Mythology, Legends, Folklore and Mysterious Things  



Click on Images for Information






 






 









The Germanic people have traditionally celebrated Yule. Researchers have linked the first Yule festivities to the Wild Hunt, the God Odin, and the paganic Anglo-Saxon Mōdraniht i.e. Mothers Night. Yule-related words are still used to depict Christmas and other holiday period in English and the Scandinavian languages, in addition to Finnish and Estonian. The Yule log, Yule goat, Yule boar, Yule singing and other rituals and customs associated with Christmas today may have ties to earlier pagan Yule festivities. The current equivalent of the Old Norse words Jól and Jólnir for Odin is Yule. The Germanic people also commemorate Yule, a native winter holiday. The Yule-tide phase extends roughly two months, occurring at the conclusion of the modern-day calendar year during what is now mid-November and early January, and was first mentioned in epithet of month names. The etymology of the word is still unknown, despite various hypothetical efforts to locate Indo-European cognates outside of the Germanic linguistic family. Early in the history of the Germanic people, Yule is mentioned; in a Gothic language calendar from the fifth to sixth centuries, it has been referred to as Fruma Jiuleis. In the eighth century, the English historian Bede stated that the Anglo-Saxon calendar contained the months of Geola or Giuli, which correlate to either the current month of December or the months of December and January both. According to scholars, the Yule season, the Wild Hunt, the God Odin and an upsurge in paranormal activity are all related to this month-event. The celebration of Mōdraniht, a combined female-being-focused festival, which Bede attested to have taken place among the pagan Anglo-Saxons on what is now Christmas Eve, has been further viewed as more proof of a fertility event during the Yule season. Most people believe that the festivities surrounding Yule revolved around Midwinter with practises like feasting, drinking and sacrifice i.e. Blót.

This article uses text information from the Wikipedia article – Yule – [Wikipedia-Article-Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yule ] which is released under the -- Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License – [License-Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_Creative_Commons_Attribution-ShareAlike_4.0_International_License ] [List of Principal Authors (5 or less) of the Wikipedia-Article on the date of this Article being Created in this Website: - Bloodofox, Ingwina, Anupam, Skyerise, TylerBurden] [Use the following Authorship tool to find out the author contributions:- https://xtools.wmcloud.org/authorship ] [The Current Article on this Website has been paraphrased from the above linked corresponding Wikipedia-Article and You may redistribute this, verbatim or modified, provided that you comply with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License] [License-Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_Creative_Commons_Attribution-ShareAlike_4.0_International_License ]

[Image: AI generated art of Germanic Yule Festival] [Please Also Relate to Original Individual Text and/or Image URLs (if applicable) for More Usage Property and Sharing, Remixing or Attributing the Contents] [Contents on Wikipedia is covered by – Disclaimer – Wikipedia-Disclaimer-Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:General_disclaimer ] [Contents in this Website is also covered by Disclaimer linked at the bottom of the Page] [This website article means no intellectual appropriation by any way and only wishes to contribute in sharing of knowledge]












 




  Mythology, Legends, Folklore and Mysterious Things  



Click on Images for Information





 





Disclaimer   Privacy Policy   Disclosure   User-Manual   Contact   About Us