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Forwarded from โขSLAVIAโข ๐ตโช๐ด
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Montenegro ๐ฒ๐ช
Stunning mountains, beautiful bright bays overlooking the Adriatic Sea, old villages, small cozy towns.
Stunning mountains, beautiful bright bays overlooking the Adriatic Sea, old villages, small cozy towns.
Forwarded from ๐ธ๐๐๐๐
๐๐ถ๐๐ฑ๐๐๐
Forwarded from ๐ด๐๐๐๐๐๐๐ ๐
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Russian girls in folk clothing ๐ท๐บ
@eurasianvolk
@eurasianvolk
What a beautiful life our pagan ancestors have lived so in-tuned with their local wild surroundings, with their spirituality being directly connected to their native land, native nature and ecosystem.
Forwarded from โขSLAVIAโข ๐ตโช๐ด
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Traditional South Slavic Folk song from the Vasojeviฤi tribe in Montenegro ๐ฒ๐ช
- ฤegoviฤ TV
- ฤegoviฤ TV
I think the author has added the so-called Star of David because this symbol was not originally the Star of David and was not used by Jewish people
Forwarded from Aryan Paganism, Traditions and Art (APTA)
Not sure why the author decided to add the star of david there. Other than that, itโs a nice collection of traditional European swastikas and other symbols.
Forwarded from Aryan Paganism, Traditions and Art (APTA)
Cecrops the first king of Athens
He was a half-man-half-snake, but despite such monstrous appearance Cecrops is remembered as a wise ruler who brought laws to first Atheneans and taught them how to build altars and offer sacrifice.
According to Pausanias:
Cecrops was the first to name Zeus the Supreme god, and refused to sacrifice anything that had life in it, but burnt instead on the altar the national cakes which the Athenians still call pelanoi. But Lycaon brought a human baby to the altar of Lycaean Zeus, and sacrificed it, pouring out its blood upon the altar, and according to the legend immediately after the sacrifice he was changed from a man to a wolf.
He was a half-man-half-snake, but despite such monstrous appearance Cecrops is remembered as a wise ruler who brought laws to first Atheneans and taught them how to build altars and offer sacrifice.
According to Pausanias:
Cecrops was the first to name Zeus the Supreme god, and refused to sacrifice anything that had life in it, but burnt instead on the altar the national cakes which the Athenians still call pelanoi. But Lycaon brought a human baby to the altar of Lycaean Zeus, and sacrificed it, pouring out its blood upon the altar, and according to the legend immediately after the sacrifice he was changed from a man to a wolf.
Forwarded from Western Heritage
Bridge and Gorges of the Dala River in Leuekerbad - by Caspar Wolf, c'1777
Forwarded from The Paganist
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The carnyx was a wind instrument of the Celts of the Iron Age, used between 300 BC and 200 AD. It was a kind of bronze pipe, vertically directed, with a bell in the form of an animal's head, such as a boar's. It was used during battles.
Forwarded from Dark & Fascinating Art (Vin's Favourite Artwork Archive)
Pegasus and Bellerophon by Odilon Redon
Forwarded from Hyperborean Radio (Uncensored)
Bringing Home the Body of King Charles XII by Gustaf Cederstrom
๐ฒHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)๐
๐ฒHyperborean Radio (Uncensored)๐