Thule (myth)



         


Thule is, in the Greek and Roman mythologies, a place, usually an island, in the far north, perhaps Scandinavia. First mentioned by the Greek geographer and explorer Pytheas of MassalĂ­a (present-day Marseille) in the 4th century BC. Pytheas claimed that Thule was six days north of Britain, and that the midsummer sun never set there.

The most likely locale for Thule is nowadays considered to be the coast of Norway; other historians think it was the Shetland Islands, Faroe Islands or Iceland, however. In the Middle Ages, the name was sometimes used to denote Iceland.

Some Occult groups, most notably the German Thule Gesellschaft (ca. 1920) thought that it was the original source of the secret wisdom of the Aryan race.

Thule was also mentioned by Traditionalist author Julius Evola in connection with Hyperborea (literally, far north) and Atlantis.

The Romans used the generic phrase Ultima Thule to denote any distant place located beyond the "borders of the known world".


See also: Thule






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