Forwarded from Salgofnir
Strive to become the best version of yourself and remember who you are 🔱
Follow @Salgofnir for motivational quotes and ancestral wisdom.
https://www.instagram.com/p/DGlJ72PNcCJ/?igsh=cXg5NWl0OXlpMHV6
Follow @Salgofnir for motivational quotes and ancestral wisdom.
https://www.instagram.com/p/DGlJ72PNcCJ/?igsh=cXg5NWl0OXlpMHV6
Forwarded from 𝐸𝓊𝓇𝑜𝓅𝑒𝒶𝓃𝒱𝑜𝓁𝓀 (𝑊𝑜𝑢𝑡𝑒𝑟𝑠゚・:*✿ ㅤ)
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Forwarded from Æhtemen
Settlement from the Neolithic Age and from the Iron Age (folk wanderings) by artist Karl Jensen for the book Antiquity of Scandinavia By T. Sillasen 1925.
Forwarded from 𝐸𝓊𝓇𝑜𝓅𝑒𝒶𝓃𝒱𝑜𝓁𝓀
Men-an-Tol is a mysterious monument located in Cornwall, United Kingdom. It is one of Cornwall's most enigmatic and iconic ancient structures. Also known as the "Crick Stone", it is estimated to date back to the Neolithic or early Bronze Age. It undoubtedly served some sort of ceremonial or astronomical purposes and may be the remains of an ancient stone circle. There are many legends associated with it. It is said to represent a portal to the realm of the fey folk. Other legends tell us that it has miraculous healing powers. It is also said that a woman can achieve pregnancy with ease if she crawls through the holed stone seven times backwards on a full moon night.
@europeanvolk
@europeanvolk
Forwarded from ᛉ Sagnamaðr Stark ᛉ
The Old English term freca was a cognate of Old Norse Freki, used to mean brave rather than ravenous, and was used for warriors; perhaps denoting cultic wolf warriors.
In Beowulf, terms for warriors included scyldfreca (shield-hero), sweordfrecan (swordsman), hildefrecan (battle-hero), and freca Scyldinga (Scylding’s hero).
There is another Old Norse term likely cognate to Freki; frœkna/frœkinn, meaning valiant, used in the titles of the Sigrgarðs saga frœkna and Friðþjófs saga hins frœkna. The Old English equivalents were frecne/frecna, meaning dangerous, fierce, or also bold.
https://www.group-telegram.com/AEHTEMEN/2219
In Beowulf, terms for warriors included scyldfreca (shield-hero), sweordfrecan (swordsman), hildefrecan (battle-hero), and freca Scyldinga (Scylding’s hero).
There is another Old Norse term likely cognate to Freki; frœkna/frœkinn, meaning valiant, used in the titles of the Sigrgarðs saga frœkna and Friðþjófs saga hins frœkna. The Old English equivalents were frecne/frecna, meaning dangerous, fierce, or also bold.
https://www.group-telegram.com/AEHTEMEN/2219
When it comes to it’s medicinal properties, I personally use Fennel Seeds for heartburn/stomach acid. I pair it with clove, and it actually works really well. I know it’s not for everyone, but I take this naturally remedy by simply chewing a pinch of organic non-gmo fennel seeds and two cloves. Others can take it in however they like. You can make a tea with it, a tincture, or whatever way works for you.
I totally agree with this post on human sacrifice, but I can’t say about animal sacrifice. Based on all my research I don’t believe pagan ethnic Europeans performed human sacrifice. If they have, it was some rare cases of specifically criminals, or maybe prisoners of war.
As far all pre-Christian Europeans collectively practicing animal sacrifice, this I think was done, but it wasn’t any different than any other time they had to slaughter an animal for food.
Did they sacrifice their animals to make a cruel spectacle out of how that animal suffered as it was dying and bleeding out? No, I don’t think that’s how it was. I think back in those days everyone including little children must have seen at least a time or two an animal being slaughtered for food, so people back then were use to seeing that kind of a thing.
The gathering of people for animal sacrifice was probably for the purpose of witnessing the gift offered to whichever god.
For me personally seeing an animal sacrifice would be a very difficult thing to observe, and I’m just being totally honest here. Only because my great love for all animals. I consume seafood and chicken, and on occasion get a steak at my favorite steakhouse place, but I didn’t have to butcher these animals for their meat, I simply purchased the meat. Things like that make us today very different from our ancestors back then who had to grow their own food, raise and butcher their own animals. Two very different lifestyles that lead to two different perceptions of life.
Some Slavic researchers claim that there were no animals being sacrificed back then, only offerings of sweet breads, honey, mead, and wines, nuts and berries, things like that. Other Slavic researchers say that yes animal sacrifice was a thing.
According to actual written sources that were accepted by academia, animal sacrifice was a thing for Slavic people before Christianity, but the problem with these written sources is that they come from Christians who have almost succeeded at completely destroying the native pagan spiritual heritage of Slavic people, but thankfully they were not successful to completely destroy it, and many traces of it still exist today. So, these academic Christian sources cannot be trusted when they speak about Slavic paganism.
