Runes: A Free Course, pt 1

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  • Опубліковано 7 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 225

  • @JacksonCrawford
    @JacksonCrawford  Рік тому +177

    One other word I ought to have mentioned in the section about words related to "rune" is Finnish "runo," apparently derived directly from the Proto-Germanic word, except that in Finnish it means "poem" (note that each of the individual constituent poems/stories of the Kalevala is called a "runo"). Finnish isn't related to the Germanic languages, but it has borrowed words from them at every stage of their development, including Proto-Germanic. Anyway, this meaning adds one more wrinkle to the surprisingly complex picture of what this word might have originally meant.

    • @skitidetdu6672
      @skitidetdu6672 Рік тому +7

      As a Swede it's funny when I see a Finnish text, with tons of Swedish words but with an i or an o at the end. Sometimes with an extra vowel stuck in there.

    • @Pengalen
      @Pengalen Рік тому +8

      Rún means secret in Irish.
      Also as I'm watching this video, I just keep thinking of Ron saying to Hermione "Ancient Runes? Just how many classes are you taking?"

    • @YvonneEriksen
      @YvonneEriksen Рік тому +4

      I'm Danish. I named my son Rune, because I've learned, that it meant secret (not a lot of men in my life until I met my husband). I've always thought the secret came from the fact, that only few could actually read what the runes meant. They were meant for the few - and therefore had a sense of mystery about them.

    • @Ravn000
      @Ravn000 Рік тому +5

      Amazing video, as always!
      You mentioned Rune being related to something like the swedish Ränna, meaning to drive. Ränna also means furrow or cut or groove. I find the idea funny that they might simply have called these furrows from cutting them into stone.

    • @Sasha-ff5ce
      @Sasha-ff5ce Рік тому

      Perhaps the meaning of “poem” came from a sharing of Germanic poetry

  • @lkjh861
    @lkjh861 Рік тому +14

    Runes are just as associated with magic, as the Roman alphabet it is ~ meaning, under almost every doorsill in the Roman Empire you would find a small rolled-up piece of lead or copper foil with a spell to ward the home against evil. Indeed, sometimes those same rolled-up pieces of foil have been found with curses, tugged into a crevice near the home of someone a Roman sought to cause misfortune.
    That it, it's the WORDS that are magical ~ NOT the individual characters of the alphabet.

  • @fugithegreat
    @fugithegreat Рік тому +14

    I'm fascinated by the idea of writing being an almost magical secret to the masses in a world where most people were illiterate. The idea of writing being a metaphorical whisper is also intriguing.

  • @hakon_dlc
    @hakon_dlc Рік тому +83

    Fascinating video, my Old English course at uni only touched this subject only very briefly so I am grateful for you covering it completely free of charge! A huge shoutout to the Patreon supporters who enable Dr. Crawford to share his knowledge publicly!

  • @ahnraphel
    @ahnraphel Рік тому +15

    Doc I know you're not a Heathen yourself but your work helps those of us trying to be historically accurate in our faith practice as closely as we can and I can't thank you enough. I feel it in my gut that you are good people and I wish you the very best in life.

  • @XianVivre
    @XianVivre Рік тому +47

    I'm glad you cover these concepts in depth, and make your knowledge available to the public.

  • @Spectre94951
    @Spectre94951 Рік тому +16

    The whispers/secrets correlation makes sense given that the Old/Proto Norse societies would have been semi-literate. So you would only know what was said if you had been taught to read.

  • @maenormand7635
    @maenormand7635 Рік тому +31

    What a generous offering. Thanks Doc!

  • @marionl.9094
    @marionl.9094 Рік тому +37

    Hi,
    I've been learning Old Norse and everything you've talked about for over 4 years now. Is there any other way than patreon to support you?
    You're a star made of gold and we need more people like you! Thanks for all you're doing to spread the knowledge!

    • @cactustree505
      @cactustree505 Рік тому +2

      @Marion L. Click on the 'Thanks' or the heart icon with a $ symbol. Usually it lets me set the amount to donate. This one had a fixed $1 donation, which I've never seen before. Maybe just check another video of his.

