The Sun in Norse Myth

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2023
  • The sun (Sól or, it's a long story, Sunna) isn't much in evidence in Norse myth. This video looks at where it (she?) shows up and why people may think there's more of it in the Eddas than there is.
    Jackson Crawford, Ph.D.: Sharing real expertise in Norse language and myth with people hungry to learn, free of both ivory tower elitism and the agendas of self-appointed gurus. Visit jacksonwcrawford.com/ (includes bio and linked list of all videos).
    Jackson Crawford’s Patreon page: / norsebysw
    Visit Grimfrost at glnk.io/6q1z/jacksoncrawford
    Latest FAQs: vimeo.com/375149287 (updated Nov. 2019).
    Jackson Crawford’s translation of Hávamál, with complete Old Norse text: www.hackettpublishing.com/the... or www.amazon.com/Wanderers-Hava...
    Jackson Crawford’s translation of The Poetic Edda: www.hackettpublishing.com/the... or www.amazon.com/Poetic-Edda-St...
    Audiobook: www.audible.com/pd/The-Poetic...
    Music © I See Hawks in L.A., courtesy of the artist. Visit www.iseehawks.com/
    Logos and channel artwork by Justin Baird. See more of his work at: justinbairddesign.com

Комментарии • 142

  • @JacksonCrawford
    @JacksonCrawford  Год назад +8

    Related videos:
    Vafþrúðnismál (Vafthruthnismal / Vafthrudnismal): ruclips.net/video/RhRqtdlt9I4/видео.html
    Vǫluspá (Voluspa): ruclips.net/video/5q6-owZc1zA/видео.html
    The Moon in Norse Myth: ruclips.net/video/7K16KaktVwY/видео.html

    • @Andrea-ky9lh
      @Andrea-ky9lh 11 месяцев назад

      Do you have a Spotify account with these videos? I would love to listen to them there while I'm on the go.

  • @CountsDigGraves
    @CountsDigGraves Год назад +184

    "I don't have the heart of a poet" says the poetry writing scholar cowboy with the sunset backdrop.

    • @grimble4564
      @grimble4564 Год назад +10

      Good taste always dictates a degree of detachment from the facts of reality

    • @Aangkai
      @Aangkai Год назад +6

      He doesn't have the heart of a post, but he sure has the gift for it

  • @glassshark9522
    @glassshark9522 Год назад +77

    Another thing I think contributes to the compulsion to lay a "god of ____" framework over the Norse pantheon is that the first world mythology that many of us learn about as kids is the Greek pantheon. Regardless of the historicity of the practice, those gods all have a fairly cut and dried portfolio, so it might be natural for people to assume all mythologies work the same way.

    • @arifreeman
      @arifreeman Год назад +29

      Even the Greeks weren't cut and dry, here's a bit I wrote complaining about it:
      In Greek mythology Poseidon, an Olympian, is god of the Sea.
      Before Poseidon in the time of the Titans, Thaumas is the god of the sea. Thaumas is married to Electra who is the daughter of Oceanus, who is god of the sea. Thaumas is the son of Gaia and Pontus and Pontus is the god of the sea.
      This is too many concurrent gods of the sea, but you can't get rid of any of them because Thaumus and and Electra are the parents of Iris, who is goddess of rainbows, so if you get of any of any of the pre-Poseidon gods of the sea you can't have rainbows and we want rainbows because they are nice.

    • @ThorirPP
      @ThorirPP Год назад +21

      @@arifreeman to be fair, one of those ancient greek sea gods, Oceanus (Okeanos), isn't actually a god of the sea, but rather a god of the ocean. This might mean the same thing today, as we use the word ocean for a large sea, but in the original ancient greek worldview the sea was surrounded by a landmass, and that landmass had the ocean (okeanos), which was a river that surrounded the world and was a source of most, if not all, freshwater in the world, and Oceanus was the god of that freshwater river (this is also why the Oceanids, daughters of Oceanus, are freshwater nymphs)
      But yeah, there were multiple gods associated with the sea in Greek mythology, some which you didn't mention being Tethys (mother of Electra), and Nereus (brother of Thaumas), and probably even more.

    • @JenksAnro
      @JenksAnro Год назад +12

      Yeah I would agree that Greek gods aren't as cut and dried as people often think, especially the Olympian gods.
      But we should note that the Titans do tend to be more directly related. Helios, for example, is not the god of the sun, he is the literally actual sun. Gaia is the earth. This is true for many titans but not all. No one really knows what Kronos is god of, and he doesn't seem to "be" anything. Some people argue that he is a god of the harvest, but that's mostly based on evidence from his Roman counterpart Saturn, the only real evidence that he might have something to do with farming is that he wields a sickle. It doesn't even really make sense that he would be the god of farming since, according to Hesiod, people didn't farm when Kronos was the ruler of the heavens. Some people think he is the god of time, but that's a confusion between Chronos (who "is" time itself) and Kronos, which start with a different letter in Greek.
      So I would say Greek gods are a mixed bag of personified natural objects or abstract concepts, lords of areas of the world, like Poseidon for the sea, Hades for the underworld, and gods who are just chilling and aren't really god *of* anything, like Daimons or maybe someone like Kronos.

