• When Þjazi discovers that Iðunn is gone, he takes his eagle's plumage and chases Loki all the way to Ásgarðr, where he is killed by the Æsir.
  • Ancient Origins articles related to Iðunn in the sections of history, archaeology, human origins, unexplained, artifacts, ancient places and myths and legends.
  • İdunn veya Iðunn, Nesir Edda’ya göre şiir tanrısı Bragi ile evli olan sonsuz gençlik tanrıçası olup, gençliğin kaynağı ve tanrıların ölümsüzlüğünün sağlayıcısı...
  • 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.
  • Iðunn (romanized "Idun") is one of the goddesses of the Norse pantheon. She is best known in two unrelated roles: as the wife of Bragi (the god of poetry)...
  • The eagle agrees, but only on the condition that Loki make a solemn vow to lure Iðunn, bearing her apples of youth, from the safety of Asgard.
  • The name Iðunn is believed to derive from the Old Norse word "ið," which means "again" or "anew," and "unnr," which means "love" or "wave."
  • Iðunn. Genitive: Iðunnar. - Icelandic. Nominative: Iðunn. Accusative ... Iðunn is an Ásynja, the goddess of youth.
  • Norse folklore says that Iðunn, which can also be written as Idunn or Iduna, was the goddess for spring and renewal.
  • IÐUNN collection In Norse mythology Iðunn is the goddess of spring, youth, and rejuvenation. She is the keeper of magical apples of immortality.