  • @teresabeekind5899
    @teresabeekind5899 Рік тому +19

    Thank you Mr Crawford🙏

    • @Iwoodlikethat
      @Iwoodlikethat Рік тому +6

      That's Doctor Mr. Crawford haha

    • @beepboop204
      @beepboop204 Рік тому

      @@Iwoodlikethat hey, just dont call him GURU and he wont mind

    • @teresabeekind5899
      @teresabeekind5899 Рік тому +2

      @@Iwoodlikethat I should have assumed that with his amazing resumé! Apologies Dr Crawford!

  • @solveigw
    @solveigw Рік тому +10

    Thank you. This is interesting.
    As a Norwegian we learn about the runic alphabet in school. I was taught about them, and now my teens have been taught as well.
    I can't say I know them, because I can't write the Futhark just based on memory, but in most generations of Norwegians alive today, there will be someone who have used runes as a secret code language :) Myself included!

  • @tertia0011
    @tertia0011 Рік тому +19

    Thanks to very generous patreon supporters & Prof. Crawford for making free course available to Internauts.

  • @phinicebear6781
    @phinicebear6781 Рік тому +10

    So interesting to hear actually professional discussion about runes as an actual language. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and thoughts.

    • @briantaylor9475
      @briantaylor9475 Рік тому +3

      Actually, alphabet; system of writing, not a language.

  • @janach1305
    @janach1305 Рік тому +2

    I remember when I was on a pagan bulletin board on the web back in the Nineties, people were outraged when I claimed that the main purpose of runes is writing, and that everything else (i.e. the magic stuff) is gravy. They thought I meant the use of runes in magic was bunk, whereas I meant it was a rare and secondary use, like modern pagans writing their magic spells in the Latin alphabet. I was surprised at how many people got angry at what I considered an entirely reasonable statement.

  • @jonaslundman5788
    @jonaslundman5788 Рік тому +8

    As a swedish history teacher I very mutch like this! This notion that the runes are some sort of a Taro deck is very irriting… thanks doc!

  • @Explorer273
    @Explorer273 Рік тому +3

    If I was to guess about the meaning of rune it would be memory. One reason is that it's more or less the modern Swedish meaning of the word - in memorial. The more logical one is that it's what you always do when you write something down. Unless the writing is destroyed it will remain readable long after you are dead and gone.

  • @a.s.476
    @a.s.476 6 місяців тому +1

    In Latvian language we have a word "runa", which means "speech" and "to speak" - "runāt". These words sound very similar to the Old Norse "rúnar" and have a similar meaning - they are related to speech, talking.

  • @jeffatwood9417
    @jeffatwood9417 Рік тому +1

    I appreciate your presentation. Thank you .
    I look at the evolution of writing from the “mystical” perspective of, what is a word?
    It begins as a spark of inspiration, presumably due to some stimulus.
    It manifests as a thought, which births another….
    The thought is expressed in a word, which also begets offspring.
    Who knows all the echoing whispers? Writing was the way to remove the corrupted loyalty relying on messenger memories…as long as literacy segregated the classes.

  • @Martzoerst
    @Martzoerst 4 місяці тому

    Great work! As a swede learning this it is a huge help. When I hear "ek erilaz" it says "I the jarl". To me it fits, the strong and learned man wrote what few can read.

  • @Fummy007
    @Fummy007 Рік тому +6

    I have no idea how you can film outdoors in the snow and have audio quality like your indoors. Impressive

  • @margomaloney6016
    @margomaloney6016 Рік тому +13

    Thanks Doc for offering this college level lecture on UA-cam! I really appreciate it and look forward to the next! :)

  • @MacNab23
    @MacNab23 Рік тому +3

    As someone with no academic background - indeed, I'm not even a college graduate - these videos have been invaluable to my personal studies and deep interest in this and related subjects. The Patreon is a pittance for the knowledge gained.

  • @moonsix3r
    @moonsix3r Рік тому +6

    I appreciate the time you take to make these available to everyone. You've helped me understand more about Norse Mythology then I ever thought possible. Please don't stop posting 💜

  • @bombfog1
    @bombfog1 Рік тому +5

    Until your intro in this video I had no idea that Runes were associated with magic in the public mind, or rather any more so than magic is associated with Classical Latin or Koine. There are ample extant magical incantations and curse tablets in these languages of course, but I don’t have the impression that anyone sees these two Mediterranean languages as anything to do with mysticism. Very interesting.

