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Loki

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This page is about the Norse god Loki. For other uses of the word see Loki (disambiguation).
File:Manuscript loki.jpg
This picture, from an 18th century Icelandic manuscript, shows Loki with his invention - the fishing net.

Loki Laufeyjarson is the god of mischief in Norse mythology, a son of Fárbauti and Laufey. He is described as the "contriver of all fraud". Loki is in a sense both a god and a Jotun (comparable to the Titans and Gigantes of Greek mythology). He mixed freely with the gods for a long time, even becoming Odin's blood brother. The composer Richard Wagner presented Loki under an invented Germanized name Loge in his operas Das Rheingold and Die Walküre. Nevertheless, "the figure of Loki remains obscure; there is no trace of a cult, and the name does not appear in place-names"[1].

Nature

The trickster god is a complex character, a master of guile and deception. Loki was not so much a figure of unmitigated badness as a kind of celestial con man. Loki is an adept shape-shifter, with the ability to change both form (examples include transmogrification to a salmon, horse, bird, flea, etc.) and sex.

According to some scholarly theories Loki is conceived of as a fire spirit, with all the potential for good and ill associated with fire. However, this view is probably due to linguistic confusion with logi "fire", as there is little indication of it in myth where Loki's role is predominantly associated with Odin, either as Odin's wily counterpart or antagonist. Ström[2] identifies the two gods to the point of calling Loki "a hypostasis of Odin", and Rübekeil[3] suggests that the two gods were originally identical, deriving from Celtic Lugus (the name of which would be continued in Loki).

Children

File:IdunandlokibyJohnBauer.jpg
Iðunn and Loki, by John Bauer

Loki was the father (and in one instance the mother) of many creatures, men and monsters.

Having liaisons with giantesses was nothing unusual for gods in Norse mythology—both Odin and Freyr are good examples; and since Loki was actually a giant himself, there is nothing unusual about this activity. Together with Angrboda, he had three children:

While he was in the form of a mare Loki also gave birth to Sleipnir, the eight-legged steed of Odin.

Scheming with fellow gods

Loki occasionally works with the other gods. For example, he tricked the unnamed giant who built the walls around Asgard, out of being paid for his work by distracting his horse while disguised as a mare—thereby he became the mother of Odin's eight-legged horse Sleipnir. He also retrieved Odin's spear, Freyr's ship and Sif's wig from Dvalin, the dwarf, as well as rescuing Iðunn. Finally, in Þrymskviða, Loki manages, with Thor at his side, to get Mjolnir back when the giant Thrym secretly steals it, in order to ask for Freyja as a bride, in exchange.

Loki tricks Höðr into shooting Baldr

Slayer of Baldr

Loki may have overplayed his hand when, disguised as a giantess, he arranged the murder of Baldr. He used mistletoe, the only plant which had not sworn to never harm Baldr, and made a dart of it, which he tricked Baldr's blind brother Höðr into throwing at Baldr, thereby killing him. Another version of the myth, preserved in Gesta Danorum, does not implicate Loki.

The gods, bereft at the loss of Baldr, travelled to the underworld to bargain for Baldr's life; there, Hel told them that the only way to ensure the god's return was to have everything in the world weep for him. The gods went through the land, and convinced not only men, women and animals to weep for Baldr, but also rocks and trees. Finally, they arrived at a cave in which a giantess dwelled. The gods were unable to convince her to cry for Baldr, and so he remained in the underworld.

Sigyn and Loki, by Mårten Eskil Winge (1890)

When the gods discovered that the giantess had been Loki in disguise, they hunted him down and he was forced to flee. He hid by night as a salmon beneath a waterfall, and by day, perhaps trying to anticipate how the gods might catch him, he idly wove nets and burnt them. One day the gods found his fireplace at night, and found a net in the fire. From its design they created another, which they used to catch Loki. This may be both the first example of reverse engineering in mythic history, and the origin of the fish net.

The gods bound Loki to three rocks with the entrails of his son Váli. Then they tied a serpent above him, the venom of which drips onto his face. His wife Sigyn (a goddess, not the giantess who was the mother of Loki's monster brood) gathers the venom in a bowl, but from time to time she has to turn away to empty it, at which point the poison drips onto Loki, who writhes in pain, thus causing earthquakes. He will free himself, however, in time to attack the gods at Ragnarök along with the other giants and his monster children.

Friend to man

Not all lore depicts Loki as a malevolent being. An 18th century ballad (that may have drawn from a much earlier source) from the Faroe Islands, entitled Loka Táttur, depicts Loki as a friend to man: when a thurs (troll or giant) comes to take a farmer's son away, the farmer and his wife pray to Odin to protect him. Odin hides the son in a field of wheat, but the thurs finds him. Odin rescues the son and takes him back to the farmer and his wife, saying that he is done hiding the son. The couple then prays to Hœnir, who hides the son in the neck-feathers of a swan, but again the thurs finds him. On the third day, they pray to Loki, who hides the son amidst the eggs of a flounder. The thurs finds the flounder, but Loki instructs the boy to run into a boathouse. The giant gets his head caught and Loki kills him by chopping off his leg and inserting a stick and a stone in the leg stump to prevent the thurs from regenerating. He takes the boy home, and the farmer and his wife embrace both of them.

Homologues

Some anthropologists have compared him to Coyote, a trickster figure of Native American mythology. Others compare him to Hermes, who tricked Apollo and also often broke boundaries. Loki can at times be reminiscent of the Chinese Monkey King whose persona in myth underwent changes over the centuries.

See also

Other spellings

  • Common Danish, Swedish and Norwegian form: Loke
  • Nynorsk - Norwegian form: Lokkje
  • German form: Lohho

References

  1. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, 2004
  2. ^ Folke Ström, Loki. Ein mythologisches Problem, Göteborg (1956)
  3. ^ Ludwi Rübekeil, Wodan und andere forschungsgeschichtliche Leichen: exhumiert, Beiträge zur Namenforschung 38 (2003), 25–42