Venus (mythology) - Venus (mythology) The Birth of Venus, by Botticelli Venus is the Roman goddess of love, equivalent to Greek Aphrodite and Etruscan Turan. Other figures possibly corresponding to Venus are: Tlahuizcalpantecuhtli in Aztec mythology Kukulcan in Maya mythology Sif in the Norse mythos Her cult began in Ardea and Lavinium, Latium. On August 18, 293 BC, her oldest temple was built. August 18 was then a festival called the Vinalia Rustica. On April 1, the Veneralia was celebrated in honor of Venus Verticordia, the protector against vice. On April 23 215 BC, a temple was built on the Capitol dedicated to Venus Erycina to commemorate the Roman defeat at Lake Trasum. Julius Caesar introduced Venus Genetrix as a goddess of motherhood and domesticity. Venus was often depicted in.
Inuit mythology - Inuit mythology Inuit mythology has many similarities to the religions of other polar regions, such as Northern Russian mythology, Siberian mythology, Finnish mythology and Norse mythology. Inuit mythology is unlike the common conception of what the term "mythology" refers to. Unlike Greek mythology, for example, people have believed in it, without interruption, up to and including the present time. While there are few believers left when compared to Christianity, for example, many Inuit do still hold to their ancestral religious beliefs; there are also neopagans who have integrated some or all of the Inuit beliefs into their own belief structures. Many Inuit have merged those beliefs to a greater or lesser degree with Christianity or other religions, and may hold varying degrees of literal belief in what.
Giant (mythology) - Giant (mythology) Giants are humanoid creatures of prodigious size and strength, a type of legendary monster that appear in the tales of many different races and cultures. They are often stupid or violent and are frequently said to eat humans, especially children; others, like Oscar Wilde's giants, are intelligent and friendly. The Cyclopes of Homer's Odyssey were giants, as was Goliath who strove with King David in the Bible. The Bible also records a race of giants whose name is now usually translated "Nephilim;" these are the giants meant when the book Genesis observes that "There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men and they bore children to them, the.
Gram (mythology) - Gram (mythology) In Norse mythology, Gram was the name of the sword that Sigurd (Siegfried) used to kill the dragon Fafnir. It originally belonged to his father, Sigmund, who received it after pulling it out of a log into which Odin had stuck it -- nobody else could pull it out. See Sigurd for more details on the story of Siegfried and Fafnir..
Finnish mythology - Finnish mythology Finnish mythology survived as oral tradition well into the 18th century. Based on animistic beliefs, the Finnish uphold one of the very few primitive religious traditions in Western Europe, albeit in a secularized form. The rites of the hunt (Peijainen), harvest and sowing etc. may well be held as social events, but the spiritual undercurrent is not totally absent. Although the gradual influence of surrounding cultures raised the significance of the skygod in a monolatristic manner, he was originally just a naturespirit like all the others. The one whose name was never uttered by the Finns was the spirit whose carnal form is known in English as bear. While active and committed belief in the ancient gods of Finland is limited to minor and mutually.
Alf (mythology) - Alf (mythology) In Norse mythology, King Alf was the suitor of Alfhild. She dressed as a man to avoid marrying him. Then, he thinking she was a warrior, battled almost to the death. Realizing he was as strong as she was, Alfhild married him..
Anglo-Saxon mythology - Anglo-Saxon mythology The principal Anglo-Saxon gods were many and bear close comparison with their Norse counterparts and reflects the close relationship between peoples deriving from lands adjoining the shores of the Baltic and the Norsemen, who, it must be remembered, were as much traders and travellers as they were reavers. Information would have been orally transmitted between groups and tribes by the Anglo-Saxon travelling minstrelsy, the scops. Some of this poetry exists in manuscript form, and one of the principal sources is the epic poem Beowulf. The sources and the nature of this poem moreover demonstrate the strong bond of inter-relationship between the Anglo-Saxons and the Vikings. The hero of the poem, Beowulf, for example, is a Geat, a kingdom in the south of Sweden. To further clutter.
Verdandi - Verdandi One of the three norns in Norse Mythology. Her name means "being"..
Karl - of Sweden Karl Knutsson Bonde - King of Sweden and Norway Karl Sverkersson - King of Sweden Charles - english translation of "Karl" Karl - the ancestor of the peasants according to Norse mythology Karl (comedy prize) - an Austrian comedy prize. This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that just points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page..
Ve - Ve In Norse mythology, Ve was one of the Aesir and a son of Bestla and Bor. His brothers were Vili and Odin. He was known for having given humanity the powers of speech and their external senses. He may have had an affair with Odin's wife, Frigg. Ve is also a letter of Cyrillic alphabet. The Vedas are part of Hindu Shruti..
