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In Germanic mythology, Wayland the Smith ( ang, WÄ“land; , ; Old Frisian: Wela(n)du; german: Wieland der Schmied; goh, Wiolant; ''Galans'' (''Galant'') in Old French; gem-x-proto, WÄ“landaz, italic=no from ', lit. "crafting one") is a master blacksmith originating in Germanic heroic legend, described by
Jessie Weston Jessie Weston may refer to: *Jessie Weston (scholar) (1850–1928), English independent scholar, medievalist and folklorist *Jessie Weston (writer) Jessie Edith Weston (also known as Jessie Weston-Campbell, 1865 – 21 May 1939) was a New Zeala ...
as "the weird and malicious craftsman, Weyland".Weston, J. (1929). 'Legendary Cycles of the Middle Age', in Tanner, J.R. (ed.), ''The Cambridge Medieval History'' Vol. VI, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, p. 841f. Wayland's story is most clearly told in the Old Norse sources '' Völundarkviða'' (a poem in the '' Poetic Edda'') and '' Þiðreks saga''. In them, Wayland is a smith who is enslaved by a king. Wayland takes revenge by killing the king's sons and then escapes by crafting a winged cloak and flying away. A number of other visual and textual sources clearly allude to similar stories, most prominently the Old English poem '' Deor'' and the Franks Casket. Wayland is also mentioned in passing in a wide range of texts, such as the Old English '' Waldere'' and ''
Beowulf ''Beowulf'' (; ang, BÄ“owulf ) is an Old English epic poem in the tradition of Germanic heroic legend consisting of 3,182 alliterative lines. It is one of the most important and most often translated works of Old English literature. The ...
'', as the maker of weapons and armour. He is mentioned in the German poems about Theoderic the Great as the father of Witige. He is also attributed to have made various swords for Charlemagne and his paladins, namely Curtana, Durendal and Joyeuse.


Attestations


Earliest evidence

The oldest reference known to Wayland the Smith is possibly a gold solidus with a Frisian runic inscription ᚹᛖᛚᚩᛞᚢ wela u 'wayland'. It is not certain whether the coin depicts the legendary smith or bears the name of a moneyer who happened to be called Wayland (perhaps because he had taken the name of the legendary smith as an epithet). The coin was found near Schweindorf, in the region
Ostfriesland East Frisia or East Friesland (german: Ostfriesland; ; stq, Aastfräislound) is a historic region in the northwest of Lower Saxony, Germany. It is primarily located on the western half of the East Frisian peninsula, to the east of West Frisia ...
in north-west Germany, and is dated AD 575–625.


Scandinavian


Visual

Wayland's legend is depicted on Ardre image stone VIII, and probably on a tenth-century copper mount found in Uppåkra in 2011. A number of other possible visual representations exist in early medieval Scandinavia, but are harder to verify as they do not contain enough distinctive features corresponding to the story of Wayland found in textual sources.


''Völundarkviða''

