- and the
subject of the Lay of
Hyndla The
dwarf Ótr is
sometimes known as
Óttarr Ottar from Hålogaland, the
Viking adventurer Ottir Iarla (Earl Ottir), historical...
- Ohthere, also
Ohtere (Old Norse:
Óttarr vendilkráka, Vendelcrow; in
modern Swedish Ottar Vendelkråka), was a semi-legendary king of
Sweden of the house...
-
Óttarr svarti ("
Óttarr the Black") was an 11th-century
Icelandic skald. He was the
court poet
first of Óláfr
skautkonungr of Sweden, then of Óláfr Haraldsson...
-
Encomium Emmae, do not
mention this. Even so, in a Knútsdrápa by the
skald Óttarr svarti,
there is a
statement that Cnut was "of no
great age" when he first...
-
Óttarr Olaf Proppé (born 7
November 1968) is a
former Icelandic politician. He is a musician, actor,
former Reykjavík City
Councilor (Best
Party 2010-2014)...
-
deeds of King Cnut the Great,
three poems by
Sigvatr Þórðarson,
Óttarr svarti, and
Óttarr svarti (partially preserved)
Geisli ‒ the
deeds of King Olaf Haraldsson...
-
pedigree of
Óttarr so that he can
touch his inheritance, and the lay
consists mostly of
Hyndla reciting a
number of
names from
Óttarr's ancestry. Because...
-
Norse mythology, Otr (Old Norse: [ˈotz̠]; alternately: Ott, Oter, Ottar,
Ottarr, Otter) is a dwarf. He is the son of the king
Hreidmar and the
brother of...
- the Heimskringla,
published by
Samuel Laing in 1844,
included a
verse by
Óttarr svarti, that
looks very
similar to the
nursery rhyme:
London Bridge is broken...
- Gutþormr Gjúka ættar, þó var hann bróðir
beggja þeira; allt er þat ætt þín,
Óttarr heimski.
Gunnar and Högni, the
heirs of Gjúki, And Gudrún as well, who...