Fenrir
Fenrisulfr, Fenrir or Fenris is a Norse mythological wolf.
Fenrir or Fenris may also refer to:
- Fenrir (moon), a moon of Saturn named after Fenrisulfr
- Fenris - Inner Sphere designation of a Medium-class Clan Battlemech in the science-fiction series Battletech
- Fenrir is a monster card in the Yu-Gi-Oh! Trading Card Game
In printed media:
- Fenris Ulf, or Maugrim, a character in C.S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
- Fenrir Greyback, a lycanthropic Death Eater in the Harry Potter series of books
- The Lord of Terror, from the anime and manga Oh My Goddess!
- Fenris - character in a comic book Lucifer (DC Comics) published by Vertigo, an imprint of DC Comics
- The Fenris device, a fearsome weapon in the eponymous book by Brian Stableford
In music:
- Fenriz is the stage name of the lyricist and drummer for the Norwegian black metal band Darkthrone
In video games:
- The Fenrir is a Minmatar freighter class capital ship in Eve Online.
- The Fenris brood is a part of the Zerg Swarm in the StarCraft series.
- Fenrir is the name of an ancient civilization that lived in the north of Aselia in Tales of Phantasia
- Fenrir is the companion of the Ice spirit Celsius in Tales of Symphonia
- Get of Fenris, a werewolf tribe in the roleplaying game Dark Ages: Werewolf
- The motorcycle that Cloud Strife drove in the movie Final Fantasy VII Advent Children
- A recurring summon from the Final Fantasy series, appearing in Final Fantasy VI, Final Fantasy IX, and Final Fantasy XI
- Fenris the familiar in the Quest for Glory universe
- Fenrir is the name of the Democratic Republic of Leasath's advanced superfighter from the flight-simulation game Ace Combat X: Skies of Deception
- Fenrir is the name of a dark magic tome in the game Fire Emblem
- Fenrir is a type of pet that can be mounted by any character classess in the online game, Mu Online
- The Keyblade you obtain in the videogame Kingdom Hearts II after defeating Sephiroth
- Fenrir is the name of a Muspell aircraft carrier in the computer game Battle Engine Aquila
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Fenrir (disambiguation)". Image Credit.
Extended Definition: Fenrir
Fenrir
- Fenrir and Fenris redirects here. See Fenrir for other uses.
In Norse mythology, Fenrir or Fenrisulfr is a wolf, the son of Loki and the giantess Angrboða. Fenrir is bound by the gods, but is ultimately destined to grow too large for his bonds and swallow Odin whole during the course of Ragnarök. He will be slain by Odin's son, Viðarr, who will slice his belly open, avenging his father.
Fenrir has two sons, Hati ('hate') and Skoll. Skoll chases the horses Árvakr and Alsviðr, that drag the chariot which contains the sun. Hati chases Máni, the moon. 'Skoll', in certain circumstances, is used as a heiti to refer indirectly to the father (Fenrir) and not the son. This ambiguity works in the other direction also, for example in the Vafþrúðnismál, where a confusion exists in stanza 46 where Fenrir is given the sun-chasing attributes of his son Skoll. This can mostly be accounted for by the use of Hróðvitnir and Hróðvitnirson to refer to both Fenrir and his sons.
Learning from the prophecy of the sybil (cf. Völuspá) and from his contest with Vafþrúðnir (related in Vafþrúðnismál) that the children of Loki and Angrboða would bring trouble to the gods, Odin had the wolf brought to him along with his brother Jörmungandr and his sister Hel.
After casting Jörmungandr into the sea and Hel down into the land of the dead, Odin had the wolf raised among the Æsir. Only the god Týr was daring enough to feed the growing monster. The gods, urged by the wolf's increasing strength and by prophecies that he would be their destruction, attempted to bind the great beast. Twice he agreed to be chained and twice easily burst out of two successive fetters. The first, made of iron, was called Lœðingr. The second, also of iron, but of twice the strength, was called Drómi.