According to '' Völundarkviða'', the king of the Finns (the Old Norse term for the Saami people) had three sons: Völundr (Wayland) and his two brothers Egil and Slagfiðr. In one version of the myth, the three brothers lived with three Valkyries: Ölrún, Hervör alvitr and
Hlaðguðr svanhvít In Norse mythology, Hlaðguðr svanhvít (Old Norse ''Hlaðguðr'' "swan-white"Simek (2007:151).) is a valkyrie. Hlaðguðr svanhvít is attested in the '' Poetic Edda'' poem '' Völundarkviða'' as the sister of the valkyrie Hervör alvitr (both ...
. After nine years, the Valkyries left their lovers. Egil and Slagfiðr followed, never to return. In another version, Völundr married the
swan maiden The swan maiden is a mythical creature who shapeshifts from human form to swan form. The key to the transformation is usually a swan skin, or a garment with swan feathers attached. In folktales of this type, the male character spies the maiden, ...
Hervör, and they had a son, Heime, but Hervör later left Völundr. In both versions, his love left him with a ring. In the former myth, he forged seven hundred duplicates of this ring. Later, King
Niðhad King Niðhad, ''Níðuðr'' or ''Niðungr'' was a cruel king in Germanic legend. He appears as Níðuðr in the Old Norse '' Völundarkviða'', as ''Niðung'' in the '' Þiðrekssaga'', and as ''Niðhad'' in the Anglo-Saxon poems '' Deor'' and ...
captured Völundr in his sleep in Nerike and ordered him hamstrung and imprisoned on the island of Sævarstöð. There Völundr was forced to forge items for the king. Völundr's wife's ring was given to the king's daughter,
Böðvildr Böðvildr, Beadohild, Bodil or Badhild was a princess, the daughter of the evil king Níðuðr/Niðhad/Niðung who appears in Germanic legends, such as ''Deor'', ''Völundarkviða'' and '' Þiðrekssaga''. Initially, she appears to have been a t ...
. Niðhad wore Völundr's
sword A sword is an edged, bladed weapon intended for manual cutting or thrusting. Its blade, longer than a knife or dagger, is attached to a hilt and can be straight or curved. A thrusting sword tends to have a straighter blade with a pointed ti ...
. In revenge, Völundr killed the king's sons when they visited him in secret, and fashioned goblets from their skulls, jewels from their eyes, and a brooch from their teeth. He sent the goblets to the king, the jewels to the queen and the brooch to the king's daughter. When Böðvild takes her ring to Völundr for mending, he tricks and seduces her, and gets her pregnant. Later, he flies to Niðhad's hall where he explains how he has murdered the king's sons, fashioned jewelry from their bodies and fathered a child with Böðvild. The crying king laments that his archers and horsemen can't reach Völundr, as the smith flies away never to be seen again. Niðhad summons his daughter, asking her if Völundr's story was true. The poem ends with Böðvild stating that she was unable to protect herself from Völundr as he was too strong for her.


=''Þiðreks saga''

= The Scandinavian '' Thidrekssaga''/''Didrikssaga'' also includes a version of the story of Wayland ( non, Velent). This part of the saga is sometimes called ''
Velents þáttr smiðs ''Velents þáttr smiðs'' is the name given to the part of the ''Þiðrekssaga af Bern'' saga that deals with Wayland the Smith (Velent, Wieland, Völundr). Summary Velent is the son of the Jötunn, giant Vaði from Sjaelland.''The Saga of Didr ...
''. The events described at King Niðung's court (identifiable with Niðhad in the Eddic lay) broadly follow the version in the Poetic Edda (though in the saga his brother, Egil the archer, is present to help him to make his wings and to help Velent escape). However, the rest of the story is different. It tells of how Wayland was the son of a giant named Wade ( non, Vadi), and how he was taught to smith by two dwarfs. It also tells of how he came to be with King Nidung, crossing the sea in a hollow log, and how he forged the sword
Mimung Witege, Witige or Wittich ( ang, Wudga, Widia; Gotho- lat, Vidigoia) or Vidrik "Vidga" Verlandsson ( + ''Viðga'' or ''Videke'' + ''Verlandsson'', ''Vallandsson'', or ''Villandsson'') is a character in several Germanic heroic legends, poems abo ...
as part of a bet with the king's smith. And it also tells about the argument that led to Nidung's hamstringing of Wayland, and ultimately to Wayland's revenge: Nidung had promised to give Wayland his daughter in marriage and also half his kingdom, and then went back on this promise. The saga elaborates on the flying contraption he builds using feathers collected by Egil; the contraption was called the ''flygil'' which suggests it was a pair of wings (german: ) in the original German version, but conceived of as a '' fjaðrhamr'' (feather cloak) by the saga-writers. Wayland here also wears a blood-filled bladder as a prop, instructing Egil to aim his arrow at this bag, thus feigning injury and deceiving the king. The saga also tells of the birth of a son, Wideke ( non, Viðga), to Wayland and Nidung's daughter. While he was still in captivity, the couple have a conversation, and they vow each other's love; the smith also reveals he has fashioned a weapon ( non, vapn) and hidden it in the forge for his unborn son. He settles in his native Sjoland and eventually marries the princess with the blessing of her brother who became the next king after Niðung's death. This son inherits the sword Mimung, and goes on to become one of Thidrek/Didrik's warriors.


