Skaði
Here’s to all of the inspiring women in our community, without whom our trails and little corner of the world wouldn’t exist. Thank you. Rebecca, Amy, Maleah, Joyce, Ciara, Kari, Kelly, Jackie, Mackenzie, Andrea, Margie, Mary, Leann, Mary B., and Carol - particular accolades go out to you and your continued dedication to the trails. It will never go unnoticed or under-appreciated.
So, in celebration of International Women’s Day - meet Skadi (pronounced “SKAHD-ee;” Old Norse Skaði) is a giantess and goddess in Norse mythology. Her name is either identical with the Old Norse common noun skaði, “harm,” or comes from another Germanic root preserved in the Gothic word skadus and the Old English sceadu, both of which mean “shadow.”[1] Her name is likely related to the name “Scandinavia,” but whether Skadi lent her name to the land-mass or vice versa is uncertain.[2]
Skadi lives in the highest reaches of the mountains, where the snow never melts. She’s an avid huntress, and her bow, snowshoes, and skis are her most often-mentioned attributes.[3][4][5]
She was once married to the god Njord. However, their marriage was a failure; Njord couldn’t stand the cold and dreariness of the mountains, and Skadi couldn’t stand the light and noise of Njord’s home by the seashore, so the two parted ways.
The giants (or, to use a word that more properly translates their Old Norse name, the “devourers”) are predominantly forces of darkness, cold, and death. Skadi fits this pattern, and seems to have had particular associations with winter. Her status as a goddess by marriage, however, along with the frequency of her historical worship,[6] seem to suggest that she has a more benevolent demeanor than most of her kin, perhaps in a capacity as a patroness of winter subsistence activities. - Excerpt from this source
More sources here:
[1] Turville-Petre, E.O.G. 1964. Myth and Religion of the North: The Religion of Ancient Scandinavia. p. 164.
[2] McKinnell, John. 2005. Meeting the Other in Norse Myth and Legend. p. 63.
[3] Eyvindr Skáldaspillir. Háleygjatal, stanza 4.
[4] Bragi Boddason. Ragnarsdrápa, stanza 20.
[5] Snorri Sturluson. The Prose Edda. Gylfaginning 23.
[6] Turville-Petre, E.O.G. 1964. Myth and Religion of the North: The Religion of Ancient Scandinavia. p. 165.