thumb|right|Rán uses her net to pull a seafarer into the depths in an illustration by [[Johannes Gehrts, 1901]]
In Norse mythology, Rán (in Old Norse: ) is a goddess and personification of the sea. Rán and her husband Ægir, a jötunn who also personifies the sea, and together the two produced nine daughters who personify the sea waves, and Rán's son is Snær, who personifies the snow. Rán may also be the mother of the beautiful jötunn Gerðr, wife of the god Freyr. The goddess is frequently associated with a net, which she uses to capture sea-goers. According to the prose introduction to a poem in the Poetic Edda and in Völsunga saga, Rán once loaned her net to the god Loki.
Rán is attested in the Poetic Edda, compiled during the 13th century from earlier traditional sources; the Prose Edda, written during the 13th century by Snorri Sturluson; in both Völsunga saga and Friðþjófs saga hins frœkna; and in the poetry of skalds, such as Sonatorrek, a 10th-century poem by Icelandic skald Egill Skallagrímsson.
Etymology
The Old Norse common noun rán means 'plundering' or 'theft, robbery'. In turn, scholars view the theonym Rán as meaning, for example, 'theft, robbery'. On the etymology of the theonym, scholar Rudolf Simek says, "although the meaning of the name has not been fully clarified, Rán was probably understood as being 'robber' ... and has nothing to do with [Old Norse] ráða 'rule'.
Attestations
Sonatorrek
Rán and Ægir receive mention in the poem Sonatorrek attributed to 10th century Icelandic skald Egill Skallagrímsson. In the poem, Egill laments the death of his son Böðvar, who drowned at sea during a storm:
<blockquote>
{|
|
:<small>Old Norse:</small>
:Mjök hefr Rán rykst um mik;
:emk ofsnauðr at ástvinum.
:Sleit marr bönd mínnar áttar,
:snaran þátt af sjalfum mér.
|
:<small>Nora K. Chadwick translation:</small>
:Greatly has Rán afflicted me.
:I have been despoiled of a great friend.
:Empty and unoccupied, I see the place
:which the sea has torn my son.
|
|}
</blockquote>
In one difficult stanza later in the poem, the skald expresses the pain of losing his son by invoking the image of slaying the personified sea, personified as Ægir (Old Norse ǫlsmið[r] 'ale-smith') and Rán (Ægis man 'Ægir's wife'):
{|
|
:<small>Old Norse:</small>
:Veiztu um ϸá sǫk
:sverði of rækak,
:var ǫlsmið[r]
:allra tíma;
:hroða vágs brœðr
:ef vega mættak;
:fœra ek andvígr
:Ægis mani.
|
:<small>Bjarni Einarsson translation:</small>
:You know,
:if I took revenge with the sword
:for that offence,
:Ægir would be dead;
:if I could kill them,
:I would fight Ægir and Rán.
|
|}
Poetic Edda
thumb|Rán pulls her net beside her husband Ægir as depicted by [[Friedrich Wilhelm Heine (1845–1921) after an original by Friedrich Wilhelm Engelhard (1813–1902)]]
Rán receives three mentions in the Poetic Edda; twice in poetry and once in prose. The first mention occurs in a stanza in Helgakviða Hundingsbana I, when the valkyrie Sigrún assists the ship of the hero Helgi Hundingsbane as it encounters ferocious waters:
<blockquote>
{|
|
<small>Henry Adams Bellows translation</small>
:But from above did Sigrun brave
:Aid the men and all their faring;
:Mightily came from the claws of Ron
:The leader's sea-beast off Gnipalund.
|
<small>Carolyne Larrington translation</small>
:And Sigrun above, brave in battle,
:protected them and their vessel;
:the king's sea-beasts twisted powerfully,
:out of Ran's hand toward Gnipalund.
|
|}
</blockquote>
In the notes for her translation, Larrington says that Rán "seeks to catch and drown men in her net" and that "to give someone to the sea-goddess is to drown them."
The second instance occurs in a stanza found in Helgakviða Hjörvarðssonar. In this stanza, the hero Atli references Rán while flyting with Hrímgerðr, a female jötunn:
<blockquote>
{|
|
<small>Henry Adams Bellows translation:</small>
:"Witch, in front of the ship thou wast,
:And lay before the fjord;
:To Ron wouldst have given the ruler's men,
:If a spear had not stuck in thy flesh."
|
<small>Carolyne Larrington translation:</small>
:'Ogress, you stood before the prince's ships
:and blocked the fjord mouth;
:the king's men you were going to give to Ran,
:if a spear hadn't lodged in your flesh.'
|
|}
</blockquote>
Finally, in the prose introduction to Reginsmál, Loki visits Rán (here rendered as Ron) to borrow her net:
:[Odin and Hœnir] sent Loki to get the gold; he went to Ron and got her net, and went then to Andvari's fall and cast the net in front of the pike, and the pike leaped into the net.
