Ragnarök

Scandinavian mythology
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Also known as: Götterdämmerung, Ragnorökkr
Old Norse:
“Doom of the Gods”
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Ragnarök, in Scandinavian mythology, the end of the world of gods and men. Ragnarök is a series of events and catastrophes that will ultimately culminate in a final battle between the gods and the demons and giants, ending in the death of the gods. The world is then reborn.

Meaning and literary sources

The term Ragnarök comes from ragna, which means “gods,” and rök, which means doom or end. Ragnarök could thus be taken to mean “the doom of the gods.” However, the spelling Ragnarøkkr is also used, which means “twilight of the gods.” The Ragnarök is described in the Icelandic poem Völuspá (“Sibyl’s Prophecy”), probably of the late 10th century and part of the Poetic Edda, and in the 13th-century Prose Edda of Snorri Sturluson (died 1241), which largely follows the Völuspá. The title of Richard Wagner’s opera Götterdämmerung is a German equivalent of Ragnarök meaning “twilight of the gods.”

The story of Ragnarök

The story of Ragnarök begins with the death of Balder, the god of light and the most widely beloved of Odin’s sons. When Balder foresees his death in a dream, his mother, Frigg, secures oaths from all creatures, as well as from fire, water, metals, trees, stones, and illnesses, not to harm her son. Only the mistletoe is thought too young and slender to take the oath. Through the machinations of the trickster Loki, the blind god Höd hurls a shaft of mistletoe at Balder, killing him. Hel, the goddess of death, promises that she would restore Balder to the world of the living if all things would weep for him. All do, except the giantess Thökk, who is none other than Loki in disguise.

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The slaying of Balder heralds an unusually harsh winter, called the Fimbulwinter (“Mighty Winter”), that lasts for three years. The scarcity of resources leads people to despair and violence, and the human population is almost completely wiped out. The Prose Edda relates that “over all the world there shall be mighty battles” and that “brothers shall slay each other for greed’s sake.” There is a constant twilight, and eventually the Sun, Moon, and stars are hidden from sight. The winter is followed by terrible earthquakes, which destroy the bonds and shackles that had contained the forces of darkness. The great wolf Fenrir and Jörmungandr, the Midgard serpent, are freed, and the monsters leave a trail of destruction in their wake. The sky splits apart, and Surtr, the fire giant, leads the sons of Muspelheim across Bifrost, shattering the rainbow bridge. Loki escapes his bonds beneath the earth and helms Naglfar, a ship made of the nails of dead men. As the Poetic Edda reads:

O’er the sea from the north | there sails a ship
With the people of Hel, | at the helm stands Loki
After the wolf | do wild men follow,
And with them the brother | of Byleist goes.

The ship is captained by Hrym, the leader of the frost giants. Also with Loki are the legions of Hel, walking corpses who had died shameful deaths. Loki’s legions, the sons of Muspelheim, Fenrir, and Jörmungandr, arrive at the battle plain of Vigrid. Heimdall, the watchman of the gods, sounds the Gjallarhorn, alerting the gods in Asgard, who then arm themselves and assemble at the world-tree Yggdrasill. There they are joined by the Einherjar, the warriors who died good deaths in battle.

The final conflict begins, in which Odin is swallowed by Fenrir, and Thor is poisoned by Jörmungandr as he kills it. Odin is avenged by his son Vidar (Víðarr), who pierces Fenrir’s heart, while Freyr is struck down by Surtr. Tyr faces the hellhound Garm (Garmr), and they kill each other. Finally, virtually all on the field are slain, save Loki and Heimdall, who mortally wound each other. Surtr raises his sword, and the world burns, save for Yggdrasill. This is captured in the Poetic Edda as:

The sun turns black, | earth sinks in the sea,
The hot stars down | from heaven are whirled
Fierce grows the steam | and the life-feeding flame,
Till fire leaps high | about heaven itself.

Thus, the world ends in darkness as the earth sinks into the sea. Afterward, the earth rises again, and a woman and a man, Lif and Lifthrasir, emerge from the world-tree and repopulate the land. A few gods survive. Odin’s sons Vidar and Vali are unharmed by Surtr’s fire or the depths of the sea, and they establish a dwelling at the Plains of Ida, the former site of Asgard. Thor’s sons Modi and Magni retrieve the hammer Mjollnir and join them there, as do the resurrectedBalder and his brother Höd. This new pantheon is then worshipped by the world of humans. The Poetic Edda relates:

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Now do I see | the earth anew
Rise all green | from the waves again
The cataracts fall, | and the eagle flies
And fish he catches | beneath the cliffs.

The reference to the names Lif and Lifthrasir appears in the poem Vafthruthnismol (“The Ballad of Vafthruthnir”), also part of the Poetic Edda.

Archaeological record

Numerous treatments of Ragnarök have been discovered in the archaeological record. Thorwald’s Cross, a runestone found on the Isle of Man and dated to the 11th century, shows a man with a bird on his shoulder pointing a spear at a wolf, with one leg in the wolf’s mouth. This is considered a depiction of Odin being eaten by Fenrir at Ragnarök. The other side of the stone shows a figure next to a Christian cross, by a fish and a defeated serpent. The stone thus shows both pagan and Christian beliefs. The Ledberg stone, an 11th century stone found in Sweden, also shows a man with his foot at the mouth of a four-legged beast and is thus considered a depiction of Odin being eaten by Fenrir.

Ragnarök in popular culture

The 21st century has seen several depictions of Ragnarök in popular media. The 2013 Norwegian movie Gåten Ragnarok follows an archaeologist who finds a mythical serpent. Thor: Ragnarok (2017) presents the Marvel Cinematic Universe’s interpretation of the Asgardian apocalypse. Thor, played by Chris Hemsworth, faces the dual threats of Cate Blanchett’s Hela (who wishes to rule Asgard) and the fire demon Surtur (who seeks to destroy it). The 2022 sequel, God of War: Ragnarök, to Santa Monica Studio’s PlayStation 2018 video game God of War has the protagonist Kratos fighting Norse gods and creatures. The Norwegian TV series Ragnarok (2020–23) is set in the present day in the fictional town of Edda. It features a boy who is the reincarnation of Thor, fighting climate change and industrial pollution which are destroying the planet.

Sanat Pai Raikar