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==Attestations== References to the ship occur in the ''Poetic Edda'', the ''Prose Edda'', and in ''Heimskringla''. The ship is mentioned twice in the ''Poetic Edda'' and both incidents therein occur in the poem ''[[Grímnismál]]''. In ''Grímnismál'', Odin (disguised as ''[[List of names of Odin|Grímnir]]''), tortured, starved, and thirsty, imparts in the young [[Agnarr Geirröðsson|Agnar]] cosmological knowledge, including information about the origin of the ship Skíðblaðnir: {{quote| {{wikitable| | <small>[[Benjamin Thorpe]] translation:</small><poem> [[Sons of Ivaldi|Ivaldi's sons]] went in days of old Skidbladnir to form, of ships the best, for the bright Frey, [[Njörðr|Niörd]]'s benign son. [[Yggdrasil]]'s ash is of all trees the most excellent, and of all ships, Skidbladnir. of the [[Æsir]], [[Odin]], and of horses, [[Sleipnir]], [[Bifröst]] of bridges, and of [[skald|skallds]] [[Bragi]], [[Hábrók|Hâbrôk]] of hawks, and of dogs, [[Garmr|Garm]], {{bracket|[[Brimir]] of swords.}}<ref name="THORPE25">Thorpe (1866:25).</ref></poem> | <small>[[Henry Adams Bellows (businessman)|Henry Adams Bellows]] translation:</small><poem> In days of old did Ivaldi's sons Skithblathnir fashion fair, The best of ships for the bright god Freyr, The noble son of Njorth. The best of trees must Yggdrasil be, Skithblathnir best of boats; Of all the gods is Othin the greatest, And Sleipnir the best of steeds; Bifrost of bridges, Bragi of skalds, Hobrok of hawks, and Garm of hounds.<ref name="BELLOWS101">Bellows (1923:101).</ref></poem> }} }} ''Skíðblaðnir'' is mentioned several times in the ''Prose Edda'', where it appears in the books ''[[Gylfaginning]]'' and ''[[Skáldskaparmál]]''. The first mention of ''Skíðblaðnir'' in the ''Poetic Edda'' occurs in chapter 43, where the enthroned figure of [[High, Just-As-High, and Third|High]] tells [[Gylfi|Gangleri]] (king [[Gylfi]] in disguise) that the god Odin is an important deity. High quotes the second of the above-mentioned ''Grímnismál'' stanzas in support.<ref name="FAULKES34">Faulkes (1995:34).</ref> The boat is first directly addressed in chapter 43; there Gangleri asks that, if ''Skíðblaðnir'' is the best of ships, what there is to know about it, and asks if there is no other ship as good or as large as it. High responds that while ''Skíðblaðnir'' is the finest ship and the most ingeniously created, the biggest ship is in fact ''[[Naglfar]]'', which is owned by [[Muspell]]. The Sons of Ivaldi, who High adds are [[Dwarf (Germanic mythology)|dwarfs]], crafted the ship and gave it to Freyr. High continues that the ship is big enough for all of the gods to travel aboard it with wargear and weapons in tow, and that, as soon as its sail is hoisted, the ship finds good wind, and goes wherever it need be. It is made up of so many parts and with such craftsmanship that, when it is not needed at sea, it may be folded up like cloth and placed into one's pocket. Gangleri comments that ''Skíðblaðnir'' sounds like a great ship, and that it must have taken a lot of magic to create something like it.<ref name="FAULKES36-37">Faulkes (1995:36–37).</ref> The next mention of the ship occurs in ''Skáldskaparmál'' where, in chapter 6, poetic ways of referring to Freyr are provided. Among other names, Freyr is referred to as "possessor of ''Skidbladnir'' and of the boar known as [[Gullinbursti]]". The first of the two ''Grímnismál'' stanzas mentioned above is then provided as reference.<ref name="FAULKES75">Faulkes (1995:75).</ref> In chapter 35, a myth explaining ''Skíðblaðnir''{{'}}s creation is provided. The chapter details that the god [[Loki]] once cut off the goddess's [[Sif]]'s hair in an act of mischief. Sif's husband, Thor, enraged, found Loki, caught hold of him, and threatened to break every last bone in his body. Loki promises to have the [[Svartálfar]] make Sif a new head of hair that will grow just as any other. Loki goes to the dwarfs known as Ivaldi's sons, and they made not only Sif a new head of gold hair but also Skíðblaðnir and the spear [[Gungnir]]. As the tale continues, Loki risks his neck for the creation of the devastating hammer [[Mjöllnir]], the multiplying ring [[Draupnir]], and the speedy, sky-and-water traveling, bright-bristled boar [[Gullinbursti]]. In the end, Loki's wit saves him his head, but results in the stitching together of his lips. The newly created items are doled out by the dwarfs to Sif, Thor, Odin, and Freyr. Freyr is gifted both Gullinbursti and ''Skíðblaðnir'', the latter of which is again said to receive fair wind whenever its sail was set, and that it will go wherever it needs to, and that it can be folded up much as cloth and placed in one's pocket at will.<ref name="FAULKES96-97">Faulkes (1995:96–97).</ref> ''Skíðblaðnir'' receives a final mention in ''Skáldskaparmál'' where, in chapter 75, it appears on a list of ships.<ref name="FAULKES162">Faulkes (1995:162).</ref> The ship gets a single mention in the ''Heimskringla'' book ''[[Ynglinga saga]]''. In chapter 7, a [[euhemerism|euhemerized]] Odin is said to have had various magical abilities, including that "he was also able with mere words to extinguish fires, to calm the sea, and to turn the winds any way he pleased. He had a ship called ''Skíthblathnir'' with which he sailed over great seas. It could be folded together like a cloth."<ref name="HOLLANDER10-11">Hollander (2007:10–11).</ref>
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