skip to content
 

Norse Myth in the Space Age: from Viking to Valhalla (Dr Dale Kedwards)

3:00pm-3:30pm on Saturday 22 March

Times shown are in GMT (UTC +0) up to the 26th March. For events on or after 27th March times are in BST (UTC +1).

Department of Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic, Room GR 06/07, 9 West Road, CB3 9DP

When NASA named their Mars mission the Viking program, they established the Viking voyages of exploration and settlement as a new metaphor for the exploration of our solar system.

This talk asks why the Middle Ages have been so appealing to the scientists whose work it is to understand the cosmos. It shows how medieval imagery has penetrated the deepest reaches of our solar system. On Jupiter’s moon Callisto, we will visit the largest impact crater in the solar system, Valhalla, which takes its name from the hall of the Norse god Óðinn, its air is sweet with the scent of mead and woodsmoke. On Jupiter's moon Io, we will encounter Surtr, a volcano named for a giant in Norse myth who wields fire, poetically described in Old Norse poetry as 'the harm of branches', against the gods at Ragnarök. And in the Earth's own ionosphere, we will meet a Norse god of the dawn, put there by space scientists to study the Sun's effects on the upper atmosphere.

In this talk, a specialist in Old Norse literature seeks to understand why planetary scientists and international space agencies use the Middle Ages to think about space and its exploration, and what this reveals about our cosmic imagination.

Telephone number:
Drop in welcome, no need to book

Booking/Registration is: RECOMMENDED

Additional Information

Age: Adults, Young Adults 12 – 18
Format: Talk
Timing: In person
Cost: Free
Event Capacity: 80
Theme: Society, Discovery
Accessibility: Step-free access, Accessible toilet

Download the PDF programme

Sign up for email updates

Get all the Cambridge Festival news straight from us to your inbox. Sign up to our mailing list now.

Festival FAQs

Got a question? Check out our FAQs here.

Image copyright: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona

You might also like...

Read more at: Exhibition - 'Curious Cures: Medicine in the Medieval World'

Exhibition - 'Curious Cures: Medicine in the Medieval World'

9:00am-6:30pm on weekdays from Sunday 30 March until Saturday 6 December
9:00am-4:30pm Saturday every week from Saturday 29 March until Saturday 6 December
Timing: 
In person
Format: 
Exhibition
Age: 
All Ages

How did people treat illness and live healthily many centuries ago? How was the body thought to function? And who studied and practised medicine?...

Follow us on socials