Mistilteinn
Mistilteinn ("Mistletoe"), also known as Misteltein or Mystletainn, is Hrómundr Gripsson's sword in Hrómundar saga Gripssonar, a legendary saga from Iceland.[1][2]
Mistilteinn first belonged to Þráinn, who had been king in Valland before he retired in his burial mound with his wealth.
The Danish king Óláfr and his men, among whom Hrómundr Gripsson, learnt about that and found the barrow. Þráinn, who had become a draugr (living dead), was sitting inside. No one but Hrómundr dared to enter. After a long and fierce fight, he defeated Þráinn and took his treasure, especially his sword, with which Þráinn had killed four hundred and twenty men, including the Swedish king Semingr.[3]
Hrómundr used Mistilteinn during the battle between Óláfr and two Swedish kings both named Haldingr. He killed Helgi inn frækni (the Valiant), who had slain his brothers. He then lost Mistilteinn in the water out of witchcraft. He deeply felt this loss but soon recovered his sword, which was found in the stomach of a pike. But Mistilteinn was of no help when he fought king Haldingr, whom he eventually killed with a club.
References
- Bachman, W. Bryant; Erlingsson, Guðmundur (1993). Six old Icelandic sagas. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-9156-6. OCLC 28026760.
- Villani, Bruno (2013). "How was Baldr conceived of?: a Survey of theMinor Sources of the Myth of Baldr". Annali. Nuova Series. XXIII (1): 5–25. doi:10.1400/230448.
- Kapitan, Katarzyna Anna (2020). "Medieval Poetry in Post-medieval Manuscripts: New Perspectives on the Transmission History of Griplur". Scripta Islandica: Isländska Sällskapets Årsbok. 71: 51–98. doi:10.33063/diva-429320. S2CID 235069993.