wayland the smith การใช้
- Many legends surround Saxon Wayland, or Wayland the smith, a mythical metalworker.
- According to the tale, Flibbertigibbet was apprentice to Wayland the Smith, and greatly exasperated his master.
- The best preserved, now in the modern church, depicts alongside other images the story of Wayland the Smith.
- :The merriam-webster . com entry for Wayland the Smith shows IPA \ ?w-lYn ( d ) \ which looks like the " England " version.
- During the Middle Ages, he became the son of Wayland the Smith and B鲳vildr, and this entitled him to carry a hammer and pliers in his coat of arms.
- See, for example, Wayland the Smith ( possibly the example you're thinking of ) or Hephaestus .-- talk ) 02 : 46, 9 May 2014 ( UTC)
- :: : The magic aspect of metalworking, the first real " technology ", ( weaving and pottery being crafts really ) is reflected in the fearful laming of Hephaestus and Wayland the Smith.
- In addition to the life of Dietrich, various other heroes'lives are recounted as well in various parts of the story, including Attila, Wayland the Smith, Sigurd, the Nibelungen, and Walter of Aquitaine.
- The protagonist robbing the bathing lady's garment is a common swan maiden folklore motif, and William Henry Schofield felt this was borrowed specifically from the story of Wayland the Smith, which survive in the Middle High German " " and the Eddic poem " V鰈undarkvi餫 ".
- The decline of the monasteries in the later Anglian period probably led to the new Scandinavian, secular lords ordering the stones to be made, but many reflect Anglian ( Northumbrian ) styles and motifs, and have an amalgamation of Christian concerns ( for example, Crucifixion scenes ) and Viking iconography and myths ( for example, scenes depicting Ragnar鰇 and Wayland the Smith ).