  • @NorseNoahJ
    @NorseNoahJ Рік тому +5

    I’m watching every moment of this series no doubt

  • @demi3115
    @demi3115 Рік тому +2

    Can't wait for the following videos about this topic! Just one short note about Frisian. It was spoken along the north sea coast of Belgium, the netherlands and Germany. Or as it is often called, between the Zwin (Bruges) and the Weser(Bremen).

  • @Remedy40370
    @Remedy40370 Рік тому +2

    As a Swede-Finn born in Canada; your channel & your books I’ve purchased have been great! Thanks so much!

  • @theogeitondasamphilochos5630
    @theogeitondasamphilochos5630 Рік тому +2

    I found your idea absolutely poetic and beautiful that letters are "language without sounds" like whispering in council! Good job👍

  • @ashenwalls3558
    @ashenwalls3558 Рік тому +4

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us! Even for someone who believes magic, I believe it's important to have a well rounded education.

  • @woolwell_farm
    @woolwell_farm Рік тому +1

    Thanks!

  • @evaashwood1084
    @evaashwood1084 Рік тому +3

    And now, what we've all been waiting for... it drops, and it's fire! 🔥

  • @MatthewsPersonal
    @MatthewsPersonal Рік тому +1

    When odin hangs himself to obtain the runes, and given the context of the rest of havamal, i cant help but feel that Odin hanged himself to obtain the advise (and or magic) he gives in the other sections

  • @trajan098117
    @trajan098117 Рік тому +4

    Thanks so much for this. I am so pleased that you are producing a sensible overview of the runes based on the most up to date evidence and research with no speculation about magic. Nice hat too!

    • @pricklypear7516
      @pricklypear7516 Рік тому +2

      I am sincere in my question here: Is that "speculation about magic" really so wide-spread or deeply ingrained? I mean, among at least semi-intelligent people? As much as I enjoyed this video, I felt that the protestations almost seemed to validate the (utterly absurd) "magic" connection. If I served my guests a big pot of stew, I wouldn't say, "Nope, no witch's brew here! Uh-uh, didn't use a bit of eye of newt or toe of frog!" I sort of found the emphasis on it a bit off-putting.

    • @phirion6341
      @phirion6341 Рік тому

      @@pricklypear7516 As a linguist, you are almost always forced to do long preludes and put down some common understandings when you communicate to the broader public.
      What can be frequently encountered are some unhelpful derailments via esoteric/nationalist/hyperspritualists who think that a chart on Pinterest has educated them definitely than those """dirty biased""" (sic) academics

  • @BethRitterGuth
    @BethRitterGuth Рік тому +2

    I appreciate this series, Jackson.The same politics apply in other disciplines like literature, and some topics are "off topic" for "true" academics (whomever they are, really). As an academic locked out of rune studies since that's not my field, I truly appreciate the time and attention you are taking professionally to provide content. While I do read runes daily for divination on social media, I try to be clear that this usage of them is modern and not necessarily historical since no evidence suggests they were used for anything more than an alphabet. I also think that divination tools, as they stand, can be made of anything since they are intended to bring the user meaning. So, if a stack of bananas is meaningul to a user, that can be a divination tool. But just because it's a tool for one person doesn't mean it's a tool for another. In any case, I love the series, and I am eager to learn more about each rune :).

  • @ksbrook1430
    @ksbrook1430 Рік тому +1

    Nice intro to runes. Looking forward to the next part.
    To me, the possibility that the word "rune" came from or is associated with council is plausible. Look at the etymology of our word "thing", which originally meant meeting, assembly, council. Over the years the meaning changed, so it now means an item. Language makes for a fascinating study.

  • @nickolasrogers3549
    @nickolasrogers3549 Рік тому +3

    I just started my journey in Norse pagan and I have been told by many to check you out so here I am and Im positive that I'll enjoy your teachings

  • @bumpty9830
    @bumpty9830 6 місяців тому

    Thank you for the free course. Educating the public makes you a professor with or without an institutional affiliation.

  • @fugithegreat
    @fugithegreat Рік тому +2

    You're so awesome Dr. Crawford! This is everything I hoped education can and should be, accessible and affordable or free to the public. Thank you (and other academics that I follow in this space) for sharing your knowledge to counteract all the mystical rune bunk out there. I will definitely be following this course!

