Grímnismál
0 sources
Grímnismál
Summary
Grímnismál is an eddic poem[1]. Grímnismál ranks in the top 9% of eddic_poem entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (100 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Grímnismál's instance of is recorded as eddic poem[3].
- Grímnismál's genre is recorded as narrative poetry[4].
- Grímnismál's part of is recorded as Poetic Edda[5].
- Grímnismál's part of is recorded as Norse mythology[6].
- Grímnismál's Commons category is recorded as Grímnismál[7].
- Grímnismál's language of work or name is recorded as Old Icelandic[8].
- Grímnismál's language of work or name is recorded as Old Norse[9].
- Grímnismál's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0391f[10].
- Grímnismál's characters is recorded as Odin[11].
- Grímnismál's characters is recorded as Frigg[12].
- Grímnismál's characters is recorded as King Geirröð[13].
- Grímnismál's characters is recorded as Agnarr Geirröðsson[14].
- Grímnismál's characters is recorded as Fulla[15].
- Grímnismál's has edition or translation is recorded as Grimnismol[16].
- Grímnismál's main subject is recorded as Odin[17].
- Grímnismál's Encyclopædia Britannica Online ID is recorded as topic/Grimnismal[18].
- Grímnismál's published in is recorded as Codex Regius (GKS 2365 4to)[19].
- Grímnismál's published in is recorded as AM 748 I 4to[20].
- Grímnismál's title is recorded as {'lang': 'und', 'text': 'Grímnismál'}[21].
- Grímnismál's Great Norwegian Encyclopedia ID is recorded as Grimnesmål[22].
Why It Matters
Grímnismál ranks in the top 9% of eddic_poem entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (100 views/month).[2] Grímnismál has Wikipedia articles in 14 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23] Grímnismál is known by 23 alternative names across languages and contexts.[24]