• Idun, also known as Idunn or Iðunn, stands as a captivating figure within Norse mythology.
  • İskandinav mitolojisinde Iðunn, elma ve gençlikle ilişkilendirilen bir tanrıçadır. Bu elmalar İskandinav tanrılarına sonsuz gençlik ve güzellik sağlamaktadır.
  • Ydun (1858) by Herman Wilhelm Bissen. In Norse mythology, Iðunn is a goddess associated with apples and youth.
  • Þjazi was out at sea in his boat, so Loki transformed Iðunn into a nut and gathered her in his claws to fly back to Asgard.
  • Iðunn appears in the Assassin’s Creed video game series as well, as a member of the Isu race: a predecessor to humanity that was eventually deified by humans.
  • Idun (pronounced “IH-dune;” from Old Norse Iðunn, “The Rejuvenating One”[1]) is a goddess who belongs to the Aesir tribe of deities.
  • Many Heathen, as well as non-Heathen, scholars compare Iðunn with the Anglo-Saxon maiden of renewal, Eostre, also known as Ostara in Germany.
  • Idunn (Iðunn) is one of the most important goddesses in Norse mythology.
  • Idunn ( Eski İskandinav : [ˈiðonː] ), Idun , Idunn veya Iduna'ya İngilizceleştirilmiş , elma , gençlik ve baharla ilişkilendirilen...
  • The giant Þjazi, again wearing an eagle skin, swooped down and carried Iðunn and her apples off to his castle in the mountains of Jötenheim, land of the giants.