sufi
lala
oh yes, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmad_ibn_Fadlan me and washyerhands were discussing that one here i thinkWatched the first two of these now and think I will soon watch the 3rd as well, cos he's left it hanging.
He is a bit pompous as you say, very pleased with himself and when he gets a bit excited and moves his hands about, he's good fun to watch.
I like how hes quite up front about them not knowing a lot about why things happened.
The funeral description is captivating, gets more and more serious, unhinged, disturbing. The part about the slave girl looking over the fabricated doorway into heaven, describing it all.
Then all the stuff with the animals. Plus how he reminds you it was all at night, when they're paralytically drunk, with fires burning.
And I love how the main source material is from an Arab who met them on the Volga in 922 AD. Like finding out that there was a cohort of Central European Roman soldiers very near my house in the 1st century AD.
And he does a good job in the first one of emphasising how all the non-human beings were very much "reality" for the children of the Ash.
Had no idea that viking Myth posited a place called Niflheim, literally "Home of mist". I thought I'd found all references to fog/smoke/mist/haze and then another comes along...
you know that the british isles are known as