Other

In Icelandic manuscripts from the fourteenth century onwards, the terms '' Labyrinth'' and ''Domus Daedali'' ('home of Daedalus') are rendered ''Vǫlundarhús'' ('house of Vǫlundr'). This shows that Völundr was seen as equivalent to, or even identical with, the classical hero Daedalus. In '' Þorsteins saga Víkingssonar'', Völundr is the manufacturer of the
magic sword In mythology, legend or fiction, a magic sword is a sword with magical powers or other supernatural qualities. Renowned swords appear in the folklore of every nation that used swords.Josepha Sherman, ''Once upon a Galaxy'' p 113 In some tra ...
Gram (also named ''Balmung'' and ''Nothung'') and the magic ring that Þorsteinn retrieves.


English


Visual

The Franks Casket is one of a number of other early English references to Wayland, whose story was evidently well known and popular, although no extended version in Old English has survived. In the front panel of the Franks Casket, incongruously paired with an '' Adoration of the Magi'', Wayland stands at the extreme left in the forge where he is held as a slave by King
Niðhad King Niðhad, ''Níðuðr'' or ''Niðungr'' was a cruel king in Germanic legend. He appears as Níðuðr in the Old Norse '' Völundarkviða'', as ''Niðung'' in the '' Þiðrekssaga'', and as ''Niðhad'' in the Anglo-Saxon poems '' Deor'' and ...
, who has had his hamstrings cut to hobble him. Below the forge is the headless body of Niðhad's son, whom Wayland has killed, making a goblet from his skull; his head is probably the object held in the tongs in Wayland's hand. With his other hand Wayland offers the goblet to Böðvildr, Niðhad's daughter. Another female figure is shown in the centre; perhaps Wayland's helper, brother Egil, or Böðvildr again. To the right of the scene his brother) catches birds, which he then makes wings from with their feathers, so he is able to escape. During the Viking Age in northern England, Wayland is depicted in his smithy, surrounded by his tools, at Halton, Lancashire, and fleeing from his royal captor by clinging to a flying bird, on crosses at Leeds, West Yorkshire, and at Sherburn-in-Elmet and
Bedale Bedale ( ) is a market town and civil parish in the district of Hambleton, North Yorkshire, England. Historically part of the North Riding of Yorkshire, it is north of Leeds, south-west of Middlesbrough and south-west of the county town of ...
, both in North Yorkshire. English local tradition placed Wayland's forge in a Neolithic long barrow mound known as Wayland's Smithy, close to the Uffington White Horse in Oxfordshire. If a horse to be shod, or any broken tool, were left with a sixpenny piece at the entrance of the barrow the repairs would be executed.