As far as archaeologists claim that they find various locations where animals were sacrificed by European pagans, I cannot trust that either, because it could be anything.
So my conclusion is that I don’t really know if my Slavic pagan ancestors sacrificed animals to their gods. I don’t see any strong evidence of it, but at the same time I don’t see that they would be against such a thing either, only because they were slaughtering animals left and right back in those days for food already.
As far all pre-Christian Europeans collectively practicing animal sacrifice, this I think was done, but it wasn’t any different than any other time they had to slaughter an animal for food.
Did they sacrifice their animals to make a cruel spectacle out of how that animal suffered as it was dying and bleeding out? No, I don’t think that’s how it was. I think back in those days everyone including little children must have seen at least a time or two an animal being slaughtered for food, so people back then were use to seeing that kind of a thing.
The gathering of people for animal sacrifice was probably for the purpose of witnessing the gift offered to whichever god.
For me personally seeing an animal sacrifice would be a very difficult thing to observe, and I’m just being totally honest here. Only because my great love for all animals. I consume seafood and chicken, and on occasion get a steak at my favorite steakhouse place, but I didn’t have to butcher these animals for their meat, I simply purchased the meat. Things like that make us today very different from our ancestors back then who had to grow their own food, raise and butcher their own animals. Two very different lifestyles that lead to two different perceptions of life.
Some Slavic researchers claim that there were no animals being sacrificed back then, only offerings of sweet breads, honey, mead, and wines, nuts and berries, things like that. Other Slavic researchers say that yes animal sacrifice was a thing.
According to actual written sources that were accepted by academia, animal sacrifice was a thing for Slavic people before Christianity, but the problem with these written sources is that they come from Christians who have almost succeeded at completely destroying the native pagan spiritual heritage of Slavic people, but thankfully they were not successful to completely destroy it, and many traces of it still exist today. So, these academic Christian sources cannot be trusted when they speak about Slavic paganism.
As far as archaeologists claim that they find various locations where animals were sacrificed by European pagans, I cannot trust that either, because it could be anything.
So my conclusion is that I don’t really know if my Slavic pagan ancestors sacrificed animals to their gods. I don’t see any strong evidence of it, but at the same time I don’t see that they would be against such a thing either, only because they were slaughtering animals left and right back in those days for food already.
Forwarded from Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)
Here's a tip, whenever the Bible says "Lamb" you can pretty much translate that to "Innocent" so our young are on the table. In fact our young are pretty much grade-a Prime Sacrifice material for their "Sin-Offerings" or whatever their word for it is.
Our Kind don't do Human and animal sacrifice, that would be the Abrahamics (Semites and Spiritual Semites). The Lack of it in our Lands is due to our peoples inherent disgust with such things. Not so for the Not-Us especially the Chosenites.
Yes, even Christianity when not done by our people still in touch with our nature will commit such atrocities. The entire Christian religion is based on a rather extreme version of this or at least the concept is. (Human sacrifice is considered the founding action after all)
None of the Abrahamism is yours, Christianity, Judaism, Islam and their ilk are just parasites that latch themselves onto our culture and people. No one likes biblically accurate Christianity because it is monstrous and anathema to our Kind. You have to mix the Pagan in for it to have any trace of nobility.
Our Empathy has run away with us and we assume that all others behave and think as we do. They do not. Many are monsters by the standard of Our Ways. Ranging from Cannibalism and Sexual Monstrosities to the above example of sacrifice of our children.
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P.S.- Several? Only Several?
🌲Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)🍄
Our Kind don't do Human and animal sacrifice, that would be the Abrahamics (Semites and Spiritual Semites). The Lack of it in our Lands is due to our peoples inherent disgust with such things. Not so for the Not-Us especially the Chosenites.
Yes, even Christianity when not done by our people still in touch with our nature will commit such atrocities. The entire Christian religion is based on a rather extreme version of this or at least the concept is. (Human sacrifice is considered the founding action after all)
None of the Abrahamism is yours, Christianity, Judaism, Islam and their ilk are just parasites that latch themselves onto our culture and people. No one likes biblically accurate Christianity because it is monstrous and anathema to our Kind. You have to mix the Pagan in for it to have any trace of nobility.
Our Empathy has run away with us and we assume that all others behave and think as we do. They do not. Many are monsters by the standard of Our Ways. Ranging from Cannibalism and Sexual Monstrosities to the above example of sacrifice of our children.
-
🌲Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)🍄
Forwarded from Aryan Paganism, Traditions and Art (APTA)
Greek myth illustrated by Severino Baraldi
Here this researcher talks about god Apollo’s association to wolf, and the more archaic worship of this god that revolved around war, hunt, and colonization. https://youtu.be/uyrBWIbZdDk?si=ksSTIcLcOWcyGP21
YouTube
Apollo the Wolf God
Apollo has long been considered a god of the sun, but his archaic depictions and associations do not easily fit this categorization. Might there be a darker and more mysterious origin of Apollo than many people realize? Looking at his association with the…