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Dellingr
View on WikipediaIn Norse mythology, Dellingr (Old Norse possibly "the dayspring"[1] or "shining one"[2]) is a god. Dellingr is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled in the 13th century from earlier traditional sources, and in the Prose Edda, written in the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson. In both sources, Dellingr is described as the father of Dagr, the personified day. The Prose Edda adds that, depending on manuscript variation, he is either the third husband of Nótt, the personified night, or the husband of Jörð, the personified earth. Dellingr is also attested in the legendary saga Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks. Scholars have proposed that Dellingr is the personified dawn and his name may appear both in an English surname and place name.
Attestations
[edit]Poetic Edda
[edit]Dellingr is referenced in the Poetic Edda poems Vafþrúðnismál and Hávamál. In stanza 24 of Vafþrúðnismá, the god Odin (disguised as "Gagnráðr") asks the jötunn Vafþrúðnir from where the day comes, and the night and its tides. In stanza 25, Vafþrúðnir responds:
- Delling hight he who the day's father is, but
- night was of Nörvi born; the new and waning moons the
- beneficent powers created, to count the years for men.[3]
In Hávamál, the dwarf Þjóðrœrir is stated as having recited an unnamed spell "before Delling's doors":
In the poem Fjölsvinnsmál, Svipdagr asks "What one of the gods has made so great the hall I behold within?" Fjölsviðr responds with a list of names, including Dellingr.[5] In a stanza of the poem Hrafnagaldr Óðins, the appearance of Dagr, horse, and chariot are described, and Dagr himself is referred to as "the son of Delling."[6]
Prose Edda
[edit]In chapter 10 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning, the enthroned figure of High states that Dellingr is a god and the third husband of Nótt. The couple have Dagr, who carries the features of his "father's people", which are described as "bright and beautiful". Odin placed both Dellingr's son, Dagr, and Dellingr's wife, Nótt, in the sky, so that they may ride across it with their horses and chariots every 24 hours.[7]
However, scholar Haukur Thorgeirsson points out that the four manuscripts of Gylfaginning vary in their descriptions of the family relations between Nótt, Jörð, Dagr, and Dellingr. In other words, depending on the manuscript, either Jörð or Nótt is the mother of Dagr and partner of Dellingr. Haukur details that "the oldest manuscript, U, offers a version where Jǫrð is married to Dellingr and the mother of Dagr while the other manuscripts, R, W and T, cast Nótt in the role of Dellingr's wife and Dagr's mother", and argues that "the version in U came about accidentally when the writer of U or its antecedent shortened a text similar to that in RWT. The results of this accident made their way into the Icelandic poetic tradition".[8]
Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks
[edit]Five riddles found in the poem Heiðreks gátur contained in the legendary saga Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks employ the phrase "Delling's doors" (Old Norse Dellings durum) once each. As an example, in one stanza where the phrase is used Gestumblindi (Odin in disguise) poses the following riddle:
- What strange marvel
- did I see without,
- in front of Delling's door;
- its head turning
- to Hel downward,
- but its feet ever seek the sun?
- This riddle ponder,
- O prince Heidrek!
