Valkyrie
In Norse mythology, Valkyries are divine female figures who serve as handmaidens to the god Odin, riding across battlefields to select slain warriors deemed worthy of an afterlife in Valhalla, his great hall where they prepare for the apocalyptic battle of Ragnarök.[1][2] The term "Valkyrie" derives from the Old Norse valkyrja, literally meaning "chooser of the slain," reflecting their central role in determining the fate of combatants by escorting the chosen warriors to Odin's domain, Valhalla; it is said that half of those slain in battle go to Freyja's field of Fólkvangr, which she rules.[1][3] Depicted in medieval Icelandic literature such as the Poetic Edda and various sagas, Valkyries are often portrayed as armored warrior maidens equipped with helmets, chainmail, spears, and shields, symbolizing their martial prowess and association with the chaos of war.[1][2] In Valhalla, they transition from selectors to hostesses, serving mead to the einherjar (the chosen dead) in a ritual that underscores themes of honor, feasting, and eternal readiness for battle.[3][2] Their imagery also appears in Viking Age artifacts like Gotlandic picture stones, where they are shown as winged or flying figures offering horns of drink, blending supernatural elements with the warrior culture of Scandinavia.[2] While the exact number of Valkyries varies across sources, they are frequently mentioned in groups of nine, twelve, or thirteen, with no canonical total in the surviving texts.[3] Prominent examples include Brynhildr, a fierce Valkyrie punished by Odin with an enchanted sleep and central to the tragic romance in the Völsunga saga; Sigrún, who defies fate for love of the hero Helgi in the Poetic Edda; and Gunnr, whose name means "war" and who appears in the Völuspá.[4][3] These figures embody the Valkyries' dual nature as agents of destiny and objects of romantic lore, often falling in love with mortals only to face sorrow or separation.[1][4] The Valkyrie motif, rooted in pre-Christian oral traditions, evolved through 13th-century Christian-era compilations like Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda, influencing later European art, literature, and opera, such as Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen.[3][2] Though imaginative constructs of Viking ideology rather than historical women warriors, they highlight Norse views on gender, mortality, and the divine intervention in human strife.[1]Terminology
Etymology
The term valkyrja in Old Norse, the singular form denoting a female figure in mythology, derives from the compound valr ("the slain" or "slain in battle") and kyrja ("to choose"), literally translating to "chooser of the slain."[5] The plural form appears as valkyrjur in medieval texts such as the Poetic Edda and Prose Edda, reflecting standard Old Norse nominal inflection.[6] This etymology underscores the Valkyrie's role in selecting warriors for the afterlife, a concept rooted in Germanic warrior culture. The word traces back to Proto-Germanic *walakuzjǭ, a feminine agent noun formed from *walaz ("slain" or "battlefield corpse") and a derivative of *keusaną ("to choose" or "to select"), with the suffix *-jǭ indicating agency.[7] The *walaz element evolved from Proto-Indo-European *welh₃- ("to strike, wound, or kill"), undergoing typical Germanic sound shifts such as the conversion of PIE laryngeals and the development of w from u̯. The "choose" component similarly stems from PIE *ǵews- ("to choose"), highlighting a broader Indo-European semantic field of decision-making in conflict.[8] In Old English, the cognate wælcyrge (or wælcyrige) initially paralleled the Norse meaning as "chooser of the slain," but by the late Anglo-Saxon period, it shifted semantically to denote a "sorceress," "witch," or malevolent female figure associated with fate and destruction, as seen in texts like Wulfstan's Sermo Lupi ad Anglos where it glosses Latin terms for furies or goddesses of war. This evolution likely arose from cultural adaptations and Christian influences reinterpreting pagan motifs, with wæl retaining the sense of "slaughter" from *walaz and cyrge from *kyrja, though the compound took on connotations of supernatural malice rather than heroic selection.[9]Names
