![]() ![]() "S ewn Lips, Propped Jaws, and a Silent Áss (or Two): Doing Things with Mouths in Norse Myth." The Journal of English and Germanic Philology 111.1 (2012): 1–24. ![]() ![]() " Are There Echoes of the Ad 536 Event in the Viking Ragnarok Myth? A Critical Appraisal." Environment and History 24.3 (2018): 303–24. New York: The American-Scandinavian Foundation, 1926. "Norse Mythology: Legends of Gods and Heroes." Trans. For the Vikings, the myth of Ragnarok was a prophecy of what was to come at some unspecified and unknown time in the future, but it had profound ramifications for how the Vikings understood the world in. When Norse mythology is considered as a chronological set of tales, the story of Ragnarok naturally comes at the very end. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, 2003. Ragnark, in Norse mythology, is a series of prophesied events, including a great battle and various natural disasters, foretold to ultimately result in the. Battle of the Doomed Gods by Friedrich Wilhelm Heine (1882) Ragnarok is the cataclysmic destruction of the cosmosand everything in it even the gods. ![]() "‘ Northern Gods in Marble’: The Romantic Rediscovery of Norse Mythology." Romantik: Journal for the Study of 1.1 (2012): 26. " The Wolf's Jaw: An Astronomical Interpretation of Ragnarok." Archaeoastronomy and Ancient Technologies 6 (2018): 1–20. " Twilight of the Gods? The ‘Dust Veil Event’ of Ad 536 in Critical Perspective." Antiquity 332 (2012): 428–43. "Ragnarok: The End of the Gods." London: Canongate 2011. ![]()
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