'Your riddle is good, Gestumblindi,' said the king; 'I have guessed it. It is the leek; its head is fast in the ground, but it forks as it grows up.'[9]
Theories
[edit]Jacob Grimm states that Dellingr is the assimilated form of Deglingr, which includes the name of Dellingr's son Dagr. Grimm adds that if the -ling likely refers to descent, and that due to this Dellingr may have been the "progenitor Dagr before him" or that the succession order has been reversed, which Grimm states often occurs in old genealogies.[10] Benjamin Thorpe says that Dellingr may be dawn personified, similarly to his son Dagr, the personified day.[11]
Regarding the references to "Delling's door" as used in Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks, Christopher Tolkien says that:
- What this phrase meant to the maker of these riddles is impossible to say. In Hávamál 160 it is said that the dwarf Thjódrørir sang before Delling's doors, which (as Delling is the father of Dag (Day) in Vafþrúðnismál 25) may mean that he gave warning to his people that the sun was coming up, and they must return to their dark houses; the phrase would then virtually mean 'at sunrise.' As regarding dǫglings for Dellings in H, and Dǫglingar were the descendants of Dagr (according to SnE. 183).[12]
John Lindow says that some confusion exists about the reference to Dellingr in Hávamál. Lindow says that "Dellingr's doors" may either be a metaphor for sunrise or the reference may refer to the dwarf of the same name.[13]
The English family name Dallinger has been theorized as deriving from Dellingr.[14] The English place name Dalbury (south of Derbyshire) derives from Dellingeberie, which itself derives from Dellingr.[15]
See also
[edit]- Ēostre, an Old English goddess possibly associated with the dawn
Notes
[edit]- ^ Bellows (1936:75).
- ^ Orchard (1997:32).
- ^ Thorpe (1907:13).
- ^ Thorpe (1907:47).
- ^ Thorpe (1907:100).
- ^ Thorpe (1866:31–32).
- ^ Byock (2005:19).
- ^ Haukur (2008:159—168).
- ^ Tolkien (1960:35).
- ^ Stallybrass (1883:735).
- ^ Thorpe (1851:143).
- ^ Tolkien (1960:34).
- ^ Lindow (2001:93).
- ^ Barber (1968:26).
- ^ Kerry (1897:63).
References
[edit]- Barber, Henry (1968). British Family Names: Their Origin And Meaning. Genealogical Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-8063-0021-4.
- Bellows, Henry Adams (Trans.) (1936). The Poetic Edda. Princeton University Press.
- Byock, Jesse (Trans.) (2006). The Prose Edda. Penguin Classics. ISBN 978-0-14-044755-2.
- Haukur Thorgeirsson (2008). "Hinn fagri foldar son" as published in Gripla XIX, pages 159–168. Árni Magnússon Institute for Icelandic Studies.
- Kerry, Charles (Editor) (1897). Journal of the Derbyshire Archaeological and Natural History Society. Derbyshire Archaeological Society.
- Lindow, John (2001). Norse Mythology: A Guide to the Gods, Heroes, Rituals, and Beliefs. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-515382-8.
- Orchard, Andy (1997). Dictionary of Norse Myth and Legend. Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-34520-5.
- Stallybrass, James Steven. (1883) (Trans.) Jacob Grimm's Teutonic Mythology, volume II. W. Swan Sonnenschein & Allen.
- Thorpe, Benjamin (Trans.) (1851). Northern Mythology: Comprising the Principal Popular Traditions and Superstitions of Scandinavia, North Germany, and the Netherlands. E. Lumley.
- Thorpe, Benjamin (Trans.) (1866). Edda Sæmundar Hinns Frôða: The Edda of Sæmund the Learned. Part I. London: Trübner & Co.
- Thorpe, Benjamin (Trans.) (1907). The Elder Edda of Saemund Sigfusson. Norrœna Society.
- Tolkien, Christopher (Trans.) (1960). The Saga of King Heidrik the Wise: Translated from the Icelandic with Introduction, Notes and Appendices by Christopher Tolkien. Thomas Nelson and Sons LTD.
