Misplaced Pages

Beyla

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
One of Freyr's servants in Norse mythology For places in Guinea, see Beyla, Guinea and Beyla Prefecture.

Beyla (Old Norse: [ˈbœylɑ]) is one of Freyr's servants along with her husband, Byggvir, in Norse mythology. Beyla is mentioned in stanzas 55, 66, and the prose introduction to the Poetic Edda poem Lokasenna. Since this is the only mention of Beyla, scholars have turned to the etymology of Beyla's name for additional information about her. However, the meaning of her name is unclear and her name has been proposed as related to "cow," "bean," or "bee."

Lokasenna

In the prose introduction to Lokasenna, Beyla and Byggvir are cited as attending In stanza 55 of Lokasenna, after his verses with Sif, Loki accuses Beyla of being filthy but the reason for this is unclear.

Stanza 55:

Beyla qvaþ:
«Fioll a/ll scialfa,
hygg ec a for vera
heiman Hlorriþa;
hann reþr ró
þeim er rogir her
goð a/ll oc gvma.»
Beyla spake:
"The mountains shake,
and surely I think
From his home comes Hlorrithi now;
He will silence the man
who is slandering here
Together both gods and men."

Stanza 56:

Loci qvaþ:
«Þegi þv, Beyla!
þv ert Byggviss qven
oc meini blandin mioc;
okynian meira
coma meþ asa sonom,
a/ll ertv, deigia! dritin.»
Loki spake:
"Be silent, Beyla!
thou art Byggvir's wife,
And deep art thou steeped in sin;
A greater shame
to the gods came ne'er,
Befouled thou art with thy filth."

In relation to Loki's comments in Lokasenna, proposals have been made that Beyla and her husband are personifications of agriculture associated with Freyr: Beyla as the manure that softens the earth and develops the seed, Byggvir as the refuse of the mill, chaff.

Notes

  1. ^ Lindow (2001:78).
  2. ^ Henry Adams Bellows' 1936 translation of Lokasenna. Available online:
  3. Thorpe (1851:198-199.)

References in Popular Culture

References

The god Freyr in Germanic paganism
Attributes
Major attestations
Names and associates
Cult
Old Norse religion and mythology
Mythological Norse people, items and places
Deities,
dwarfs, jötnar,
and other figures
Æsir
Ásynjur
Vanir
Jötnar
Dwarfs
Heroes
Others
Locations
Underworld
Rivers
Other locations
Events
Sources
Society
Religious practice
Festivals and holy periods
Other
See also
Categories: