• In Norse mythology Ægir (EYE-gir) is the Lord of the Ocean. ... Ægir brews with the help of his nine daughters, who are often portrayed as the waves of the ocean.
  • According to Norse mythology, Ægir is known for hosting elaborate feasts for the gods and other mythical beings in his grand hall beneath the sea.
  • Ægir /Aegir and Rán (pronounce Raun, not Rann) Ægir is the unfathomable Void, loaded with intelligence and orderliness. Rán is the perfect order in Ægir, and...
  • Mountain-dweller: the giant (Ægir). The Arnamagnæan Codex has “Ægir” instead of “Egil,” but, aside from the fact that Thor had just left Ægir’s house, the...
    • Future maintenance releases of our stable version
    • Development of future versions of Ægir, and
    • Extending Ægir with new features.
  • 1) Old Norse ægir = 'sea', 'ocean' [1] [2] [3] [4]. 2) Old Norse Ægir = 'sea giant', 'water man' [4]. Both words derive from Ancient Germanic *ahwo = 'water' [4] [5].
  • Ægir (anglicised as Aegir) is a jötunn and a personification of the sea in Norse mythology. He often hosts the gods in his halls and is associated with brewing…
  • Aegir (Ægir). Home Norse Mythology Encyclopedia Aegir (Ægir).
  • Ran and Ægir as well as the dynamic I imagine they'd have is one of these obsessions! As well as their 9 daughters like come on how adorable is this?!.
  • In Lokasenna, Ægir hosts a party for the gods where he provides the ale brewed in an enormous pot or cauldron provided by Thor and Týr.