantyr. Hervor secretly gave her son the sword Tyrfing. While Angantyr and Heidrek walked, Heidrek wanted to have a look at the sword. Since he had unsheathed it, the curse the dwarves had put on the sword made Heidrek kill his brother Angantyr. This was the second of Tyrfing's three evil deeds.Heidrek became king of the Goths. During a voyage, Heidrek camped at the Carpathians (Harvaða fjöllum, cf. Grimm's law). He was accompanied by eight mounted thralls, and when Heidrek slept at night, the thralls broke into his tent and took Tyrfing and slew Heidrek. This was the last one of Tyrfing's three evil deeds. Heidrek's son, also named Angantyr, caught and killed the thralls, and reclaimed the magic sword, and the curse had ceased. Angantyr was the next king of the Goths, but his illegitimate half-Hun brother Hlod (or Hlöd, Hlöðr) wanted half of the kingdom. Angantýr refused, and Gizur called Hlod a bastard and his mother a slave-girl. Hlod and 343,200 mounted Huns invade the Goths (See The Battle of the Goths and Huns). The Huns greatly outnumber the Goths. The Goths won because Angantyr used Tyrfing. He killed his brother Hlod on the battleground. The bodies of the numerous warriors choke the rivers, causing a flood which filled the valleys with dead men and horses.For links to source text in English translation and Old Norse and for general commentary see Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks.".
- Tyrfing thumbnail King_Svafrlame_Secures_the_Sword_Tyrfing.jpg?width=300.
- Tyrfing wikiPageID "87313".
- Tyrfing wikiPageLength "3977".
- Tyrfing wikiPageOutDegree "40".
- Tyrfing wikiPageRevisionID "667750685".
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Angantyr.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Arngrim.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Berserker.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mythological_Norse_weapons.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mythological_swords.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Category:Tyrfing_cycle.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Durin_(Norse_mythology).
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Durinn.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Dvalinn.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Dwarf_(Norse_mythology).
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Dwarf_(mythology).
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Fornsigtuna.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Gamla_Uppsala.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Gardariki.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Garðaríki.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Goths.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Grimms_law.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Heidrek.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hervarar_saga.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hervarar_saga_ok_Heiðreks.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hervararkviða.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hervor.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hjalmar.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hjalmar_and_Ingeborg.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hlod.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hlöd.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Hlöðskviða.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Magic_sword.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Norse_mythology.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Odin.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Old_Norse.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Orvar-Odd.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Poetic_Edda.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Samsø.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Shieldmaiden.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Svafrlami.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink The_Battle_of_the_Goths_and_Huns.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Thervingi.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Tofa_(Poetic_Edda).
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Tyrfing_Cycle.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Yngvi_and_Alf.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink Örvar-Oddr.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLink File:King_Svafrlame_Secures_the_Sword_Tyrfing.jpg.
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tirfing".
- Tyrfing wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tyrfing".
- Tyrfing hasPhotoCollection Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Notable_swords.
- Tyrfing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses.
- Tyrfing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Tyrfing subject Category:Mythological_Norse_weapons.
- Tyrfing subject Category:Mythological_swords.
- Tyrfing subject Category:Tyrfing_cycle.
- Tyrfing hypernym Sword.
- Tyrfing type Article.
- Tyrfing type Weapon.
- Tyrfing type Article.
- Tyrfing type Artifact.
- Tyrfing type Object.
- Tyrfing type Source.
- Tyrfing comment "Tyrfing, Tirfing or Tyrving (The name is of uncertain origin, possibly connected to the Terwingi) was a magic sword in Norse mythology, which figures in the Tyrfing Cycle, which includes a poem from the Poetic Edda called Hervararkviða, and the Hervarar saga. The name is also used in the saga to denote the Goths. The form Tervingi was actually recorded by Roman sources in the 4th century.Svafrlami was the king of Gardariki, and Odin's grandson.".
- Tyrfing label "Tyrfing".
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfingur_(sverð).
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs ティルヴィング.
- Tyrfing sameAs 티르핑.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs m.0lzvn.
- Tyrfing sameAs Тюрфинг.
- Tyrfing sameAs Tyrfing.
- Tyrfing sameAs Q1328328.
- Tyrfing sameAs Q1328328.
- Tyrfing sameAs 提爾鋒.
- Tyrfing wasDerivedFrom Tyrfing?oldid=667750685.
- Tyrfing depiction King_Svafrlame_Secures_the_Sword_Tyrfing.jpg.
- Tyrfing isPrimaryTopicOf Tyrfing.