Welcome to Assassin's Creed Wiki! Log in and join the community.

Idun

From the Assassin's Creed Wiki
Revision as of 12:20, 5 November 2020 by imported>Francesco75 (As she is already categorized as Norse deity, I think is not necessary to categorized as norse mythology.)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


Idun and the apples, by J. Doyle Penrose

Idun, also known as Iðunn or Iduna, was a Nordic goddess associated with youth and rejuvenation. According to the Poetic Edda, she was the caretaker of the orchard of the golden apples, fruit which ensured the gods' vigor and immortality.

Legacy and influence

In the 9th century, the Vikings Eivor, Dag and Tora launched a counter-attack against Kjotve the Cruel's forces who were raiding the settlement of Rogaland. After fighting off the raiders, Eivor investigated a sound coming from inside a building, only to be attacked by the tattooed slave Gull. Amidst her wild ramblings, Gull mentioned that she was a "slave to Sökkvabekkr, Sága and Idun's bounty."[1]

In 2012 Clay Kaczmarek included James Doyle Penrose's painting of Idun and the Apples in a set of puzzles he'd hidden within the Animus for his follower to find. In Clay's puzzle it was suggested that Idun's golden apples were in truth Apples of Eden.[2]

Appearances

References

zh:伊登