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Topic ClosedGreek or Norse Mythology?

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Poll Question: Which do you prefer?
Poll Choice Votes Poll Statistics
12 [46.15%]
14 [53.85%]
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Jim Garten View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Greek or Norse Mythology?
    Posted: March 20 2013 at 12:02
Originally posted by CPicard CPicard wrote:

Yeah, but the last picture is a drawing. It would be better to have a recent photograph.


I would, but since an incident in her temple, there's a bit of a restraining order on me

AS FAR AS I WAS CONCERNED, I WAS WORSHIPPING HER!

Edited by Jim Garten - March 20 2013 at 12:02

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 20 2013 at 08:36
Originally posted by Jim Garten Jim Garten wrote:

Hmmmm -

Norse:



Bloody hell, Madonna's let herself go...

Greek:



Me vote Greek.


Yeah, but the last picture is a drawing. It would be better to have a recent photograph.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 20 2013 at 08:23
^ best post ever ClapLOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2013 at 08:08
Hmmmm -

Norse:



Bloody hell, Madonna's let herself go...

Greek:



Me vote Greek.

Jon Lord 1941 - 2012
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2013 at 04:16
Norse
and welcome to the forum Brynhild
rotten hound of the burnie crew
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 14 2013 at 04:07
Hey!

Definitly norse mythology!
If you guys are also interested in old norse myths and want to know more, I invite you to visit this FB page:

https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dreams-of-Valhalla/167530103397698

an iPad app will follow, and this is gonna be awesome!

Have fun, :)

Brynhild!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2012 at 05:02
It seems to me that the Vanir was the tribal set of God - where fertility/wisdom is the important aspects of life.
But noone knows for sure. 
Might also be 2 diffrent clans with diffrent religions melting together.
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2012 at 04:12
you have two types of pantheons in pre germanic north mythology, you have the Ęsir and the Vanir, Vanir was the North germanic and Ęsir was the western germanic, but in year 700 the continentual germanic was intruduced to the norther tribes, Ęsirs were a more war based and agressive pantheon of gods, while Vanir was a more nature loving and spiritual dietys, but they were fused together after this war Ęsir-Vanir War.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 25 2012 at 02:23
Originally posted by ole-the-first ole-the-first wrote:

Originally posted by Atkingani Atkingani wrote:

Haven't those mythologies, together with Celtic, Slavonic, Indo-Persian, etc, the same substrate or the same origin? I mean, peoples that lived in a certain area between Europe and Asia and are identified for sharing the same culture and speaking a common language, labelled the Proto-Indo European (PIE).

Later they dispersed and each mythology evolved separately but at least for me they are similar since they had the same craddle, dealing basically with anthropomorphic or zoomorphic characters.

Quite different are the mythologies of Americans (the originals) or some African peoples where the 'heroes' are associated with the powers of Nature: Sun, Moon, clouds, thunderbolts, rainbows and so on.




Yes, all the Indo-European mythologies, as well as languages, have had the same common origins.

Though in every mythology gods are simply personificated powers of nature. The concept of anthropomorphic gods came pretty lately.
When you live in tribes, with a flat structure, You will have mostly Gods of nature.
Moon, Sun, River, Thunder, Old Tree, Ocean, Mountain.
 
When you move into a more complex city based systemj (like the times of the known Norse & Greek myth) 
You still have nature gods, but more complex gods are added, God of Trade, God of poetry, Gods of War, God of justice, ect.
 
 
Prog is whatevey you want it to be. So dont diss other peoples prog, and they wont diss yours
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2012 at 18:45
Originally posted by Atkingani Atkingani wrote:

Haven't those mythologies, together with Celtic, Slavonic, Indo-Persian, etc, the same substrate or the same origin? I mean, peoples that lived in a certain area between Europe and Asia and are identified for sharing the same culture and speaking a common language, labelled the Proto-Indo European (PIE).

Later they dispersed and each mythology evolved separately but at least for me they are similar since they had the same craddle, dealing basically with anthropomorphic or zoomorphic characters.

Quite different are the mythologies of Americans (the originals) or some African peoples where the 'heroes' are associated with the powers of Nature: Sun, Moon, clouds, thunderbolts, rainbows and so on.




