Today I climbed the highest hill in southern England and found this cool ram skull
Forwarded from Son of Sigurd
Who art thou, resting upon the roof of my hall?
Be not wrathful, O ancient one, 'tis I, thy loyal son.
What dost thou seek here?
Strength.
Be not wrathful, O ancient one, 'tis I, thy loyal son.
What dost thou seek here?
Strength.
Do stone circles have any relevance to Germanic Heathenry? https://youtube.com/shorts/iTcdHfbCfjo?feature=share
YouTube
Should Heathens use Stone Circles?
Neopagans love stone circles but do they have anything to do with Germanic Heathen religion? This channel depends on your support:Patreon: https://www.patreo...
It isn't just white boy summer, this time it's SAXON SUMMER. 100-% cotton shirts shipping from USA and EU. Available in a few colours - The black print and white print are separate listings. I am wearing the white on navy.
The podcast ranking website MillionPodcasts has ranked the Survive the Jive Podcast as 4th in the top 50 Pagan podcasts, 3rd in top 50 Norse myth podcasts, 39th in human history podcasts, 5th in Anglo-saxon podcasts
This new website lets you compare allele frequencies between samples.
Genos Historia used it to determine frequencies in blue eye snp rs12913832 among IA Britons vs Anglo-Saxons and found:
British Celts 55% G allele,
British Saxons 93% G allele.
https://adgap.online/variant
Genos Historia used it to determine frequencies in blue eye snp rs12913832 among IA Britons vs Anglo-Saxons and found:
British Celts 55% G allele,
British Saxons 93% G allele.
https://adgap.online/variant
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
Reconstructions of a bronze age structure from the Netherlands which belonged to the Elp Culture, an offshoot of the Bell Beaker culture. It resembles a pergola or a Shinto arch and is thought to have had a religious function.
The Z301 (r1b) haplogroup, which is associated with West Germanic people in the iron age, was formerly found in the Elp Culture.
The Z301 (r1b) haplogroup, which is associated with West Germanic people in the iron age, was formerly found in the Elp Culture.
A review of Vilhelm Grønbech's seminal work on the religion and culture of ancient Germanic peoples
https://youtu.be/jVxRekwq0Is?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/jVxRekwq0Is?feature=shared
YouTube
Jive Book Review: The Culture of the Teutons
A review of Vilhelm Grønbech's seminal work on the religion and culture of ancient Germanic peoples. Grønbech, professor of the history of religion at the University of Copenhagen, looks at Norse, Lombardic, Anglo-Saxon, Gothic and Roman sources to identify…
Forwarded from Eastern Europa
The bone with an Elder Futhark inscription found in the early Slavic settlement in Lahn (near Lundenburg), Bohemia.
In 2017, a cattle bone with runes of the Germanic Elder Futhark (dated 585–640 CE) was discovered in a Prague culture settlement near Lundenburg, in Czechia. The inscription contains no recognizable words in either Slavic or any other language, but seems to represent an attempted abecedary.
It may have been incised by people of Germanic origin that were present in the region, or the runes may have been engraved by the Slavs. In either case, the find attests to a direct interaction between the Slavic and Germanic ethnolinguistic groups, which opens the possibility of the runic knowledge being transferred to the Slavs by the Germanic peoples.
@easterneuropa
In 2017, a cattle bone with runes of the Germanic Elder Futhark (dated 585–640 CE) was discovered in a Prague culture settlement near Lundenburg, in Czechia. The inscription contains no recognizable words in either Slavic or any other language, but seems to represent an attempted abecedary.
It may have been incised by people of Germanic origin that were present in the region, or the runes may have been engraved by the Slavs. In either case, the find attests to a direct interaction between the Slavic and Germanic ethnolinguistic groups, which opens the possibility of the runic knowledge being transferred to the Slavs by the Germanic peoples.
@easterneuropa
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
It isn't just white boy summer, this time it's SAXON SUMMER. 100-% cotton shirts shipping from USA and EU. Available in a few colours - The black print and white print are separate listings. I am wearing the white on navy.
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
A review of Vilhelm Grønbech's seminal work on the religion and culture of ancient Germanic peoples
https://youtu.be/jVxRekwq0Is?feature=shared
https://youtu.be/jVxRekwq0Is?feature=shared
YouTube
Jive Book Review: The Culture of the Teutons
A review of Vilhelm Grønbech's seminal work on the religion and culture of ancient Germanic peoples. Grønbech, professor of the history of religion at the University of Copenhagen, looks at Norse, Lombardic, Anglo-Saxon, Gothic and Roman sources to identify…
Forwarded from Survive the Jive: All-feed
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Forwarded from Modern Platonist
In Roman religion, the “do ut des” is the pillar that sustains the entire relationship between Gods and men: you give to be given. In the picture, my domestic altar during an offering.
This essential trait of the relationship between Gods and men is also important in our daily relationships between men. We need to give in order to receive. Reciprocity and respect of the other must be at the center of the culture of our social life.
Traditional primordial religions understand that there is more authenticity in a mutual gain contract than in almsgiving. Even Greek philosophy defended this ethical approach. Replacing the “do ut des” from the heart of our spiritual and material relationships has done great harm to our mindset. We need to return to the primordial “do ut des.”
Source: John Scheid, ‘Quand faire, c’est croire. Les rites sacrificiels des Romains.’ Aubier, 2005.
This essential trait of the relationship between Gods and men is also important in our daily relationships between men. We need to give in order to receive. Reciprocity and respect of the other must be at the center of the culture of our social life.
Traditional primordial religions understand that there is more authenticity in a mutual gain contract than in almsgiving. Even Greek philosophy defended this ethical approach. Replacing the “do ut des” from the heart of our spiritual and material relationships has done great harm to our mindset. We need to return to the primordial “do ut des.”
Source: John Scheid, ‘Quand faire, c’est croire. Les rites sacrificiels des Romains.’ Aubier, 2005.
Reminder that there will be a Voice Chat here on Telegram with me for patrons, tonight at 5:30 pm UK time
Forwarded from Race Realism Channel
During the Early Middle Ages, Turkic Avars of Central Asian origin settled in Eastern Central Europe.
They remained genetically segregated from Europeans even after two centuries; both populations intentionally avoided interbreeding, despite their proximity.
"The generation-long genetic barrier was maintained by systematically choosing partners with similar ancestry from other sites in the Avar realm."
Source: Ancient DNA reveals reproductive barrier despite shared Avar-period culture (Nature, 2025)
They remained genetically segregated from Europeans even after two centuries; both populations intentionally avoided interbreeding, despite their proximity.
"The generation-long genetic barrier was maintained by systematically choosing partners with similar ancestry from other sites in the Avar realm."
Source: Ancient DNA reveals reproductive barrier despite shared Avar-period culture (Nature, 2025)
Forwarded from TheBeakerLady
Artistic Reconstruction of a man of the Fatyanovo-Balanovo Culture (offshoot of eastern Corded Ware Culture).
Cool fact, they had carved bone pins that looked similar to Yamnaya ones. I wanted to showcase that along with ornaments made from bear teeth and a bear claw since related artifacts have been found at their sites (we just do not know for sure how they wore them). For pigmentation, there were many Fatyanovo who had similar skin, hair and eye color to Yamnaya (as did many early CWC) so I presented that here.
Cool fact, they had carved bone pins that looked similar to Yamnaya ones. I wanted to showcase that along with ornaments made from bear teeth and a bear claw since related artifacts have been found at their sites (we just do not know for sure how they wore them). For pigmentation, there were many Fatyanovo who had similar skin, hair and eye color to Yamnaya (as did many early CWC) so I presented that here.