Hurstwic: Religion in the Viking Age

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  • Опубліковано 2 жов 2024
  • This is the first in a series of presentations for the Hurstwic Heathen Study Group, an organization that meets monthly for informal presentations and discussions on topics of interest to heathens and to anyone with a passion for Norse-related topics.
    In this presentation, Hurstwic manager William Short discusses Viking-age religion: what we know about the beliefs and rites of the Viking people, and how we know about these topics.
    www.hurstwic.co...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 266

  • @janepalermo6670
    @janepalermo6670 6 років тому +8

    Beautifully rendered. Intelligent - with not a hint of sensationalism. Refreshing as a Nordic lake.

  • @rterral
    @rterral 8 років тому +78

    For those of us who can't afford to go back to school to study history, things like this are so valuable. I've done several Viking lectures through The Learning Company and this is a fresh look with some different perspectives. Thank you so much!

    • @faramund9865
      @faramund9865 4 роки тому +5

      Fuck "school", this stuff is much better

    • @chowiedoit
      @chowiedoit 4 роки тому

      How do you get stuff through the learning company?

    • @michaellowe1039
      @michaellowe1039 4 роки тому +1

      @@chowiedoit I don't know about the learning company, maybe he meant www.thegreatcourses.com/
      This place has viking and other courses by distinguished lecturers on various subjects.

    • @mdencler
      @mdencler 3 роки тому

      You never had to go to school to study these things in the first place. That's a terrible limitation to impose on yourself. Oh yeah, you're not a victim either, grow up.

  • @YuckTradingCo
    @YuckTradingCo 8 років тому +38

    Man this is an absolutely fantastic lecture. I've seen other videos involving Hurstwic and need to know more about the organization. Really great what they're doing

    • @thorleifr
      @thorleifr  7 років тому +6

      Andy, to learn more, please visit our website:
      www.hurstwic.com
      or connect with us on Facebook:
      facebook.com/hurstwic/

    • @mountain-roots
      @mountain-roots 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@thorleifr these videos and lectures helped me out tremendously in my research. Take a look if you have time.

  • @Navlelo33
    @Navlelo33 7 років тому +5

    I just discovered this video/lecture and i'd like to express my thanks for sharing your insight in these interesting topics myself. Just as the icelandic, I myself am interested in my heritage and how people lived and thought thousand years ago. Thanks!

  • @ChubbyCheeseMonkey
    @ChubbyCheeseMonkey 7 років тому +110

    looks like the Allfather himself

    • @brujo_millonario
      @brujo_millonario 7 років тому +7

      Let's hope he doesn't lose an eye though! (Anyway some say Odin recovered his missing eye).

    • @derekstynes9631
      @derekstynes9631 7 років тому +3

      The All Fadir was Taller!

    • @ianwehmeyer1296
      @ianwehmeyer1296 6 років тому +4

      The all father also had abs

    • @Nothing2CHere4U
      @Nothing2CHere4U 6 років тому +4

      @Norseman
      More like an Avatar of, then actual. But I see the endearment you hold, by making such a devoted comparison.
      Wisdom has many faces, but you see it's glorious countenance before you. skål !!

    • @Nothing2CHere4U
      @Nothing2CHere4U 6 років тому +1

      @@derekstynes9631 As the Aesir aged, they would turn to Iðunn, for her life restoring apples. Othin would very much be hunched and diminished at times. Wisdom is a great burden.

  • @valdrsvensson4921
    @valdrsvensson4921 7 років тому +35

    I love the history of my ancestors, but I have always hated lectures. All of yours have my attention at all times. Very well done, and thank you.

  • @Whatever65759
    @Whatever65759 7 років тому +28

    Such a pity we know hardly anything about Viking Religion. I am a Hindu from far-away India who is both fascinated and revolted by Viking temerity and cruelty, and can't help finding similarities between our cultures: Polytheism, cremation, epics and Mythology; all these of course co-incidental as our cultures never met... or did they?
    Viking legacy lives on : human/women rights, 12-member jury, modern Democracy. Isn't Queen Elizabeth a direct descendent of Vikings through William of Normandy? When the British left India in 1947, they left us a Viking inspired legacy of Government, democracy, judicial independence and fair play which endures to this day. We Indians have no issues adopting Democracy which is in line with our Hindu beliefs of open-mindedness and acceptance of the highest ideals of other cultures.
    Unlike Vikings however, we reverted back to our religion, rituals, and customs after almost 1000 years of Muslim and British rule, as we Hindus are more comfortable sharing a strong and personal relationship with our Goddesses & Gods, than with a perpetually-angry monotheist male God. But that's another story...

