• Jump to navigation Jump to search. In Norse mythology, Víðarr (Old Norse, possibly "wide ruler",[1] sometimes anglicized as Vidar /ˈviːdɑːr/, Vithar, Vidarr, and Vitharr)...
  • In Norse mythology, Víðarr is a god among the Æsir associated with vengeance. Víðarr is described as the son of the god Óðinn and the Jǫtunn Gríðr...
  • Víðarr is the avenger of his father, the son that puts things right, the restorer. Víðarr is the slayer of the wolf. ... Víðarr restores Order, Víðarr rights wrongs.
  • However, the manner of Fenrir's death is different in Vafþrúðnismál, stanza 53, which states that Víðarr shall tear apart the terrible jaws and so shall slay the wolf.
  • Viðarr is the Æsir god of vengeance. He is the son of Óðin and the jötunn Gríðr, and he is fated to avenge his father by killing Fenrir at Ragnarök.
  • Vidar (Víðarr), the son of Odin and Giantess Grindr, is one of the Æsir gods in Norse mythology. He is also known as the silent god.
  • Víðarr is described as the son of Odin and the jötunn Gríðr, and is foretold to avenge his father's death by killing the wolf Fenrir at Ragnarök, a conflict which he is...
  • Then Víðarr takes the wolf's upper jaw in on hand and rips his mouth apart whereupon he dies'. Víðarr will be one of the gods who survive Ragnarǫk.
  • // since I doubt Víðarr will ever explain his silence, I suppose I should. He took a vow of silence out of mourning when Baldr was killed.
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