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Þjazi then appeared in his eagle shape, grabbed Idunn and flew away with her to his realm of Þrymheimr, located in Jötunheimr.
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Þjazi and then
Loki borrowed a magical coat from Freyja that would allow him to take the shape of a falcon, then flew to Jotunheim until he reached the hall of Þjazi.
Þjazi and eagle
Bragi says that after hitting an eagle ( Þjazi in disguise ) with a pole, Loki finds himself stuck to the bird.
Þjazi arrives in eagle shape, snatches Iðunn, flies away with her and takes her to his home, Þrymheimr.
Image: Treated NKS haustlong. jpg | Another depiction of Þjazi as an eagle, trying to stop the Æsir from boiling food.
Bragi says that after hitting an eagle ( Þjazi in disguise ) with a pole, Loki finds himself stuck to the bird, and being pulled further and further into the sky, his feet banging against stones, gravel, and trees, and he felt his arms might be pulled out from his shoulders.
Þjazi arrives in eagle shape, snatches Iðunn, flies away with her, and takes her to his home, Þrymheimr.
Þjazi and Idunn
As they flew across the land Loki shouted and begged to be let down as his legs banged against trees and stones, but Þjazi would only do so on the condition that Loki must lure Idunn out of Asgard with her apples of youth, which he solemnly promised to do.
Finding Idunn alone while Þjazi was out to sea on a boat, Loki transformed her into a nut and carried her back, flying as fast as he could.
For this reason the expressions " speech of Þjazi, Gangr or Idi " and " Idi's shining talk " are kennings for gold, and twice in the same book a kenning is given for Þjazi as " lady wolf ", a reference to his abduction of Idunn.
Þjazi and with
Loki says that, even if this is his fate, that he was " first and foremost " with the other gods at the killing of Skaði's father, jötnar Þjazi.
At the time Þjazi and Loki agreed on, Loki lures Iðunn out of Asgard into " a certain forest ", telling her that he had discovered some apples that she would find worth keeping, and told Iðunn that she ought to bring her own apples with her so that she may compare them with the apples he has discovered.
When the gods saw Loki flying toward them with Þjazi right behind they lit a fire which burned Þjazi's feathers, causing him to fall to the ground where he was set upon and killed.
At the time the Þjazi and Loki agreed on, Loki lures Iðunn out of Asgard into " a certain forest ", telling her that he had discovered some apples that she would find worth keeping, and told Iðunn that she ought to bring her apples with her so that she may compare them with the apples Loki discovered.
Þjazi and her
In all sources, Skaði is the daughter of the deceased Þjazi, and Skaði married the god Njörðr as part of the compensation provided by the gods for killing her father Þjazi.
The Prose Edda relates that Loki was once forced by the jötunn Þjazi to lure Iðunn out of Asgard and into a wood, promising her interesting apples.
Additionally, in connection to the story of her abduction by Þjazi, she may be referred to as " Þjazi's booty ".
Þjazi once abducted the goddess Iðunn, and in Þrymheimr he held her, causing the gods to age until her rescue, in turn resulting in the death of Þjazi.
In Snorri Sturluson's Haustlöng ( source ) Njörðr is married to the giantess Skaði as part of the compensation provided to her by the Æsir for killing her father, Þjazi.
Þjazi and Þrymheimr
Gastropnir, home of Menglad, and Þrymheimr, home of Þjazi, were both located in Jötunheimr, which was ruled by King Thrym.
In Norse mythology, Þrymheimr ( Old Norse " crash-home ," " Thunder Home ," or " noisy-home ") was the abode of Þjazi, a jötunn, located in Jötunheimr.
Þjazi and located
Þjazi and .
High further states that Njörðr's wife is Skaði, that she is the daughter of the jötunn Þjazi, and recounts a tale involving the two.
Further in Skáldskaparmál, the skaldic god Bragi recounds the death of Skaði's father Þjazi by the Æsir.
In the stanza, Odin details that the jötunn Þjazi once lived there, and that now his daughter Skaði does.
In chapter 23 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning, the enthroned figure of High details that Njörðr's wife is Skaði, that she is the daughter of the jötunn Þjazi, and recounts a tale involving the two.
In chapter 56 of the Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, Bragi recounts to Ægir how the gods killed Þjazi.
This poem depicts two mythological scenes painted on a shield, the first being Iðunn's abduction by the giant Þjazi.
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