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Who is the Celtic Vishnu? (SUMMARY Version)
This is the summarized version of my longer video on Cú Chulainn and Vishnu — for those who are short on time.
Watch: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=KkFS7LwNqFU
Thank you again to Arnaud Carrasco for the amazing artwork featured in the video.
Arnaud Carrasco:
arnaudcarrasco.artstation.com
——————————————-
Cú Chulainn is a miraculously preserved instance of the Vishnu type, embodying numerous "avatars" of this god type all within himself.
Learn about Cú Chulainn.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Many Germanic reconstructionists in the past few years have integrated the ancient Germanic Luni-Solar calendar into their contemporary religious practice, but there is one simple fact about the ancient Germanic calendar that many get wrong - the months did not begin on new moons, but on full moons.
We can illustrate this based on a couple of sources, namely Bede's De Temporum Ratione. That the ancient Germanic months corresponded to the Lunar cycle is well-established. That the ancient Germanic people recognized two yearly seasons, winter and summer, is also well-known. We learn from Bede that among the ancient English, winter begun on a Full Moon of a month called Winterfilleth:
"Hence, they called the month in which the winter season began 'Winterfilleth,' a name made up from 'winter' and 'full Moon,' because winter began on the Full Moon of that month."
Supposing that the Germanic months begun on New Moons, this would make a season begin in the middle of a month, which would be quite odd. But let see what Bede has to say further:
"The months of Yule derive their name from the day when the Sun turns back [and begins] to increase, because one of [these months] precedes [this day] and the other follows."
We know that Bede isn't referring to the Winter Solstice in this instance, but to a generally recognized belief of the ancient cosmology that the Sun literally moves away from the Earth in winter and closer in summer, resulting in the coldness and warmth of the seasons. But what is more striking here is the fact that while it's usually claimed that Yule Moon is the Full Moon in the middle of the second Yulemonth, Bede says that the first Yulemonth precedes this point and the other follows it, he does not say that Yule takes place in the middle of the second Yulemonth. The only logical explanation here is that Yule takes place between these two months. Keeping in mind that Winter begins on a Full Moon, Midwinter, likewise, taking place three months after its beginning, must take place on a Full Moon. Therefore, this other excerpt suggests that the second Yulemonth begun on a Full Moon, thus the ancient English months begun on a Full Moon.
This logic then further explains the later English attestations of the names of the two Yulemonths - Ǣrra-ġēolamōnaþ [Ere-Yulemonth] and Æfterra-ġēolamōnaþ [After-Yulemonth]. Yule is the Full Moon between these two Yulemonths and the first month precedes Yule, while the second takes place after Yule.
The only point that I didn’t show a match for between Fionn and Odin in my previous video was the never-missing spear of Odin.
But Fionn’s spear is thus. As we see in the Colloquy of the Ancients, it was a spear that “never had a missing throw”:
nír dibraicedh urchar n-imraill dhi
He is Odin.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Lugh a warrior and a deity of exceptional versatility. He is shown with a radiant golden crown symbolizing his solar associations and divine authority. The three faces suggest omniscience and mastery over multiple disciplines, a trait often linked to Lugus in Gaulish representations. He wields Gáe Assail, his legendary spear known for its unfailing accuracy and power. Tied to the butt of the spear is his sling, Tathlum, which is also a weapon of great renown. Around his hip rests Fragarach, the sword of ultimate retribution, which could cut through any defense.
The hound at his side is Failinis, Lugh's loyal companion, known for its incredible strength and unyielding loyalty. His mantle, fastened by a silver brooch, reflects descriptions from the Táin Bó Cúailnge, and he wears a golden torc, a symbol of his kingship and divine authority. The ornate arch and solar imagery in the backdrop further highlight his status as a paramount god in Celtic mythology and a figure of leadership and skill. - Cathal
Cathbad, Ness, and Fachtna:
The Druid and the Horned Rudra-Serpent (Mythstream)
Who are Cathbad the Druid and Ness the Fianna warrior Woman?
