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Yngvi

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Yngvi-Freyr constructs the Temple at Uppsala, by Hugo Hamilton (1830)
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Yngvi-Freyr constructs the Temple at Uppsala, by Hugo Hamilton (1830)

In Scandinavian mythology, Yngvi, Ingui or Ing appears to have been the older name for the god Freyr (orginally an epitheton, meaning "lord"). Proto-Germanic *Ingwaz was one of the three sons of Mannus and the legendary ancestor of the Ingaevones.

Germanic Ingwaz

Jacob Grimm in his Teutonic Mythology and many others have considered it likely that Norse Yngvi was originally identical to Ing/Ingo/Ingui.

The element Ing- in Old English, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish and Icelandic names are usually considered to be related.

Ingwaz Ingwaz is also the reconstructed name of the Elder Futhark ŋ-rune ᛜ. The Old English Runic Poem contains these obscure lines:

Ing wæs ærest mid Eástdenum
gesewen secgum, oð he síððan eást
ofer wæg gewát. wæn æfter ran.
þus Heardingas þone hæle nemdon.
"Ing was first amidst the East Danes
so seen, until he went eastward
over the sea. His wagon ran after.
Thus the Heardings named that hero."

Norse Yngvi

In Scandinavian mythology, Yngvi, alternatively Yngve, was the progenitor of the Yngling lineage, a legendary dynasty of Swedish kings from whom the earliest historical Norwegian kings in turn claimed to be descended, see also Freyr.

Information on Yngvi varies in different traditions as follows:

(The Yngling Saga section of Snorri Sturluson's Heimskringla also introduces a second Yngvi son of Alrek who is a descendant of Yngvi-Frey and who shared the Swedish kingship with his brother Álf. See Yngvi and Alf.)

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