• Loki tricks Höðr into shooting Baldr. Höðr (Old Norse: Hǫðr [ˈhɔðz] , Latin Hotherus; often anglicized as Hod, Hoder, or Hodur) is a god in Norse mythology.
  • Höðr’ün Efsanesinin Mitolojideki Yankıları. Höðr’ün Efsanesi ve Mitolojik Önemi. Mytholojide Höðr’ün Rolü ve Sonrasındaki Gelişmeler.
  • Hodr (Höðr) is the Norse god of darkness. The twin brother of the beloved Baldr, Hodr is indirectly responsible for Baldr’s death.
  • It is by Höðr’s hands that the greatest tragedy in Norse cosmology occurs, and despite obvious trickery, Höðr bears this burden alone.
  • In one less well known version, Baldr and Höðr are rival kings fighting a naval war. In this version Höðr is not blind and is wholly responsible for Baldr's death.
  • Despite being tricked by Loki, Höðr was the one responsible for the death of his brother, and there was a general rule that deaths like Baldr’s must be avenged.
  • Hodr stands to the left of the dead god. Hodr (pronounced “HO-der”; from Old Norse Höðr, “Warrior”[1]) is a Scandinavian god whom we know only from a single...
  • In Skáldskaparmál Höðr is periphrased as the Blind God, Baldr's Slayer, Thrower of the Mistletoe, Son of Odin, Companion of Hel, and Foe of Váli.
  • Höðr. Hod (genellikle Hod, Hoder ya da Hodur şeklinde İngilizleştirilir.) İskandinav mitolojisinde kör tanrı, Odin'in oğlu, Balder'in ikizidir.
  • During a gathering of gods, where it became a sport to try to harm Baldr, seeing him invulnerable, Loki approached the blind Höðr.