    • @mistersharpe4375
      @mistersharpe4375 7 років тому +7

      According to the study of linguistics, the languages of old-norse and sanskrit can be considered cousins, both descended from vastly older language we call Proto-Indo-European. This tells us that these similarities you can see between Hinduism and Norse Paganism (as well as Latin and Greek mythology amongst others) are not coincidental at all, but indicative of shared origin.
      Of course this doesn't preclude these religions taking on aspects from non-Indo-European cultures, hence why Odin is believed to be a god brought over from central eurasia into Germania, bringing with him shamanistic and animistic practices, making the germanic-norse religion rather unique in that regards.

    • @davidcrocker9544
      @davidcrocker9544 6 років тому

      , yes yes.That is an other store.A together! North( Die going forward) not peace too all.

    • @Nothing2CHere4U
      @Nothing2CHere4U 6 років тому +1

      Odin/Villi/Vi - Brhama/Vishnu/Shiva. (All Male)
      But before you cast aspersions at the "perpetually-angry monotheist male God.", let us not forget that "traditional" Kali worship is awash in blood and child sacrifice.

    • @Nothing2CHere4U
      @Nothing2CHere4U 4 роки тому

      @@oldone1234 "you people"?
      Hey, I'm not the one putting powders on my head, clowns indeed.

    • @Nothing2CHere4U
      @Nothing2CHere4U 4 роки тому

      @@oldone1234 all religions are red herrings for why certain people choose to persecute other people. Evil is as Evil does.

  • @howser1961
    @howser1961 7 років тому +13

    Thank you sir, for this eloquent and interesting summary of the religion of my ancestors. Point of interest, the Goðafoss waterfall has great significance in the crossover from the old ways to Christianity as the lawspeaker/chieftain you mentioned, named Thorgeir Ljósvetningagoði (the one who threw his gods into the waterfall), was instrumental in the non-violent transition between the two ways, in the summer of 999. We look back to his wise judgment and resolve still to this day. (But I am sure you are aware if this already :-)
    I look forward to viewing more of your videos and I will share them with my friends and family.
    P.S. I am the great grandson of Thorsteinn, son of Ingólfur, son of Arnar - 29 times removed. It was he who founded the first assembly (Þing) in the early settlement of Iceland.

  • @MrResearcher122
    @MrResearcher122 7 років тому +39

    Eight minutes in, and I realise this is a powerful lecture. Thanks, for smashing myths, replacing stereotypes, and Christian propaganda with a more convincing story.

    • @robbiehoen
      @robbiehoen 7 років тому +7

      I don't agree. It confirms christian stories; it just provides a different perspective. The final thing he says is a great example: A christian would describe a man who begat masterful poetry, and the power to recognize an enemy. but he got this from "demons", and as payment these demons took his most precious thing from him: his son. This is exactly what christians still, to this day, view as the characteristics of demons. That's what they still acuse artists off: the greatest of which do in fact turn to drugs and sink into depression and die, mostly by their own hand.
      I see this a lot aswell in modern heathens who describe themselves as having a very intimate connection with the gods. One of the best known of those people in my country felt Odin connect with her when she askedsomething from him. She collapsed and instantly descended into deep depressions that she still suffers from, and her body completely shut down almost that same day, and she is still bound to a wheeledchair. She describes Odin as talking to her so much that it often drives her insane. Again: tShe asked something from this god/demon, and he made her pay an enormous price. this is described by both christians and heathens, so they are not "propaganda" or lies, they are just something that a christian says (and a lot of heathens aswell) is simply not nessesary. You can achieve it by yourself through hard work and dedications and making sacrifices that YOU CHOOSE YOURSELF. It is this reasons that christians concider the old gods "demons" because these demons are completely self-serving, greedy, and don't care about the wellbeing of anther, which is the root of evil. So again: not christian propaganda because they are being described by both christians and heathens.

    • @torstenscott7571
      @torstenscott7571 5 років тому +7

      You're 100% right about Christian propaganda. They had to destroy even the accurate memory of the Native European worldview in order to promote their nonsensical Abrahamic death cult.

    • @RD-dy7pp
      @RD-dy7pp 5 років тому +3

      @@robbiehoen Sounds very Christian to me!

    • @robbiehoen
      @robbiehoen 5 років тому

      @@RD-dy7pp What sounds christian?

    • @rivercrystal2511
      @rivercrystal2511 3 роки тому

      @@robbiehoen your POV on odinism. He is calling you christian and i honestly would not argue.

