User talk:Volkandalici

GODDES MRELYA ‘’ᛗᚱᛖᛚᛖᛃᚨ’’

The date of its first appearance is found in legends from pre-millennium times.

Sturlusson's Edda (1179-1241) contains many of these legends. Only Snorri wrote the details of the creation of the mythology, which is based on a wide variety of sources.

It is rumoured to have been inspired by high priests to decorate churches and is known to have appeared in many different faiths.

In Greek mythology, her name is MARALY and she is said to be the lost daughter of Aphrodite (Greek: Ἀφροδίτη), heiress of the seas with her deep blue eyes and goddess of love.

According to another legend in Norse mythology, her name was Mrelya and she was the daughter of the goddess Freya, and sources quote the god Odin as saying that her pearl-coloured body was made from the cores of 5000 stars.

Goddess Mrelya's eyes are made of oceans, so when she gets angry, disasters such as tsunamis and floods are inevitable everywhere, so Viking kings make offerings to Goddess Mrelya before going on intercontinental sea voyages.

The famous Lord Ragnar Lothbrok offered various offerings and sacrifices, including human sacrifices, in gratitude to the Goddess Mrelya every spring, which falls on 25 June in today's calendar.

Although she has hundreds of names as a person about whom hundreds of stories have been told in every period and who has taken part in legends, the only person believed to be her today is Mrs Meral, aged 18 years and 2 months, living in A***** region of Turkey.