    • @such_a_dork
      @such_a_dork 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@arifreeman Sure, but the way it's generally *taught* is the oversimplified, "Posiedon's the god of the sea, Aries is the god of war, etc." So that's what ends up coloring the perceptions of people who don't eventually dig deeper into it (and I suspect a fair amount of those who do).

    • @dungcheeseMORK999
      @dungcheeseMORK999 11 месяцев назад +1

      This is what I think so many get wrong. We think all 'mythologies' function the same way, when in reality that just isn't the case.

  • @nobodyexceptme7794
    @nobodyexceptme7794 Год назад +11

    Salute the shot selection, cant ask for a better backdrop than that.

  • @gordonkennygordon
    @gordonkennygordon Год назад +24

    Greetings from the beautiful Wasatch mountains in Utah! Since you mentioned merch, I thought I'd mention that I would totally buy a coffee cup with "Vituð ér enn, eða hvat?" on it.
    Thank you for your great work - you exemplify what I think is the very best of our emerging Rocky Mountain culture.
    Peace!
    Kenny
    Post Script - I'm a couple decades older, and I can tell you from experience that it's not always possible to differentiate between "going as planned" and "devastating emotional nightmare"
    ...just sayin...
    Buena suerte, compadre!

  • @lakrids-pibe
    @lakrids-pibe Год назад +13

    Glædelig midsommer.
    Han er Odins mand!

  • @alicelarsson165
    @alicelarsson165 Год назад +17

    Maybe people also get some perceptions about the sun's importance from the hints and theories about solar cults and sun worship in the earlier eras, the Nordic Bronze Age. All the petroglyphs interpreted as sun symbols, and artifacts like the Trundholm sun chariot.
    28:30 another perhaps just random etymology theory I think I read was about the god Ullr, derived from Wulþuz meaning glory, shining, radiating or something, might once been associated with the sky or sun.

  • @Great_Olaf5
    @Great_Olaf5 Год назад +8

    16:40 Another good example is that I've sometimes seen stars poetically described as daughters of the moon.

  • @AndrewTheFrank
    @AndrewTheFrank Год назад +10

    I do a lot of gardening and live in California. I care a lot about shade and sunlight and so often think of the sun as being to the south when planning out the garden layout for the year. So I get it.

    • @lapatossu5976
      @lapatossu5976 11 месяцев назад +2

      A long time ago it was common to view the world from the perspective of the rising sun.
      Plutarch explains this in Isis and Osiris, "for the Egyptians believe that the eastern regions are the face of the world, the northern the right, and the southern the left.​ The Nile, therefore, which runs from the south and is swallowed up by the sea in the north, is naturally said to have its birth on the left and its dissolution on the right."
      The word "sunnan", which we today consider as the south, can be poetically used as meaning "behind". Therefore the line means the sun rises from behind, or east, and casts it's rays to the right of the heavenly horses, that is to the north of the heavenly equator.

  • @voidofmisery4810
    @voidofmisery4810 Год назад +5

    as a fellow grown man, i just wanted to let you know that you are exceptionally handsome good sir. just wanted to compliment you. also, love this talk since history is absolutely so fascinating and growing up I was never interested, but now I am :) so thanks!

  • @fredyyfredfreddy
    @fredyyfredfreddy Год назад +20

    I first thought he said, I am talking about the sun and how it is disgusting 😮

    • @user-B_8
      @user-B_8 8 месяцев назад

      😲😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +3

    You too Crawford, all the best and bright days ahead.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +5

    I think it is fine to tell the story as it says on paper, because then people can unfold the riddles themselves.
    As you say, if you don't have the heart of a poet, just go with what feels right to you. No use in convincing us of an interpretation you don't believe in. But I'm glad you mentioned it at least.

  • @Darkurge666
    @Darkurge666 Год назад +4

    I think it makes sense that the Sol (the sun) is much more important than the moon. Because the winter is long and dangerous, while the summer is shorter and brings life. In the summer we have sun until late in the evening and it associated with pleasant temperature and never with harsh burning, as in the southern part of Europe or other warmer cultures. The moon is less important for our survival, but it has been important for time keeping, as in many cultures.

  • @stephenmurray7495
    @stephenmurray7495 Год назад +1

    23:27 That card. I wasn't expecting to laugh so much over my morning tea, but I threw my head back and roared like a musketeer. Not with any cruelty, you understand, but in recognition.