And does the Rudra type have a consistent (horned) serpent form?
Thank you to Arno, Collin and Josephus for coming on to discuss.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=hM_dcd06c8E
Special Samhain episode.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-gYtYAUbcYI
Who is Aillen, the Burner, defeated by Fionn on Samhain?
What myth does this battle parallel?
And is Diwali from a shared root with Samhain?
Thank you to Boban Saor for pointing out several of the details in this video and aiding me with the Gaelic.
Happy Samhain to everyone.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
I popped into Gnostic Informant’s livestream for a few minutes last night to explain my theory on the origin of Moses’ narrative
Gnostic is a Taliesin’s Map fan confirmed.
@3:04:50
https://www.youtube.com/live/qj2tbC-7_mY?si=pNAlf_x_S8dG7m1u&t=11091
My argument:
If there was a single myth that included
1. An illicit golden sacrifice that gets angrily interrupted by a sage and then destroyed
2. The sage receives codified/numbered transmissions of knowledge and ritual practices from the high god, who speaks to him from a mountain
3.Several of the same plagues as are in Exodus
4.The sage gets into a contest of divine powers with the king and protects himself from the divine wrath by making a symbolic mark over him
5.When giving the knowledge the sage has his head changed into a head that is elsewhere described as horned with light, similar to Moses
6. Parallels to Moses striking the rock and to Miriam becoming leprous
If all of these were found in ONE myth
It would be VERY interesting.
- O’Gravy
Hymn to the Gaelic Gods 1 (adapted from the Rig Veda)
An example of praise to the Celtic Pantheon and an example that Celtic Paganism can build upon.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OzCSyTF3nc4
Cú Chulainn is a mysterious figure.
Nonetheless, he does have a direct equivalent in Norse mythology, an equivalent many find shocking.
But this parallel only becomes really decisive when we uncover a myth whose hidden meaning has never before been understood:
the reincarnation of Cú Chulainn as a rampaging beast.
New video:
Cú Chulainn: his Norse Equivalent and Hidden Myth (Response to @FortressofLugh)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-d1yMDpe9Ks
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
In part 2 of my last video I discovered the source of the Book of Exodus.
For those who want to get to the point, I made a shortened clip version summarizing the concluding parallels.
Cernunnos in the BIBLE? Exodus Source Discovered (Clip/Summary)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=on6wM6OoqjQ
The Ultimate Cohencidence
I’m going to tell myself that Religion for Breakfast saw and is responding to my last video, since I just asked this very obscure question, which I haven’t seen fully addressed elsewhere before:
why exactly does Aaron have a horn-shaped mitre hat in artwork?
(His character is based on the Indo-European “Cernunnos” god type.)
However, Religion For Breakfast slightly misrepresents the Moses “horned” etymology here by calling it “only” metaphorical for “glory,” and a couple of commenters correct him for this. The meaning of “horned” is still present there.
This shows a tendency to explain more elusive and mystical details away with accounts that simplify ambiguity.
If anyone who watched my Exodus video was wondering about Aaron’s headdress, have a look at this video, as it gives great historical detail about its possible origin.
Do you think it settles the question?
Is the horned headpiece Aaron is shown with a “coincidental” mystical re-emergence of the horns of the deity underpinning his character, rather than being based on an original (obscure) Jewish tradition?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=fzubjTIaDm8
CERNUNNOS Part 2: The True Origin of Exodus in Indo-European Myth (Moses, Aaron, and Yahweh)
watch: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=7bkMDH6h1tU
In investigating the Cernunnos mythos I have found, almost by accident, the origin of the majority of the Exodus narrative.
The conclusion of our investigation is almost beyond belief:
The narrative details of the biblical Exodus seem to have been mostly borrowed from an Indo-Iranic source (either Iranic or Indian).
This video lays out the numerous points of alignment that demonstrate this likelihood.
“Cernunnos” found his way into the Bible.
— And not as someone you would expect.
Video editing by Arno Preiner.
Thanks to Arno for his help on this project.
