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RAGNARöK


Oðinn is getting eaten by Fenrir with his spear Gungnir while Surtr brandishes his sword. In the background, Thor wields his weapon Mjolnir against Jörmungandr. From ''The Death of Odin'', a Faroese postage stamp.

In Norse mythology, 'Ragnarök' ("Fate of the gods"[1]) is the battle at the end of the world. It will be waged between the Æsir, led by Odin, and the various forces of the Jötnar, including Loki. Not only will most of the gods, giants and creatures involved perish in this apocalyptic conflagration, but almost everything in the universe will be torn asunder.
In Viking warrior societies, dying in battle is the highest honour a man can attain. One earns an afterlife in Hel by dying in bed. One earns a place in Valhalla by dying, with honour, in battle. This is carried over into the worship of a pantheon in which the gods themselves will one day die in battle at Ragnarök. Exactly what will happen, who will fight whom, and the fates of the participants in this battle are well known to the Norse peoples from the sagas and skaldic poetry. The ''Völuspá'' — prophecy of the völva (sybil), the first lay of the Poetic Edda, dating from about the year AD 1000 — spans the history of the old gods, from the beginning of time to Ragnarök, in 65 stanzas. The ''Prose Edda'', put in writing some two centuries later by Snorri Sturluson, describes in detail what takes place before, during, and after the battle.
What seems eschatologically unique about Ragnarök is that the gods know through prophecy what is going to happen: when the event will occur, who will be slain by whom, and so forth. They even realize that they are powerless to prevent Ragnarök. But they still bravely and defiantly face their bleak destiny. This is thought by many scholars to represent the ordered world (the Æsir) eventually succumbing to the unavoidable forces of chaos and entropy (the giants).
The north portal of the Urnes stave church (11th cent.): "The intertwined snakes and dragons represent the end of the world according to the Norse legend of Ragnarök".[2]

Old Norse ''Ragnarök'' is a compound of ''ragna'', the genitive plural of ''regin'' ("gods" or "ruling powers"), and ''rök'' "fate" (etymologically related to English "reach"). Ragnarøkkr is another form which meaning is slightly different, as "røkkr" means "twilight".

Contents
Chronology
Prelude
Portents
Final battle
Aftermath and rebirth
See also
References
Notes

Chronology


Prelude

The main events that signify the approach of Ragnarök:
# The birth of three beings — the offspring of the God Loki and the Giantess Angrboda, namely Jörmungandr, Fenrir and Hel and the gods' subsequent actions to confine them;
# The death of the God Baldr and the binding of Loki;
# The arrival of Fimbulwinter.
Portents

Ragnarök will be preceded by the Fimbulwinter, the winter of winters. Three successive winters will follow each other with no summer in between. As a result, conflicts and feuds will break out, and all morality will disappear.
The wolves Sköll and Hati will finally devour Sól (the original Sun) and her brother Máni (the original Moon) respectively, after a perpetual chase. The stars will vanish from the sky, plunging the earth into darkness.
The earth will shudder, so violently that trees will be uprooted, and mountains will fall, and every bond and fetter will snap and sever, freeing Loki, the God of Mischief, and his ferocious son Fenrir. This terrible wolf's slavering mouth will gape wide open, so wide that his lower jaw scrapes against the ground and his upper jaw presses against the sky. He will gape even more widely if there is room. Flames will dance in his eye and leap from his nostrils.
Faroese stamp depicting the beginning of Ragnarök

Eggthér, watchman of the Jotuns, will sit on his grave mound and strum his harp, smiling grimly. The red cock Fjalar will crow to the giants and the golden cock Gullinkambi will crow to the Gods. A third cock,[3] rust red, will raise the dead in Hel.
Jörmungandr, the Midgard serpent, and Loki's other monstrous offspring will rise from the deep ocean bed to proceed towards the land, twisting and writhing in fury on their way, causing the seas to rear up and lash against the land. With every breath, the serpent will spew venom, staining the earth and the sky in poison.
From the east, the army of Jotuns, led by Hymir, will leave their home in Jötunheimr towards the battlefield of Vigrid (Óskópnir).
From the north, the grisly ship Naglfar (made from the nails of dead men), which will be set free by the tsunami and flooding caused by Jörmungandr will set sail towards Vigrid, with Loki, now unbound, as the helmsman, and Hel, with all those from her realm by the same name, as the deadweight.
The world will be in uproar, the air will quake with booms, blares and echoes. Amid this turmoil, the Fire Giants of Muspelheim, led by Surtr, will advance from the south and tear apart the sky itself as they too, close in on Vigrid. Surtr will brandish a fierce fire sword, the Sword of Revenge, that consumes everything in his path with flames. As Surtr and the others ride over Bifröst, the rainbow bridge will crack and break behind them. Garmr, the hellhound bound in front of Gnipahellir, will also get free. He will join the fire Giants on their march.
So all the Jotuns and all the inmates of Hel, Fenrir, Jörmungandr, Garm, Surtr and the blazing sons of Muspelheim, will gather on Vigrid. They will all but fill that plain that stretches one hundred leagues in every direction.
Meanwhile, Heimdall, being the first of the gods to see the enemies approaching, will blow his Giallar horn, sounding such a blast that will be heard throughout the nine worlds. All the gods will wake and at once meet in council. Odin will then mount Sleipnir and gallop to Mímir's spring and consult Mímir on his own and his people's behalf.
Then, Yggdrasil, the world tree, will shake from root to summit because the dragon Níðhöggr has chewed through its roots. Everything on the earth, in the heavens, and Hel will quiver. All Æsir and Einherjar will don their battle dresses. This vast host (800 men can stand abreast in each of Valhalla's 540 gates totaling in 432,000 warriors) will march towards Vigrid and Odin will ride at their head, wearing a golden helmet and a shining corselet, brandishing Gungnir.
Final battle

Tyr chaining Fenrir.