  • @hackerminecrafitiano
    @hackerminecrafitiano Год назад +8

    Hey! Great video!
    I found it really interesting that the gender of these astrological bodies are the opposite from Romance languages.
    And, if I recall correctly, Sun and Moon are both feminine in Old Tupi. The etymology of the their names in this language are respectively "mother of the day" and "mother of the night".
    "Sun" is *arasy*, *ara* "day" and *sy* "mother".
    This has an impact on Tupi mythology.
    Well, this is at least what I now from some Tupi material, and also the epic novel *Macunaíma*, by the brazilian author Mário de Andrade. This writer did a lot of research on various indigenous groups (other than Tupi) and their religions and legends.

    • @fartsofdoom6491
      @fartsofdoom6491 11 месяцев назад

      Interesting. That's the first time I've encountered a mythology where sun and moon aren't different genders. Not that I've ever looked explicitly into it, but it's something I've noticed. Male Sun/female Moon in Greek, Latin, and I think Celtic (and Egyptian? Really not sure), the other way round in Germanic and I think also in Inuit mythology. Don't remember which way around it was in other examples, but every culture where I've hitherto come across it had them as male and female (usually either as a couple or as siblings). I've also always found it interesting that on the rare occasions English actually genders them it's usually a male sun and female moon rather than the other way round as it is in other Germanic languages. I suspect that's due to Latin/French influence on the language.

    • @semaj_5022
      @semaj_5022 9 месяцев назад +3

      I find it interesting that Japan also has a feminine solar deity in Amaterasu and a male (most likely, but not generally clarified, I think) lunar deity in Tsukuyomi (or Tsukiyomi). They are depicted as estranged siblings, with Amaterasu being the picture of beauty and mobility/grace and Tsukuyomi being the height of beauty and serenity.

    • @user-rg7uz8of9r
      @user-rg7uz8of9r 22 дня назад

      sun is feminine and moon is male in vedic tradition as well, though this is overlooked due to to both (and all) bodies having a masculine deity as well as a feminine

    • @hackerminecrafitiano
      @hackerminecrafitiano 22 дня назад

      @@user-rg7uz8of9r do you mean all bodies have both a masculine and a feminine version? I didn't quite understand

  • @ForestDaughtersJournals
    @ForestDaughtersJournals 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hope things that are weighing down on you lighten. Thank you for your videos.

  • @Pandaemoni
    @Pandaemoni Год назад +17

    Just a (very) minor suggestion: It would be helpful to either include a card in the video linking to other videos of yours you reference or just include the link to them in the description below the video. I intend to watch your Vafthruthnismal video next (or, as it appears to be over an hour, as soon as time permits), but it was a little hard to find since I can't easily type out "Vafþrúðnismál" without cutting and pasting (which could not be done in the case the reference in this video).

    • @Lycaon1765
      @Lycaon1765 Год назад +2

      My universal copying app doesn't work anymore, so i concur

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +2

    My interpretation of himinjodyr is more simple. Horses ride through it every day to pull the heavenly bodies up and down into and out of the sky, thus, the horizon is the heaven-horse-door.
    I hope that makes sense linguistically.

  • @NOLNV1
    @NOLNV1 Год назад +8

    The sun and moon chariots have a peculiar detail, I don't know if this is a later thing, but in Scandinavia the sun is usually associated with the feminine and the moon with the masculine.
    If it is an older tradition I guess Snorri could have depicted a juxtaposition of genders though.
    Edit: that's what I get for commenting early

  • @AndrewTheFrank
    @AndrewTheFrank Год назад +5

    I remember hearing a lot about Egypt while growing up, especially on TV, and the thing always stressed with that was the sun god Ra.

  • @johndaugherty4127
    @johndaugherty4127 Год назад +1

    My dad used to call me Jackson. I like your channel

  • @doncarlosderush1500
    @doncarlosderush1500 Год назад

    Excellent video, Sir. 🙌

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +1

    Perfect timing for the midsummer solstice!

  • @genghisgalahad8465
    @genghisgalahad8465 Год назад

    Hel yeah! This is an intriguing and timely and awesome topic of the Norse!

  • @klausolekristiansen2960
    @klausolekristiansen2960 Год назад +16

    We do not know all Odin's powers, but we do know his spell list.

    • @henryoswaldcraft5215
      @henryoswaldcraft5215 Год назад +10

      Yes, indeed, and they are (in order): 1 Bless/Enhance Ability, 2 (Mass) Heal/Healing Word, 3 Bane, 4 Telekinesis? (there is no unlocking spell, and even Thaumaturgy requires things to already be unlocked), 5 Sanctuary/Shield, 6 Counterspell/Remove Curse (there is no spell for returning curse to sender), 7 Control Flames/Pyrotechnics (though they both specify within 5-foot cube), 8 Calm Emotions, 9 Control Water/Weather/Winds, 10 Confusion/Feeblemind, 11 Stoneskin, 12 Animate/Speak with Dead, 13 Ceremony (though there is nothing that will prevent someone from being killed at all, game balance and all that), 14 Legend Lore, 15 I really don't know, 16 & 17 Charm Person/Enthrall/Friends (as well as the latter half of Antipathy/Sympathy, but there is no "love/seduction" spell), and then we don't know 18.