Thumbnail Art by MOROSOPHVS
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
I’m always asked to respond to these posts of people trying to speak “authoritatively” on Celtic myth, who clearly have never read a single one of the primary texts.
In all honesty, I get second hand embarrassment. But I’m not here to bully. Celtic myth is confusing.
For those who want to say Lugh is = to Odin: Name a single narrative myth that they share. Not a vague family relation or association.
I’ll show you what I mean.
Who is the lord of the Gaelic “mannerbund” (the Fiana) who receives knowledge from a magic well?
Finn.
Who is the leader of the Wild Hunt?
Gwyn, Welsh linguistic cognate of Finn.
Who loses an eye and transforms into a fish, as Odin also does?
Fintan, divine ancestor of the sovereign god Nuada.
Who fasts under a magical tree to gain the power of prophecy, next to waters that turn all things white, after drinking from a magical cup?
Finn.
Who is considered the storehouse of all knowledge?
Fintan.
Who divides Sky from Earth along with his two brothers, as Odin does with Ymir’s body?
Eber Finn.
Who steals back the wondrous liquid from the giant in the tower and sleeps with his daughter while there?
Finn Mac Kinealy.
Finn. None of these myths belong to Lugh. Lugh does not lose an eye, or turn into a fish, or gain wisdom from a well, or lead the wild hunt or lead the Fiana.
IN FACT LUGAID MAC CON’S FIANA LEADER IS FIONN MAC CUMHAILL.
Almost all of Odin’s myths are reflected in the myths of Finn/Fintan, none in Lugh.
Name me a single narrative, full mythic story, that Odin shares with Lugh/Lugaid.
As long as you remain silent in response to this question your claim stands refuted.
Come back to the subject when you’ve studied more. Until then, stop spreading misinformation to those who won’t know better.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Setting the record straight:
Lugh = Tyr
Be more inquisitive.
https://x.com/StructuralMyth1/status/1808201862723797368
Most people speaking on this subject don’t know what is even coming out of their mouths.
I’ll tell you the actual Tyr equivalent hand-losing.
Cuchulainn (“the Hound”), cornered and wounded, binds himself to a stone. Lugaid (form of Lugh) kills him.
As Cuchulainn drops his sword it cuts Lugaid’s hand off, an immediate reaction to being neutralized as when Fenrir bites Tyr’s hand off.
Fenrir is indeed bound to a stone in Snorri’s version.
Cuchulainn reincarnates into a boar (the Boar of Formael) that is later killed just like Fenrir, among other parallels.
So we have this other hand-severing myth, that has much more aligning it with the Fenrir scene.
And it is Lugaid who has his hand severed by the bound “hound”.
Lugh is Tyr. There is no counter-argument based on actual myths.
Stone-bound figure with canine characteristics causes the loss of a hand in a God. That god is Lugaid.
People look at Nuada and see “hand severed” and that’s all they think matters. It’s really lazy in retrospect but even Dumezil posited the connection.
He then later retracted it when he realized it was wrong!
Another confusion put to bed.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Celtic Parallels to Odin’s Myths 👁️
Celtic myth has parallels for essentially all of the famous events of the Odin mythos.
If there is any central Odin myth that I am missing here, please comment below.
The primary Celtic Odin is the Gaelic Fionn (aka Eber Finn) whose Welsh linguistic and mythic cognate is Gwyn/Gwion.
No other god in Celtic myth has anywhere close to the enormous set of precise parallels to Odin that we see circling Fionn/Gwyn.
In the Gaelic case Fionn, leader of the Fianna “mannerbund” is juxtaposed to a rival/friend Fianna leader named Goll, “the one-eyed”.
Based on mythic parallels we can see that the two rival-friend Fianna leaders, Fionn and Goll, are two sides of one and the same deity: the one-eyed mannerbund god. Fionn further has a primordial double, named Fintan, who continues the same Fionn/Odin type mythos and who is also esoterically identified with the one-eyed Salmon of Knowledge, Goll Essa Ruaid. Once again we see “Finn” vs “Goll” names as two epithets of the same being. Note: this is not the Rudra vs Siva duality, but closer to the Rudra-Siva vs Mahakala Bhairava duality. Instead, the seer and peace-weaving brother of Eber Finn, named Amergin, is the Siva parallel.
