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===Other=== Freyja is mentioned in the [[saga]]s ''[[Egils saga]]'', ''[[Njáls saga]]'', ''[[Hálfs saga ok Hálfsrekka]]'', and in ''[[Sörla þáttr]]''. ;''Egils saga'' In ''[[Egils saga]]'', when [[Egill Skallagrímsson]] refuses to eat, his daughter Þorgerðr (here anglicized as "Thorgerd") says she will go without food and thus starve to death, and in doing so will meet the goddess Freyja: <blockquote> Thorgerd replied in a loud voice, "I have had no evening meal, nor will I do so until I join Freyja. I know no better course of action than my father's. I do not want to live after my father and brother are dead."{{sfnp|Scudder|2001|p=151}} </blockquote> ;''Hálfs saga ok Hálfsrekka'' In the first chapter of the 14th century [[legendary saga]] ''Hálfs saga ok Hálfsrekka'', King Alrek has two wives, Geirhild and Signy, and cannot keep them both. He tells the two women that he would keep whichever of them that brews the better ale for him by the time he has returned home in the summer. The two compete and during the brewing process Signy prays to Freyja and Geirhild to Hött ("hood"), a man she had met earlier (earlier in the saga revealed to be Odin in disguise). Hött answers her prayer and spits on her yeast. Signy's brew wins the contest.{{sfnp|Tunstall|2005}} [[File:Freyja in the dwarfs' cave.jpg|thumb|upright|''Freyja in the Dwarf's Cave'' (1891) by {{Interlanguage link|Louis Huard|fr}}]] ;''Sörla þáttr'' In ''[[Sörla þáttr]]'', a short, late 14th century narrative from a later and extended version of the ''[[Flateyjarbók|Óláfs saga Tryggvasonar]]'' found in the ''[[Flateyjarbók]]'' manuscript, a euhemerized account of the gods is provided. In the account, Freyja is described as having been a concubine of Odin, who bartered sex to four dwarfs for a golden necklace. In the work, the [[Æsir]] once lived in a city called [[Asgard]], located in a region called "Asialand or Asiahome". Odin was the king of the realm, and made [[Njörðr]] and [[Freyr]] temple priests. Freyja was the daughter of Njörðr, and was Odin's concubine. Odin deeply loved Freyja, and she was "the fairest of woman of that day". Freyja had a beautiful [[Boudoir|bower]], and when the door was shut no one could enter without Freyja's permission.{{sfnp|Morris|Morris|1911|p=127}} Chapter 1 records that one day Freyja passed by an open stone where [[dwarf (Germanic mythology)|dwarfs]] lived. Four dwarfs were smithying a golden necklace, and it was nearly done. Looking at the necklace, the dwarfs thought Freyja to be most fair, and she the necklace. Freyja offered to buy the collar from them with silver and gold and other items of value. The dwarfs said that they had no lack of money, and that for the necklace the only thing she could offer them would be a night with each of them. "Whether she liked it better or worse", Freyja agreed to the conditions, and so spent a night with each of the four dwarfs. The conditions were fulfilled and the necklace was hers. Freyja went home to her bower as if nothing happened.{{sfnp|Morris|Morris|1911|p=128}} As related in chapter 2, Loki, under the service of Odin, found out about Freyja's actions and told Odin. Odin told Loki to get the necklace and bring it to him. Loki said that since no one could enter Freyja's bower against her will, this would not be an easy task, yet Odin told him not to come back until he had found a way to get the necklace. Howling, Loki turned away and went to Freyja's bower but found it locked, and that he could not enter. So Loki transformed himself into a fly, and after having trouble finding even the tiniest of entrances, he managed to find a tiny hole at the gable-top, yet even here he had to squeeze through to enter.{{sfnp|Morris|Morris|1911|p=128}} Having made his way into Freyja's chambers, Loki looked around to be sure that no one was awake, and found that Freyja was asleep. He landed on her bed and noticed that she was wearing the necklace, the clasp turned downward. Loki turned into a [[flea]] and jumped onto Freyja's cheek and there bit her. Freyja stirred, turning about, and then fell asleep again. Loki removed his flea's shape and undid her collar, opened the bower, and returned to Odin.{{sfnp|Morris|Morris|1911|pp=128–129}} The next morning Freyja woke and saw that the doors to her bower were open, yet unbroken, and that her precious necklace was gone. Freyja had an idea of who was responsible. She got dressed and went to Odin. She told Odin of the malice he had allowed against her and of the theft of her necklace, and that he should give her back her jewelry.{{sfnp|Morris|Morris|1911|p=129}} Odin said that, given how she obtained it, she would never get it back. That is, with one exception: she could have it back if she could make two kings, themselves ruling twenty kings each, battle one another, and cast a spell so that each time one of their numbers falls in battle, they will again spring up and fight again. And that this must go on eternally, unless a [[Christianity|Christian]] man of a particular stature goes into the battle and smites them, only then will they stay dead. Freyja agreed.{{sfnp|Morris|Morris|1911|p=129}}
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