Dellingr
View on GrokipediaName and Etymology
Linguistic Origins
The name Dellingr derives from Old Norse, formed from the adjective dallr, meaning "shining" or "luminous", with the suffix -ingr forming a diminutive or agent noun denoting "the shining one" or "gleaming."[3][4] This traces to Proto-Germanic *dalliz or *Dallingaz, interpreted as "shining one."[3] Linguistically, Dellingr exhibits i-umlaut, where the vowel e results from the influence of the following high vowel i on an original a in Proto-Norse *dall-ingaʀ, a common phonological process in North Germanic languages that shifted stem vowels for grammatical harmony. The term relates to a broader Proto-Germanic semantic field of light and brightness, with cognates including Old English deall ("proud, eminent, bright"), stemming from an underlying sense of radiance or distinction. Further back, this points to the Proto-Indo-European root *dʰel- ("to light, shine"), as cataloged in comparative etymological reconstructions.[4] Phonetic parallels appear in other Germanic words evoking daylight, such as Old English dæg ("day") and Gothic dags ("day"), both from Proto-Germanic *dagaz, which shares a conceptual overlap with dawn imagery despite distinct roots; these terms illustrate how North Germanic nomenclature for celestial phenomena often intertwined shining and diurnal motifs. In 13th-century Icelandic manuscripts, such as those preserving the Poetic Edda and Prose Edda, the name is consistently rendered as Dellingr, reflecting the standard Old Norse nominative singular ending -r for masculine i-stems, pronounced approximately as /ˈdɛlːɪŋr/ with a geminated ll and trilled r. Occasional modern or abbreviated forms like Delling appear in secondary sources or anglicized contexts, implying a shortened pronunciation /ˈdɛlɪŋ/ by dropping the case marker, though this does not reflect primary textual variations.[5][6]Interpretations of the Name
The name Dellingr is most commonly interpreted as "the dayspring" or "the shining one," evoking the initial glow of dawn and its mythological connotations of transition from night to light. This etymological sense derives from Old Norse roots associated with brightness and emergence, aligning with Dellingr's familial ties to Dagr (Day) and Nótt (Night) in the Eddas. While the precise etymology remains conjectural, the predominant interpretation aligns with themes of light and dawn.[3] Scholar Jacob Grimm, in his comparative analysis of Germanic mythology, proposed that Dellingr represents an assimilated form of Deglingr ("son of Dag" or "day-descendant"), linking it to broader Indo-European motifs of dawn deities through linguistic parallels in Proto-Germanic terms for light and daybreak. Grimm's evidence draws from cognates in Old English (dæg, day) and other branches, suggesting Dellingr embodies the luminous threshold of daylight, akin to dawn figures in Vedic (Uṣas) and Greek (Eos) traditions.[7] The name's survival in onomastics is evident in the modern English surname Dallinger, theorized as a direct derivation from Old Norse Dellingr, reflecting Viking Age personal naming practices in Anglo-Scandinavian regions. Similarly, the place name Dalbury in Derbyshire originates from Dellingeberie (attested in the Domesday Book, 1086), meaning "stronghold of Dellingr's people," where Dellingr likely functioned as a personal or theophoric name denoting brightness or dawn.[8]Attestations in Old Norse Literature
Poetic Edda References
Dellingr appears in poems of the Poetic Edda, an anonymous collection of Old Norse mythological and heroic poetry preserved primarily in the 13th-century Codex Regius manuscript, as well as in later Eddic-style poetry. These references portray him primarily as a divine figure associated with the origins of day and light, often in cosmological or incantatory contexts. The attestations emphasize his paternal role and symbolic connections to dawn without providing extended narratives. In the poem Vafþrúðnismál, a wisdom contest between Odin (disguised as Gagnráðr) and the giant Vafþrúðnir, Dellingr is named as the father of Dagr (Day) in stanza 25. The giant responds to Odin's query about the origins of night and day: "The father of day is Delling called, / And the night was begotten by Nör; / Full moon and old by the gods were fashioned, / To tell the time for men."[2] This brief mention situates Dellingr within the mythic genealogy of time, linking him to Nótt (Night) as her husband and contrasting his role with Nör's paternity of night.