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No, that would take the skill of Wayland the smith of the gods."
The best preserved, now in the modern church, depicts alongside other images the story of Wayland the Smith.
Wayland the Smith, character from northern European mythology (also spelt Weyland)
According to the tale, Flibbertigibbet was apprentice to Wayland the Smith, and greatly exasperated his master.
There is a character named Weyland Smith in Fables based on Wayland the Smith.
Weyland or Wayland the Smith, a legendary smith in Germanic and Norse mythology.
Rooster is Robin Hood or Wayland the Smith or the Lord of Misrule.
Several of the works of the Matter of France, however, agree that the sword was forged by Wayland the Smith, who is commonly cited as a maker of romantic weapons.
Clementine customs may be survivals of earlier pagan rituals, a confusion of Saint Clement with the early Saxon Wayland, or Wayland the smith, a mythical metalworker.
The front panel, which originally had a lock fitted, depicts elements from the Germanic legend of Wayland the Smith in the left-hand scene, and the Adoration of the Magi on the right.
In addition to the life of Dietrich, various other heroes' lives are recounted as well in various parts of the story, including Attila, Wayland the Smith, Sigurd, the Nibelungen, and Walter of Aquitaine.
Nidud was a villainous king in the lay of Wayland the smith, Olaf aided the Norwegian king Vikar in battle, and Sporsnjall was burnt to death by Ingjald Ill-ruler together with five other petty kings.
Carved in whalebone on a 1,200-year-old Northumbrian casket, alongside scenes of the birth of Christ and the suckling of Romulus and Remus, Wayland the Smith plots the rape of a princess and plans his escape on magic wings.
Initially, she appears to have been a tragic victim of Wayland the smith's revenge on her father, but in later Scandinavian versions, she had a happy ending as Wayland's wife and as the mother of the hero Viðga of the Þiðrekssaga and medieval Scandinavian ballads.
Gram was forged by Wayland the Smith and originally belonged to Sigurd's father, Sigmund, who received it in the hall of the Völsung after pulling it out of the tree Barnstokkr into which Odin had stuck it where no one else could pull it out.