Search A Light In The Darkness

Tuesday, 6 October 2009

Sun Mythology I

In Norse mythology Sol and Mani, the Sun and the Moon, were chased by the wolf brothers Skoll and Hati. Solar eclipses were thought to occur when Skoll almost caught up to Sol. It was in fact fated that Skoll would one day catch and eat Sol, at which time her daughter would replace her. Skoll and Hati were the son’s of Fenrir, a wolf-shaped monster who in turn was eldest child to Loki, the malicious trickster god responsible for the death of Baldur the Beautiful, Odin’s son and god of Light.
The gods believed in a prophecy that Fenrir and his sons would bring about their doom and the end of the world. Known as Ragnarok, their doom would follow a severe ice age in which humanity would perish. Then Odin would lead the warrior gods of Asgard against the forces of evil led by Loki and including the giants, Fenrir, and his sons. After a terrible battle the universe itself would be destroyed and a new golden age ruled by the surviving gods, including Baldur, would ensue. In German, Ragnarok translates into "Götterdämmerung" (Twilight of the Gods), the last of Wagner’s four operas that comprise "Der Ring des Nibelungen," The Nibelungen Ring.

Although the Norse god Sol was also called Sunna or Sunne, the Sun itself was known as Alfrodull, or "Glory-of-Elves." The ancient Viking poems prophesy that on or after doomsday the Sun will bear a daughter who will be the new Sun, the luminous world to come. The poetic and oral literature of Iceland and our primary knowledge of ancient Norse paganism, the Eddas, say "One beaming daughter the bright Sun bears before she is swallowed by Fenrir; so shall the maid pace her mother’s way when the gods have gone to their doom."

The personification of the Sun in early Greek history was Helios, sometimes referred to as Helios Panoptes, the "all seeing." Like the Norse god Sol, Helios also drives a fiery chariot across the heavens. Helios had a son, Phaëton (or Phaëthon), whose friends didn’t believe him when he bragged that his father was the sun god. To prove it, Phaëton asked Helios to let him borrow the car (his chariot, the Sun) for a day. Because Helios had promised to give his son anything he asked for (talk about spoiled!), he eventually agreed. On the fateful day Phaëton panicked and lost control of the chariot. When it went too high the Earth began to freeze, and when it went too low the Earth was burned—supposedly how Africa got its deserts and the skin of its inhabitants became black. Finally Zeus had to intervene, striking the chariot with a lightning bolt, whereupon Phaëton was killed and fell into the River Po … read more