[2] The poem Hávamál, attributed to Odin and comprising gnomic wisdom and spells, references Dellingr in stanza 161 as part of Odin's enumeration of his magical knowledge. Odin recounts: "A fifteenth I know, that before the doors / Of Delling sang Thjothrörir the dwarf; / Might he sang for the gods, and glory for elves, / And wisdom for Hroptatyr wise."[9] Here, "Delling's doors" functions as a kenning for the threshold between night and day, evoking the dawn as a liminal space where the dwarf Thjothrörir performs an incantation granting strength to the gods (Æsir), prosperity to the elves (Álfar), and foresight to Odin (Hroptatýr).[9] This usage underscores Dellingr's symbolic guardianship over the transition to daylight. In Fjölsvinnsmál, a riddle poem involving the hero Svipdag's quest to reach the hall of Menglǫð, Dellingr is listed among the divine guardians of the gates in stanza 34. The watchman Fjölsviðr names the protectors: "Dori and Uri, Dellingr, Atvarðr, / Líðskjalf, Loki" as those who hold the keys to the enclosed realm.[10] This enumeration positions Dellingr as one of the Æsir-like figures securing a magical, otherworldly domain, implying his role in maintaining cosmic boundaries akin to his dawn associations elsewhere. The late Eddic-style poem Hrafnagaldr Óðins, a creation hymn invoking Odin's ravens preserved in 17th-century manuscripts, describes Dagr's procession in stanza 24, explicitly identifying him as "the son of Delling." The text states: "Dellingur’s son drove forward his steed, / Adorned with precious jewels; / The horse’s mane shines across the world of men, / His charger drew Dvalinn’s plaything in a chariot."[11] This vivid imagery highlights Dellingr's lineage as the progenitor of daylight's radiant journey, reinforcing themes of illumination and divine motion in the poem's cosmological framework.[11]Prose Edda References
In Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, Dellingr appears primarily in the Gylfaginning section, chapter 5, where he is portrayed as a god of the Æsir and the third husband of Nótt, the giantess personifying night and daughter of the giant Nörfi or Narfi.[12] Their union produces Dagr, the personification of day, described as bright and fair like his father in contrast to Nótt's dark complexion.[13] Odin, referred to as Allfather, receives Nótt and Dagr as gifts and assigns them celestial roles: he provides each with a horse and chariot to traverse the sky alternately, with Nótt riding the horse Hrímfaxi (whose bit-foam creates dew on earth) ahead of Dagr's Skinfaxi (whose mane illuminates the heavens and ground), thereby establishing the daily cycle of night and day for humanity.[12] This account synthesizes earlier poetic traditions into a structured prose narrative, emphasizing Dellingr's Æsir affiliation and his contribution to cosmic order.[13] Within the Gylfaginning's framing device, where the Swedish king Gylfi interrogates disguised gods (High, Just-as-High, and Third) about the world's workings, Dellingr's role underscores the Æsir's dominion over natural phenomena, integrating him into the pantheon's hierarchical explanations of creation and time.[12] Manuscript variations among the four primary codices of Gylfaginning affect Dellingr's familial ties: while most, including Codex Wormianus and Codex Trajectinus, name Nótt as his wife and Dagr's mother, the oldest surviving manuscript, Codex Upsaliensis (c. 1300), substitutes Jörð (the earth personification, typically Nótt's daughter by Annarr in other versions) as Dellingr's spouse and Dagr's mother, thereby reshaping the genealogy and linking day more directly to earthly elements.[14] This divergence, noted in stemmatic analyses, highlights textual fluidity in 13th-14th century copies but does not alter Dellingr's core association with dawn-like brightness or his place in the Æsir.[15]References in Sagas
