Norns
Norns
National Geographic Society
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The Norns (Old Norse: norn, plural: nornir) of Norse mythology are three dísirs by the names of Urd (the past), Verdandi (the being) and Skuld (what is to come).
They live beneath the roots of Yggdrasil, the world tree at the center of the cosmos (although some accounts have it that they dwell above the arch of the Bifrost Bridge), where they weave the Tapestry of fates. Each person's life is a string in their Loom, and the length of the string is the length of the person's life. Interestingly, Skuld was also the name of a Valkyrie.
Thus everything is preordained in the Norse Religion: even the gods have their own threads, though the norns do not let the gods see those. This clear subjection of the gods to a power outside their control and the implication that they, too, will have an End are major themes of the literature surrounding Norse mythology.
The three weaving crones who control Destiny exist at a deep mythic level, though probably not as old as the art of Weaving itself. The counterparts of the Norns among the Greeks were the Moirae, known to the Romans as the Parcae.
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In Macbeth by William Shakespeare, three witches called the Weird Sisters tell the protagonist about his destiny. Weird is derived from the Anglo-Saxon wyrd, which is cognate to Urd. The three weird sisters appears to have been a late version of the Norns.
The Norns are also alluded to as "one-eyed shrews" in Allen Ginsberg's poem, Howl.
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