  • @ciarandoyle4349
    @ciarandoyle4349 Рік тому +1

    Hmmm! It's hard to resist imagining a connection between the word rune and the modern Irish words:
    Rún = secret, beloved person (noun)
    Rúnda = secret (adjective)
    Rúnaí = secretary
    But I believe the only alphabets ever used to write in Irish were Ogham and the Roman (or Latin).

  • @lyarrastark6254
    @lyarrastark6254 Рік тому +2

    Thank you, Mr. Crawford!

  • @trajan098117
    @trajan098117 Рік тому +1

    Thanks

  • @wadejustanamerican1201
    @wadejustanamerican1201 Рік тому

    Thank you, Dr. Crawford. As an old Physical Anthropology major, I appreciate this course.

  • @Veidr99
    @Veidr99 9 місяців тому

    Thank you so much sir and best of days good sir

  • @raziel4949
    @raziel4949 Рік тому +2

    Thank u so much 🙌🙌🙏

  • @Henrique-wy6cv
    @Henrique-wy6cv Рік тому +2

    Fascinating stuff mr. Jackson, runes are fascinating, you were able to sum up very well to the point that I as a complete novice to languages was able to understand clearly, great work and keep it up!!

  • @bostonharborbookbindery19
    @bostonharborbookbindery19 Рік тому +2

    Love it! Love the subject, the hat, all of it. Fantastic video! Looking forward to more. So happy to be a Patreon supporter

  • @zachariaszut
    @zachariaszut Рік тому +2

    Thank you, very kind of you.

  • @SunraeSkatimunggr
    @SunraeSkatimunggr Рік тому +7

    Being of the more "magical" mind when I was first introduced to the Elder Futhark 30 years ago, I have since come to realize that words didn't just happen, we pick the sounds we put together to represent the thing we talk about, or the idea we are trying to transmit. Written language is much younger than spoken, and spoken took a long time to formalize everywhere, so the original "magic" is in the sounds a language makes, then later in the shapes they pick to represent those sounds. The letters represent these sounds, thus hold "magic". Even the names of each letter hold a vibration.

    • @MasterPoucksBestMan
      @MasterPoucksBestMan Рік тому +4

      I also find it interesting how in the Phoenician letters that all later European writing systems come from, has the first letter representing a bovine creature as well. In their case, it represented a glottal stop that most European languages don't typically have. 'Aleph, where the apostrophe represents the glottal stop. Turn the A upside down and you can clearly see the animal head with horns rising up. When the Greeks borrowed the writing system, since they didn't have a glottal stop in their language, they used the first letter to represent the first vowel that comes after the initial glottal stop in the word 'Aleph, in other words "A". But it's interesting to me that even though an F sounds nothing like an A, the symbol of the cow needing to be first in the row was so important that the first letter was changed from a letter representing an A sound, to one that represented the first sound of the word that DID mean cow in their language, F for Feoh.

  • @gergelypinter8229
    @gergelypinter8229 Рік тому +2

    Dr. Crawford does it again!

  • @alcavein
    @alcavein Рік тому +1

    Perfect setting to teach something like this

  • @leval_413
    @leval_413 21 день тому

    I'm an Asian just spontaneously want to understand runes so now I'm here watching a man teaching in the snow. Tks

  • @spikewillow4552
    @spikewillow4552 Рік тому +1

    Really appreciate you sharing your wisdom 🤟

  • @borkfate1094
    @borkfate1094 Рік тому

    Thank you for this. My grandfather stowed away on a ship from Denmark, one of the last.

  • @jamesfortune243
    @jamesfortune243 Рік тому +2

    Outstanding content!

  • @stolman2197
    @stolman2197 Рік тому +1

    Love the hat sir! From Varusteleka I assume.

  • @DarknessovHezrou
    @DarknessovHezrou 6 місяців тому

    Thank you. I am forever your student sir.

  • @kakashifuijin
    @kakashifuijin Рік тому

    I like the eagle that you have in the shoulder profesor

  • @whyshy11
    @whyshy11 9 місяців тому

    Thank you for providing this information and knowledge openly. May you r blessed in your dail living.

  • @estebanmunoz9279
    @estebanmunoz9279 Рік тому

    Im a DR crawford fan now ! Its like my 6th video in a row

  • @iabergils
    @iabergils 10 місяців тому

    So I was thinking, because of what you said about the text saying "xx wrote him a runa" and thought about the fact that most runestones, at least around where I live, is what we today also,refers to as a "runa" which I believe in English is called an obituary. Amazing that the word survived untouched until this day when everything else has changed so much that I can't even understand most of my own language from, say the 1400s. I am Swedish by the way. I know Norwegians have always been known for protecting their language more, whereas we often traditionally just adopt words from other languages and let them replace the old ones.