Yes, all the Indo-European mythologies, as well as languages, have had the same common origins.

Though in every mythology gods are simply personificated powers of nature. The concept of anthropomorphic gods came pretty lately.
This night wounds time.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2012 at 18:31
Originally posted by Atkingani Atkingani wrote:

Haven't those mythologies, together with Celtic, Slavonic, Indo-Persian, etc, the same substrate or the same origin? I mean, peoples that lived in a certain area between Europe and Asia and are identified for sharing the same culture and speaking a common language, labelled the Proto-Indo European (PIE).

Later they dispersed and each mythology evolved separately but at least for me they are similar since they had the same craddle, dealing basically with anthropomorphic or zoomorphic characters.

Quite different are the mythologies of Americans (the originals) or some African peoples where the 'heroes' are associated with the powers of Nature: Sun, Moon, clouds, thunderbolts, rainbows and so on.


The Greek and Norse gods were also associated with the powers of nature. Similarities in mythologies have a lot  to do with the thought processes of humans that invented them and how they use those processes to answer questions such as how does the Sun move across the sky, and that alone presents such a limited number of options and possibilities that the chances of separate populations arriving at the same solution (a Sun god - Sol, Sunna, Helios, Apollo, Awondo, Ra, Sekmet, Bast, Aten, Tonatiuh,  Ri Gong Ri Guang Pu Sa, Tai Yang Shen, Surya, Amaterasu) is quite high. The same is true of creation myths, and here it is the differences between the various mythologies are just as informative - The Norse gods created the Universe whereas the Greek gods were created by the Universe - here two possible options and they picked different solutions.
 
Regardless of when homo sapiens migrated into the Americas (30,000 or 14,000 years ago) they were the same as us in every physical way, with the same brain capacity and the same speech abilities for memory and story-telling, it is possible that the mythologies migrated out of Africa with them.
What?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2012 at 17:10
Haven't those mythologies, together with Celtic, Slavonic, Indo-Persian, etc, the same substrate or the same origin? I mean, peoples that lived in a certain area between Europe and Asia and are identified for sharing the same culture and speaking a common language, labelled the Proto-Indo European (PIE).

Later they dispersed and each mythology evolved separately but at least for me they are similar since they had the same craddle, dealing basically with anthropomorphic or zoomorphic characters.

Quite different are the mythologies of Americans (the originals) or some African peoples where the 'heroes' are associated with the powers of Nature: Sun, Moon, clouds, thunderbolts, rainbows and so on.


Guigo

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 24 2012 at 16:48
Always Greek mythology.
Everyone is going to visit Hades after death, but, at least, Greeks weren't waiting for some apocalypse ą la Ragnarok.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 23 2012 at 16:50
Both are good, but Norway reigns supreme.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 23 2012 at 13:42
Norse.
Haiku

Writing a poem
With seventeen syllables
Is very diffic....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 23 2012 at 07:21
Originally posted by Andy Webb Andy Webb wrote:

Jesus promised to end sin
Thor promised to banish the ice giants.

I don't see any ice giants.

Norse mythology: 1, Christianity: 0.
  a little bit out of context (Christianity having to do nothing with Greek mythology), but I give you credit as it is indeed funny LOLLOLLOL.
I won't vote as I am not very familiar with the Norse mythology (being Greek my vote would be biased).
I find mythology to be really inspiring for young people (better than modern age TV rubbish...) - kids should be taught more about these things...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 23 2012 at 06:00
Norse, o' course.  Ragnarok baybee!


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2012 at 21:03
Originally posted by Andy Webb Andy Webb wrote:

Jesus promised to end sin
Thor promised to banish the ice giants.

I don't see any ice giants.

Norse mythology: 1, Christianity: 0.


LOL

Caio had something similar to this in his sig a while ago, except it used atheism as the butt of the joke instead of Christians.  They're both really funny.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2012 at 19:53
Originally posted by Andy Webb Andy Webb wrote:

Jesus promised to end sin
Thor promised to banish the ice giants.

I don't see any ice giants.

Norse mythology: 1, Christianity: 0.


LOL

Heard that before, but still a classic.

I can understand your anger at me, but what did the horse I rode in on ever do to you?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: November 22 2012 at 19:19
LOL
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