:''This article is about the valkyrie Brynhildr. For the
asteroid named after her, see
123 Brunhild. For the Queen of the
Franks, see
Brunhilda of Austrasia.''
,_G._Bussière,_1897.jpg)
Brynhild by G. Bussière, 1897
In
Norse mythology, 'Brynhildr' was a
shieldmaiden and a
valkyrie. She is a main character in the ''
Völsunga saga'' and some
Eddic poems treating the same events. Under the name ''Brünnhilde'' she appears in the ''
Nibelungenlied'' and therefore also in
Richard Wagner's opera cycle
Der Ring des Nibelungen. Brynhildr is probably inspired by the
Visigothic princess ''
Brunhilda of Austrasia'', married with the
Merovingian king ''
Sigebert I'' in
567. The history of Brynhildr includes fratricide, a long battle between brothers, and dealings with the
Huns.
In Norse myth

Faroese stamp depicting Brynhild & Buðli
According to the Völsungasaga, Brynhildr is the daughter of
Budli. She was ordered to decide a fight between two kings: Hjalmgunnar and Agnar. The valkyrie knew that
Odin himself preferred the older king, Hjalmgunnar, yet Brynhildr decided the battle for Agnar. For this
Odin condemned the valkyrie to live the life of a mortal woman, and imprisoned her in a remote castle behind a wall of shields on top of mount ''
Hindarfjall'' in the Alps, and cursed her to sleep until any man would rescue and marry her. The hero
Sigurðr Sigmundson (''Siegfried'' in the Nibelungenlied), heir to the clan of
Völsung and slayer of the dragon
Fafnir, entered the castle and awoke Brynhildr by removing her helmet and cutting off her chainmail armour. He immediately fell in love with the shieldmaiden and proposed to her with the magic ring
Andvarinaut. Promising to return and make Brynhildr his bride, Sigurðr then left the castle and headed for the court of
Gjuki, the
King of Burgundy.
[1]
Gjuki's wife, the sorceress
Grimhild, wanting Sigurðr married to her daughter
Gudrun (
Kriemhild in Nibelungenlied), prepared a magic potion that made Sigurðr forget about Brynhildr. Sigurðr soon married Gudrun. Hearing of Sigurðr's encounter with the valkyrie, Grimhild decided to make Brynhildr the wife of her son
Gunnar (
Gunther in the Nibelungenlied). Gunnar then sought to court Brynhild but was stopped by a ring of fire around the castle. He tried to ride through the flames with his own horse and then with Sigurðr's horse,
Grani, but still failed. Sigurðr then exchanged shapes with him and entered the ring of fire. Sigurðr (disguised as Gunnar) and Brynhildr married, and they stayed there three nights, but Sigurðr laid his sword between them (meaning that he did not take her virginity before giving her to the real Gunnar). Sigurðr also took the ring Andvarinaut from her finger and later gave it to Gudrun. Gunnar and Sigurðr soon returned to their true forms, with Brynhildr thinking she married Gunnar. However, Gudrun and Brynhild later quarreled over whose husband was greater, Brynhildr boasting that even Sigurðr was not brave enough to ride through the flames. Gudrun revealed that it was actually Sigurðr who rode through the ring of fire, and Brynhildr became enraged. Sigurðr, remembering the truth, tried to console her, but to no avail. Brynhildr plotted revenge by urging Gunnar to kill Sigurðr, telling him that he slept with her in Hidarfjall, which he swore not to do. Gunnar and his brother
Hogni (
Hagen in the
Nibelungenlied) were afraid to kill him themselves, as they had sworn oaths of brotherhood to Sigurðr. They incited their younger brother,
Gutthorm to kill Sigurðr, by giving him a magic potion that enraged him, and he murdered Sigurðr in his sleep. Dying, Sigurðr threw his sword at Gutthorm, killing him.
[2](some Eddic poems say Gutthorm killed him in the forest south of the
Rhine, also while resting)
[3]. Brynhildr herself killed Sigurðr's three-year-old son, and then she willed herself to die. When Sigurðr's funeral pyre was aflame, she threw herself upon it – thus they passed on together to the realm of
Hel.
[2]
However, in some
Eddic poems such as
Sigurðarkviða hin skamma, Gunnar and Sigurðr lay siege to the castle of
Atli, Brynhildr's brother. Atli offers his sister's hand in exchange for a truce, which Gunnar accepts. However, Brynhildr has sworn to marry only Sigurðr, so she is deceived into believing that Gunnar is actually Sigurðr.
[5]
According to the Völsunga saga, Brynhildr bore Sigurðr a daughter,
Aslaug, who later married
Ragnar Lodbrok.
In the Eddic poem ''
Helreið Brynhildar'' (Bryndhildr's ride to Hel), Brynhildr on her journey to Hel encounters a ''
gýgr'' (giantess) who blames her for an immoral livelihood. Brynhildr responds to her accusations:
| :''“Munu við ofstríð'':''alls til lengi'':''konur ok karlar'':''kvikvir fæðask;'':''við skulum okkrum'':''aldri slíta'':''Sigurðr saman.'':''Sökkstu, gýgjar kyn.”'':[1] | :“Ever with grief:and all too long:Are men and women:born in the world;:But yet we shall live:our lives together,:Sigurth and I.:Sink down, Giantess!”:—Bellows translation |
In Nibelungenlied
In the
Nibelungenlied, Brünnhilde is instead the queen of ''Isenland'' (
Iceland). Gunther here overpowers her in three warlike games with the help of Siegfried – equipped with an invisibility cloak. Firstly, Brünnhilde throws a spear that three men only barely can lift towards Gunther, but the invisible Siegfried diverts it. Secondly, she throws twelve fathoms a boulder that requires the strength of twelve men to lift. Lastly, she leaps over the same boulder. Gunther, however, defeats her with Siegfried's help also in these games, and takes her as his wife.