Translator Henry Adams Bellows notes how this version of the narrative differs from how it appears in other sources, where Loki catches the pike with his own hands.
In the same section, the author cites a fragment of a work by the 11th century Icelandic skald Hofgarða-Refr Gestsson, where Rán is referred to as 'Gymir's ... völva':
{|
|
<small>Standardized Old Norse</small>
:Ok sem kvað Refr:
::Fœrir bjǫrn, þar er bára
::brestr, undinna festa
::opt í Ægis kjǫpta
::<nowiki>*</nowiki>ursǫl Gymis vǫlva.
|
<small>Anthony Faulkes translation</small>
:And as Ref said:
::Gymir's spray-cold spæ-wife often brings
::the twisted-rope-bear [ship] into Ægir's jaws
::[under the waves]
::where the wave breaks.
|
|}
The section's author comments that the stanza "[implies] that they are all the same, Ægir and Hler and Gymir. The author follows with a quote from another stanza by the skald that references Rán:
<blockquote>
:But sea-crest-Sleipnir [ship], spray-driven, tears his breast, covered with red paint, out of white Ran's mouth [the sea's grasp].
In the Nafnaþulur section of Skáldskaparmál, Rán appears in a list of goddesses (Old Norse ásynjur).
Völsunga saga and Friðþjófs saga hins frœkna
Rán receives a single mention in Völsunga saga. Like in the prose introduction to the eddic poem Reginsmál (discussed above), "they sent Loki to obtain the gold. He went to Ran and got her net."
In the legendary saga Friðþjófs saga hins frœkna, Friðþjófr and his men find themselves in a violent storm, and the protagonist mourns that he will soon rest in Rán's bed:
{|
|
<small>Old Norse</small>
:Sat ek á bólstri
:í Baldrshaga,
:kvað, hvat ek kunna,
:fyr konungs dóttur.
:Nú skal ek Ránar
:raunbeð troða,
:en annar mun
:Ingibjargar."
|
<small>Eiríkr Magnússon and William Morris translation (1875):</small>
:"On bolster I sat
:In Baldur's Mead erst,
:And all songs that I could
:To the king's daughter sang;
:Now on Ran's bed belike
:Must I soon be a-lying,
:And another shall be
:By Ingibiorg's side."
|
|}
The protagonist then decides that as they are to "go to Rán" (at til Ránar skal fara) they would better do so in style with gold on each man. He divides the gold and talks of her again:
{|
|
:Nú hefir fjórum
:of farit várum
:lögr lagsmönnum,
:þeim er lifa skyldu,
:en Rán gætir
:röskum drengjum,
:siðlaus kona,
:sess ok rekkju.
|
|}
Scholarly reception and interpretation
According to Rudolf Simek, "... Rán is the ruler of the realm of the dead at the bottom of the sea to which people who have drowned go." Simek says that "while Ægir personifies the sea as a friendly power, Rán embodies the sinister side of the sea, at least in the eyes of the late Viking Age Icelandic seafarers."
See also
- Sessrúmnir, the hall of the goddess Freyja, which may have been conceived of as a ship
Notes
References
- Byock, Jesse. 1990. Trans. The Saga of the Volsungs. University of California Press.
- Kershaw, Nora. 1922. Trans. Anglo-Saxon and Old Norse Poems. Cambridge at the University Press.
- Eiríkr Magnússon and Morris, William. Trans. 1875. Three Northern Love Stories and Other Tales. Ellis & White.
- Faulkes, Anthony (Trans.). 1995 [1989]. Trans. Edda. Everyman.
- Faulkes, Anthony. (Editor). 1998. Trans. Edda: Skáldskaparmál. I. Viking Society for Northern Research.
- Gudbrandur Vigfusson. 1874. Trans. An Icelandic-English Dictionary: Based on the Ms. Collections of the Late Richard Cleasby. Clarendon Press.
- Bellows, Henry Adams. 1936. Trans. The Poetic Edda. Princeton University Press. New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation.
- Larrington, Carolyne (Trans.). 1999 [1996]. Trans. The Poetic Edda. Oxford World's Classics.
- Simek, Rudolf. 2007 [1993]. Translated by Angela Hall. Dictionary of Northern Mythology. D.S. Brewer.
