The Above World: Reaching for the Sky in Native American Traditions

Painting by Albert Bierstadt, Wikimedia Commons. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Albert_Bierstadt_-_Indian_Canoe.jpg

The Sky World of Native American tradition refers to a parallel celestial universe located in the Sky. It is home to deities such as the Sun, the Moon and Morning Star, but ordinary people can sometimes access it in exceptional and magical circumstances.

King Herla and the Wild Hunt in Twelfth-Century England and Wales

Peter Nicolai Arbo, ‘Asgårdsreien’ (1872)

The ghostly “Wild Hunt” rampaged across European folklore as a company of supernatural huntsmen that often counted fairies and the dead among their number.

British Legends: Treachery, Murder, Lust and Rowena – The Rule of Vortigern

Illumination of a 15th century manuscript of Historia Regum Britanniae showing king of the Britons Vortigern and Ambros watching the fight between two dragons.

Vortigern was legendary 5th century King of the Britons featured in the work of early British writers such as Gildas, Nennius, Bede, Geoffrey of Monmouth and others.

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