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Learnings: Blessing the Ship: Difference between revisions
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imported>Wagnike2 Created page with "{{Imageneed}} The keel, pictured here, was the backbone of the ship. According to legend, there was a christening ritual for boasts called "blooding the keel." The term seems..." |
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{{Imageneed}} | {{Imageneed}} | ||
The keel, pictured here, was the backbone of the ship. According to legend, there was a christening ritual for boasts called "blooding the keel." The term seems to hint at some kind of human or animal sacrifice to please the gods. However, it was likely just a metaphor. Metaphors and similes were often found in Norse poetry and legends. " | The keel, pictured here, was the backbone of the ship. According to legend, there was a christening ritual for boasts called "blooding the keel." The term seems to hint at some kind of human or animal sacrifice to please the gods. However, it was likely just a metaphor. Metaphors and similes were often found in Norse poetry and legends. "Blood in the keel" may have meant getting the ship's feet wet, or putting here in the water. | ||
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]] | [[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]] | ||
Revision as of 20:42, 21 December 2021
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The keel, pictured here, was the backbone of the ship. According to legend, there was a christening ritual for boasts called "blooding the keel." The term seems to hint at some kind of human or animal sacrifice to please the gods. However, it was likely just a metaphor. Metaphors and similes were often found in Norse poetry and legends. "Blood in the keel" may have meant getting the ship's feet wet, or putting here in the water.
