Baldr: Difference between revisions
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|name = Baldr | |name = Baldr | ||
|native = | |native = | ||
|image = | |image = ACV DoR Baldr Database Render.png | ||
|birth = | |birth = | ||
|death = c. 75,000 BCE {{c|physical death; consciousness contained within the [[Salakar]]}}<ref name="TheMasters">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]] – [[Dawn of Ragnarök]]'' – [[Pride of the Aesir]]</ref> | |death = c. 75,000 BCE {{c|physical death; consciousness contained within the [[Salakar]]}}<ref name="TheMasters">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]] – [[Dawn of Ragnarök]]'' – [[Pride of the Aesir]]</ref> | ||
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==Legacy and influence== | ==Legacy and influence== | ||
Baldur passed on to myth after the great catastrophe. In myth he was regarded as a bright and optimistic figure, with the gift of foresight<ref name = "database"/> and invulnerability.<ref name="FM 1"/> | Baldur passed on to myth after the great catastrophe. In myth he was regarded as a bright and optimistic figure, with the gift of foresight<ref name = "database"/> and invulnerability.<ref name="FM 1"/> | ||
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ACV Baldur Toy.PNG|A toy of Baldr based off his Sigrblot statue. | ACV Baldur Toy.PNG|A toy of Baldr based off his Sigrblot statue. | ||
ACV Baldr statue.png|Baldr statue during the Sigrblot festival in Ravensthorpe. | ACV Baldr statue.png|Baldr statue during the Sigrblot festival in Ravensthorpe. | ||
ACV FM - Baldr 1.jpg|Baldr while sailing his ship | |||
ACV FM - Baldr 2.jpg|Baldr in Asgard's treasury | |||
ACV FM - Baldr 3.jpg|Baldr cloaked as he approached the entrance to Muspelheim | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 03:25, 7 February 2024
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Baldr was an Æsir isu, son of Odin, mythologized in Norse folklore as the god of light, peace, innocence, purity and prophecy.
Biography
Baldr was born to Frigg and Odin in Asgard during the Isu Era,[2] being the one of sons of the Æsir leader.[3] He is the brother of Thor and Heimdall.
Baldur was poisoned with by Loki in retaliation for Odin's imprisonment of his son Fenrir, leading to his death. After his death, Odin looked desperately for a way to resurrect his son, to no avail.[4]
Legacy and influence
Baldur passed on to myth after the great catastrophe. In myth he was regarded as a bright and optimistic figure, with the gift of foresight[2] and invulnerability.[5]
Baldr had a totem named after him in the popular dice game Orlog, played during the 9th century. The piece "Baldr's Invulnerability" would earn players extra helmets and shields for each die that rolled either of those icons. An Anglo-Saxon man at the Ragnarsson War Camp for the Great Heathen Army in Ledecestreshire possessed the piece, which he gave to the Viking shieldmaiden Eivor Varinsdottir of the Raven Clan after being defeated.[6]
In 881, the King of Dublin Bárid mac Ímair cursed Flann Sinna using Baldur's name in exasperation for not heeding his warning of an incoming attack.[7]
Mythological tales
In myth, Baldr accompanied his brothers Thor and Heimdall as they tracked a Muspel giant that had entered Ásgarðr. In an ensuing conflict, the Muspel and Baldr were caught in a rockfall. The Muspel is killed while Baldr emerges unscathed yet laments the death of his enemy. Escaping the rubble into a dwarven tunnel, he meets an escaped dwarf slave whom the Muspel was chasing, unknowingly leading him into Ásgarðr. Baldr was informed by the dwarf of Muspel forces gathering to invade his homeland of Svartálfaheimr. Through their conversation, Baldr realizes he has little life experience as a warrior. Upon seeing sunlight and exiting the tunnels, Baldr turned back to find the dwarf but disovered he was nowhere in sight.[5]
Days pass, and Baldr returned home, before Odin–deep in conversation with Tyr–could worry further. At a celebration feast, Baldr could not help but notice Tyr's missing arm and his father's missing eye. He went to bed to reflect upon these things.[5]
After a few more days, Baldr stood before his father's throne Hliðskjálf and met with Odin and his stepmother, Freyja.[5]
Eivor's visions

In the 9th century, Eivor Varinsdottir, reincarnation of the isu Odin, consumed psychoactive mixtures prepared by her clan's resident oracle Valka, which sent her on hallucinogenic visions where she explored mythical realms from Norse cosmology as "Havi", subconsciously merging her Norse religious beliefs with the real genetic memories of Odin present within her DNA.