    • @bluebird3281
      @bluebird3281 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@henryoswaldcraft5215 No scry, find two familiars, or eight-legged phantom steed?

    • @henryoswaldcraft5215
      @henryoswaldcraft5215 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@bluebird3281 Well, I went only off the list of eighteen spells in Hávamál, and I found nothing that would suggest "Scry" to me.
      Also, Huginn, Muninn, and Sleipnir never seemed like "summons" to me, but rather autonomous beings with distinct existence aside from Odin. I would classify them as familiars more in the "friends/family (Sleipnir)" sense than summoned creatures.
      But then again, Dr Crawford does make mention on occasion that the reading of Odin's fear of their failure to return makes it seem as though Huginn and Muninn are his literal thought and memory given physical shape, so... I'm not sure.

    • @stephanieparker1250
      @stephanieparker1250 9 месяцев назад

      Fireball +20 damage for sure.

  • @bluedogguy
    @bluedogguy Год назад

    love your videos.

  • @paulcrosslin
    @paulcrosslin 9 месяцев назад +1

    This story tells me about How the Norse were able to navigate great bodies of water and how they new the best times to raid upriver. The Norse were not only feared raiders but renowned travelers and traders. They must have had a superior system that allowed for both sea travel and river navigation.

  • @martinnyberg9295
    @martinnyberg9295 Год назад +2

    3:05 This interesting point made me bewildered, as I was trying to think about how my learning French is affected by my knowing German already. I forgot that my second language is English. 😂

    • @gudrunvenema9759
      @gudrunvenema9759 20 дней назад +1

      Yeah same here. I have a German accent in my french, because you know, I'm dutch😂

  • @jonumbrella
    @jonumbrella Год назад +2

    Good Video sir as always. You also always have me missing Colorado. I lived in Bailey, far from the now Moscow. Anyway I wondered and i'm guessing you have heard this before but if not have you have looked at some comparisons of Norse mythology and the religion/mythos of Siberia , in particular the steppes, Mongolia and Tengri. Tengriism and Norse mythology could have been written by cousins except Tengrism is one of the oldest religions in the world. There is no doubt the Norse, travelled through here and likewise nomads from here visited all of Europe. Its a fascinating comparison even down to the similar runes. Anyway all the best.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +4

    Personification is personification.
    The gods very clearly are concepts personified as can be taken from their names.
    As you are trying to maybe say, the sun and the moon don't really feature in elaborate personified stories like Wen, Thur and Bald do. And they're never referred to as any type of god as far as I know (edit: you show an example that it is referred to as a god in Grímnismál).
    But when they say that Night is the mother of Day. It is very easy to link that to Tacitus who says that Germans believe that night begets day, night comes before day. It's a personification of a natural phenomenon.

  • @DrFrankenskippy
    @DrFrankenskippy 11 месяцев назад

    Fab' vid' thx ... would be good to see you expand on sun symbolically, metaphorically and archetypically and the relation to Baldr

  • @Karina-Loves-Andreas
    @Karina-Loves-Andreas Год назад

    Thought provoking

  • @brettmeldahl4456
    @brettmeldahl4456 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @ArkhanNightman
    @ArkhanNightman Год назад

    Brilliant

  • @michaelhorn6029
    @michaelhorn6029 Год назад

    Happy Solstice Sir

  • @Explorer273
    @Explorer273 Год назад +6

    As someone born and raised in Sweden without being influenced by chistianity until I started school I understand a couple of things that most people don't. It doesn't really matter how old it is or isn't. My world view as a child was what my grandmother told me about her ancestors and the things that live around us. Without making any further claims about anything the most important thing she passed on to me wasn't the stories but her world view. The world is just there. It does have a sort of spiritual level but it doesn't affect our every day life. Things are just things including the sun and the moon. There is no need for an explanation of everything. My personal experience from living with cultural christians is that most can't see how christian ideas limit their world view. They populate their world with angels, demons, a creator and an immortal soul and so on. Even if they reject the religion the ideas remain and they use those words to describe the world. Using the word 'soul' to describe something refers to the christian understanding of the word. Someone raised in a christian society will think of religion as something with a bible and rules and a god ruling and demanding obedience and servitude. In the western world christianity defines what a religion is. That means all savages by default live in fear of their gods because that's the way it always must be? Does a religion have to be like that? What if people in the Viking age was more like me and didn't think the gods were that important since they live in their own world? That is how I understand the sun and the moon. They are just there. The rest is entertainment. Enjoy it.

    • @faramund9865
      @faramund9865 Год назад +1

      If you grew up in a remote village I would take your view as possibly a descendant of the old view. Or maybe at least partly.
      But obviously in cities things have changed a lot and also have influenced too how things are seen in villages, especially post-war.