Textual

The
Old English Old English (, ), or Anglo-Saxon, is the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the early Middle Ages. It was brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, Anglo ...
poem '' Deor'', which recounts the famous sufferings of various figures before turning to those of Deor, its author, begins with "Welund":
:Welund tasted misery among snakes. :The stout-hearted hero endured troubles :had sorrow and longing as his companions :cruelty cold as winter - he often found woe :Once Nithad laid restraints on him, :supple sinew-bonds on the better man. :That went by; so can this. :To Beadohilde, her brothers' death was not :so painful to her heart as her own problem :which she had readily perceived :that she was pregnant; nor could she ever :foresee without fear how things would turn out. :That went by, so can this.
Weland had fashioned the mail shirt worn by
Beowulf ''Beowulf'' (; ang, BÄ“owulf ) is an Old English epic poem in the tradition of Germanic heroic legend consisting of 3,182 alliterative lines. It is one of the most important and most often translated works of Old English literature. The ...
according to lines 450–455 of the epic poem of the same name:
:No need then :to lament for long or lay out my body. :If the battle takes me, send back :this breast-webbing that Weland fashioned :and Hrethel gave me, to Lord Hygelac. : Fate goes ever as fate must. :: ( Heaney trans.)
The reference in '' Waldere'' is similar to that in Beowulf – the hero's sword was made by Weland
Gordon, R. K. Robert Kay Gordon (1887–1973) was an English scholar of medieval and early modern English literature and administrator at the University of Alberta in Canada. In 1913, having graduated from the Universities of University of Toronto and Oxford ...
(1954)
''Anglo-Saxon Poetry''
London: Dent, p. 65. This is a partial text of the ''Walder'' fragments in modern English. See the start of fragment A for Wayland.
– while
Alfred the Great Alfred the Great (alt. Ælfred 848/849 – 26 October 899) was King of the West Saxons from 871 to 886, and King of the Anglo-Saxons from 886 until his death in 899. He was the youngest son of King Æthelwulf and his first wife Osburh, who bot ...
in his translation of Boethius asks plaintively: "What now are the bones of Wayland, the goldsmith preeminently wise?" Swords fashioned by Wayland are regular properties of medieval romance. King Rhydderch Hael gave one to
Merlin Merlin ( cy, Myrddin, kw, Marzhin, br, Merzhin) is a mythical figure prominently featured in the legend of King Arthur and best known as a mage, with several other main roles. His usual depiction, based on an amalgamation of historic and le ...
, and Rimenhild made a similar gift to Child Horn. English literature was also aware of the character Wade, whose name is similar to that of Vaði, the father of Wayland in ''Þiðreks saga''.


Continental Germanic

Wayland is known by the name ''Wieland'' in line 965 of the Latin epic '' Waltharius'', a literary composition based on Old High German oral tradition, as the smith who made the poem's eponymous protagonist's armor:


Toponyms and folklore

Wayland is associated with Wayland's Smithy, a burial mound in the Berkshire Downs. This was named by the English, but the megalithic mound significantly predates them. It is from this association that the folk belief came about that a horse left there overnight with a small silver coin ( groat) would be
shod A horseshoe is a fabricated product designed to protect a horse hoof from wear. Shoes are attached on the palmar surface (ground side) of the hooves, usually nailed through the insensitive hoof wall that is anatomically akin to the human toen ...
by morning. This belief is mentioned in the first episode of '' Puck of Pook's Hill'' by Rudyard Kipling, "Weland's Sword", which narrates the rise and fall of the god.


In modern culture

Sir Walter Scott includes Wayland Smith as a character in his novel ''Kenilworth'' set in 1575. Both the Austrian
composer A composer is a person who writes music. The term is especially used to indicate composers of Western classical music, or those who are composers by occupation. Many composers are, or were, also skilled performers of music. Etymology and Defi ...
Siegmund von Hausegger (1904) and the Russian composer
Leopold van der Pals Leopold van der Pals (St. Petersburg 4 July 1884 – Dornach 7 February 1966) was a Danish/Dutch modernist composer who developed a personal and lyrical style in composing by involving elements of late romanticism, expressionism and impressionism ...
(1913) used the Wayland saga as inspiration for symphonic poems. Weland the smith is one of the characters in '' Puck of Pook's Hill'', a fantasy book by Rudyard Kipling.


See also


References

;Citations ;Bibliography * * * * *


External links


Völundarkviða - Heimskringla.no
{{Authority control Characters in Norse mythology English legendary characters Germanic gods Germanic legends Legendary Norsemen Smithing gods Swordsmiths Swan maidens