During one such vision, induced after a waking dream, she relived the events leading up to the death of Baldr. In these visions, Loki secretly told the Muspels how to poison Baldr with mistletoe[8], resulting in his kidnapping and death, leaving Odin to grieve over the loss of his child.[4][9]
Later, Odin attempted to resurrect Baldr by plunging Niflheimr to demand of Hel that she bring him back. Upon her defeat, Hel revealed to Odin the truth: her attempts to impede Odin from reaching and resurrecting Balder were orchestrated by Baldr himself. Somehow Baldr yet lived after death and explained to Odin that he required his enemies to believe him gone. In order to do so he had to erase Odin's memories of this reunion, as he had many times before. To do this he offered to replace Muninn (memory) with Sýnin (insight), that Odin could see towards the future. In this manner Baldr planned to survive Ragnarök from beyond, to lead the world after that catastrophe to a brighter future.[10]
Behind the scenes
Baldr, or Baldur, is a god from Norse and Germanic mythology attested as the son of Odin and Frigg. His death, described in both the Poetic Edda and Prose Edda, is associated with the coming of Ragnarök. In the Assassin's Creed series, Baldr was first mentioned in Assassin's Creed: Valhalla, and subsequently featured heavily in the game's third expansion, Dawn of Ragnarök.
The game offers seemingly contradictory accounts about his death; Loki's fragment of memories, explored through the Animus Anomalies planted by Basim Ibn Ishaq into Layla Hassan's simulation has Loki imply that he poisoned Baldr with a small amount of mistletoe, which was enough to cause his death, and soon left to tell his consort, Aletheia; while the Dawn of Ragnarök expansion, positioned as a mythologized version of actual events, has a more elaborate scenario, where Baldr is captured and tortured by Surtr, with Sinmara forcing him to ingest many "drafts" of mistletoe until his death, with Loki simply giving Surtr the means to capture him, and subsequently being imprisoned.
Etymology
Baldr is Old Norse for lord or prince.
Gallery
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Baldr in chains.
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Baldr's Invulnerability.
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A toy of Baldr based off his Sigrblot statue.
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Baldr statue during the Sigrblot festival in Ravensthorpe.
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Baldr while sailing his ship
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Baldr in Asgard's treasury
-
Baldr cloaked as he approached the entrance to Muspelheim
Appearances
- Assassin's Creed: Valhalla (first mentioned)
- Wrath of the Druids (mentioned only)
- Dawn of Ragnarök (first appearance)
- The Forgotten Saga (consciousness only)
- Discovery Tour: Viking Age (mentioned only)
- Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Forgotten Myths
- Echoes of History (mentioned only)
- The World of Assassin's Creed Valhalla: Journey to the North – Logs and Files of a Hidden One (mentioned only)
References
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Dawn of Ragnarök – Pride of the Aesir
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Dawn of Ragnarök – Database: Baldr
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – The Forgotten Saga – The Forgotten Saga: A Manifold Path
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Animus Anomalies: Quartzite Ridge
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Forgotten Myths – Issue #1
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Wrath of the Druids – The Mask of Diplomacy
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Dawn of Ragnarök – The Rescue
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – Dawn of Ragnarök – Pride of the Aesir
- ↑ Assassin's Creed: Valhalla – The Forgotten Saga