    • @Explorer273
      @Explorer273 Год назад

      @@francisdec1615 I don't agree with the idea that christianity was forced on Swedes. Yes it happened in the 14th century but by then Sweden had been christian for centuries. Christianity is basically a monotheistic version of Roman paganism and both are religions by slaves for slaves. More than half of the population in Rome were slaves 2000 years ago. The guess is that it was something like 25% in Scandinavia during the Viking age. No slaves means no need for a religion for slaves but if you keep slaves you invite christianity. And now we are all slaves.

  • @SpookiBunny
    @SpookiBunny 11 месяцев назад

    look i ain't really that into poetry but after advertising it like that imma have to give that video a go. very efficient strategy

  • @Fridrik-
    @Fridrik- Год назад +3

    17:20 about Tungl being used for all heavenly bodies. The moder Icelandic word for satellite is gervitungl meaning fake-tungl

  • @user-qd8yy9lc4g
    @user-qd8yy9lc4g Год назад +3

    In regards of gendering of sun and moon - in Slavic languages, _crescent_ moon is masculine, sun (gramatically) is neuter, while sun (poetically), _round moon_ and stars are all feminine. And, while there is very very little information in regards of what pre-Christian beliefs were like, none of the four or so deities - Svarog, Svarozits, Dazhbog, and Khors - that could be associated with sun are feminine.

    • @Volodiviede
      @Volodiviede Год назад

      Sun is neuter in Slavic languages

    • @user-qd8yy9lc4g
      @user-qd8yy9lc4g 11 месяцев назад

      @@Volodiviede Yep, correct! Thanks, was thinking of fairy-tale depictions.

  • @brettmeldahl4456
    @brettmeldahl4456 Год назад +2

    How a person comes across can lend a lot to the validity of the substance being sent one’s way. This mad seems a gentleman. He seems humble in his knowledge and obviously responsible to share it. I enjoy him. I enjoy learning from him. Would love fifteen minutes to have coffee with him and I would drive from Seattle to do it…in a heartbeat. Thank you, sir, for all your work. Here comes a second thanks on this one alone.

  • @TheOchsavidare
    @TheOchsavidare Год назад +2

    I can’t help but notice that you no longer add that your translation of the prose Edda is forthcoming, is that project on ice?

  • @liorsilberman6757
    @liorsilberman6757 Год назад +2

    Hebrew has a feminine word for the sun (שמש) but two words for the moon, ירח (from the same root as the word for a month) which is masculine, and לבנה (="the white one") which is feminine. In Genesis 1 they are simply called "the big illuminator" and the "the small illuminator". That said Semitic language disagree here. In Arabic and Hebrew the word is feminine, but the Akkadian word is masculine, as is the Akkadian sun god with the same name.

  • @anthonyholton2886
    @anthonyholton2886 7 месяцев назад

    Just watched this after viewing the new "Ahsoka" series on Disney. It's fascinating to learn the source of the names of the two Sith in the series, Baylan Skoll, and Shin Hati. I'm curious to see if the story will draw any further from Norse mythology in it's plot, or if only the cool names will apply.

  • @TransSappho
    @TransSappho 5 месяцев назад

    For some reason (not sure why) I’ve named every bike I’ve owned after a mythical horse, and my current one is bright orange so I named it Skinfaxi. My last one was Sleipnir (though sadly it was stolen)

  • @szymonbaranowski8184
    @szymonbaranowski8184 Год назад +3

    in polish sun is neutral
    while moon is male
    the same as summer and winter
    but we have word similar to Luna, łuna which means afterlight, aura, halo which. is female type
    also etymology of moon says word means a prince, so son of king
    storm is female (in Hungarian male )
    but wind is male as well as thunder and lightningbolt
    air neutral
    spirit, ghost, breath is male soul is female
    heart is neutral
    we see directions of world in terms of sun movement, rising sun is east setting sun is
    west
    halfday is south halfnight is north
    indieuros buried dead to south so to sun
    so up as sun is on top at noon
    figuring at night it's lower
    and lower is obviously underworld
    dead didn't go to underworld or did but wanted to look at divine realm
    for us sun walks/moves "chodzi"
    so it can be also double object or person
    but more object the same as moon
    as we say moon decreases like a resource
    something to count measure
    if your myths consider sun being eaten then you probably should literally look at words
    related with eating as mouth
    here it's related with feminin or plural feminine
    how about Surya? and how in celtic? how in iranic

  • @annekabrimhall1059
    @annekabrimhall1059 Год назад +1

    I’m a Boulderite too😊I like carving into stones so I’m trying to find something like “home sweet home” or “bless this house” in Norse. Are there runes that make phrases like that or do I need to spell it out in English words?

