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Prose Edda
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==Naming== The etymology of "Edda" remains uncertain; there are many hypotheses about its meaning and development, yet little agreement. Some argue that the word derives from the name of [[Oddi]], a town in the south of Iceland where Snorri was raised. Edda could therefore mean "book of Oddi." However, this assumption is generally rejected. Anthony Faulkes in his English translation of the Prose Edda comments that this is "unlikely, both in terms of [[linguistics]] and [[history]]"<ref name="FAULKES-1982">Faulkes (1982).</ref> since Snorri was no longer living at Oddi when he composed his work. Another connection was made with the word ''[[贸冒r]]'', which means 'poetry or inspiration' in Old Norse.<ref name="FAULKES-1982" /> According to Faulkes, though such a connection is plausible semantically, it is unlikely that "Edda" could have been coined in the 13th century on the basis of "贸冒r", because such a development "would have had to have taken place gradually", and ''Edda'' in the sense of 'poetics' is not likely to have existed in the preliterary period.<ref name="FAULKES-1977-32-39">Faulkes (1977: 32-39).</ref> Edda also means 'great-grandparent', a word that appears in ''Sk谩ldskaparm谩l'', which occurs as the name of a figure in the eddic poem ''[[Rigsthula]]'' and in other medieval texts. A final hypothesis is derived from the [[Latin]] ''edo'', meaning "I write". It relies on the fact that the word ''"kredda"'' (meaning "belief") is certified and comes from the Latin ''"credo"'', meaning 'I believe'. ''Edda'' in this case could be translated as "Poetic Art". This is the meaning that the word was then given in the medieval period.<ref name="FAULKES-1982"/> The now uncommonly used name ''S忙mundar Edda'' was given by the [[Bishop]] [[Brynj贸lfur Sveinsson]] to the collection of poems contained in the [[Codex Regius]], many of which are quoted by Snorri. Brynj贸lfur, along with many others of his time incorrectly believed that they were collected by [[S忙mundr fr贸冒i]]<ref name="GISLI-1999-XIII">G铆sli (1999: xiii).</ref> (therefore before the drafting of the Edda of Snorri), and so the Poetic Edda is also known as the Elder Edda.
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