In the legendary saga Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks, Dellingr appears through the kenning "Delling's doors" (Dellings durum in Old Norse), employed in five riddles within the poem Heiðreks gátur. This phrase evokes the threshold of dawn, framing the riddles as observations made at the onset of day. The saga, a fornaldarsaga composed around the 13th century, integrates these poetic elements into its narrative without expanding on Dellingr's mythology. The riddles occur during a verbal contest between the blind wanderer Gestumblindi—disguised Odin—and King Heiðrekr, where Gestumblindi poses enigmas to outwit the monarch. This exchange underscores themes of light emerging from darkness and transitional moments, as the riddles are introduced with the refrain "What is that wonder that I saw outside Delling's doors?" (Hvat er þat undra er ek úti sá fyrir Dellings durum?), symbolizing revelations at dawn's boundary. Such usage parallels similar dawn-related kennings in Eddic poetry, though here they serve a dramatic, contest-driven purpose. A representative example is the "leek riddle," posed as: "What is the marvel which I have seen outside Delling's doorway? Two restless, lifeless things boiling a wound-leek (sáralauk)."[16] The solution is a fire and kettle, with "wound-leek" as a kenning for an onion, but the riddle's placement outside "Delling's doors" ties it to the imagery of dawn's first light illuminating everyday scenes. This poetic device highlights Dellingr's association with transitional illumination in a narrative setting. Overall, Dellingr lacks any direct mythological role or characterization in the saga, functioning solely as a motif for poetic expression rather than an active figure. The references emphasize kennings' role in enhancing the saga's intellectual and thematic depth, without narrative elaboration on his divine attributes.Mythological Role and Associations
Family Relationships
In Norse mythology, Dellingr is depicted as the third husband of Nótt, the personification of night, with whom he fathered Dagr, the personification of day. Nótt, daughter of the giant Nörvi (or Narfi), first married Naglfari, by whom she bore a son named Auðr; her second husband was Annarr, father of her daughter Jörð, the personification of earth. These sequential marriages position Dellingr within a lineage of day-night deities that governs the cosmic order.[17] The Poetic Edda confirms Dellingr's paternity of Dagr in the poem Vafþrúðnismál, where the giant Vafþrúðnir states that "the father of day is Delling called." This brief attestation aligns with the familial ties outlined in the Prose Edda, emphasizing Dellingr's role in the diurnal cycle without further detailing his marital connections.[18] Manuscript variations in the Prose Edda introduce an alternative tradition in which Dellingr marries Jörð rather than Nótt, making her the mother of Dagr; this occurs in the oldest surviving copy, the Codex Upsaliensis (c. 1300–1325), while later manuscripts like Codex Regius favor the Nótt union. Such divergence may reflect scribal interpretations linking Dellingr's dawn associations to earth's fertility, though the standard account maintains his bond with Nótt.[19]Symbolism of Dawn and Light
Dellingr embodies the liminal moment between night and day in Norse cosmology, serving as a symbolic threshold that marks the shift from darkness to illumination. This transitional role is particularly evident in the kenning "Delling’s doors," which represents the gateway of dawn and underscores the poetic depiction of dawn as a boundary in the cosmic order.[20] In Eddic poetry, such as Hávamál, this imagery portrays Dellingr's domain as the point where nocturnal forces yield to diurnal light, emphasizing his function as a mediator in the eternal rhythm of time.[21] As the father of Dagr, the personified Day, Dellingr's symbolism extends to the renewal and transition inherent in the world's daily cycle, where his lineage facilitates the procession of light across the heavens. In the Prose Edda, Dagr is equipped with a horse whose mane shines brightly, riding it to illuminate the earth each day, thereby enacting a perpetual renewal that counters the preceding reign of Nótt, Night.[17] This familial connection reinforces Dellingr's thematic association with hopeful beginnings, as the dawn heralds vitality and order following the stasis of night.[20] Dellingr's links to light motifs in Eddic poetry further illuminate his role in maintaining cosmic harmony, with his name interpreted as "the gleaming one" evoking brightness and clarity. These motifs, including shining thresholds, symbolize the structured progression of celestial bodies and the restoration of equilibrium in the mythological worldview, as seen in references to dawn's radiant emergence in poems like Vafþrúðnismál.[20] Such imagery positions Dellingr not merely as a progenitor but as an archetypal force of luminescence that delineates the boundaries of light's dominion.[22]Scholarly Interpretations
