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Ragnarok, in Norse mythology, the battle at the end of the
world; literally, "doom of the divine powers." According
to the Norse tradition, at the end of the world, there would
be a terrible battle between the forces of good and evil. The
gods and their allies would fight to the death against their
longtime foes, the giants and monsters. Not only would the gods
and giants perish in this apocalyptic conflagration, but everything
in the universe would be torn asunder.
In the Viking warrior societies, dying in battle was a fate
to admire, and this was carried over into the worship of a pantheon
in which the gods themselves were not everlasting, but would
one day be overthrown, at Ragnarok. Exactly what would happen,
who would fight whom, and the fates of the participants in this
battle were well known to the Norse peoples from their own sagas
and skaldic poetry. The 'Voluspa' (Prophesy of the Seeress),
the first lay of the 'Poetic (or Elder) Edda', dating from about
1000 AD, spans the history of the gods, from the beginning of
time to Ragnarok, in 65 stanzas. The 'Prose (or Younger) Edda',
written two centuries later by Snorri Sturluson, describes in
detail what would take place before, during, and even after the
battle.
Signs of the coming of Ragnarok would be apparent to all.
First, there would be great strife for three winters, during
which the social fabric would break apart; brothers would kill
brothers, fathers and sons would murder each other, vows would
no longer be kept, and depravity and chaos would increase everywhere.
Next, three winters would occur together with no summer between
them. This would be the Fimbul Winter (Mysterious, or Monstrous,
Winter); a pervasive snow would fly in all directions, accompanied
by terrible frost and blizzard-sharp winds.
The wolf who perpetually chased the sun would catch and swallow
it, and the other sky wolf would catch the moon. The stars would
disappear. Then the whole Earth would shake, trees would be uprooted,
and the mountains would fall, causing all fetters and bonds to
snap and break. This would free the monsters--including the wolf
Fenrir and his father, Loki--who had been bound by the gods.
Fenrir's eyes and nostrils would burn with fire, and the gaping
jaws of his open mouth would scrape Earth and heaven. The ocean
would surge up onto the lands because another of Loki's sons,
the serpent Jormungand, would rise up from its deep ocean bed
onto the land in a rage, bespattering the sky and sea with his
poison. The grisly boat Naglfar, made of the nails of dead men,
would be loosed from its moorings, and would carry an army of
frost giants, with their captain, Hrym, at the helm. Amid this
turmoil, the sky would open and from it would ride the fire giants,
led by Surt with his blazing sword. Everything in their path
would go up in flames. The fire giants would ride over Bifrost,
the Rainbow Bridge leading to heaven, collapsing it in flames
as they crossed.
The forces of evil, including Loki, leading an army of all
the souls who had been in Hel, would gather on an enormous field
called Vigrid. Heimdall would be the first of the gods to see
the enemy approaching, and he would blow mightily on Gjallarhorn
to alert all the gods. They would quickly hold a parliament,
and Odin would ride to Mimir's well to consult Mimir on his own
and his people's behalf. Then the World Tree, the ash Yggdrasil
that connects and supports all parts of the universe, would groan
and shake, and all creatures would become fearful. The Aesir
gods would don their battle dress. Odin would lead the Einherjar,
the souls of dead heroes, into the battle, wearing his golden
helmet, his coat of mail, and carrying his spear, Gungnir. Thor
would advance at Odin's side.
Odin would attack the gigantic wolf Fenrir. Thor would not
be able to help his father because he would be engaged by his
old enemy Jormungand. Frey would fight Surt and be killed for
lack of his magic sword. The hellhound Garm would fight Tyr and
they would kill each other. Thor would be victorious over the
serpent, but would fall to the ground dead himself from the poison
the serpent spit at him, after stepping away just nine paces
from its body.
Fenrir would swallow Odin. Immediately Odin's son Vidar would
come forward and step on the wolf's lower jaw. With one hand
he would grasp the wolf's upper jaw and tear apart its mouth,
killing it at last. Loki would battle the god Heimdall, and both
would die. After that, Surt would fling fire over the Earth and
burn the whole world. Humans would perish along with the gods
and all other creatures. But evil would perish also, and according
to both Eddas, a better, peaceful universe would coalesce after
the destruction of the old.
A new Earth would arise out of the sea, green and growing,
and crops would grow without having been sown. The meadow Idavoll,
in the now-detroyed Asgard, would have been spared. The sun would
reappear because before being swallowed by the wolf, Alfrodul
(another name for the sun) would give birth to a daughter as
fair as she herself, and this maiden daughter would ride her
mothers road in the new sky.
A few gods would also have survived: Odin's sons Vidar and
Vali; Thor's sons Modi and Magni, who would now have their father's
magic hammer, Mjolnir; and most importantly, Balder and his brother
Hod, who would come up from Hel and dwell in Odin's former hall
in the heavens. These survivors would sit down together, discuss
their mysteries, and talk of the things that had happened. In
the grass at Idavoll, they would find the golden pieces the Aesir
had used in playing at draughts.
Humans would reappear because two of them, Lif and Lifthrasir,
would have survived by hiding themselves during the cataclysm,
in a place called Hoddmimir's Holt, a small thicket of trees.
They would live on morning dew and would repopulate the world
of humans and worship their new pantheon of gods, led by Balder.
There would still be many halls to house the souls of the
dead. According to the 'Prose Edda', another heaven existed south
of and above Asgard, called Andlang, and a third heaven further
above that, called Vidblain; and these places would offer protection
while Surt's fires burned the world. According to both 'Eddas',
after Ragnarok, the hall of Gimle would be the best place to
be in heaven. Brimir, another place in heaven, would be a hall
where plenty of good drink would be served. A hall called Sindri,
built of red gold, would house the souls of the good and virtuous.
The 'Prose Edda' also mentions Nastrand (or Nastrond, "Corpse
Strand"), a large hall facing north whose walls would be
woven of snakes. The snakes' heads would all face the interior
of the hall, spitting poison, so that rivers of poison flowed
inside. Here the souls of murderers and oath-breakers would be
forced to wade through these streams of poison forever. And in
the worst place of all, Hvergelmir, the serpent Nidhogg, also
an apparent survivor of Ragnarok, would torment the bodies of
the dead
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