Fenrir is a large and fierce wolf. He is a son of Loki.
Fenrir is a large and fierce wolf.
A large, fierce wolf. He killed Odin in the battle of Ragnarok.
Father over all, kind of like The God in the Christianity religion.
Norse or Scandinavian mythology comprises the myths of north Germanic pre-christian religion. Most of the written sources for Norse mythology were assembled in medieval Iceland in Old Norse, notably as the Edda. Norse mythology is the best-preserved version of wider Germanic Paganism, which also includes the closely related Anglo-Saxon and continental varieties. Germanic mythology can be shown to preserve certain aspects attributed to common Indo-European Mythology. Norse mythology has its roots inProto-Norse Iron Age Scandinavian prehistory. It flourishes during the Viking Age and following the Christinization of Scandinavia during the High Middle Ages passed into Scandinavian folklore, some aspects surviving to the modern day.
The Norse god of the sea - the Norse mythology was what denmark believed at in old days - was Njord. Njord was the farther of Freya and Frey. The giants have also some kind of a goddes of the sea, and she was named Ran.
Grover Underwood was not a god. He was a satyr. In Greek mythology, a satyr was a creature that was half man and half goat.
There isn't one, but multiple; The Norns are female entities that rule over the destiny of men as well as other gods. Supposedly the Norns appear when a person is born and determine that person's entire future, good or bad.
One kind of creature that is a producer for me is a hawk
A Fuanglong doesn't exist, however, a Fucanglong is a dragon in Chinese mythology, which lives underground, and creates volcanoes to send messages to heaven.
They were called longships.
a Caribbean sea creature
Ratchet is a fictional creature called a Lombax
bird