The Legend Of Herne The Hunter (an English Folklore) Explained

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  • čas přidán 14. 01. 2021
  • THE LEGEND OF HERNE THE HUNTER (an English Folklore) EXPLAINED:
    In English folklore, Herne the Hunter is a ghost associated with Windsor Forest and Great Park in the English county of Berkshire.
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    #mythology #mythologyexplained #hernethehunter #herne #legends

Komentáře • 35

  • @chetia666
    @chetia666 Před 2 lety +23

    Those who have watched 'Robin of Sherwood' almost 30 years ago will surely know who 'Herne the hunter' was. Savior of the people of Sherwood from an evil Sheriff of Nottingham.

    • @conorwhite2066
      @conorwhite2066 Před rokem +1

      Brilliant tv series btw.. when I used to watch it Herne used to terrify yet mystify me

  • @danielaherne1605
    @danielaherne1605 Před 3 lety +22

    believe me people do also worship Cernunnos

    • @feddy11100
      @feddy11100 Před 3 lety

      I met him. Took a heroic dose a while back... It was, interesting and a bit frightening. It lives within us all.

    • @Celt-starseed
      @Celt-starseed Před 3 lety +6

      Yes Cernunnis was recognised throughout the ancient Celtic nations.

    • @Cernunnos_83
      @Cernunnos_83 Před 3 lety +1

      @Punyo Dumer Now you did.

    • @vojtazaruba5230
      @vojtazaruba5230 Před rokem

      Me for example.... :D

    • @jakemcnamee9417
      @jakemcnamee9417 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Moved to America.
      Love in an area with lots of see and elk. I saw him in my mind when I went out planting at night, just a flash image in my head.
      I am convinced he resides everywhere such animals are prevalent. I don't know much about him, but I respect him and know he is a great deity. Feels good to love around an area where a deity resides

  • @brightbite
    @brightbite Před 3 lety +35

    There is a version of the story which suggests that Herne died fighting a white stag which nearly killed Herne's king. So Herne fought the stag off to save the king, and died in place of the king. We know that it is written that there is no greater love than to die for a friend. Once you see it in that way, it is difficult to conflate Herne with the devil.

    • @Jonesy32188
      @Jonesy32188 Před 2 lety +1

      Citations?

    • @Abeturk
      @Abeturk Před rokem +1

      The names of some organs
      it's used as the suffix for nouns, “Ak”= ~each one of both
      (Yan= side) (Gül= rose) (Şek=facet) (Dal=subsection, branch) (Taş=stone)
      Yan-ak= each of both sides >Yanak=the cheek
      Kül-ak = each of both roses >Kulak= the ear
      Şek-ak = each one of both sides of the forehead >Şakak= temple
      Tut-ak=dudak=the lip
      Dal-ak=dalak=the spleen
      Böbür-ak=böbrek=the kidney
      Paça-ak=bacak= the leg
      Paty-ak=(phathy-ak>hadyak>adyak)=Ayak= the foot > each of the feet (pati = paw)
      Taş-ak=testicle
      Her iki-ciğer.=Akciğer=the lung
      Tül-karn-ak =that obscures/ shadowing each of both dark/ covert periods= Karanlık (batıni) çağların her birini örten tül
      Zhu'l-karn-eyn=the (shader) owner of each of both times
      Dhu'al-chorn-ein=double horned one=(the horned hunter)Herne the hunter= Cernunnos = Cornius

    • @brightbite
      @brightbite Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@Jonesy32188 englishhistoryDOTnet, "Herne The Hunter & The Wild Hunt." That is just one version of the story. In other versions I have read, he does die and is revived.

  • @brandonbeedle5278
    @brandonbeedle5278 Před rokem +3

    I am convinced that the pop culture version of the Wendigo is an Americanized version of Herne the Hunter.

  • @seanhuds229
    @seanhuds229 Před rokem +1

    When I was a child, my father owned a Hawk whom he named Hern. Makes perfect sense to me now as we used to hunt with him.

  • @tishainess9339
    @tishainess9339 Před 2 lety +1

    Just discovered this channel recently... It's quickly become my favorite ❤️thank you for feeding my lust for comparative mythology and bringing these awesome and enlightening tales to all 🥰

  • @itarry4
    @itarry4 Před 3 lety +7

    There's many different myths on the wild hunt, it's not always Odin. It totally depends on the place and time the myth was being told. You can trace its travel around Europe mostly as it went from place to place with travellers and was then adapted by that culture to fit with their views on the world. Sometimes it was death himself, usually at times of famine, sometime a hunter who was being punished for something. I find the way different cultures adapt myths to fit as they need to be really interesting.

  • @BaritoneUkeBeast4Life
    @BaritoneUkeBeast4Life Před rokem +1

    Just a quick note, the author and narrator of this video like most people on CZcams and the internet mispronounce the name, Cernunnos in the same way that American basketball fans mispronounce the Boston Celtics. The correct way to pronounce Cernunnos is with a hard K so it is pronounced: Care-new-knows.

  • @hubertkatupa1811
    @hubertkatupa1811 Před 3 lety +3

    Am waiting...

  • @cameronhansen3637
    @cameronhansen3637 Před 3 lety +6

    Ive been searching for the story of Berwyn. I cant find it anywhere all I've found is that berwyn was with White hair and the Legendary son of Kerenhyr but i have yet to find any storied about either. Im on this search because Berwyn is middle name and ive always been told by my father it was a strong gaelic name and im just trying to learn about it. I was hoping you could either do a vid or tell me where i can find a story about any of it. Thankyou i love your story telling voice.

    • @jakemcnamee9417
      @jakemcnamee9417 Před 10 měsíci

      Wish I could help the the modern internet is harder to use than the old internet.
      But would be interesting in creating a group fro archiving knowledge that the modern internet would obscure.

  • @Pat-Mustard
    @Pat-Mustard Před 2 lety +2

    Who else was brought to this site via Robin of Sherwood's Herne the Hunter?

    • @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn
      @KevenHutchinson-gt1nn Před 20 dny

      I have, I used to watch it on vhs in the 90s. Still watch them on DVD to this day.

  • @057_afifmarufnashrulloh6

    Thanks

  • @eddedd-ky5yi
    @eddedd-ky5yi Před 3 lety

    Herne The Hunter -- Zulkarneyin (2 hornes) are the same person..He is a time traveller..

  • @hallygibblets2747
    @hallygibblets2747 Před 2 lety

    a new RPG boss just dropped >.>

  • @martijnv6032
    @martijnv6032 Před 2 lety

    The Best Version 》Faithfullness ...

  • @thomasvieth6063
    @thomasvieth6063 Před 2 lety +1

    In Terry Pratchett Herne is a small stag the size of a rabbit and not very powerful

  • @danielaherne1605
    @danielaherne1605 Před 3 lety +3

    Thx for video, as I truly believe I am of his blood line

  • @thedragon5289
    @thedragon5289 Před 3 lety +7

    Uuuuuummmmm... let's just say that modern Celts and Celtic pagan based folk got em right. Go look up images of Pashupati and then come back.😉 I and many other Celtic descendants have always honored him as such, just like the Hindus do. strangely enough most of us recognize who he was even from childhood. His Image at the age of five felt safer than safe, righter than right, and known to me before a name was even uttered. And that's WAAAAAY before the internet was born!😆❤🦌

  • @teenygiant7006
    @teenygiant7006 Před 3 lety +3

    Nice voice 😂