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4 posts tagged with sagas. (View popular tags)
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Health, Grooming, and Medicine in the Viking Age. "John of Wallingford, the abbot of St. Albans Abbey wrote in his chronicles that the Norse invaders in England were far more attractive to Anglo-Saxon women since, unlike Anglo-Saxon men, they combed their hair daily, took baths weekly, and laundered their clothing regularly."
posted by rodgerd
on Aug 19, 2010 -
48 comments
Narts! The Nart Sagas are arguably the most essential ingredient of Circassian Culture, to which they are what Greek mythology is to Western Civilization. Though much less known than their Greek counterparts, the Nart epic tales are no less developed. The heroism, sagacity, guile and ferocity of the Nart demi-gods are more than matches
to those of the Greek Pantheon. If this
selection of stories captures your interest, you might want John Colarusso's
Nart Sagas from the Caucasus; you can read the
introduction online ("A ship sailing across the Black Sea in the year 1780 eventually would have come upon a lush shore at the eastern end of the dark gray waters..."). Although they seem to have been brought by the
Ossetes (and J. Cassian is posting an Ossetian tale,
The Death of Soslan, on his
blog), they're
everywhere in the Northern Caucasus. And
some people say they were the source of the King Arthur stories.
posted by languagehat
on Dec 4, 2004 -
13 comments
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