  • @Charizard006
    @Charizard006 5 років тому +3

    My ancestral history was lost through the christianization of those before me. I finally decided I was gonna find out where I came from and let me tell you, I may be in america but it feels good to be home :)

  • @vishwa5254
    @vishwa5254 5 років тому +4

    I came here after watching Vikings series what really made me curious about Viking religion is that its similarities with hindu religion. In Hindu religion sacrifices of goats bafellow chickens( that too violently like ripping apart goat from bare mouth and drinking its blood) are still today practiced in little villages in India. this practice varies from village to village to different gods. we too worship many gods. (human sacrifices (child pregnant lady) also takes place in ancient India)

    • @chinmoyghosh5427
      @chinmoyghosh5427 4 роки тому +1

      Vedic dharma has nothing in common with norse religion....what r u talking about is paganism practised by tribes in India.....hindu society became corrupted over the ages hence reformers like raja ram mohan roy and guru nanak sprung up to save dharma.....and last of all dharma is what united India and still repeated attempts at conversion we still remain at large unlike the norse faith ......

    • @vishwa5254
      @vishwa5254 4 роки тому

      @@chinmoyghosh5427 sorry dude i never said vedic. it is actually dravidian culture. some aryan invaded our country started vedic. vedic dharm is worst i hate it. i am comparing nords sacrifice with south indian local god's sacrifice.

  • @derekstynes9631
    @derekstynes9631 7 років тому +5

    I come from the Viking City of Dublin and like most Irish Men I can tell a Good Story!
    And I can Give the Highest Praise to a Truly exceptional and Knowledgeable Man !

  • @l337pwnage
    @l337pwnage 6 років тому +2

    Well, if there were longer writings, you can be sure the christians destroyed all they could find.
    My guess is another problem is if you are going to have long writings, they would have to somehow be stored and protected from the harsh weather. Anyone who lives in a cold climate knows how much frost damages structures every year. It would be quite annoying and time consuming to maintain structures every year to attempt to house and maintain fragile writings.

  • @saoirserosenstock8144
    @saoirserosenstock8144 7 років тому +15

    This guy is really interesting

  • @Krucek6666
    @Krucek6666 3 роки тому +2

    Kudos for bringing up the Egil's saga my favourite one. Plus I live in Borgarnes for almost 2 years now so I'm lucky enough to visit Skallagrimur mound almost everyday. Plus Egil's settlement Borg is nearby. But I just wanted to say thank You for this lecture and a huge piece about Iceland and poetry.

  • @JuhaAaltonen
    @JuhaAaltonen 8 років тому +62

    More of these lectures on youtube.

    • @lucioinnocenzo2328
      @lucioinnocenzo2328 6 років тому +1

      Juha Aaltonen why all pagans focus on Vikings instead of Romans and Greeks?

    • @colec.6477
      @colec.6477 6 років тому +2

      Lucio Innocenzo Viking were kickass

    • @faustianluminary4456
      @faustianluminary4456 5 років тому +5

      @@lucioinnocenzo2328
      There are numerous varieties of Pagans, "Germanic," "Celtic," "Hellenic," "Slavic," even "Egyptian," among others. Most people focus on what is ethnically significant, and familiar for them, i.e. the religions/cultures of their ancestors. Find what interests you, I'm sure there are similarly like-minded individuals out there.

    • @joannajett2524
      @joannajett2524 5 років тому +1

      @@lucioinnocenzo2328 Don't worry, many pagans do worship the Greek and Roman deities.

    • @chuckray6930
      @chuckray6930 3 роки тому

      Meh... he started off by saying nobody knows for sure...

  • @vikingwolf4328
    @vikingwolf4328 8 років тому +10

    I love this, please make more educational videos like this.

  • @chrishelstrom812
    @chrishelstrom812 7 років тому +4

    i believe in Norse beliefs my grandpa and father used to tell me about this stuff as a child... they did their best to keep knowledge of our ancestry but alot was lost other then what they knew thank you for uploading these videos and "ta hand om bröderna av oden."

  • @artv.9989
    @artv.9989 8 років тому +38

    the lecturer looks like a viking

    • @oddicocidic
      @oddicocidic 7 років тому +1

      don't think so. I've heard that Vikings had short hair

    • @cal9132
      @cal9132 7 років тому +5

      Peter Henriksen lmao #NotallVikings

    • @st.patrick3247
      @st.patrick3247 7 років тому +1

      Art It gives him credibility.

    • @marquelethenstrom1103
      @marquelethenstrom1103 7 років тому +1

      The One Known As Art How do you know? How many 9th-century Norse have you met?

    • @colec.6477
      @colec.6477 6 років тому +1

      Peter Henriksen maybe but I'm pretty sure they had long hair, it was always cold and it probably gave off a animalistic look intimidation tactics

  • @gorillaguerillaDK
    @gorillaguerillaDK 6 років тому +1

    I'm a bit disapointed that you didn't mention that when it comes to fallen warriors, then Freyja gets to choose half of them first and bring them to Fólkvangr, and Óðinn gets the rest.....