Theories on Divine Nature
Scholars have debated Dellingr's classification within the Norse pantheon due to ambiguous references in the Poetic Edda, particularly in Fjölsvinnsmál, where his name appears in a list of guardians that blends divine and dwarf-like figures, such as Loki alongside typical dwarf names like Dori and Ori.[23] This vagueness has led to speculation on whether Dellingr represents an Æsir god, an elf (álfr), or a dwarf, especially since his name also appears in dwarf enumerations (thulur) in Snorri Sturluson's Skáldskaparmál and a dwarf named Þjóðrœrir sings before "Dellingr's doors" in Hávamál, stanza 160, potentially indicating a separate dwarf entity or metaphorical dawn gates.[24] John Lindow interprets Dellingr primarily as a minor deity associated with dawn, emphasizing his role as father of Dagr (Day) and husband of Nótt (Night), which aligns with his name's etymological link to "shining" or "dayspring," though he remains far less prominent than light-associated figures like Baldr, who features centrally in eschatological narratives.[24] Lindow notes the Hávamál reference as a point of confusion, possibly alluding to a dwarf homonym rather than diminishing Dellingr's divine status among the Æsir.[24] In Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, Dellingr is integrated into the euhemeristic framework of Gylfaginning, where the gods are portrayed as deified historical chieftains from Asia Minor who migrated north, with Dellingr positioned as Nótt's third husband and Dagr's father to explain cosmic cycles, thus historicizing him as a mortal ancestor rather than a purely supernatural entity. This treatment reflects Snorri's broader strategy to reconcile pagan myths with Christian historiography, subordinating Dellingr's mythical attributes to a rationalized genealogy without resolving underlying ambiguities from earlier poetic sources.Comparative Mythology
Dellingr shares thematic parallels with the Greek goddess Eos and the Roman goddess Aurora, both of whom personify the dawn as a herald of light emerging from the enveloping darkness of night. In the Prose Edda, Dellingr is depicted as the spouse of Nótt, the personification of night, and father of Dagr, the embodiment of day, thereby facilitating the cosmic transition that mirrors the daily renewal brought by Eos—who rises each morning in her golden chariot to scatter darkness—or Aurora, who opens the gates of heaven for the sun's arrival. These figures collectively underscore an Indo-European motif of dawn as a liminal entity bridging obscurity and illumination, often associated with beauty, renewal, and the onset of vitality. Linguists have reconstructed the Proto-Indo-European dawn deity as *h₂éwsōs, a feminine figure reflected in cognates across daughter languages, including Greek Eos (from *h₁éwsōs) and Vedic Uṣas. While Dellingr's name derives from Old Norse dellingr ("dayspring," linked to dagaz "day"), some comparative studies invoke Grimm's linguistic framework to explore broader connections between Germanic light deities and this PIE root, positing Dellingr as a localized, masculinized variant within the Indo-European tradition of celestial time-keepers. Jacob Grimm's Deutsche Mythologie highlights etymological ties between Germanic terms for day and light, facilitating such reconstructions that position Dellingr amid a pantheon of dawn-bringers evolving from a common ancestral mythology. In contrast to the Vedic Uṣas, who is prominently female and deeply integrated into the Rigveda's familial cosmology as the daughter of Dyaus (sky) and sister to deities like the Adityas, Dellingr represents a gendered divergence in Germanic tradition, where the dawn aspect is paternal and tied to nocturnal unions rather than solar sibling bonds. Uṣas is invoked in over 300 hymns as a vibrant, chariot-riding herald of cosmic order (ṛta), emphasizing fertility and divine lineage, whereas Dellingr's role remains more subdued, focused on generational continuity between night and day without extensive hymnal elaboration. This difference illustrates how Indo-European dawn motifs adapted variably, with Germanic versions emphasizing patrilineal cosmic mechanics over the expansive, poetic femininity seen in Indic sources.References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Dellingr
