The Connection Between Lost Israel and the Norse Homeland
An
Ancient Answer
To An Age-Old
Question
Evidence
Of Lost
Where is lost Israel? Bible readers throughout the
Christian centuries have pondered the fate of the ten tribes of the
House of Israel who vanished into Assyrian exile in the 7th century,
B.C. There is no shortage of modern ideas concerning their fate,
but the real answer to this historic riddle lies hidden not far beneath
the surface of ancient annals found in
Theses annals are the Norse sagas, which concern events
dating back into prehistory, passed down by word of mouth and embellished
with mythological elements over time. Yet it is not difficult to
see the underlying course of events they describe, even though not
written down until over a millennium later.
The book, “Ruling Races of Prehistoric Times” discusses
the significance of the ancient sagas. These ancient accounts “tell us of the earliest ages of civilization” and
present to us the early “life of the nations, whose home was bounded by the Indian Ocean, the
Caspian and
ASGARD
IN MIDGARD, OR MEDIA
The Norse homeland was a city called Asgard, which
was located within a region called by the sagas, Midgard. “The Gods gave them Midgard for a home,” says
author Sigvart Sorenson. (
For example, “Etymons Of English
Words,” by John Thomson states that “according to Gothic authors, Asgard, in Media, the ancient capital of our
forefathers... is called Aderkind [or] Azerkind by the Persians... Kind in the Persian name is
the Gothic gard, Russian gorod,
an enclosure.” (pp. 7-8) Thomson also adds, “The Massagetae were so named... from Saxon Maethas, the Medians.” (p.9) The Massagetae were
one branch of the Getai or Goths, later
known in Europe by other names such as Angles, Saxons, and Norse,
and the name indicates their place of origin in Media. Historian
Sharon Turner commented that the existence of hundreds of Medo-Persian
words in the Saxon language was due to their former residence there. (History of
the Anglo-Saxons)
The word, Norse, means “northern people,” because their
final destination was Scandinavia in
THE HEBREW CONNECTION
Links
between
The word, Asgard, itself
means the “city of the Asa.” The word
“Asa” or “Asen,” means the “god-men”
or, more properly, “the people of God,” a distinctive term used by
the Israelites. (Judg.
20:2;
The
Hebrew connection with the Norse or Goths is shown by Boyd Dawkins,
in “Early Man In
John
Thomson adds, “The Celtic language,
including the Hellenic and Latin dialects is supposed to have been
general throughout
This
Celtic idolatry was itself an important mark of identification. Du Challu, in “The Viking Age” (ii:44) reveals that
“Odin was originally a Jotun [ie.,
powerful man] and it would appear from the mythological literature
of the North that, for some reason, he wished to found a new religion.” The
House of Israel was banished from
Norse heroes provide additional evidence of a Hebrew
identification. “Helgi,
the holy one (German heilige), [was]
the son of Halfdan, the half of father Dan, the judge.”(Ruling Races,
p.96) The word, Dan, means
judge in Hebrew, and Dan was the progenitor of one of
We
also find that giants play a significant part in the Norse sagas,
which may be a remembrance of one of the best-known Bible stories:
David’s victory over Goliath. Our English word, colossus, is derived
from the word, Gollius, the Hebrew form of the name Goliath. The sagas
even tell us that, “Asgard is
a place where giants are refused admittance.” Did these mythological
giants receive life and inspiration from an early Bible story that
we still treasure today?
Ancient
mythology is far more than just fictional storytelling. It is a cultural
remembrance of the remote past as well as the travels and deeds of
our ancestors. This study has only scratched the surface of a deeper
analysis yet to be completed in book form.