It is a series of events in the Old Norse canon that describe the fall of the gods and the submersion of the world in water, from which only two humans will survive.
You could say it's the Norse myth version of the Book of Revelation.
Norse Mythology originated in early Scandinavia.
The chief god of Norse mythology is Odin.
Norse mythology, or you can also say the myths of Scandinavia.
Norse mythology comes from early Scandinavia.
I can't seem to find a reference to Ijosalfa in Norse mythology.
Ragnarok took place in Norse mythology
Ragnarok is the end of the world according to the Norse mythology. Ragnarok Online is a game based on this mythology, hence the name
The final battle in Norse Mythology is known as Ragnarok.
Ragnarok is another name for the Norse armageddon, which is a series of events that results in the end of the world in Norse mythology.
The apocolypse in Norse Mythology is called Ragnarok.
The end of all things in Norse mythology was an event called Ragnarok.
Ragnarok is the Norse term for the doom of the gods and the end of the world as we know it.
Ragnarok wasn't a god/or a being. In Norse Mythology Ragnarok, was the predestined death of the Germanic Gods. Ragnarok marks the end of the old world and the beginning of the new.
Fenrir is a powerful wolf that is a son of Loki. In Ragnarok it killed Odin.
John Stanley Martin has written: 'Ragnarok' -- subject(s): Norse Eschatology, Norse Mythology
A large, fierce wolf. He killed Odin in the battle of Ragnarok.
Ragnarok is Norse mythology. From Norway or Sweden, or those countries in that area. It is a final battle of good and evil, and the destruction of gods