English, asked by writetochinchu, 8 months ago

A 3 minute speech on Nore Mythology.

Answers

Answered by kdreadlord
1

Norse Mythology's Endless Appeal

Explanation:

  • Hail to the gods!Hail to the goddesses!Hail to the bounteous earth!Speech and witGive to us famous onesAnd healing hands, while we live!
  • A white-bearded Icelandic gentleman, bundled up against Reykjavík’s midwinter cold, recites these verses of medieval pagan poetry before an attentive gathering. They stand closely together beneath a clear night sky, holding candles, gathered in a circle around a roaring fire. So begins the Yule celebration of Icelanders who practice a modern iteration of Norse religion, a contemporary practice that considers the poems and legends of Norse mythology to be core texts for ritual and reflection.
  • Far from Iceland, my parents were philosophers in Chicago. When I was a child, they made sure I read Greek, Jewish and Christian mythology, telling me I could believe whatever I wanted as an adult, but that I needed to know these three traditions, so I could understand the art, literature and music of the western world.
  • My father, from a German farming village in eastern Europe, told me stories of Siegfried the dragon-slayer and introduced me to Grimms’ Fairy Tales and fabulous folklore from the Rhine River region. The one thing I didn’t learn about was Norse mythology. As a kid, Norse myths seemed like exclusive property of far-away Scandinavia.
  • Hope it helps!#BAL
Answered by FIREBIRD
20

Answer:

Explanation:

The stories that have come down to us as Norse myths developed throughout Northern Europe as part of an oral tradition dating from the eighth to the eleventh centuries .

Encompassing both mythological tales of the gods and heroic tales of warriors and leaders, the Norse mythological tradition offers insights into both the religious beliefs and the history of the cultures of Northern Europe between the fall of the Roman Empire and the birth of early modern national cultures. Its primary myths treat themes common to most cultures: the creation of the world, the nature of good and evil, and the cycles of life, death and regeneration.

Norse myths have their roots in tales told by a variety of Indo-European peoples who populated much of north and central Europe from as early as 600 B. C .

People, known as the "Northmen" told and preserved the stories of the old gods and inspired many of the heroic legends that form the basis of Norse mythology.

The primary literary sources are the Snorra Edda, the Saemander Edda, and the Skaldic poems.

#answerwithquality #BAL

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