    • @joannajett2524
      @joannajett2524 5 років тому

      Yep, that's often forgotten, it seems. People always say the greatest honour would be to end up in Valhalla, but since Freyja gets first pick, wouldn't Folkvangr be an even greater honour?

  • @freyjahelm4892
    @freyjahelm4892 6 років тому +4

    I'm spending today cleaning and listening to your lectures.
    I stumbled on to you, I do not know who you are but it would be wonderful for you to lecture at Decorah' s Nordic fest, or driftless college in southern Wisconsin.

  • @Mairiain
    @Mairiain 3 роки тому +2

    For those looking for the discussion on religion as indicated by the title: He starts talking about it around the 20:00 minute mark.

  • @NoctLightCloud
    @NoctLightCloud 3 роки тому +1

    I wished we would've covered Vikings in school here in Austria. Thank you very much!

  • @brujo_millonario
    @brujo_millonario 7 років тому +4

    There's a Norwegian historian lady I don't remember her name; she has videos here on youtube. She says the first viking raids were performed because new converted Christians didn't want to make business with heathens anymore. So trade was replaced with raiding. Then other raids followed which had nothing to do with that. She also says most Norsemen were NOT raiders.

    • @fiddibelow
      @fiddibelow 5 років тому

      Not just didn't do business they straight up decapitated Norwegians Swedes and Danes if they could

    • @joannajett2524
      @joannajett2524 5 років тому

      If you find this lady's name/channel, would you please tell us? That sounds like something I'd want to watch, and I'm probably not the only one.

    • @thomascockill4006
      @thomascockill4006 4 роки тому +1

      Nw this would make sense.very possible as people will not steal or fight if there is an alternative, survival is placed above wealth and material goods unless your a nutcase so to believe they were bands of traders suddenly turned savage raiders overnight for no reason like history tells us makes a lot less sense than what your Norwegian historian proposes. Much respect to her. Great post.

  • @BLzBob.7268
    @BLzBob.7268 7 років тому +3

    I truly appreciate the honesty. It is so refreshing to hear a learned man say . . . "We just don't know", and leaving us to make our own conclusions.

  • @martinan22
    @martinan22 8 років тому +1

    The poems were not memorized exactly, i dont think. They hade standard phrases, the narrative, rythm. A tale would use different words each time. The kennings are often used to follow the alliteration. SeaStead is alliterated, Boat is not.

  • @derinden15
    @derinden15 8 років тому +5

    21:09 Ancient Greeks also believed that there were first Titans . Gods were created after them and they overthrew the titans. There was also a time of golden age when people lived in harmony and didn't have to work to feed themselves.

    • @beersmurff
      @beersmurff 7 років тому +2

      No wonder. Most european religions stem from the same source. The Proto-Indo-european religion.
      So many similarities in all the religions. Christianaity, Judism, Roman mythology, Greek mythology, Nordic mythology etc.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_religion

    • @thomascockill4006
      @thomascockill4006 4 роки тому

      @@beersmurff do the research for yourself before you believe such fanciful bullshit claims with no evidence

  • @faramund9865
    @faramund9865 4 роки тому +2

    I feel home when I hear these stories... When talking about the serpent killed in the Rhine for example, I was literally born next to the Rhine... I'm happy :)

  • @RenanL.S.
    @RenanL.S. 3 роки тому +1

    Your lectures are always so well organized and explanatory, I love the vikings since I were a kid.
    I have been studing more them recently for two projects of mine, ans RPG campaing and a story, and these videos have been being incredibly helpful and fascinating.
    Here is the playlist I have been doing: ua-cam.com/play/PLIyEt4zG9ElScp01uchJDkET0Bop5_kPg.html

  • @sinsemiliasam14
    @sinsemiliasam14 7 років тому +2

    right before I found this lecture I was listening to another video on Vikings and norsemen and it was just painting them as bloodthirsty barbarians with no regard to human life, of course that's not true from things I've read so this is a really nice lecture with actual facts and information much respect thanks

    • @doordasher1381
      @doordasher1381 11 місяців тому

      ua-cam.com/video/kqTC6QE9Igs/v-deo.htmlsi=b5OwvfDAZB13BiyU

  • @martinan22
    @martinan22 8 років тому +1

    Populations expand to the food limit. Raiders would have tended to be younger sons. Also, during the viking age these seakings evolved, viking chiefs without land with large retinues. Some became so powerful they went back to scandinavia and made themselves kings, upsetting the entire political system in scandinavia.

  • @AlexaMadeiras
    @AlexaMadeiras 6 років тому +2

    Beautifull and interestin Video !!! Thabk you for your special time to share this video !!! The Gods protect you all !!

