Grottisongr
Grottisöngr is a Scandinavian legend that was written down by Snorri Sturluson in the Poetic Edda. It warns against greed and explains why the sea turned salt. It has also survived independently as a heavily modified Scandinavian folk tale. It has been used as a political metaphor by Scandinavian socialists.
- Skjöld was a son of Odin's and he was the ancestor of the Skjöldungar (Scyldings). He ruled the country that we today call Denmark, but which in those days was called Götaland (see Reidgotaland). Skjold had a son named Fridleif and who succeeded him on the throne. Fridleif had a son who was named Fródi who became king after Fridleif at the time when Caesar Augustus proclaimed peace on earth and Christ was born. The same peace ruled in Scandinavia and it was called the Fródi peace when no man hurt another, even if he met his father's or his brother's killer, free or tied. No man was a robber and a golden ring could rest on the moor of Jalangr for a long time.
- King Fródi visited Sweden and its king Fjölnir. Then he bought two female slave Norse mythology
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|align=center| The Nine Worlds of Norse Mythology
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|align=center| People, places and things: Deities | Giants | Dwarves | Valkyries
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|align=center| Orthography | Numbers | Runes | Kenning
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|align=center| Elder Edda | Younger Edda | Skald | Sagas | Later influence
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