    • @ErikHolten
      @ErikHolten 11 месяцев назад

      You could do either!
      So the options are two in lettering, times two in languages, totalling four.
      Runes tend to be easier to chisel than Latin letters, even when using ALL CAPITALS.
      Runes are kind of difficult to get "right" though, as Crawford has shown in multiple older videos. It's doable without making it read like someone who don't understand how it works did it (well… at least to who someone who does), but it may takes some work and study. Anyway, I'd always use the Younger Futhark for writing Old Norse. If you're writing English with runes, I'd feel more at liberty to use the fun letters of the Elder Futhark as I pleased, as Modern English isn't really meant for any other alphabet than the Latin one anyway, so who cares. =)
      So if I were looking to create a "my home is my castle" tablet, I'd look no further than to the Crawford favorite: Hávamál, which reliable sources tell me is available in a very nice edition/English translation from the well-assorted Boulder Book Store.
      I believe the first half-stanzas of s.36/37 contain a phrase that may fit the bill:
      _Bú er betra,_
      _þótt lítit sé,_
      _halr er heima hverr_

  • @paulcrosslin
    @paulcrosslin 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you Dr Crawford. Do you know what a Sundog is? And if so what did the Norse think it meant?

  • @abhiramn474
    @abhiramn474 Год назад

    May of the Vedic gods can be seen as personifications of forces of nature. Indra to the storm, Vayu to the wind, etc.

  • @BrandyPepin
    @BrandyPepin Месяц назад

    Beaucoup de cultures voient la Soleil comme féminin. Et le Lune comme masculin. C'est très intéressant merci :)

  • @user-kw5jm5dd4c
    @user-kw5jm5dd4c 4 месяца назад

    In French the south cardinal direction is called the midi (noon) instead of a cognate of South like Spanish Sur. Somehow the concept must come from Norse speakers, perhaps the Normans

  • @borntowar5581
    @borntowar5581 Год назад +4

    Sol Invictus was worshipped at the end of the Roman Empire. Interesting that the Norse word for Sun is Sol.

    • @faramund9865
      @faramund9865 Год назад +9

      From what I know these words come from the same Indo-European root.

  • @John-un3lj
    @John-un3lj 11 месяцев назад

    In regards to the moon preceding the sun - roman sources mentions that the germanic tribes considered the day to begin at sunset, thus the moon would would (in this context) precede the sun.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +1

    I should really find out more about oblique in language, I see it all the time in etymology.

    • @klausolekristiansen2960
      @klausolekristiansen2960 Год назад

      I, he, she, we, they are nominative. They are used for the object of a sentence. She sees it.
      Me, him, her, them are oblique. They are used for everything else. It sees her. This is for her.

  • @astrOtuba
    @astrOtuba 5 дней назад

    20:55 in Lithuanian, Sun is feminine (Saulė) and Moon is masculine (Mėnulis). Just an example

  • @johanneswerner1140
    @johanneswerner1140 Год назад +1

    Ha en glad midsommar!

  • @martinnyberg9295
    @martinnyberg9295 Год назад +1

    Does anyone know if there are any parallel text translations of the norse texts - not necessarily into English, any Scandinavian language, or German works for me too - for studying the stories and learning a bit of norse at the same time? Out-of-print probably is available in a library somewhere, but they‘d be easier to find if their existence and authors are known. 😏

  • @bencornwell6209
    @bencornwell6209 11 месяцев назад

    Ride or Die Jackson. I love your work.

  • @davidvaughn367
    @davidvaughn367 Год назад +1

    I too am a little leary of the attempt to attach too much religious significance to many of the ancient tales.
    Maybe they just Are what they are.
    It Is perhaps possible that certain people could have become associated with certain elements, much as many South American native groups are known to do, which were then misunderstood by outsiders in an attempt to interpret these myths as one would a Greek or Roman myth.
    Which by the way, may also be at least partially misunderstood.
    Just my two cents worth.

  • @seanbrown207
    @seanbrown207 Год назад +1

    I think the other cultural track Western culture has is Roman and Ancient Greek since we hear so much about their deities. Especially since those sources have a tradition of distilling or identifying deities with natural forces. We also have the Christian/Judeo tradition that historically often distinguishes God from natural forces and competing cultures often identifying their deities with nature. And if you are in the US, Mexico, and Canada, then it’s Native cultures that I’d say also occupy that second track, where some emphasized nature more (for example, Aztecs appeasing their sun god).
    I don’t think Dungeons and Dragons has a lot to do with it, although I’m not saying it’s absent. It’s too much of a transitory force and active only in pop culture, whereas the others I mentioned permeate our culture and have for thousands of years. Potentially this “D&D” influence is already piggybacking on earlier Tolkien fame and pre-existing Norse fixation in the West that has (as I understand) existed since at least the 19th century. It might even be possible to claim that the West has fixated on the Norse since Medieval Europe, with Christian concern and fear of Vikings raids on Christian religious communities.

  • @P-Mouse
    @P-Mouse 9 месяцев назад

    interesting how they took Skoll & Hati for Star Wars.