  • @halvardscarvan4932
    @halvardscarvan4932 4 роки тому +1

    Aye hate that Aye got here so late, Aye must say that this is so fucking fascinating

  • @osborne9255
    @osborne9255 7 місяців тому +1

    This is excellent. I'm going to watch the whole lot now.

  • @anandrahangdale5214
    @anandrahangdale5214 3 роки тому

    Ancient Aryan Religions would also make a great video

  • @ericekblom5651
    @ericekblom5651 5 років тому +1

    We use runes here on Åland Island. We call them bomärken.

  • @miguelb2421
    @miguelb2421 7 років тому +2

    I really enjoyed this video and what you had to say found it both interesting and informative.

  • @Dyrlingur
    @Dyrlingur 6 років тому +2

    I like your video. Thanks from Iceland. Do wish to inform you though the reason for why my forefathers did not write more on runes has been explained. The reason is because they had to write it on objects that you show in your video. Like you explain. As soon as they got "inc and paper" they started writing. Something that was not possible with stones, bones, trees and so on, which they wrote runes on. Had nothing to do with nothing other than space. Cant write books on stones.
    Great video, like it a lot. I am so thankful to you.

    • @joannajett2524
      @joannajett2524 5 років тому +1

      Plus, imagine the hard work of carving that much writing, even if you had the space. Writing on paper doesn't require as much muscle.

  • @thedarkmaster4747
    @thedarkmaster4747 6 років тому +2

    "with his honour intact and enhanced." XD #StealingIsForSissys. #WarriorsDoEverythingToTheFace. i love it...

  • @christophermiller5467
    @christophermiller5467 4 роки тому +1

    I think a lot of the saga descriptions of paganism have been backed up with archaeology, like the sacred arm ring in temples etc... Adam of Bremen's account is also being proven true through archaeology. Ibn Fadlan is also being taken as believable by scholarly consensus now.

  • @freeinformation9869
    @freeinformation9869 7 років тому +6

    6:00 Thanks for sharing, but ... he is skipping the Viking activities in a rather careless way. For about 300 years much af France and The British Isles were ruthlessly terrorized by huge Viking raids of Northmen. It was almost an anual summertime event and huge numbers of people were brutally killed, maimed, raped, expelled, robbed, extorted and enslaved even. Yes, this was only part of what the Norse were about, but it cannot be dismissed. It was brutal and it was continuous and unrelenting.
    And no, not every man had to farm. A huge amount of slaves were put to work on farms and larger constructions, so the Jarls and Karls had time to Viking. Slavery was a very essential part of the Norse society.
    Yes other contemporary people and cultures in Europe were equally ruthless in their own way and yes, there are many other more humane and sympathetic aspects of the Norse culture worth considering, but the two issues of Viking raids and Thralls cannot be dismissed, they were very prominent.

    • @freeinformation9869
      @freeinformation9869 7 років тому +4

      Well, as this is about Vikings, and I know quite a bit about Vikings, it is pretty obvious that I wrote about Vikings.
      And you misunderstood my errant. I wasn't ranting, I was correcting wrong or missing information.
      If you want ranting, there are a billion other places where you can find that. About Christians, about Communists, about Conservatives, about Gay people, About Catholics, about Muslims, about Hindoos, about meat-eaters, about everything you could ever think of. And more.

    • @christianlance9506
      @christianlance9506 7 років тому

      Free Information also though around this time frame many of the world was well barbaric so In retrospect it wasn't uncommon just a horrible part of living thank goodness it's not exactly like that lol

  • @garytucker5748
    @garytucker5748 5 років тому +1

    Stunning the animals brain,alows the heart to continue to pump the blood from the animal,they didnt want the blood in the flesh,kosha killing.

  • @kemonoyama2084
    @kemonoyama2084 6 років тому +1

    If you understand what the Giants are and you understand what Yggdrasil is. You will understand why the Gods created the "first " man and Woman, LOL, out of Tree Trunks by the river...and what that really means...you will understand the whole rest of the story, the first war, all of it...but you first have to understand the story of the Gods. Great Video!

  • @BlazeLeeDragon
    @BlazeLeeDragon 4 роки тому +1

    17:45 I just now noticed watching this again that William looks similar to Snorri. :) I really like this video and glad it was brought back to my attention to watch again. Such a rich resource of knowledge. thank you for sharing.

  • @sirbattlecat
    @sirbattlecat 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you for a very nice presentation. For those who might be interested in the myths, I recommend you check out the old Danish cartoon, and comics, (I presume they're subtitled) Valhalla.

