Desdichado
Legend
Here's an idea I've had recently. Let's say that our fantasy world is a planet of a star in LMC, or SagDEG, or some other small galaxy that's a near satellite of a large spiral galaxy like the Milky Way. If so, the big spiral would literally dominate the night sky, and may even be easily visible during the day. The nucleus of the galaxy would be at least as bright and as big as the Moon in our sky, and the flocculent spiral arms would spread over nearly half the sky at night. You could probably easly make out the halo of fuzzy globular clusters easily with the naked eye (and tell what they are), and you might also be able to see other smaller satellite galaxies, and depending on your location within the small satellite galaxy, you might also have a relative paucity of stars.
What kinds of mythology would cultures on this world use to explain such an astonishing sight in their everyday night sky? My idea is that the human inhabitants of such a world are migratory; they traveled through some sort of gate to arrive here from a planet within the larger galaxy, and brought with them a small selection of their own animals and plants, which have since spread amongst completely alien flora and fauna. But that's so long ago that even legends barely hint at it, and certainly nobody has preserved that as a historical fact. So, whatever role the big spiral may once have had, is lost in the mists of time, and it's only the source of various myths as a magnificent portent in the heavens.
Any ideas?
What kinds of mythology would cultures on this world use to explain such an astonishing sight in their everyday night sky? My idea is that the human inhabitants of such a world are migratory; they traveled through some sort of gate to arrive here from a planet within the larger galaxy, and brought with them a small selection of their own animals and plants, which have since spread amongst completely alien flora and fauna. But that's so long ago that even legends barely hint at it, and certainly nobody has preserved that as a historical fact. So, whatever role the big spiral may once have had, is lost in the mists of time, and it's only the source of various myths as a magnificent portent in the heavens.
Any ideas?