A place for Aryan (European) Folkish Pagans
Kirik was at a loss of words and stared at the treasure for a short while. He turned his head looking for the old man in rags, but he was nowhere to be found. He got out of the hole and returned to the pot with a horse as it was too heavy for one man to lift. He rode to the city. There he bough some flour, millet and salo for his family. Riding back home he saw a crowd of priests gathered around his house. They have no doubt heard of Kirik’s miraculous find and were all very eager to conduct a burial for his child. The latter was performed at the local church with pomp and ceremony.
Читать полностью…Kirik
There was a poor peasant by the name Kirik. His child died and he came to the priest asking for a proper burial. The priest asked for money the man didn’t have. So poor Kirik took a shovel, went to the cemetery field and started digging. After some time an old man dressed in rags approached the hole. He asked Kirik why he was alone out in the field digging. After hearing the reason the old man told him to dig at another site down the road saying that it would be a much better place for the grave.
Getting ready for an interview with Henrik Palmgren of the famous Red Ice TV at the top of the hour, 5pm EST!
Be sure to tune in as we discuss Paganism in today's world, theological debates online and so much more!
I want to personally thank Henrik for the opportunity for a new and small channel to be on his show! Be sure to tune in and subscribe to /channel/redicetv and /channel/rediceuncensored and can't wait to see you all there!
Recently heard this Easter=Ishtar bs from a wiccan. Though the whole thing died a while ago, but apparently it didn’t.
Читать полностью…The belief in luck and good fortune is widely spread among Romanians…the beliefs in fairies coming at birth and deciding one's fate is still widely practiced. Romanians also believe that luck and fortune can be obtain by wearing different fetishes such us crucifixes, and four-leaf clovers.
Romanians also believe that good/bad luck or fortune/misfortune has to do with one's own determination and hard work in life.
Those who held this self deterministic view are urban and more educated persons who were told under communism that an equal and prosperous society is built only through hard work…
Florin Paul Botica
Romanian people claim to be Christian, attending church, praying to God, and observing other Christian rites and holy days. However, to deal with daily needs and issues, they also believe in and practice folk beliefs and customs, many of which are unbiblical…casting spells, witchcraft, divination, mediums and spiritists, magic, communing with the dead, and sorcery.
Many Catholics in Romania are nominal Christians who do not attend church regularly.
Florin Paul Botica
Silver pendant from Klahammar
Читать полностью…Cheiron the Centaur and Jason by William Russell Flint
Читать полностью…Centaur Leading a Procession
Norman Lindsay
Art of Bohdan Golovatsky
Читать полностью…They washed their hands and took up the barley-meal to sprinkle over the victims, while Chryses lifted up his hands and prayed aloud on their behalf. “Hear me,” he cried, “O god of the silver bow, that protectest Chryse and holy Cilla, and rulest Tenedos with thy might. Even as thou didst hear me aforetime when I prayed, and didst press hardly upon the Achaeans, so hear me yet again, and stay this fearful pestilence from the Danaans.”
Thus did he pray, and Apollo heard his prayer. When they had done praying and sprinkling the barley-meal, they drew back the heads of the victims and killed and flayed them. They cut out the thigh-bones, wrapped them round in two layers of fat, set some pieces of raw meat on the top of them, and then Chryses laid them on the wood fire and poured wine over them, while the young men stood near him with five-pronged spits in their hands. When the thigh-bones were burned and they had tasted the inward meats, they cut the rest up small, put the pieces upon the spits, roasted them till they were done, and drew them off: then, when they had finished their work and the feast was ready, they ate it, and every man had his full share, so that all were satisfied. As soon as they had had enough to eat and drink, pages filled the mixing-bowl with wine and water and handed it round, after giving every man his drink-offering.
Thus all day long the young men worshipped the god with song, hymning him and chaunting the joyous paean, and the god took pleasure in their voices.
Homer Illiad
We are nearing completion of the Yggdrasil Deep-dive!
For a part of Germanic Faith with very little written about it, there was a ton of info under the surface.
We will let you know when it's published on the YouTube channel!
Among the Wined [Slavs]…conjugal love is preserved with such vigor that a woman refuses to live after the death of her own husband; their noblest women are ordered to bring death by their own hands and burn on the same pyre with their husbands.
