<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Sons of Odin / Ásynjur / Ulster Cycle / Jötnar / Heimdallr / Loki / Heimdalargaldr / Gjallarhorn / Freyja / Norse mythology / Æsir / Mythology
Date: 2000-09-06 00:21:57
Sons of Odin
Ásynjur
Ulster Cycle
Jötnar
Heimdallr
Loki
Heimdalargaldr
Gjallarhorn
Freyja
Norse mythology
Æsir
Mythology

William Sayers Irish Perspectives on Heimdallr

Add to Reading List

Source URL: userpage.fu-berlin.de

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 242,32 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Ulster Cycle / Dingle / Annascaul / Iveragh Peninsula / Dingle Peninsula / Slea Head / C Chulainn / Great Blasket Island / Beara Peninsula / Dunquin / Mount Brandon / Dingle Way

THE COLLINS PRESS: Release The Dingle Peninsula A Walking Guide Adrian Hendroff

DocID: 1p21V - View Document

Celtic culture / Táin Bó / Medb / Flidais / Conall Cernach / Fráech / Ulster Cycle / Irish literature / Irish mythology

HEROIC ROMANCES OF IRELAND VOLUME 2 A. H. LEAHY∗ PREFACE TO VOL. II It seems to have been customary in ancient Ireland to precede by shorter stories the recital of the Great Tain, the central story of the

DocID: 191OD - View Document

Literature / Literary genres / Ulster Cycle / Táin Bó / Romance / Irish poetry / Translation / Yellow Book of Lecan / Early Irish literature / Irish literature / Medieval literature

HEROIC ROMANCES OF IRELAND VOLUME 1 A. H. LEAHY∗ IN TWO VOLUMES VOL. I PREFACE

DocID: 18tXj - View Document

Fortification / Hill of Tara / Lugh / Ringfort / Archaeology / County Meath / Prehistoric Europe / Celtic culture / Ancient Ireland / Royal sites of Ireland / Ulster Cycle

Gabhra Independent Archaeological Surveys Gabhra Independent Archaeological Surveys. Rath Lugh National Monument

DocID: 18bl7 - View Document

Religion / Symbolism / Manannán mac Lir / Comet / Lugh / Swastika / Mongán mac Fiachnai / Meteor shower / Celtic mythology / Tuatha Dé Danann / Ulster Cycle / Irish mythology

Tree-ring chronologies present us with independent records of past natural events which, strangely, or perhaps not so strangely, seem to link with some stories from myth. M G L Baillie School of Archaeology and Palaeoeco

DocID: 1828K - View Document