  • @t.d.w.maverick5727
    @t.d.w.maverick5727 3 роки тому +1

    Hey shout out to the Runes🔮💝😃

  • @shanekonarson
    @shanekonarson 5 років тому +1

    BTW Hurstwik , very good lecture, tusen Takk ! Thank you very much for your efforts

  • @SunsetStarship
    @SunsetStarship 6 років тому +2

    Great video! Thanks for the upload.

  • @basslvck
    @basslvck 7 років тому +1

    Thank You very much for doing this ... Skoal !

  • @M_Bamboozled
    @M_Bamboozled 10 місяців тому

    Iceland has a population of around 300,000 but has more authors and publishes more books per head of population than anywhere else in the world. I wonder if their love of stories and poetry has a Celtic influence. A great number of Icelanders were Irish, Scots and British, sometimes slaves given freedom and setting up new lives for themselves. Melkorka is a fine example in Laxdæla saga. I think this mix of Celtic and Nordic made Iceland unique. And both cultures believed in elves of some kind.

  • @gunnarthorsen
    @gunnarthorsen 3 роки тому

    It has become common to refer to Scandinavians from centuries ago as "vikings", but this is misleading. "Viking" was a profession, not a people. It is true that vikings traded, raided and pillaged. It is better to say that NORSE people ho were not necessarily also "vikings", farmed, wove cloth, made pottery, created jewelry, etc.

  • @nordmanruss
    @nordmanruss 3 роки тому

    Very interesting but not knowing that rus were the slavish people from nower days russia(wich a surprise)is funny🤣In one of the oldest text called povesti vremenich let stands much about that,allso the vikings knew the gardarica(now russia)and their kings very well. The Swea (Sweeds)were group of scandinavik people like the Vareger or Varjagi in russian language.

  • @iminmymojo7903
    @iminmymojo7903 3 роки тому +1

    There’s a black dot on that whiteboard and I keep thinking that is something on my screen 😂

  • @HappyQuailsLC
    @HappyQuailsLC 4 місяці тому

    It sounds like the Gods were representative of human aspirations, afterall wouldn't every human of their time prefer to be a God? And these lessons show how humans will not attain that status, no matter how hard they try. Such as how they will never be immortal, as in how "old age brings every mortal to their knees".

  • @BlackHermit
    @BlackHermit 7 років тому +2

    "an ancient checksum to detect errors" haha ;)

  • @svetovanabozenstvi
    @svetovanabozenstvi 6 років тому +1

    Amazing speaker

  • @geiregholmfossaberg7302
    @geiregholmfossaberg7302 3 роки тому

    Jól is celebrated in Faroe Islands 🇫🇴 Denmark and Norway 🇳🇴 today

  • @priestessoftheancientflame4232
    @priestessoftheancientflame4232 7 років тому +3

    Well done lecture!

  • @theadventuresofkingpersius5961
    @theadventuresofkingpersius5961 5 років тому +1

    This is awesome.. Very insightful

  • @stuart940
    @stuart940 6 років тому +1

    he looks like snorri sturluson

  • @vickyrowe393
    @vickyrowe393 9 місяців тому

    What is he banging on about u can travel from asygarth to Midgard from Yorkshire

  • @Jehovanisodivine
    @Jehovanisodivine 4 роки тому +1

    This was an amazing lecture wowww thank you

  • @wilsonthewarrior
    @wilsonthewarrior 8 років тому +2

    I love these lectures :D

  • @friendoftellus5741
    @friendoftellus5741 3 роки тому

    Until 1000 AD the vikings believed in Thor and Odin. Then they became catholic christians. In the 16'th century they became protestant christians.

    • @gunnarthorsen
      @gunnarthorsen 3 роки тому

      Belief in the old Gods persisted well past the time of conversion. Go to many ancient Christian stave churches in Norway and you will see Odin and other Gods depicted in carving, not as deities to be worshipped, but their memory was still ket alive. There was a period of perhaps 200 years where the old religion and the new overlapped. It didn't just disappear suddenly when "the white Christ" came.

  • @norsemannewswest8133
    @norsemannewswest8133 7 років тому +2

    Great lecture.

  • @YvonneEriksen
    @YvonneEriksen 4 роки тому

    The woman 37:37 is Aud the Deep-Minded (Auðr djúpúðga Ketilsdóttir), my 42. granmother - perhaps. She had three crosses erected at Krossholar. The father of Snurri Sturlason, Sturla Thordarson, was ninth generation living at Hvammur, Dölum, counting from Aud.