  • @drphosferrous
    @drphosferrous 9 месяцев назад

    So is Death of Baldur all post christian retroactive stuff? It does fit solar archetypes really well. He's the kind of guy anyone can't help but love. Super generous and friendly and good looking and majically bulletproof. I could see shamash,legba, or apollo being like that as a young god but dying tragically.

  • @AndrewTheFrank
    @AndrewTheFrank Год назад +2

    I've heard it from different people who study different ancient cultures and religions and they say the same thing about all the deities and pantheons. It isn't about elements and powers but personalities.
    I think the modern day association with powers comes from two things. First I think with atheists attempting to rationalize these traditions and views without actually researching them or talking to similar surviving cultures or just different cultures in general. The second I think comes from super heroes. Going back on the viewing things in the second thing we learn, the second culture we often learn in the west is superheroes and the big thing with superheroes is they often got a 1 power gimmick. In many ways they are like modern day pagan gods. Or at least a modern interpretation of how we think it should be romanticized. But even those superhero movies aren't about the gimmick but the personalities and the adversities they have to over come.

  • @wendilandkammer8368
    @wendilandkammer8368 Год назад

    As I was listening, I thought about epic poetry in general.
    The poets were inspired.
    So what inspired them,was it daily life or did they go into some dream like state, we'd call it day dreaming. Only way back it might have been called something else.
    In dreams anything is possible and in day dreams the imagination is allowed to run wild and if they followed that the sun and moon could very likely been real people.
    Just a thought.

  • @dixgun
    @dixgun Месяц назад

    Sólar? That word surprises this viewer.

  • @kimfleury
    @kimfleury 2 месяца назад

    "It's just there." We can't forget that American culture was begun by the descendants of the Norse, so I think it's no accident that we're more pragmatic than poetic.

  • @phillipr.mctear8962
    @phillipr.mctear8962 11 месяцев назад

    👍

  • @j.s.c.4355
    @j.s.c.4355 9 месяцев назад

    maybe it’s a kenning. Daughter of summer might be the ripened wheat or barley or some thing.

  • @bernadmanny
    @bernadmanny Год назад

    Iceland used to have more forests before overgrazing and felling.

  • @DD-rt9lc
    @DD-rt9lc Год назад

    What about Dag riding Skinfaxi and the wolf Skol

  • @user-kw5jm5dd4c
    @user-kw5jm5dd4c 4 месяца назад

    In Tolkien mythology, too, the sun is female (guided by Arien, a female Maia) and the moon is male (guided by a male Maia, Tilion). The moon rose before the sun, but Arien is significantly more powerful than Tilion.

  • @trapper1211
    @trapper1211 10 месяцев назад

    -He's dying we need a doctor!!!!
    -Hi im old norse specialist, doctor Jackson Crawford...

  • @abhiramn474
    @abhiramn474 Год назад

    In the Central Indian tribal religion (Gond, Savar, Munda) there is a creator God called Singbonga, Bhagwan, or Takkur Jiu, or even Narayan. He is called the “ sun god” but is not actually the Sun or a Sun god like Ra or Helios or even Surya. I wonder how this dichotomy exists. The Vedic god Vishnu was a solar deity but became detached from the solar orb we call the sun.

  • @brettmeldahl4456
    @brettmeldahl4456 Год назад +2

    Haven’t read a comment. Still listening to this for the first time. Sun=light=life giver=female/mother…

  • @FrankShortt
    @FrankShortt Год назад

    Thanks for keeping our stories real, and I agree with most of your perspectives on our myths and texts.
    Today, we still use the male for the moon: «en måne, månen», and the sun and other star feminine «ei sol, sola/solå - ei stjerne, stjerna/stjernå» but you can technically use male too: «en sol, solen - en stjerne, stjernen»

  • @zoushuu
    @zoushuu Год назад +2

    hej

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +2

    Concerning Svalinn, you'd almost think they knew about the atmosphere which protects us from burning up. Or was it the ozon layer...
    Either way, if they did then I wonder how. Perhaps they just saw that the stars came out at night and that when the sun shines there is something that obstructs the view of said stars, and that that's the shield. Which would be pretty close to understanding we have an atmosphere, not bad.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад

    I'm so confused, of course the sun shines from the south... As in, it's highest point is in the south, thus it rotates around the south from our perspective.
    Do Americans have the sun in the North? (that's rhetorical by the way)

  • @MasterPoucksBestMan
    @MasterPoucksBestMan 11 месяцев назад +2

    Old English had feminine Sunne, but also masculine Sunna (like Wicca *male* and Wicce *female*) and masculine Sigel. Have you elsewhere encountered Wulþuz > Ullr being mentioned as the Nordic bronze age male sun deity, and that being a reason why Ullr is singled out in Grimnismal "Ullr and all the gods", because of the sun's previously greater importance in the bronze age before the mini ice age and the rise in importance of the storm and weather deities, and placenames of Ullr often being at or very near placenames of Freyr?