Lastly, based on clear parallels to Odin and to Eber Finn, we can deduce that the Welsh Efnysien, the hostile one who is juxtaposed to his peace making brother Nisien, is another form of the Welsh Odin who is aka Gwyn.
If we then take this grouping of mannerbund gods, centering around the name Fionn/Gwyn and one-eyedness, we can see that parallels to essentially the entire Odin mythos are preserved in Celtic myth, and more beyond what we have of Odin as well.
Please read for yourself in each of these tales to find the Celtic versions of these Odin-type myths (details change!):
1 Odin loses an eye (see: Fintan loses an eye in “The Hawk of Achill”, also see the one eyed Goll/Goll Essa Ruaid)
2 Odin gaining wisdom at Mimir’s well (see: Fionn in “The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn”)
3 Odin on the Windy Tree acquiring the runes (see: Fionn in “The Hunt of Slieve Cuilinn”)
4 Odin’s death being tied to the rampaging beast Fenrir (see: Fionn in “The Chase of Síd na mBan Finn and the Death of Finn”)
5 Odin’s parentage from Borr, son of Buri (See: Eber Finn, son of Galam son of Bile, in “The Milesians,” from Lebor Gabala Erenn)
6 Odin dividing Earth and Sky (see Eber Finn in “The Milesians,” Lebor Gabala Erenn)
7 Odin stealing the mead (See: Fin Mac Kinealy in “Balor on Tory Island”)
8 Odin finding Askr and Embla (See: Efnysien greeting Gwern in “Branwen daughter of Llyr”)
9 Odin leading the mannerbund (see: Fionn leading the Fianna in misc. tales)
10 Odin and the Wild Hunt (see: misc. Gwyn folklore)
11 Odin shamanically turning into a fish (See: Fintan in “Cessairians” from LGE, see also Goll Essa Ruaid and Gwion-Taliesin in “Hanes Taliesin”)
12 Odin killing the servant who sleeps with Frigg in Gesta Danorum (See: Fionn in “Fionn and the Man in the Tree”)
13 Odin fathering Vidarr, killer of Fenrir (see: Fionn as father and grandfather of Oscar, killer of the Boar of Formael in “The Chase of Síd na mBan Finn and the Death of Finn”)
14 Odin being “Jalk”, gelded (see: Efnysien bursting his own heart in “Branwen ferch Llyr”)
15 Odin fathering Valli, avenger of the death of Baldr (see: Amergin fathering Conall Cernach, avenger of the death of Fergus, who was killed like Baldr)
Parallels to Rudra that Norse myth doesn’t necessarily have
1 The Vratya (Rudra-Agni) of the Atharvaveda gives rise to Mahadeva by catalyzing the feminine gold within Prajapati (see: Cumhaill (Vratya/Rudra-Agni) fathering Fionn (Mahadeva) via the daughter of Tadhgh (=Prajapati) in “The Cause of the Battle of Cnucha”)
2 Rudra shoots Prajapati as uniting with his “daughter” (see: Goll killing Cumhaill in “The Cause of the Battle of Cnucha”)
3 Siva drinks poison and turns blue (see Fionn in “The Boyhood Deeds of Fionn”/Gaedhil Glas in LGE “The Gaedhil”)
4 Mahakala overcomes Kali (see: Goll in “The Cave of Ceis Corann”)
- O’Gravy
@solarcult
CÚ CHULAINN: The Celtic Vishnu
Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hHCJEERaDhc
I am excited to share this video, featuring a new triptych portrait of Cú Chulainn by artist Arnaud Carrasco, specially planned to highlight Cú Chulainn's most important symbolic traits.
You can find more of Arnaud's work here: Arnaudcarrasco.artstation.com
***
Cú Chulainn is a miraculously preserved instance of the Vishnu type.