Boniface Letter to the king Æthlebald
The quest for the Golden Fleece and it’s aftermath illustrated by V.Lapovok
Читать полностью…Sardinian Sos Corrilos
https://www.instagram.com/p/DFAYImYqyHP/
Kirik agreed and followed the man to a secluded site down the road from the cemetery. It was a nice spot indeed and the ground was soft. Kirik began digging the grave, but soon noticed some glimmer in the hole. It was a large pot full of silver coins!
Читать полностью…My older follower probably remember this translation of an anti-clerical story about a greedy priest who tried to swindle a poor peasant by dressing up as a bull. /channel/Aryanpaganism/5306
Recently I found a very similar story which differs in detail, but the events are more or less the same. I will try retelling it with some nice illustrations.
Found some rare book illustrations. Need to get the images ready. Will post tomorrow.
Читать полностью…Viking trade routes by Severino Baraldi
Читать полностью…Romanians believe in the power of blessing to originate well-being and success in life as well as in the negative impact of curses, interestingly enough, even some Orthodox priests practice the use of cursing in helping some people get revenge on others or originating misfortune and even death in the latter' lives. Witches and fortune-tellers can also curse or bind curses. Then, oaths or conditional swearing is also greatly practiced.
Florin Paul Botica
In the Life of Homer traditions, the poet is conventionally pictured as blind, and his blindness is caused by some misfortune that happens to him in the course of his life. Different narratives feature different misfortunes. In some versions, he is blinded by some illness; in other versions, his blinding is a divine punishment for some mistake, such as his defaming of Helen or his conjuring a direct vision of Achilles entering battle in his second set of armor, the gleam of which is blinding to those who dare look at it.
G.Nagy
Invariably, and inevitably, if any people gives up the religion of its own creation to take up the religion of an alien people, it surrenders its independence and to a considerable extent its identity. For our people to have adopted Christianity was to yield up their life to the direction of Jews.
W.G.Simpson
Jason and his Teacher by Maxfield Parrish
Читать полностью…Young viking king
by Jack Coggins
Chryses Imploring the Help of Apollo
Johan Tobias Sergel
This drawing by Sweden’s most important Neoclassical sculptor and draftsman depicts a scene from Homer’s Iliad.
In the drawing, Chryses, a Trojan priest of Apollo, prays for help after Agamemnon, the leader of the Greek army, has refused to return his kidnapped daughter. In response, Apollo inflicts a plague upon the Greeks.
Chryses invoking the Vengeance of Apollo against the Greeks by Benjamin West
Читать полностью…The Nine Muses
Clio records past ages in her prose.
Euterpe's hollow reed makes double sound.
Voice-famed Thalia revelling loves the sock.
Melpomene's notes in tragic iambs seethe.
Terpsichore's golden lyre thrills all the sky.
Strings touched by Erato sweet love-songs make.
Polymnia's odes suit swift and varying moods.
Urania scans the stars of heaven in verse.
Calliope crowns epic bards with bays.
Florus
By the way, there’s a legend of Argonauts fighting dog-headed people from one of the islands they come across on their way home but I can’t trace it to any legitimate source. Seems almost like a mistake which got out of proportion. If you happen to know where it comes from-let me know.
Читать полностью…Greek myth and legends illustrated by G.Boyko and I.Shalita
Читать полностью…Slavic God of Wind and Destruction Stribog is mentioned among the idols erected in Kyiv by Vladimir before his conversion. The Tale of Igor’s Campaign calls winds the progeny of Stribog in a poetic description of them blowing strongly from the sea. There are rivers and villages in Ukraine and Poland bearing His name e.g. Strzyboga.
After the christianization Stribog’s attributes and functions were transplanted to John Cassian (Kasyan) which was common in folk christianity as an attempt at preserving the cults and practices of Pagan past. As a result Cassian became the lord of winds which he holds chained and lets loose on the 29th of February (his holiday). Kasyan also kills with sight and whistling earning him the title of the unkind saint.
This (as well as linguistic and comparativistic data) paints a picture of a dangerous deity, possibly a son of Perun who is also a warrior, but a feared and warlike one.