  • @dennisamucal723
    @dennisamucal723 7 років тому

    Sin = means hiding in Turkish , ake , aka is a kind of short , bushy tree in North Europa , Snake symbolises the Sin in Christianity , and shows it on a Tree . The Cross looks like the North Star , which people of Central Asia were believing of it was the door to God and an double headed Eagle with ears watching it over Lİfe Tree . Bible has been written by 40 men , as Turkic religion "Bektaşilik " also 40 holly man to write it . Bible sounds like shorten Babol = Baba (Father )and Oğul (Son ) in Turkish and also “Son”as Turkish word means the end . Bible says Homan being came from Ashes , Turkic religion says Human being Fed by Ashina (female wolf ) , Ash as a Turkic word means food . .. Odin = Wodan : woood : (Turkish word "Ağaç" means wood , in Turkish structure to call some thing made of wood we say "wodan" , like we saye "Ağaçdan " means some thing made of Ağaç ) . Od means fire in old Turkish , Odin or Turkish Odun means a peace of tree for Fire .

  • @niloytalukder5323
    @niloytalukder5323 4 роки тому

    This gentleman looks like CR7 in disguise ....

  • @Raventooth
    @Raventooth 4 роки тому +1

    Great lecture. I want that hoodie!

  • @rorysullivan5694
    @rorysullivan5694 4 роки тому

    How about the gods as archetypes? Were our ancestors more intellectually and spiritual sophisticated than previously imagined and were jungian before Jung? I think literal interpretation of religion is a very Abrahamic mindset.

  • @fesimco4339
    @fesimco4339 4 роки тому

    I never understood the story of Loki causing earthquakes; I've lived in Sweden and for over 15 years. In all that time we experienced one small quake. I don't imagine they were any more frequent a thousand years ago.

  • @TacDyne
    @TacDyne 8 років тому +12

    "They wrote in Post It note form"... Jesus Christ! Medieval Twitter!

    • @kevinhansson2177
      @kevinhansson2177 4 роки тому +2

      no no no... don't say that name. Replace it with the phrase "by Odins beard" ;D XD

    • @mr-x7689
      @mr-x7689 4 роки тому

      "medieval twitter" wrong. Viking age was from ca 750 to ca 1066. Medieval era ca 1050 to ca 1500 depending on where in Europe you deside to put the starting point and ending point.

  • @felixberglund2988
    @felixberglund2988 8 років тому +1

    Another challenge Thor got from the giants was to eat faster then a giant that represented fire it self

    • @oddicocidic
      @oddicocidic 7 років тому +1

      the story i heard was that Loke got that challenge

    • @joannajett2524
      @joannajett2524 5 років тому

      Right, I forgot about that one.

  • @garytucker8696
    @garytucker8696 3 роки тому

    Midgard serpent looks like Zmei Slavic folklore dragon serpent.thank you for sharing.

  • @faisalalkhedhrawi7311
    @faisalalkhedhrawi7311 4 роки тому

    Theft is not like raiding .yea right .

  • @jondavid1256
    @jondavid1256 3 роки тому

    What hes calling kennings is the same way ancient hebrew works. Before it was infused with yiddish and is the new hebrew.

  • @volmarrwyrd
    @volmarrwyrd 6 років тому

    Hmm, the name of the place, Hofstadhir points to it being a place with a temple since the Viking word Hof means temple. Stadhir means place. So the name of the town means temple place!

  • @johnbeardshall2898
    @johnbeardshall2898 5 років тому

    ancient northmen and German have the same religion with the saxons raiding hundreds of years before the vikings

  • @geiregholmfossaberg7302
    @geiregholmfossaberg7302 3 роки тому

    U pronounce it Víkingur
    (Vui chin gurr)

  • @valdrskeggjoar5972
    @valdrskeggjoar5972 6 років тому

    Heill og Sæll! I just wish to say þǫkk for making this subject more clear for me!

  • @774CISCO
    @774CISCO 2 роки тому

    thank you that was great

  • @flemishtemplar3766
    @flemishtemplar3766 7 років тому +1

    So those viking foght a farmer, got owed, stole his fortune behind his back as cowards, then returned it and burned his house down, Scared and rightend running to safety these farmer and his wife were killed while they were in shock from the fire. Wow what a honour in fighting like that. Vikings are those who stab u in the back after u made a agreement of peace.

    • @elbow6380
      @elbow6380 7 років тому +4

      keep worshipping your jewish desert god :)

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 7 років тому

      † Flemish Templar † people all time comes in any shapes and colours.. Of course every American today is like Trump! Right?

    • @danielwilliams5618
      @danielwilliams5618 7 років тому

      What El Bow wrote below - multiplied by 100. jou vokkon Poes-gesig!!!

    • @vladvalo
      @vladvalo 6 років тому +1

      Say that to the norsemen who cut down Frank's and Saxons,😂 you sir, are a fool.

