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Norse Mythology: Skadi

Skadi (Old Norse Skaรฐi) is a frost giantess. Her name is identical to the Old Norse common noun skaรฐi which means โ€œharm,โ€. Her name may be related to the naming of landmass of โ€œScandinavia.โ€ Skadiโ€™s domain is the highest peaks of the mountains where the snow never melts. She is an keen huntress and her… Continue reading Norse Mythology: Skadi

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Greek Mythology: Hades

Hades may be one of the most-well known and most popular gods from Ancient Greek mythology but wasnโ€™t one of the recognised Olympian gods even despite being the brother of Zeus. Hades was the Greek god of the Dead and his domain took on his name and didnโ€™t exist in the mortal realm but an… Continue reading Greek Mythology: Hades

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Aztec Mythology: Mictlรกn

In Aztec cosmology, the soul intakes a journey to the Underworld after death and they have four destinations: the Sacred Orchard of the Gods, the Place of Darkness, the Kingdom of the Sun, and a paradise called the Mansion of the Moon. The most common destination for a soul is Mictlรกn (Place of Darkness) with… Continue reading Aztec Mythology: Mictlรกn

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Norse Mythology: Loki

Loki (Old Norse: Loki โ€œknot/tangleโ€) is a wily trickster god of Norse mythology. While treated as a nominal member of the Aesir, he occupies a highly ambivalent and unique position among the gods, giants, and the other kinds of spiritual beings that populate pre-Christian Norse religion. Loki is the father of three monsters with giantess… Continue reading Norse Mythology: Loki

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Voodoo Folklore: Baron Samedi

Baron Samedi is the leader of the Barons and possibly the Gedรฉs. He presides over a sprawling, confusing, complex clan of spirits. Baron Samedi literally means Baron Saturday, which may sound innocuous compared to Baron Cemetery but a connection through Christianity is Saturday was between the crucifixion on Friday and resurrection on the Sunday. Thus,… Continue reading Voodoo Folklore: Baron Samedi

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Norse Mythology: Freyr

Freyr (Old Norse Freyr, โ€œLordโ€) is one of the Vanir gods and is also counted among the Aesir gods as a hostage after the Aesir-Vanir War. Fryerโ€™s father is the Vanir god Njord. Freyr has been the lover of numerous goddesses and giantesses and rumoured to include his own sister, Freya. Incest seems a common… Continue reading Norse Mythology: Freyr

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Greek Mythology: Nyx

Nyx is a very unique goddess. She has the ability to bring sleep or death. Even Zeus feared Nyx because she was older and stronger than him. She is the only goddess heโ€™s ever known to fear. She is often described as a winged or riding in a chariot across the sky, shrouded in mist… Continue reading Greek Mythology: Nyx

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Breton Folklore: The Ankou

The Ankou (Breton), Ankow (Cornish) or Angau (Welsh) from Celtic legend most commonly occurs in Brittany. Here you can still spot the Ankou haunting many of the churches and cathedrals. What is the Ankou? Itโ€™s defiant remnant of Pagan influence that had survived hidden among the stone-work of Christian buildings. The Ankou haunts the graveyard… Continue reading Breton Folklore: The Ankou

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Irish Folklore: Fรฉar Gortach

The Fear Gorta means Famine Man or Fรฉar Gortach and refers to the Hungry or Famine Grass in Irish folklore. The Famine or Hungry Man is a skeletal wraith and a harbinger of death. Fรฉar Gortach is a folklore tale of a cursed patch of land where if you tread, you are doomed to die… Continue reading Irish Folklore: Fรฉar Gortach

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Sumerian Mythology: Ereshkigal

Ereshkigal in Near Eastern mythology (Babylonian โ€“ Assyrian) was the goddess of the underworld, married to the war god Nergal. Ereshkigal ruled over the Mesopotamian realm of death. She is Inannaโ€™s sister, rival, or alter-ego as descriptions of her and her realm are found in the Sumerian hymn, The Descent of Inanna (available in English… Continue reading Sumerian Mythology: Ereshkigal