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When it comes to ‘primary’ source material about Norse mythology, few are better than the Prose Edda—but everyone hates on its 13th-century Icelandic author, the infamous Snorri Sturluson. There’s plenty of good reasons for that, but I think people take for granted that he was much less salty than his Danish contemporary, Saxo Grammaticus. This raid is about their salty source material, how it helps us understand Norse mythology, and how later authors remembered/rewrote old lore for their own times.
Reminder: this raid is originally a YouTube video! If you want visual aids, wander here: youtube.com/@fjorntheskald
Looking for more to plunder? Try Fjorn’s website: fjorntheskald.com. He even offers interactive versions of his videos there!
♫ = “Firesong” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
When it comes to ‘primary’ source material about Norse mythology, few are better than the Prose Edda—but everyone hates on its 13th-century Icelandic author, the infamous Snorri Sturluson. There’s plenty of good reasons for that, but I think people take for granted that he was much less salty than his Danish contemporary, Saxo Grammaticus. This raid is about their salty source material, how it helps us understand Norse mythology, and how later authors remembered/rewrote old lore for their own times.
Reminder: this raid is originally a YouTube video! If you want visual aids, wander here: youtube.com/@fjorntheskald
Looking for more to plunder? Try Fjorn’s website: fjorntheskald.com. He even offers interactive versions of his videos there!
♫ = “Firesong” Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)