    • @danielwilliams5618
      @danielwilliams5618 6 років тому

      No SADLY they're not!!!!

  • @teodorhansensandbakk5571
    @teodorhansensandbakk5571 5 років тому

    Can you prove that they used the D/T sound in old times here in Norway and Iceland?

  • @Jackhand100
    @Jackhand100 7 років тому +1

    Even cave men painted and some could of had a symbolic meaning or tell a story and some could just be marking a successful hunt or saying we where here and who knows how many really lived in caves in these period and this belief is largely because of a lack of evidence that people where living in huts,tent or igloo and this does not mean they where not. The lack of evidence of vikings written on anything else but stone and jewelry,weapons makes me a little suspicious that something is missing and it could of just been a taboo or most of the evidence could of just faded away into nothing and if you wanted something to last carving into stone makes some amount of sense and even if books and scrolls existed and where burned how likely is it that every one would of been destroyed and such things would of rotted away without the right conditions and the wrong materials would of speeded up this process and you would think that viking had at least some access to paint and leather and perhaps its was only the priests,magician and smiths that could write or perhaps the priests aided in placing the symbols on the objects. Not uncommon for grave markers and religion to go hand in hand and priests being more literate in other parts of Europe even among heathens is not a new ideal. What evidence is their for general knowledge of written among the vikings. What surviving records,legends or writings that suggest general knowledge and a lack of evidence does not mean these vikings did not have general knowledge of written. You don't erase a culture by allowing the books,traditions,beliefs to survive. you either warp them or erase them or both and their are other methods other then just torture and murder to weaken resistance.

  • @garytucker5748
    @garytucker5748 5 років тому

    Oxe blood mixed with clay to create a floor water proof and ceremonial foundation.

  • @steelstanding8005
    @steelstanding8005 7 років тому

    It was the Irish slaves that was doing their wrighting, they where skilled in the art from the monestarys. Used spesificly for saga writing. If you look at the dna of Iceland today, its a mix of old celt and norse

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 7 років тому

      Steel Standing Well DNA tell ca 70-80% Scottish genes was female & likewise men from Scandinavia.
      I'm not sure kidnapped women were chosen being writers according to the natural status of women those days..

  • @ericekblom5651
    @ericekblom5651 5 років тому

    The painting you see is called midvinterblot.

  • @torrizn
    @torrizn 2 роки тому

    Frøya have the først pick not odin

  • @bigchief70
    @bigchief70 6 років тому +1

    great video

  • @stevenkelly4974
    @stevenkelly4974 2 роки тому

    does this guy not produce content anymore?

    • @thorleifr
      @thorleifr  2 роки тому

      Sadly, Hurstwic's public programs (such as this lecture series) are on hiatus due to covid, so no new videos.

  • @REXI900
    @REXI900 3 роки тому

    like si eres de la uc3m

  • @zahoin8186
    @zahoin8186 3 роки тому

    Cool cool cool

  • @ericbles
    @ericbles 3 роки тому

    Thank you

  • @JesusChrist8451
    @JesusChrist8451 3 роки тому

    Oh hell yeah

  • @tsfcancerman
    @tsfcancerman 8 років тому

    my thoughts on this is that its nature and forces of nature, that the gods only got male/female shape/form just to let the kids understand it easier. cause most celebration and offerings was done to nature and animals.

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel 7 років тому +1

      tsfcancerman No proof of that.. Worshipping was done in nature but hardly any rune stones picture anything than humans with horses, ships & weapons..
      Stop mixing your holy Gaia romantic with the vikings

  • @bigthunder7002
    @bigthunder7002 3 роки тому

    Father?

  • @kimthor3536
    @kimthor3536 5 років тому

    Odin ejer alt

  • @tsfcancerman
    @tsfcancerman 8 років тому

    yes alot of the important sites from viking ages they ruined by building churches on it some of them are very well known now as ("stavkirker" in norwegian) no.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stavkirke still 28 of them

    • @agila1313
      @agila1313 8 років тому

      Not always, I think. When I was in Norway, I was told that in the late 19th/20th century most of the "old" churches were demolished because they were not in very good conditions (cracks on the wall, full of damp, etc.). In other countries they would have been restored but here, they took a more functional approach and built something new instead. This would explain why some viking churches are still up (only those that were well-preserved). This is what I was told but If I am wrong, let me know! :)

    • @beersmurff
      @beersmurff 7 років тому

      Well. Tbh, the stavkirker, made of wood, would have been gone anyways unless someone spent excessive amount of maintenance on them from 1100 AD and on.

  • @lexagriffin3220
    @lexagriffin3220 2 роки тому

    Great vídeo

  • @vladvalo
    @vladvalo 6 років тому +1

    Well done