Edda

Edda (lit. grandmother), the name given to two collections of legends illustrative of the Scandinavian mythology: the Elder, or Poetic, Edda, collected in the 11th century by Sæmund Sigfusson, an early Christian priest, “with perhaps a lingering fondness for paganism,” and the Younger, or Prose, Edda, collected in the next century by Snorri Sturleson, an Icelandic gentleman (1178-1241), “educated by Sæmund's grandson, the latter a work constructed with great ingenuity and native talent, what one might call unconscious art, altogether a perspicuous, clear work, pleasant reading still.”

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

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Nearby

Edda in Brewer’s Dictionary of Phrase & Fable

Links here from Chalmers

Mallet, Paul Henry
Resenius, Peter John
Saemund, Sigfusson
Snorro, Sturlesonius