Odin then had the dwarfs forge the chain Gleipnir ("deceiver" or "entangler"). It appeared to be only a silken ribbon but was made of six wondrous ingredients: the sound of a cat's footfall, the beard of a woman, the roots of a mountain, bear's sinews (meaning nerves, sensibility), fish's breath, and bird's spittle. Skírnir, Freyr's messenger, brought it back to Ásgarðr.
Then, in the island called Lyngvi ("Heathery") in the lake called Ámsvartnir ("Red-black") (places unknown to us), the gods challenged Fenrisulfr to break this chain also. But the wolf noted the thinness and fineness of construction of Gleipnir and not unreasonably suspected a trick. He agreed to make the test only if one of the gods was willing to place his hand in the wolf's mouth during the binding as a pledge to free him if he failed to break the chain. No god was willing to do this, until Týr stood forth and placed his hand in the wolf's mouth. Fenrisulfr strained to burst the chain but the more he struggled the tighter he was held. When the gods would not free him, the wolf bit off Týr's hand at the wrist, the point afterwards called "the wolf joint".
Then, as told by Snorri in Brodeur's translation:
When the Æsir saw that the Wolf was fully bound, they took the chain that was fast to the fetter, and which is called Gelgja 'Thin', and passed it through a great rock—it is called Gjöll 'Scream'—and fixed the rock deep down into the earth. Then they took a great stone and drove it yet deeper into the earth—it was called Thviti—and used the stone for a fastening-pin. The Wolf gaped terribly, and thrashed about and strove to bite them; they thrust into his mouth a certain sword: the guards caught in his lower jaw, and the point in the upper; that is his gag. He howls hideously, and slaver runs out of his mouth: that is the river called Ván 'Hope'; there he lies till the Twilight of the Gods.
It is prophesied that at Ragnarök the wolf will at last break free and join forces with the enemies of the gods and will then swallow Odin himself whole. After that Viðarr, Odin's son, will slay the wolf to avenge his father.
In modern fiction and media
Many books, television serials, roleplaying games and video games use the name "Fenris" or "Fenrir" in reference to a wolf or wolf-like character, including Harry Potter, Doctor Who and the Narnia series.
Several modern comic books have specifically reworked the story of Fenrir. In Mike Carey's fantasy comic book Lucifer, Fenrir appears with the Anglicised name "Fenris", and his role in the book is similar to his role in mythology, as he attempts to trigger the destruction of creation. In the Ragnarök manhwa, Fenris Fenrir is the reincarnation of the wolf Fenrir, while in Mythical Detective Loki Ragnarok, Fenrir is freed from his bindings and comes to Earth as a small, black puppy to find Loki.
In volumes 5 and 6 of the Japanese comic book Oh My Goddess!, by Kosuke Fujishima, a giant wolf by the name "Fenrir" embodies the "programme for total destruction of the Earth" and calls himself "the Great King of Terror".
Other names and spellings
- Fenrisúlfr
- Hróðvitnir, 'the famous wolf'
- Fenris wolf(an English translation of Fenrisulfr)
- Fenrisulf (an Anglicized form)
- Fenris (not found in the Old Norse sources)
- Fenrisulven (modern Norwegian, Swedish and Danish form)
- Fenrisúlvur (Faroese)
- Fenrisúlfur (Icelandic)
- Vánargand (from Skáldskaparmál)
| Norse Paganism and Mythology | ||
|---|---|---|
| List of Norse gods • Æsir • Vanir • Giants • Elves (Light Elves • Dark Elves) • Dwarves • Troll • Valkyries • Einherjar • Norns • Odin • Thor • Freyr • Freyja • Frigg • Heimdall • Loki • Baldr • Ullr • Týr • Yggdrasil • Ginnungagap • Ragnarök | ||
| Sources | Poetic Edda • Prose Edda • The Sagas • Volsung Cycle • Tyrfing Cycle • Rune stones • Old Norse language • Orthography • Later influence | |
| Society | Viking Age • Skald • Kenning • Blót • Seid • Numbers | |
| People, places and things | ||
Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia; from the article "Fenrir". Image Credit.