In Norse mythological sources, Valkyries are frequently named in lists that emphasize their martial and supernatural attributes, drawing from Old Norse compound words often combining elements related to battle, fate, and the ethereal. These names appear primarily in the Poetic Edda, with additional attestations in sagas such as the Völsunga saga, where individual Valkyries like Brynhildr play prominent roles. Approximately 30 distinct names are recorded across these texts, many sharing roots that personify concepts of war, death, and destiny, reflecting the Valkyries' function as choosers of the slain.[10] The following table catalogs key Valkyrie names from Eddic poetry and sagas, including their Old Norse forms, approximate meanings derived from etymological analysis, and primary attestations. Meanings are based on breakdowns of compound elements, such as gunnr ("war, battle"), sigr ("victory"), geirr ("spear"), hildr ("battle"), and skögull ("shaker"), which evoke the chaos and inevitability of combat.| Old Norse Name | Meaning | Attestation |
|---|---|---|
| Brynhildr | "Armored battle" (bryn- "mail-coat" + hildr "battle") | Völsunga saga; Helreið Brynhildar (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Sigrún | "Victory rune/secret" (sigr "victory" + rún "rune, mystery") | Helgakviða Hundingsbana I & II (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Skuld | "Future" or "debt/obligation" (from skulu "shall, owe") | Völuspá st. 20, 30 (Poetic Edda); also a Norn, linking fate to death selection[10] |
| Gunnr | "War" or "battle" | Völuspá st. 30; Grímnismál st. 36 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Hildr | "Battle" | Völuspá st. 30; Grímnismál st. 36 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Mist | "Mist" or "cloud" (evoking supernatural obscurity in battle) | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Skögul | "Shaker" (likely of spears or warriors) | Völuspá st. 30; Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Geirskögul | "Spear-shaker" (geirr "spear" + skögull "shaker") | Völuspá st. 30; Grímnismál st. 36 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Gǫndul | "Wand-wielder" or "magic staff" (linked to sorcery in war) | Völuspá st. 30 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Hrist | "Shaker" or "trembler" (of shields or foes) | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Skeggjöld | "Bearded-age" or "axe-age" (skegg "beard/edge" + jöld "age, time") | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Þrúðr | "Strength" or "power" | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Hlökk | "Noise" or "din" (of battle) | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Herfjǫtur | "Army-fetter" (her "army" + fjǫtur "fetter, chain") | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Göll | "Clamor" or "uproar" | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Geirahǫð | "Spear-battle" (geirr "spear" + hǫð "battle") | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Randgríðr | "Shield-shaker" (rand "shield" + gríðr "peace/truce," ironic for war) | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Ráðgríðr | "Counsel-truce" (ráð "counsel" + gríðr "truce") | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Reginleif | "Powers-heir" or "counsel-legacy" (regin "powers/gods" + leif "heir") | Grímnismál st. 35 (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Sváva | "Swan" or "flutterer" (linked to swan-maiden motifs) | Helgakviða Hjǫrvarðssonar (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Sigrdrífa | "Victory-driver" (sigr "victory" + drífa "driver, snowdrift") | Sigrdrífumál (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Kára | "Wild, curly one" (fierce or tempestuous) | Kormáks saga; associated with Helgakviða |
| Ǫlrún | "Ale-rune" or "secret beer" (mystical brew) | Völundarkviða (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Alvítr | "All-wise" or "foreign elf" (al- "all" + vítr "wise") | Völundarkviða (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Hlaðgunnr Svanhvít | "Battle white-swan" (hlað "hearth/battle" + gunnr "war"; svan-hvít "swan-white") | Völundarkviða (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Hervǫr | "Army-warrior" (her "army" + vǫr "guardian") | Völundarkviða; Heiðreks saga[10] |
| Eir | "Mercy" or "help" (healing aspect in battle) | Nafnaþulur (Prose Edda reference in Eddic context) |
| Geirdriful | "Spear-thrower" (geirr "spear" + drífa "driver") | Nafnaþulur (Prose Edda) |
| Skuld | (Repeated for emphasis in multiple roles) | Darraðarljóð (Poetic Edda)[10] |
| Róta | "Sleet" or "storm" (weather evoking doom) | Nafnaþulur (Prose Edda) |