  • @grahampalmer9337
    @grahampalmer9337 Год назад

    Ah. Now Dr Crawford I'd like you to put a few things straight about this 'Atgeirr' Norse firearm thing ....

  • @Boddah.
    @Boddah. Год назад

    I wonder if the sun cross symbol has any relation to Sundogs

    • @ErikHolten
      @ErikHolten 11 месяцев назад

      Why not?
      The meteorological sundog phenomenon works just as well to explain the Grimnismál stanza with Hati preceding the sun as anything else. Remember it's also called "solulv". (Source: Kalkar, O. Ordbog til det ældre danske Sprog (1300-1700), 1881-1907)

  • @stephanieparker1250
    @stephanieparker1250 9 месяцев назад

    Ok hold on.. how can that landscape behind you be real? It’s beyond words..

  • @fredyyfredfreddy
    @fredyyfredfreddy Год назад +1

    Just came up with an idea. You could make a short thingie on how to make norse poetry. I would get you a lot of attention.

    • @hive_indicator318
      @hive_indicator318 Год назад +3

      I agree. It was a good idea for him to release this very thing 5 days ago

  • @Robin_Goodfellow
    @Robin_Goodfellow Год назад

    Himinjódýr? So like... the sky-rim?

  • @markothy8
    @markothy8 Год назад

    in Polish, "moon" is also masculine, "księżyc", and "Sun" is neuter, "słońce"

  • @fredblonder7850
    @fredblonder7850 Год назад +1

    The reason the Sun doesn’t get mentioned? It was the DARK AGES.

  • @beepboop204
    @beepboop204 Год назад

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +4

    Five minutes in and so far I definitely disagree with your interpretation. I think the allegories about nature that you mention are often very clear in Norse Myth. And almost always concerning the sun, night and day etc.
    For example I read Baldrs draumar as representing the coming and going of the light, day/night cycle, or as we're very aware of on this day, the summer/winter cycle.
    E.g. The part where the maidens throw up their necklaces into the sky, that's the stars at night. There's something like a ring on his boat and Wen throws his golden ring in the boat too. I personally think the symbolism is pretty clear. And there's a lot of it. (And yeah I'm pulling from Snorri as well as the poem).

  • @hillogical
    @hillogical Год назад

    I know you meant "god of" titles, but I heard it as "god of titles". I imagined some ancient god worshiped by some ancient bureaucrat.

  • @dcdcdc556
    @dcdcdc556 Год назад +1

    Japanese has no grammatical gender, but Amaterasu, the Shinto solar deity is female.

  • @user-kw5jm5dd4c
    @user-kw5jm5dd4c 4 месяца назад

    In Tolkien mythology, the sun is also female, and the moon is male, and rose before the sun.

  • @Curtislow2
    @Curtislow2 Год назад

    As an obviously well learned gentleman,I wonder what your studies have revealed about our planets polar excursion and the Sun's predicted near future nova? As for me there seems to be nothing we can do to prevent our reacquiring history but prepare.

  • @gudrunvenema9759
    @gudrunvenema9759 20 дней назад

    Same in German, the sun is feminine. Die Sonne, der Mond🌞🌝

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад +2

    Hm I don't really understand your perspective regarding allegory. You say, what is the point of allegory? Yet instead you oughta ask, what is the point of these stories? What are these stories telling us? And the symbolism comes very naturally with all else that is riddled in these poems.
    I suppose you need a certain type of feeling for this kind of stuff, although I'll admit sometimes people go into a tunnel vision with it.
    I found it also interesting you mentioned Baldrs draumar as an allegory for the light/darkness cycle, summer/winter. Because I came up with this on my own and then I found someone else had also thought it up and now you say that it's a common interpretation.
    You always like to bring occams razor into it so... :)

  • @Harmonic_shift
    @Harmonic_shift Год назад +2

    The moon is odins one eye. Opening and closing through time.

  • @bardika1
    @bardika1 Год назад +1

    The sun is an orb carried by a chariot and also muspelheim. Niflheim is the dark space at night. And we are in the middle.

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 Год назад

    Didn't Snorri mention something similar that probably refers to that 'man in the moon'? Like a boy and a girl with a stick and a bucket or something?

  • @klausgartenstiel4586
    @klausgartenstiel4586 11 месяцев назад

    well, its japan. so...

  • @leisiyox
    @leisiyox Год назад +3

    Unrelated to the video... have u lost weight?

    • @rattus7881
      @rattus7881 Год назад +1

      In his more research videos he seems tired :/

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe Год назад +1

      Oh my God, Karen, you can't just ask people their about their weight!

    • @hive_indicator318
      @hive_indicator318 Год назад +1

      Commenting/asking people you don't actually know about their personal lives is rude

    • @rattus7881
      @rattus7881 Год назад

      @@hive_indicator318 heh tell that to the people who keep searching "is Jackson Crawford married?" 😂

  • @ethantorres-roseberry4090
    @ethantorres-roseberry4090 Год назад

    This guy has got to play dnd right