Norse Tradition
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Norse mythology — Norse paganism Part of Norse paganism … Wikipedia
Norse paganism — Part of Norse paganism … Wikipedia
Norse–Gaels — The Norse–Gaels were a people who dominated much of the Irish Sea region, including the Isle of Man, and western Scotland for a part of the Middle Ages; they were of Gaelic and Scandinavian origin and as a whole exhibited a great deal of Gaelic… … Wikipedia
Norse-Gaels — The Norse Gaels were a people who dominated much of the Irish Sea region and western Scotland for a large part of the Middle Ages, who were of Scandinavian and Gaelic origin and as a whole exhibited a great deal of Gaelic and Norse cultural… … Wikipedia
Norse funeral — Ship burial of a Varangian Chieftain Heinrich Semiradzki (1883) Burial customs of Viking Age Norsemen (early medieval Scandinavians) are known both from archaeology and from historical accounts such as the Icelandic sagas, Old… … Wikipedia
Death in Norse paganism — This image is usually interpreted as a Valkyrie who welcomes a dead man, or Odin himself, on the Tjängvide image stone from Gotland, in the Swedish Museum of National Antiquities in Stockholm. Death in ancient Norse times was associated with… … Wikipedia
Ríg (Norse god) — Ríg or Rígr is the name applied to a Norse god described as old and wise, mighty and strong in the Eddic poem Rígthula (Old Norse Rígsþula Song of Ríg). The prose introduction tells that Ríg is another name for Heimdall, who is moreover called… … Wikipedia
Hopewell tradition — Hopewell Interaction Area and local expressions of the Hopewell tradition The Hopewell tradition (also incorrectly called the Hopewell culture [citation needed]) is the term used to describe common aspects of the Nativ … Wikipedia
Cochise Tradition — The Cochise Tradition (also Cochise Culture) refers to the southern archeological tradition of the four Southwestern Archaic Traditions, in the present day Southwestern United States. The Cochise Tradition (? before 5000 to c. 200 BC) lasted for… … Wikipedia
Norton tradition — The Norton tradition is an archaeological culture that developed in the Western Arctic along the Alaskan shore of the Bering Strait around 1000 BCE and lasted through about 800 CE. The Norton people used flake stone tools like their predecessors … Wikipedia