  • @ragnarruckus2825
    @ragnarruckus2825 Рік тому +2

    Thanks so much for sharing your counsel on The Mystery of the Runes!

  • @wrp3621
    @wrp3621 Рік тому

    Thanks, I need all the free education I can get. I wasn't exactly paying attention at school, so am making up for it with your help.

  • @topgunaudio7983
    @topgunaudio7983 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic resource, thank you for sharing your knowledge.

  • @jean-micheltanguay8664
    @jean-micheltanguay8664 Рік тому

    Thank you for your time and your generosity

  • @yvonnemason9137
    @yvonnemason9137 Рік тому

    Fascinating and really clearly explained. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and passion for ancient languages with us. :)

  • @josefweber899
    @josefweber899 Рік тому +2

    Excellent. Much needed.

  • @wyrdnwylde
    @wyrdnwylde Рік тому

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge - I'm looking forward to getting through all of your videos. I've been studying runes since 2015, when I was first introduced to them.

  • @sallahgypsy1590
    @sallahgypsy1590 Рік тому +1

    I know this is off current topic, but I came across something interesting. Have you seen the hand of Irulegi? A brass shaped hand found in Northern Spain from what they believe came from Basgue language.
    I see ruin inscription letters of T, O, H and some not recognized. I think you should take a look at it. It's a bronze artifact shaped like a life size hand.

  • @reviewsfromasocialjusticel8558

    Thanks Dr. Crawford. Looking forward to this course.

  • @AbhinavSrivastava-xe7xi
    @AbhinavSrivastava-xe7xi 11 місяців тому

    Native Hindi and English speaker, now studying runes, and more generally PIE because I know a bunch of other PIE languages (Russian, Spanish, Dutch) at very basic level, so this is a very good first candidate for a family tree to learn. More later!

  • @FatherDave
    @FatherDave Рік тому

    A cool note on "Mysterion" from that NT translation. As a Catholic Priest we use the word "Mystery" to refer to our Sacraments. You can interchange those words. Why, and related to your "Runes are an alphabet and not spells", because they have both a visible and an invisible dimension (we believe). But that is true for writing. the visible dimensions are of course the seen script and the invisible is the meaning.
    thanks for this playlist. looking forward to the rest (Found your channel via the Battlenof Maldon discussion)

  • @cyneburga
    @cyneburga Рік тому

    More book recommendations? There goes this week's grocery money again! To paraphrase Erasmus:
    When I have a little money, I support Dr. Crawford on Patreon and I buy books; and if I have any left, I buy food and clothes.
    But I do thank you for another wonderful video and for sharing your knowledge.

  • @TRESJOIAS
    @TRESJOIAS 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for so much. Brasil

  • @rebekahshantz569
    @rebekahshantz569 Рік тому

    It is hard to listen to the education and read the pop-up info at the same time but I guess most people will watch it a second time anyway so they don't miss things.

  • @pfdrtom
    @pfdrtom Рік тому

    Thank you for this wonderful video. First things first, JC. Watching in Texas.

  • @Thereal.hawa_
    @Thereal.hawa_ 5 місяців тому

    Thank you ❤

  • @JacobafJelling
    @JacobafJelling Рік тому

    BUT DUDE. How interesting is the genetics and the “continuation” more or less for us non-phd certified noobies. Of old Norse in the Icelandic language.
    I’m stoked that I’ve found your quality videos. Alright I’ll shut up now. And enjoy this

  • @Gaisowiros
    @Gaisowiros Рік тому +2

    Runo- is also attested in Gaulish in the personal name "Comrunos" meaning "confider". Xavier Delamarre, in his Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise, claims runo- to be a common root word to Celtic and Germanic languages meaning "secret".

  • @Grimm0351
    @Grimm0351 Рік тому

    Thanks for this series. Although the hackett publishing link was dead for me, I picked up all the works i could find listed under your name on amazon.

  • @JimiHendrix998
    @JimiHendrix998 Рік тому

    Thank you for the work you have and will put into this course. More please.

