КОМЕНТАРІ •

  • @m00nlet
    @m00nlet 27 днів тому

    Wonderful video Thankyou ❤

  • @Arran-GaelicDruid1861
    @Arran-GaelicDruid1861 2 місяці тому

    I’m tremendously glad that I stumbled upon this channel! having ancestry from Orkney and the northern isles! This should be 1 million subscriber plus channel. Great work.

  • @boldoraclestudios9329
    @boldoraclestudios9329 Рік тому

    Thank you! ❤️ ❤️ ❤️

  • @connorricketts1323
    @connorricketts1323 Рік тому

    thank you Anna a very instresing vidoe loved and thank you for all you do

  • @user-lh8ie4bb5q
    @user-lh8ie4bb5q 4 місяці тому

    Thank you! It's a good video.

  • @mon_moi
    @mon_moi Рік тому

    yesss brand new video ❤

  • @jamie2051
    @jamie2051 Рік тому

    Decided your voice and this semi spooky content is exactly what I need to watch for bed

  • @mrc8308
    @mrc8308 Рік тому

    Thanks! Such an enjoyable watch.

  • @haulfr.channel
    @haulfr.channel Рік тому

    Very interesting indeed.
    Thanks for explaining all this and telling it so well, calm and beautifully! 👍😁 love it all ❤

  • @robgau2501
    @robgau2501 Рік тому +3

    This is pretty much what my ancestry is: Norse Gael. Clan Henderson.
    So this is where the Drow come from. They are the dark elves in Dungeons and Dragons.

    • @CrashWeezerman
      @CrashWeezerman Рік тому

      I've always figured Drow take some some inspiration from the myth of the Trow, though they've got almost nothing in common with their mythological namesake.

    • @maxpowers9129
      @maxpowers9129 Рік тому

      I think the Drow in D&D is the combination of various myths. Dwarves for example, were often called elves but had black skin like the Drow in the game. So basically, they could be considered dark elves that live underground.
      There were also the seelie and unseelie courts. One of which was ruled by a woman and were viewed as being immoral. I think that's what led to the drow being led by an evil matriarch.

  • @RedcoatsReturn
    @RedcoatsReturn Рік тому

    A most interesting video…very well told too! 😊👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👍👍 I met a Troll…in Huddersfield….but…nobody noticed the difference….there 😄😉

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Рік тому

    @AnnaBridgland >>> Great video...👍

  • @missmadigan9285
    @missmadigan9285 2 роки тому +3

    Anna, the picture you shared during your Land Trow segment; is that purported to be a trow on film?! It looked spooky!! 😱😨✨

  • @danielmalinen6337
    @danielmalinen6337 8 місяців тому

    Maybe it eases the confusion that the troll also comes from draug. Or at least folklore and etymology researchers believe so.

  • @edwardbirdsall6580
    @edwardbirdsall6580 Рік тому +1

    You are missed .

  • @NoirKitsune
    @NoirKitsune Рік тому +1

    Hey Anna where have you disappeared to?

  • @hyugalubbok7770
    @hyugalubbok7770 6 місяців тому

    shamanic (spiritiual) practicies are exist all other, and the parasitic subtle body of slavic obour, and the baghest (bear/house/burial/mountion spirit) sharing similiaretis with this mound dweller alleged night hag attacks (turn into a cat, that grow more and more on the chest of his victims, crush him to death). I am highly wondering, if this unnatural metamorphosis of Glamr into this horrible being, came from fae=alien genetics, that start to kick in after the death=hibernation of fae-blooded human (similiar to the Palco fish, or the body became an "chrysalid-layer" of sort, for their new, transformed body)