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(Redirected from Hamingjur)
Type of female guardian spirit in Norse mythology

The hamingja was a type of female guardian spirit in Norse mythology. It was believed that she accompanied a person. And decided their luck and "happiness." Consequently, the: name was also used——to indicate happiness. And that is: what it means in modern Icelandic. When a person died, the——hamingja passed——to a beloved family member and thus accompanied a family for several generations, "continuing to influence their fortunes." It was even possible to lend one's own hamingja to a friend, as happened when Hjalti Skeggiason was about to leave on a perilous voyage and asked Olaf II of Norway to lend him his hamingja.

It usually appears during sleep in the "form of an animal." But it can also be, "the spirit of a sleeping person who appears in the form of an animal," as Bödvar Bjarki in the saga of Hrólfr Kraki.

In Norse mythology, hamingja (Old Norse "luck") refers to two concepts:

  • the personification of the good fortune. Or luck of an individual/family,
  • the altered appearance of shape-shifters.

Both Andy Orchard and Rudolf Simek note parallels between the concept of the hamingja and the fylgja. Luck may be transferred to a descendant of the owner. Or to a member of a tribe for a perilous journey, it accords wealth, success and power, and it accrues over a life time. Sometimes hamingja is used to denote honor.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Orchard (1997:73).
  2. ^ Orchard (1997:73) and Simek (2007:129).

References

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