As such, his stories provide priceless evidence regarding what the Indo-European Vishnu originally looked like.
This evidence even illuminates centuries-old debates between the Vaishnava and Shaivite sects of Hinduism -- possibly settling them once and for all.
Learn about Cú Chulainn, the unyielding, fame-hungry, dangerous, incarnate war god with a beast's form, who contains within himself the fiery energy that fuels the cosmos.
- O'Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
It amazes me that scholars haven’t noticed that almost all of the Signs/Plagues of Moses can be found in the Indian mythic tradition, and attached to a sage who transmits sacred texts from the high god and protests an illegal golden sacrifice.
Here’s a handy list of the Omens:
Siva Purana (2.2.34). vs. Exodus
Called: “Omens” = “Signs and Wonders”
Source: https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/shiva-purana-english/d/doc226054.html
1.Darkness = Darkness
(Related celestial phenomena: The sun also appeared spotted, Stars at noon, Falling stars and meteors)
2.Locusts = Locusts
3.Moths = Gnats/Flies
4.Weather: Rough winds and dust/whirlwinds = Thunder and Hail
5.Illness: Vomiting blood and bone = Pestilence/Boils/Lice
(Also other illness: “They became unsteady and tremulous…They felt miserable…Their eyes resembled fading lotuses…or flowers…with dews trickling from them.”)
6.Jackals/Vultures = Wild animals
7.Showers of blood = River of blood
8.Makes trident sign of Siva in the air, using kusa grass, to be protected from divine onslaught = Makes three-stroke sign with blood on doorpost, using grassy shrub hyssop, to be protected from divine onslaught
Blaze = (No parallel)
Earthquake = (No parallel)
(No parallel) = Frogs
A variant of these omens is also in the Mahabharata (12.284), and a separate feud found in the Mahabharata and Skanda Purana contains 2 other parallels:
Mahabharata and Skanda Purana vs. Exodus
9.River turned to blood by a sage (during a separate feud, Mbh. 9.42; SP 6.1.172.1-16) = River turned to blood by Moses
10.Killing of all the opponent’s sons via a demon (also during this other feud, Mbh. 1.178) = Killing of all the firstborns of the Egyptians via a destroying angel
My honest reaction:
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=uuZe7GngXsU
Yemo and Mannus is a debunked theory based on strawman linguistics
It was well-intentioned but belongs to the past now
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Were the Celts Tantrics? The Celtic Kali and Bhairava (Mythstream)
We look at the hags Irnan and Orddu and the fierce hero Goll mac Morna, identifying an archaic tantric pattern that spreads across Europe and must go back to Proto-Indo-European religion.
Thank you to Collin for coming on to discuss.
Watch: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=pr4zH8w4uxE
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Check out the Gnostic Informant stream from today.
I had a great chat with Neal and Auld Boy on Soma, Dionysus and much more.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=tZ8SeuRGjY0
I uploaded a corrected version of the Hymn to Finn.
The first version had an error caused by the online transcription of the Orphic hymn.
Thanks to Josephus for identifying and fixing the error.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=9CNraHaHqLQ
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Hymn to the Gaelic Gods 2: To Finn
(adapted from an Orphic Hymn)
A second example of praise to the Celtic Pantheon, this time to the High God Finn, our Odin.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=-tOHTQ7hX1w
Who is the Celtic Odin?
The Celts have their own version of The One-Eyed God, the Lord of the Mannerbund.
The god of Wisdom who turns into a fish.
People truly don’t realize how unchanged and well-preserved he is in the Celtic traditions, as they usually don’t know where to find the full set of his myths, which are laid out in this video.
It is understandably shocking to find that almost every core myth of Odin is paralleled by this one Celtic god type — and not by the god types most commonly thrown out there.
The One-Eyed Celtic ODIN (Response to @FortressofLugh)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=jkSTb8jBPGc
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
Some people have asked how to support my effort to reconstruct the Celtic and Indo-European mythology and theology.