  • @oguzy23
    @oguzy23 3 місяці тому

    Absolute scholar thank you for your time in making this. You sir, have had an effect on this world that I am sure you have no IDEA about. Would you mind if I use this video on my channel please?

  • @RotteKampfflieger
    @RotteKampfflieger Рік тому

    Thank you for making these videos. I have been craving a real explanation non "Hollywood, and Magic" talk about the languages and culture around Rune and Scandanavia.

  • @staleovenberg127
    @staleovenberg127 Рік тому +4

    Rune, Runar (male) and Runa (female) are also used as given names in Norway, obviously related to the runes. Great video, I will follow the series with interest :-)

  • @jenniferfinlayson1512
    @jenniferfinlayson1512 Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much!

  • @wrennjb
    @wrennjb Рік тому

    Hey, I was at UGA at about the same time you would have been! I took a class in Linguistics, but I think that would have been before you were here.

  • @sognatore6199
    @sognatore6199 Місяць тому

    Slavic languages have words for "sheepskin with fleece" sounding very similar to "rune" (e.g. "runo" in Polish or "руно" in Russian). As sheepskin was used to make parchments, letters on such a writing material could symbolically represent sheep hair.
    The very same word was also used for "small plants in the forest" (like the Polish "runo lésne") whose stems and shoots could remind of letters too. Perhaps these words as well as "rune" go back to some mysterious Indo-European one...

  • @emk7132
    @emk7132 Рік тому

    Looking forward to this course!!

  • @thirdrockjul2224
    @thirdrockjul2224 8 місяців тому

    Great info! ❤

  • @slee3155
    @slee3155 Рік тому +1

    Nice hat 🤠🤠

  • @emiliaericksson
    @emiliaericksson Рік тому

    OMG thank you so much for sharing this knowledge, really THANK YOU! 👏🏻🖤

  • @doexarmi3034
    @doexarmi3034 Рік тому

    Hi Jackson,
    Great, thank you very much!
    Although I only check in from time to time (that will change 😄), I appreciate your channel very much. Good work!
    Greetings from Germany,
    Markus

  • @ConsciousConversations
    @ConsciousConversations 3 місяці тому

    0:42 omg!!! I just … the only thing that would have made this intro (shout out to that little text box at the top there) would have been if you denounced higher academics and said you have simply studied much of your life and we can be the judge and do the research ourselves (as all should) . Then at the end or your next video just deftly dropped in your crazy long list of systemic proof.
    Basically.
    What I am saying is this is cool.
    You are cool. And I agree, people want to know but are afraid to try or that whole ego fueled fear of being “blamed” for taking any stance, claim or shared idea.

  • @JacobafJelling
    @JacobafJelling Рік тому

    Brooooooo. WHAT A BANGER PHD. Ur a Legend dude. I subscribed. I Think its fascinating that you’re so knowledge about this subject.
    And I agree, that there is a lot of interest, but also that there is little quality content.

  • @davideck3635
    @davideck3635 Рік тому

    Brilliant as always. You have my thanks for sharing your knowledge with us in such an objective way. I've watched many of your videos and continue to learn so much about these ancient languages. BTW the setting for this video is breath-taking!

  • @gabrielpizo4263
    @gabrielpizo4263 Рік тому

    Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge!

  • @stevenwiederholt7000
    @stevenwiederholt7000 Рік тому +1

    LOVE The Hat!!!

  • @katherinesmith767
    @katherinesmith767 Рік тому

    Hi. Really enjoy your videos! Just a thought, I thought you might like the artist Adrian von Ziegler’s music. My favorite album (if I was forced to choose) is For The Pack.
    Have a good summer!

  • @jaronsurf
    @jaronsurf Рік тому +1

    Ty for this video, super informative.

  • @Muskoxing
    @Muskoxing Рік тому +1

    Nice hat!

  • @rangerinthewoods4580
    @rangerinthewoods4580 Місяць тому

    Great video. I like your Videos and espacially your "dialect" of speaking norse words. According to magic i have following argument: in Germany in many old Houses that are build with heavy oak beams you often find beams in the attic that have the shape of the rune Othala. This rune means - according to my humble knowledge - house/protection. Maybe ancient people put "magic" into these runes because they believed in their power. So they "loaded" them magically by giving them this prominent meaning. Just an idea and my two cent. Nevertheless, i am talking of vegvisir times and you take us on a yourney like 1400 years back into history.