Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
Sif
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
=== Hair as wheat and potential cognates === 19th-century scholar [[Jacob Grimm]] proposes a reconstruction of a Germanic deity cognate to Sif in other Germanic cultures and proposes a similar nature to that of the goddesses [[Frigg]] and [[Freyja]]: <blockquote> The [[Gothic language|Goth.]] {{lang|got-Latn|sibja}}, [[Old High German|OHG]]. {{lang|goh|sippia}}, {{lang|goh|sippa}}, [[Old English|AS]]. {{lang|ang|sib}} [[genitive case|gen]]. {{lang|ang|sibbe}}, denote peace, friendship, kindred; from these I infer a divinity ''Sibja'', ''Sippia'', ''Sib'', corresponding to [[Old Norse|ON]]. {{lang|non|Sif}} gen. {{lang|non|Sifjar}}, the wife of [[Thor|Thôrr]], for the ON. too has a pl. {{lang|non|sifjar}} meaning cognatio, sifi amicus (OHG. {{lang|goh|sippio}}, {{lang|goh|sippo}}), sift genus, cognatio. By this sense of the word, ''Sif'' would appear to be, like [[Frigg]] and [[Freyja]], a goddess of loveliness and love; as attributes of [[Odin|Oðinn]] and Thôrr agree, their wives Frigg and Sif have also a common signification.<ref name=GRIMM309>Grimm (1882:309).</ref> </blockquote> Grimm connects Eddic references to Sif's golden hair (gold is referred to as {{lang|non|Sifjar haddr}}; Sif's hair) with the herb name {{lang|non|haddr Sifjar}} (''[[Polytrichum aureum]]''){{verify source|date=June 2018}}<!-- probably Polytrichum commune ("golden maidenhair moss" etc), but "P. aureum" is not a valid scientific name as per http://www.theplantlist.org/1.1/browse/B/Polytrichaceae/Polytrichum/ -->. Grimm says that "expositors see in this the golden fruits of the Earth burnt up by fire and growing again, they liken Sif to [[Ceres (Roman mythology)|Ceres]]", and Grimm says that "with it agrees the fact that [[Old Church Slavonic|O. Slav]]. {{lang|cu-Latn|[[Živa (goddess)|Siva]]}} is a gloss on {{lang|la|Ceres dea frumenti}}" but cites [[etymology|etymological]] problems between the potential cognate. Grimm says that Thor's mother was the earth, and not his wife, yet "we do find the simple ''Sif'' standing for earth." Grimm adds that he is inconclusive regarding Sif and that, "we ought to have fuller details about Sif, and these are wholly wanting in our mythology. Nowhere amongst us is the mystic relation of the seed-corn of [[Demeter]], whose poignant grief for her daughter threatens to bring famine on mankind (Hymn to Cer. 305–306), nor anything like it, recorded."<ref name=GRIMM309-310>Grimm (1888:309–310).</ref> Citing the etymology of her name, 19th century scholar [[Guðbrandur Vigfússon]] theorizes that Sif "betokens mother earth with her golden sheaves of grain; she was the goddess of the sanctity of the family and wedlock".<ref name=VIGFUSSON526/> Scholar [[Rudolf Simek]] theorizes that Sif likely originated as a complement to Thor through his fertility associations, and that the name ''Sif'' (Simek provides the etymology "relation by marriage") may have originally simply meant "the wife (of Thor)". Simek rejects notions of a "vegetation cult" venerating Sif, says that Sif does not appear to have a function, dismisses theories proposing connections between Sif's hair and grain as "over-zealous interpretation[s]", and theorizes that Snorri invented the story of Sif's shorn locks in attempt to explain the attributes of various gods.<ref name=SIMEK283>Simek (2007:283).</ref> Scholar [[Hilda Ellis Davidson|H. R. Ellis Davidson]] states that Sif may have been an ancient fertility goddess, agreeing with a link between her lustrous hair and fields of [[wheat|golden wheat]].<ref name=DAVIDSON84>{{harvcoltxt|Davidson|1965|p=84}}</ref> Regarding Sif, Thor, and fertility, Davidson says: {{blockquote|The cult of Thor was linked up with men's habitation and possessions, and with well-being of the family and community. This included the fruitfulness of the fields, and Thor, although pictured primarily as a [[storm god]] in the myths, was also concerned with the fertility and preservation of the seasonal round. In our own times, little stone axes from the distant past have been used as fertility symbols and placed by the farmer in the holes made by the drill to receive the first seed of spring. Thor's marriage with Sif of the golden hair, about which we hear little in the myths, seems to be a memory of the ancient symbol of [[Hieros gamos|divine marriage]] between [[sky deity|sky god]] and [[earth goddess]], when he comes to earth in the thunderstorm and the storm brings the rain which makes the fields fertile. In this way Thor, as well as Odin, may be seen to continue the cult of the sky god which was known in the [[Nordic Bronze Age|Bronze Age]].<ref name="DAVIDSON-II-72">{{harvcoltxt|Davidson|1975|p=72}}</ref>}} Scholar John Lindow proposes that a potentially understated mythological importance of Sif's role in the story of her sheared hair exists; her headpiece is created along with the most important and powerful items in Norse mythology. Lindow further states that it may be easy to lose sight of the central role Sif plays in the creation of these objects.<ref name=LINDOW266>Lindow (2001:266).</ref>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
Sif
(section)
Add topic