I wake up each day with a fire in my head for this project but limited in the time I have to put into it, so after years of solving mythic mysteries for the sheer desire to have a functional pagan religion, I’ve just set up a Patreon to allow others to join the effort if they wish.
If you appreciate the research l publish in my articles and videos, and want to see the larger project reach its culmination (such as the completion of my second book, Breoghan’s Tower and the continued release of new videos on all the important topics I have in mind), you can join the Patreon at the link below and add fuel to the fire.
patreon.com/TaliesinsMap
Thank you all for reading and following along. We will raise the level of the discourse if it kills us.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
As usual, please ignore and block scam-spammers using our name.
We are NOT messaging people with questions like this.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
A quick summary of the points from my last video showing that the Exodus narrative was likely adapted from an Indo-Iranic source:
The Origin of Exodus in Indo-Iranic Myth
https://telegra.ph/The-Origin-of-Exodus-in-Indo-Iranic-Myth-Revealed-Moses-is-Dadhici-Aaron-is-Daksha-08-01
CERNUNNOS Part 1:
the Horned God of the Indo-Europeans (his Full Mythos)
watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQbBWkBUi7M&feature=youtu.be
Most people still believe — incorrectly — that the mythology of Cernunnos, the Horned God, has been lost.
In this video I identify the narrative myths of Cernunnos in Gaelic, Welsh, Vedic, Hittite, Norse, Roman and Greek traditions.
This god is in fact everywhere.
Just because his myths have been misunderstood does not mean they have been lost.
Much can be learned by placing all of the versions of his myth side by side, as I do here for the first time ever.
By doing so we uncover one of the most surprising proclamations of heresy from the ancient world:
“Hard Polytheism” was seemingly treated as heretical in the Norse tradition, and this is one of the issues the “Cernunnos” myth revolves around and reveals.
See for yourself.
Thanks to Arno Preiner for his help with this project.
- O’Gravy, The Sun Riders
@solarcult
We have discussed above that Weden [Óðinn] is the supreme God of the Germanic people in the Eddic sources, and that all the Gods are Gods by virtue of sharing His divine essence. What many people do not know, however, is that this idea is attested in our earliest literary sources, namely Tacitus' Germania. In c. 9:
"Among the gods Mercury is the one they principally worship. They regard it as a religious duty to offer to him, on fixed days, human as well as other sacrificial victims."
There's little doubt about the identity of Mercury being in reality the same God as Weden. This identification of foreign Gods using the lens of Roman religion is called Interpretatio Romana, and we have discussed the Interpretatio methods at length in our previous posts. Nevertheless, we can be sure that Tacitus here uses this method because he tells us about it elsewhere, in c. 43:
"Among the Naharvali [...] they say that their deities, according to the Roman interpretation, are Castor and Pollux: that is the character of their godhead, of which the name is ‘the Alci’."
We get more interesting information about the ancient Germanic understanding of Weden, however, when Tacitus discusses the Suebi, and in particular the Suebian Semnones, who are said to be the most ancient and the noblest of the Suebian tribes. He says, that they performed human sacrifices to a God, who can be identified with Weden based on the fact that earlier Tacitus confirms that it is to Him that the Germanic people give human sacrifices. And he gives the following description:
"This whole superstition is based on the belief that from this wood the people derives its origin and that the god who reigns over all dwells there, the rest of the world being his obedient subjects."
The Latin expression that is used is 'regnator omnium deus', the God who Rules All, and thus, Tacitus couldn't be more clear in confirming that the ancient Germanic view of Weden was that of a Most High God.
"These are the clouds about the fallen sun,
The majesty that shuts his burning eye:
The weak lay hand on what the strong has done,
Till that be tumbled that was lifted high-
And discord follow upon unison,
And all things at one common level lie.
And therefore, friend, if your great race were run-
And these things came, so much the more thereby-
Have you made greatness your companion,
Although it be for children that you sigh:
These are the clouds about the fallen sun,
The majesty that shuts his burning eye."
You know it
1 like = 1 blót
Share this image for many blessings this May Day!