oneoga:

there are few things to fear
                      when you’re the one that births monsters
                      the one that punishes them

there are few things to fear
                      when all the demons are things you have made
                                           through sin 
                                           through salvation

no
there are few things to fear
but chief among the daunts that send god king’s blood to ice
              is the wrath of a mother

                  the wrath of sigyn
                                      she who holds ragnarok at bay 
              she is something to fear

              this goddess that has been reduced to loyalty alone
              this goddess that cradles the nine in her tender hands

                                  she
                                  she is something to be feared

nanihoo:

That’s why I think Loki orbits Sigyn, not the other way around. 

Even if he doesn’t realize it, Sigyn’s everything Loki searches for. She’s accepting and assuring, she really sees him, can prop him up or knock him down a few pegs when he needs it, she’s his equal, in good time and bad. Sigyn doesn’t need Loki, she has no use for manipulating or lying to him. She can stand on her own two feet just fine without him and that gives him the freedom to go on his little chaos runs. I think that also gives him the drive to earn her attention. 

He may come and go, but wherever Sigyn goes Loki’s sure to be somewhere in orbit around her. 

Hello! I’d like to know something more about Sigyn, since despite my researches I don’t seem able to find much about her. Than you in advance for your time!

fuckyeahnorsemythology:

Unfortunately there really is not very much about Sigyn in Norse mythology, so it’s possible that you actually have found all of it and still feel shortchanged. In the Edda poems Sigyn is mentioned only in Völuspá, and all it says is:

Þar sitr Sigyn
þeygi um sínum
ver velglýjuð

There sits Sigyn (under Hveralundr, with Loki)
not (yet?), of/concerning her 
husband, happy.

Snorri explains early in Gylfaginning that Loki is married to Sigyn and they have a son named Nari or Narvi (that is, Snorri gives both names). Váli is not mentioned at that time. Later he describes the events mentioned in Völuspá, that Loki is bound to the rock and Sigyn protects him from poison by holding a bowl over him, and this description is also found in the prose epilogue to Lokasenna.

This really is all of the remaining mythological information on Sigyn. What is especially strange and frustrating is that she actually is mentioned in early skáldic poetry in a kenning for Loki – farmr Sigynjar arma ‘burden of Sigyn’s arms’ in Haustlöng by Þjóðólfr úr Hvini, and possibly also farmr arma hapts galdrs ‘burden of the arms of the captive of magic in Eilífr Goðrúnarson’s Þórsdrápa (or something like that, it’s a little difficult to unpack… this is the “incantation fetter” that you see floating around, though I’m not sure how one would translate haptr, which means a captive or prisoner, that way. It’s not clear why this would refer to Sigyn).

(Edit 5/5/15: I messed up, reading hapts as the genitive of the word haptr meaning ‘captive’, following this translation of the poem, and failed to notice that it can also be hapt ‘fetter; deity’. See this post for more)

Sigyn also seems to appear on the Gosforth Cross in England, holding the bowl over the bound Loki:

image

(image from Wikimedia Commons)

The references to her in skáldic poetry and the scene’s appearance on the Gosforth cross indicate that it was already well-known in the Viking age, but it doesn’t really tell us much more about Sigyn. A last thing I would like to add is that it is considered highly debatable whether Loki originally played a part in the myth of the death of Baldr. A lot of scholars believe that blaming Loki for Baldr’s death was a late innovation in Norse mythology, maybe not even occurring until after Christianization. If that’s true, we can’t help but wonder why exactly Loki’s binding is already known in early times, before the motivation for it. It’s also interesting to me that the image above from the Gosforth Cross appears on the same panel as a figure interpreted as Heimdallr (because he’s holding a horn) fighting a monster that is clearly not Loki. Granted, we don’t need to believe that both images are depicting things happening at the same time, and Loki is a shapeshifter, but it does seem to be evidence, even if weak, that the artist who made the Gosforth cross would have disagreed with Snorri that Heimdallr and Loki kill each other at Ragnarök.

That is about all I have to say about Sigyn as a mythological figure. If you’re interested in the meaning of names I did write a piece on why I think the meaning “victorious girlfriend” (a frequently given definition of Sigyn) is wrong on my own blog here (link). It’s a little dense but you might find it interesting.

-þorraborinn

the-halfbreed-hobbit:


Loki Chained to the Rocks

by Niels Hansen Jacobsen. Plaster, 1888-1889, has since disappeared. A marble version from 1928-1929 stil exists (see previous post).  

The sculpture’s subject comes from Nordic mythology. It shows Loki, who is punished for his misdeeds by being bound to three rocks. A serpent spewing venom was hung above him. Loki’s wife, Sigyn, collected the venom in a bowl, but when she had to empty it, the venom dripped on him, and he writhed so that the earth shook. The sculpture shows the moment at which he is writhing in pain, straining all his muscles in an effort to break his bonds.

sources:  1,  2.  

xxazaleamoonxx:

A photo of my altar setup. I made an offering of black tea and fruit-filled biscuits for Hela and Loki today (the tea doesn’t look black, in the photo, I know). 

Items featured on my altar:
* A painting of Loki
* A green dogtag with Loki’s name in Runes (in front of the picture of Him)
* 2 jars with stags on the lids
* A  dragon jewelry box
 * A  white tree to symbolize Yggdrasil
* Two offering plates and a shot glass
*  A couple of incense burners
* A basket of crystals
* A  dragon hatching from an egg with my birthstone on it (Aquamarine)
*A tiny purple bottle with a glass stopper
* A Pisces symbol (in front of the tree, not very clear in the pic)
* A tiny golden apple for Idunn (also in front of the tree, behind the Pisces symbol)
 *A bowl with a silver lid
* A shell from one of my late hermit crabs (RIP Scuttle)
* 2 cats for Freyja
* A large white candle for Thor
* A tiny clay Mjolnir (in front of Thor’s candle)
* A grey dogtag with Thor’s name in Runes (next to the tiny Mjolnir)
* A skull for Hela
* A raven/crow for Odin
* A green bowl with water in it for Sigyn
* A  tiny crystal ball
* A container filled with cinnamon and paprika, leftover from a spell I did with Loki.