Kvasir - Kvasir In Norse mythology, Kvasir was created from the saliva of all the gods, making him the wisest of the Vanir. He was quickly murdered by Fjalar and Galar, two dwarven brothers, in their cavern. They mixed his blood and preserved it; the blood fermented into a magical mead that inspired poets. The giant Suttungr, enraged by Fjalar and Galarr's murder of his father Gillingr and his mother, took the dwarves out to sea, setting them on a reef which would be covered at high tide. The dwarves entreated Suttungr to spare them, offering him for reconciliation the precious mead they had obtained. Suttungr brought the mead to his home and concealed it in a place called Hnitbjorg, asking his daughter Gunnlod to guard it. Odin left.
Jarl - Jarl is the Scandinavian language cognate of Earl. In Norse mythology, Jarl was the son of Rig and Modir. Rig taught Jarl runes and other magic, as well as the language of the birds. Jarl then gathered some men and captured some land, then married Erna, with whom he had eleven sons, the ancestors of the warriors in Norse society. See also: Birger Jarl.
Jarnsaxa - Jarnsaxa In Norse mythology, Jarnsaxa was a Jotun and Thor's lover. By him, she was the mother of Thrud, Magni and Modi..
Vidkun Quisling - after World War II. Referred to as the Norwegian Führer, Quisling lived in a mansion on Bygdøy in Oslo which he called Gimle after Norse mythology. Quisling had a mixed and relatively successful background, having achieved the rank of major in the Norwegian army, and worked with Fridtjof Nansen in the Soviet Union during the famine in the 1930s, as well as having served as defense minister in the agrarian government 1931-1933. He was son of the Lutheran priest and well-known genealogist Jon Lauritz Qvisling. On May 17 1933, the Norwegian national day, Quisling and state attorney Johan Bernhard Hjort formed Nasjonal Samling (National Unity), the Norwegian national-socialist party. Nasjonal Samling had an anti-democratic, "leader"-oriented political structure, and Quisling was to be that leader, much like Adolf Hitler was for the.
Viking - the Varangian Guard. Other names include Danes, Northmen, Norsemen Germanians and Normans. Table of contents showTocToggle("show","hide") 1 Etymology 2 Historical records 3 The Viking World 4 Sagas 5 Decline 6 Myths about Vikings 7 See also: Etymology The Viking propensity for trade is easily seen in market ports such as Hedeby; close to the border with the Franks it was effectively a crossroads between the cultures, until its eventual destruction by the Norwegians in an internecine dispute in c. 1050. According to the American Heritage Dictionary, fourth edition, "viking" is derived from Old Norse vikingr, which is istelf perhaps from vik, "creek, inlet." Historical records The first report of a Viking raid dates from 793, when the monastery at Lindisfarne on the east coast of England was pillaged by foreign seafarers..
Vidar - Vidar In Norse mythology, Vidar is the son of Odin and the god of silence, stealth and revenge. In the reborn world that arises after Ragnarok (in which Vidar kills Fenris), Vidar is preordained to rule in Odin's stead..
Vile and Ve - Vile and Ve form an important part of proto-Norse mythology. Vile and Ve were siblings of Odin who constructed Yggdrasil, the world-ash. Lodur is often thought to be another name for the god Vile. Vile and Ve are also a brother and sister duet who play violin and viola live concerts..
Jotunheim - the giants (two types: rock and frost, collectively called Jotuns) in the Norse Mythology. From here they menace the humans in Midgard and the gods in Asgard (from whom they are separated by the river Iving. The chief city of Jotunheim is Utgard. Gastropnir, home of Menglad, and Thrymheim, home of Thiazi, were both located in Jotunheim, which was ruled by King Thrym..
Joel Rosenberg - changes they've made to society. He has shown no compunction about killing off popular characters. The "Keepers of the Hidden Ways" trilogy similarly places people from the real world into a fantasy setting, making heavy use of Norse mythology. A third fantasy series, comprised of the novels D'Shai (1991) and Hour of the Octopus (1994) (both lightly humorous mysteries) is set in a Asian-influenced fantasy world with very strict cultural standards and etiquette. A third D'shai novel is currently in pre-publication. In addition to fantasy, Rosenberg has published a number of science fiction novels. Although dealing with different characters, Ties of Blood and Silver (1984) and Emile and the Dutchman (1986) are both set in the same universe. Two other books set in this universe, Not for Glory (1988) and Hero.
Jord - Jord In Norse mythology, Jord was the goddess of primitive and uncivilized areas on Earth. She was married to Odin and mother of Thor, though later Frigg was said to be Thor's mother. Alternative: Hlódyn, Fjörgyn, Jörd.