Odin will make straight for Fenrir; and Thor, right beside him, will be unable to help because Jörmungandr, his old enemy, will at once attack him. Freyr will fight the fire Giant Surtr, but will become the first of all gods to lose as he has given his own good sword to his servant Skírnir. It will still be a long struggle though, before Freyr will succumb. Tyr will battle Garm and each will slay the other. Likewise, Heimdall will fight Loki and neither will survive the evenly matched encounter.
Thor will kill Jörmungandr with his hammer Mjollnir, but only be able to stagger back nine steps before falling dead himself, poisoned by the venom that Jörmungandr spews over him. Odin will fight with his mighty spear Gungnir against Fenrir but will finally be eaten by the wolf after a long battle.
To avenge his father, Vidar will immediately come forward and place one foot on the wolf's lower jaw. On this foot he will be wearing the shoe which he has been making since the beginning of time; it consists of the strips of leather which men pare off at the toes and heels of their shoes. With one hand he will grasp the wolf's upper jaw and tear its throat asunder, killing it at last.
Then, brandishing the Sword of Revenge, Surtr will burn all Nine worlds with fire and he himself will be consumed by his own destruction. Death will come to all manner of things. Fumes will reek and flames will burst, scorching the sky with fire. The earth will sink into the sea.
Aftermath and rebirth

Barley will ripen in fields that were never sown. The meadow Idavoll, in the now-destroyed Asgard, will have been spared. The sun will reappear as Sol before being swallowed by Skoll, who will give birth to a daughter as fair as she herself. This maiden daughter will pursue her mother's road in the new sky.
Faroese stamp depicting the return of Baldur and Hodur

A few gods will survive the ordeal: Odin's brother Vili, Odin's sons Vidar and Váli, Thor's sons Móði and Magni, who will inherit their father's magic hammer Mjolnir, and Hœnir, who will hold the staff and foretell what is to come. Baldr and his brother Höðr (who both died prior to Ragnarök) will come up from Hel and dwell in Odin's former hall, Valhalla, in the heavens. Meeting at Idavoll, these gods will sit down together, discuss their hidden lore, and talk over many things that had happened, including the events surrounding the final rise of Jörmungandr and Fenrir. In the waving grass, they will find the golden chessboards that the Æsir used to own, and gaze at them in wonder. (None of the goddesses were mentioned in various accounts of the aftermath of Ragnarök, but there are assumptions that Frigg, Freyja and some of the other goddesses will survive.)
Two humans will also escape the destruction of the world by hiding themselves deep within Yggdrasil where Surtr's sword cannot destroy. They will be called Lif and Lifthrasir. Emerging from their shelter, they will live on morning dew and will repopulate the human world. They will worship their new pantheon of gods, led by Baldr.
There will still be many halls to house the souls of the dead. According to the 'Prose Edda', another heaven exists south of and above Asgard, called Andlang, and a third heaven further above that, called Vidblain; and these places will offer protection while Surtr's fire burns the world. According to both 'Eddas', after Ragnarök, the best place of all will be Gimli, a building fairer than the sun, roofed with gold, in the heaven. There, the gods will live at peace with themselves and each other. There will be Brimir, a hall on Okolnir ("never cold"), where plenty of good drinks will be served. And there will be Sindri, an excellent hall made wholly of red gold, on Nidafjoll ("dark mountains"). The souls of the good and virtuous will live in these halls.
The ''Prose Edda'' also mentions another hall called Náströnd ("corpse strand"). That place in the underworld will be vast: no sunlight will reach it; all its doors will face north; its walls and roof will be made of wattled snakes, with their heads facing inward, spewing so much poison that it runs in rivers in the hall. Here, oath breakers, murderers and philanderers will wade through those rivers forever.
Hvergelmir, and Níðhöggr, also a survivor of Ragnarök, will bedevil the bodies of the dead, sucking blood from them.
In this new world, misery will no longer exist and gods and men will live together in peace and harmony. The descendants of Lif and Lifthrasir will inhabit Midgard.

See also



Götterdämmerung

Muspilli

Skarpåker Stone

Armageddon

Poetic Edda

Prose Edda

References



Kenneth C. Davis' ''Don't Know Much About Mythology''

Notes


1. Snorri Sturluson in his Prose Edda spelled it ''Ragnarøkr'' (sometimes "Ragnarøkkr") which means "Twilight of the Gods", whence the German title of Wagner's work "Götterdämmerung." The phrase "Twilight of the Gods" is not, in fact, a latter day error of translation, but an error dating no later than the 13th century.
2. Quoted from: ''A World History of Architecture'', by Michael W. Fazio, Marian Moffett, Lawrence Wodehouse. McGraw-Hill Professional, 2003. ISBN 0071417516. Page 201.
3. The name of this cock is nowhere stated. In ''Völuspá'' it is only referred to as "the rust-red bird": "''And beneath the earth | does another crow, | The rust-red bird | at the bars of Hel ''".


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