gamehotpc
24th November 2017, 06:51
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLCcssH8hww
In Norse mythology, Rán (Old Norse perhaps "robber"[1]) is a goddess associated with the sea. According to Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, in his retelling of the Poetic Edda poem Lokasenna, she is married to Ægir and they have nine daughters together. Snorri also reports that she had a net in which she tried to capture men who ventured out on the sea: "Ran is the name of Ægir's wife, and their daughters are nine, even as we have written before. At this feast all things were self-served, both food and ale, and all implements needful to the feast. Th
http://shink.me/wcmgJ http://shink.me/q1aCM http://shink.me/G2DpU http://shink.me/ufHX3 http://shink.me/AVciz http://shink.me/Ahj4I
http://shink.me/cEhiG http://shink.me/Dk7OV http://shink.me/PEKeI http://shink.me/ih0X8 http://shink.me/Ddr3c http://shink.me/PDuOC
credit/pass https://xn--pc-lqi5ea3fzap5af9e2iwa3li.blogspot.com
In Norse mythology, Rán (Old Norse perhaps "robber"[1]) is a goddess associated with the sea. According to Snorri Sturluson's Prose Edda book Skáldskaparmál, in his retelling of the Poetic Edda poem Lokasenna, she is married to Ægir and they have nine daughters together. Snorri also reports that she had a net in which she tried to capture men who ventured out on the sea: "Ran is the name of Ægir's wife, and their daughters are nine, even as we have written before. At this feast all things were self-served, both food and ale, and all implements needful to the feast. Th
http://shink.me/wcmgJ http://shink.me/q1aCM http://shink.me/G2DpU http://shink.me/ufHX3 http://shink.me/AVciz http://shink.me/Ahj4I
http://shink.me/cEhiG http://shink.me/Dk7OV http://shink.me/PEKeI http://shink.me/ih0X8 http://shink.me/Ddr3c http://shink.me/PDuOC
credit/pass https://xn--pc-lqi5ea3fzap5af9e2iwa3li.blogspot.com