Midgard

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The runes a:miþkarþi, Old Norse á Miðgarði, meaning "in Midgard" – "in Middle Earth", on the Fyrby Runestone (Sö 56) in Södermanland, Sweden.

In Germanic cosmology, Midgard (an anglicised form of

Old Norse Miðgarðr; Old English Middangeard, Old Saxon Middilgard, Old High German Mittilagart, and Gothic Midjun-gards; "middle yard", "middle enclosure") is the name for Earth (equivalent in meaning to the Greek term οἰκουμένη : oikouménē, "inhabited") inhabited by and known to humans in early Germanic cosmology. The Old Norse form plays a notable role in Norse cosmology
.

Etymology

The

Old Norse name Miðgarðr is cognate with Gothic Midjungards (attested in the Gospel of Luke as a translation of the Greek οἰκουμένη), Old Saxon Middilgard (in Heliand), Old High German Mittilagart (in Muspilli), and Old English Middangeard. The latter, which appears in both prose and poetry, was transformed to Middellærd or Mittelerde ("Middle-earth") in Middle English literature.[1]

All these forms stem from

Common Germanic *Meðjana-garðaz, a compound of *meðjanaz ("middle") and *garðaz
("yard, enclosure"). In early Germanic cosmology, it stands alongside the term world (cf. Old English weorold, Old Saxon werold, Old High German weralt, Old Frisian wrald, Old Norse verǫld), itself from a Common Germanic compound *wira-alđiz ("man-age"), which refers to the inhabited world, i.e. the realm of humankind.[2]

Old Norse

In Norse mythology, Miðgarðr became applied to the wall around the world that the gods constructed from the eyebrows of the

Nordri, Sudri, Austri, and Vestri
, who represent the four points on the compass and became the dome of heaven. The sun, moon, and stars were said to be scattered sparks in the skull.

The Fyrby Runestone.

According to the

Eddas, Midgard will be destroyed at Ragnarök, the battle at the end of the world. Jörmungandr (also known as the Midgard Serpent or World Serpent) will arise from the ocean, poisoning the land and sea with his venom and causing the sea to rear up and lash against the land. The final battle will take place on the plain of Vígríðr
, following which Midgard and almost all life on it will be destroyed, with the earth sinking into the sea only to rise again, fertile and green when the cycle repeats and the creation begins again.

Although most surviving instances of the word Midgard refer to spiritual matters, it was also used in more mundane situations, as in the Viking Age runestone poem from the inscription Sö 56 from Fyrby:

Iak væit Hāstæin
þā Holmstæin brø̄ðr,
mænnr rȳnasta
ā Miðgarði,
sattu stæin
auk stafa marga
æftiʀ Frøystæin,
faður sinn.[3]
I know Hásteinn
(and) Holmstein, brothers,
the most rune-skilled men
in Middle Earth,
placed the stone
and many letters
in memory of Freysteinn,
their father.[citation needed]

The Danish and Swedish form Midgård or Midgaard, the Norwegian Midgard or Midgård, as well as the Icelandic and Faroese form Miðgarður, all derive from the Old Norse term.

English

The name middangeard occurs six times in the

Oikoumene
, as referring to the known and inhabited world.

The concept of Midgard occurs many times in

popular etymology; the modern English cognate of geard "enclosure" is yard. An early example of this transformation is from the Ormulum
:

þatt ure Drihhtin wollde / ben borenn i þiss middellærd
that our Lord wanted / be born in this Middle-earth.

The usage of "

Crist A
.

Old High German and Old Saxon

Mittilagart is mentioned in the 9th-century Old High German Muspilli (v. 54) meaning "the world" as opposed to the sea and the heavens:

muor varsuuilhit sih, suilizot lougiu der himil,
mano uallit, prinnit mittilagart
Sea is swallowed, flaming burn the heavens,
Moon falls, Midgard burns

Middilgard is also attested in the

Old Saxon Heliand
:

oƀar middilgard,
endi that he mahti allaro manno gihwes
Over the middle earth;
And all men He could help

References

  1. ^ "Midgard", Online Etymology Dictionary.
  2. ^ Skaldic Poetry of the Scandinavian Middle Ages, AU: USYD, archived from the original on 2011-05-18, retrieved 2007-06-23 for a version in normalized Old Norse orthography.