The Nibelungenlied also differs from Scandinavian sources in its silence on Brünnhilde's fate; she fails to kill herself at Siegfied's funeral, and presumably survives Kriemhild and her brothers.
In Wagner's "Ring" cycle
Though the cycle of four operas is titled
Der Ring des Nibelungen,
Richard Wagner in fact took Brünnhilde's role from the Norse sagas rather than from the Nibelungenlied. Brünnhilde appears in the latter three operas (
Die Walküre,
Siegfried, and
Götterdämmerung), playing a central role in the overall story of
Wotan's downfall.
In Wagner's tale, Brünnhilde is one of Valkyries; but the latter are formed out of a union between Wotan and
Erda, a personification of the earth. In ''
Die Walküre'' Wotan initially commissions her to protect
Siegmund, his son by a mortal mother. When
Fricka protests and forces Wotan to have Siegmund die, Brünnhilde disobeys her father's change of orders and takes away Siegmund's wife (and sister)
Sieglinde and the shards of Siegmund's sword
Nothung. She manages to hide them but must then face the wrath of her father, who is eventually persuaded to seal her in a ring of fire to await awakening by a hero who does not know fear.

Siegfried awakens Brünnhilde in this illustration by
Arthur Rackham to Wagner's version of the story.
Brünnhilde does not appear again until near the end of the third act of ''
Siegfried''. The title character is the son of Siegmund and Sieglinde, born after Siegmund's death and raised by the dwarf
Mime, the brother of Alberich who stole the gold and fashioned the ring around which the operas are centered. Having himself taken the ring from the giant-turned-dragon
Fafner, Siegfried is guided to Brünnhilde's rock, where he awakens her.
Siegfried and Brünnhilde appear again at the beginning of
Götterdämmerung, at which point he gives her the ring and they are separated. Here again Wagner chooses to follow the Norse story, though with substantial modifications. Siegfried does go to Gunther's Hall, where he is given a potion to cause him to forget Brünnhilde so that Gunther may marry her. All this occurs at the instigation of Hagen, Alberich's son and Gunther's half-brother. The plan is successful, and Siegfried leads Gunther to Brünnhilde's rock. In the meantime she has been visited by her sister valkyrie Waltraute, who warns her of Wotan's plans for self-immolation and urges her to give up the ring. Brünnhilde refuses, only to be overpowered by Siegfried who, disguised as Gunther, takes the ring from her by force.
As Siegfried goes to marry Gutrune, Gunther's sister, Brünnhilde sees that he has the ring and denounces him for his treachery. Still rejected, she joins Gunther and Hagen in a plot to murder Siegfried, telling Hagen that Siegfried can only be attacked from the back. So Gunther and Hagen take Siegfried on a hunting trip, in the course of which Hagen stabs Siegfried in the back with a spear. Upon their return, Brünnhilde takes charge, and has a pyre built in which she is to perish, cleansing the ring of its curse and returning it to the Rhinemaidens. Her pyre becomes the signal by which Valhalla also perishes in flame.
In popular culture
★ In the 2005 TV epic '', Norwegian-American actress
Kristanna Loken played 'Brunhild', the Queen of
Iceland and the mightiest woman in the world, who was based on the legendary Valkyrie.
★ In season 6 of the popular TV series , the character 'Brunhilda' was played by
Brittney Powell in three feature episodes: ''The Rheingold'', ''The Ring'' and ''The Return of the Valkyrie''.
★ In the classic Warner Bros.
cartoon ''
What's Opera, Doc?'',
Bugs Bunny impersonates 'Brunnhilde' to trick
Elmer Fudd.
★ The name of the comic strip witch ''
Broom-Hilda'' is a play on the Valkyrie's name.
★ In
anime ''
Fafner of the Azure'', 'Brunhilde' was name of system with Tsubaki Minashiro serving as its core, located in
Valkyrie cave, capable of completely controlling an island. Her older brother Soushi Minashiro operated ''
Siegfried'' system, used to link
Fafner mecha pilots brains directly forming single team to protect the island.
★ Henrik Jǣger describes Hjördis, the protagonist of ''
The Vikings at Helgeland'', "a 'Brynhild' shut up in a parlor."
[6]
★ In manga "
The Violinist of Hameln" there's a character who's a valkyrie, called Brunhilde.
★ Brunnhilde appears in the
Marvel Universe as the superheroine
Valkyrie. She spends a significant portion of her crime-fighting career as a member of the
Defenders.
Other names
★ Brünhild
★ Brunhild
★ Brunhilda
★ Brunhilde
★ Brunhilt
★ Brunnehilde
★ Brünnhilde
★ Brynhild
★ Brynhilt
★ Bruennhilde
References
1. Byock, Jesse L. ''The Saga of the Volsungs.'' London: Penguin, 1990. ISBN 0-14-044738-5.
2. Byock
3. "Gudrunarkviða I" in Bellows, Henry Adams. (Trans.). (1923). ''The Poetic Edda: Translated from the Icelandic with an Introduction and Notes''. New York: American-Scandinavian Foundation. Reprinted Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellon Press. ISBN 0-88946-783-8. (Available at Sacred Texts: Sagas and Legends: The Poetic Edda. An HTML version transcribed with new annotations by Ari Odhinnsen is available at Northvegr: Lore: Poetic Edda - Bellows Trans..)
4. Byock
5. Bellows
6. Jǣger, Henrik. ''Henrik Ibsen, 1828-1888. A Critical Biography''. Trans. William Morton Payne. Chicago: McClurg, 1890.