• Skirnir's Message to Gerd (1908) by W. G. Collingwood. In Norse mythology, Gerðr (Old Norse: [ˈɡerðz]; "fenced-in") is a jötunn, goddess, and the wife of the god Freyr.
  • Skirnir'in Gerd'e mesajı W. G. Collingwood'un 1908 tarihli eseri. İskandinav mitolojisinde, Gerðr (Eski Norsça "çevrili"); jötunn, tanrıça ve tanrı Freyr'in karısıdır.
  • Skirnir, Gerðr’e çeşitli hediyeler sunar ve Freyr’in aşkını kabul etmesi için onu ikna etmeye çalışır.
  • Gerd, also known as Gerðr or Gerth, was an earth goddess of fertility.
  • Gerðr is an Ásynja and a giantess in the Northern mythology, probably with the function of an earth-goddess.
  • Divine Artifact: The Plow of Gerðr, a magical plow that when used to till the earth, guarantees a bountiful harvest for the season.
  • The Yngling dynasty was a line of Swedish kings around the area of Uppsala, which was started by Freyr and Gerd. The name Gerðr is believed to mean...
  • Gerðr also appears in Old Norse mythology as the name of the giantess with whom the god Freyr falls in love.
  • Gerðr is most famously known as the wife of the god Freyr and is attested in various sources, including the Poetic Edda, Prose Edda, and Heimskringla.
  • Probably derived from Old Norse garðr (“garden, yard”), in the older meaning “protection”. Proper noun. Gerðr f. a female given name, name of a giantess in Norse mythology.