- en.wikipedia.org VíðarrA depiction of Víðarr stabbing Fenrir while holding his jaws apart by W. G. Collingwood, 1908, inspired by the Gosforth Cross.
- tr.wikipedia.org VíðarrW. G. Collingwood'un Gosforth Cross'dan esinlendiği, Víðarr'ın çenesini açık tutarak Fenrir'i bıçakladığını gösteren 1908 tarihli tasviri.
- norsemythologist.com vidar/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.
- scientiatr.com VíðarrBu makalede, günümüz toplumu üzerindeki önemini ve etkisini anlamak için Víðarr'in en alakalı yönlerinden bazılarını inceleyeceğiz.
- mythus.fandom.com wiki/VidarrIn 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...
- ydalir.ca norsegods/vidarr/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.
- nezihseven.wordpress.com 2016/10/09/vidarr-ve-…Yayınlamış olduğum bir önceki yazıda Vişnu’dan bahsedilmişti: O da tıpkı Víðarr gibi düzen getirendir, nihai kurtarıcıdır, iblislerin düşmanı, refah sağlayıcıdır.
- norse-mythology.org vidar/Vidar (pronounced “VIH-dar”; from Old Norse Víðarr, which might mean “The Wide-Ruling One”[1]) is one of the younger generation of gods who survive Ragnarok...
- pantheon.org articles/v/vidarr.htmlHowever, 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.
- worldhistoryedu.com vidarr-norse-god-of-vengeance…Vidarr and his brother Vali survive Ragnarok. A depiction of Víðarr and his half-brother Váli. Painting by Swedish artist Axel Kulle, 1892.