Ragnarsdrápa

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One of the decorations on Ragnarr's shield probably showed Thor's fishing trip. This illustration of the scene is from an 18th century Icelandic manuscript.
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One of the decorations on Ragnarr's shield probably showed Thor's fishing trip. This illustration of the scene is from an 18th century Icelandic manuscript.

Ragnarsdrápa is a skaldic poem composed in honour of the Scandinavian hero Ragnar Lodbrok. It is attributed to the oldest known skald Bragi Boddason who lived in the 9th century, and composed for the Swedish king Björn at Haugi[1]. Bragi describes the images on a decorated shield which Ragnar had given to him. The images included:

The extant fragments of Ragnarsdrápa are preserved in Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda. The episodes of Hamdir and Sorli, and Hedin and Högni are explicitly ascribed to Ragnarsdrápa while the other parts are inferred by scholars to belong to the same poem.

The poem is often compared with Húsdrápa and Haustlöng which also describe artworks depicting mythological scenes.

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