THE OLD WAYS
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I explore hidden history & other alternative information, European/ Slavic pagan music & folk art, ethnic folk traditions & rites of indigenous European/ Slavic people, animism, and more...
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Forwarded from ᛉ Sagnamaðr Stark ᛉ
In the Flóamanna saga, Þorgils invokes Erik the Red’s ire by killing a bear that Erik “cherished ancient faith in”, demonstrating the contrast of how animals were viewed in the animistic, pagan worldview as opposed to the Abrahamic worldview; not as soulless automatons, but as brothers, ensouled beings who they respected and sought to build frith with.
Painting by Hans Dahl. ᛉ
Forwarded from Folk Wisdom & Ways (Ulva)
Forwarded from Traditional Europe
"Roman Warrior" — Jacques Louis David, 1824.
Forwarded from Traditional Europe
"Parade of the arts", by Enrique Simonet
Forwarded from Traditional Europe
"The dance of the maenads", roman copies of greek originals (ca. 420 a.C.).

Around 410 B.C. In Athens, which was then celebrating Dionysus with the tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides, a large monument decorated with reliefs of bacchantes had to be built. It was undoubtedly intended to honor the memory of some winner in dramatic contests, and its motifs had lasting success, being imitated on multiple occasions. From four of these maenad reliefs, attributed to Callimachus.

The maenads were legendary nurses of Dionysus, who protected him in his childhood and became his first followers. However, the Dionysian cult involved the conversion into maenads or bacchantes of those women who, seized by Bacchic ecstasy, danced until exhaustion at the god's festivals, waved their thyrsus, wore the nebris or fawn skin and destroyed animals, feeding on its raw meat.



📸 Prado Museum, Madrid
Forwarded from Western Heritage
1st Century Sarmatian gold diadem found in Russia
Little Devil on a White Stag by Richard Borrmeister 1928
Hyperborean 🍄 Radio
The Gathering

Bonnie Marris
Forwarded from The Paganist
Apollo Sitting on the Horse Pegasus, Julius Kronberg c'1907
Forwarded from EarthlyElementss
Gauntlet from the parade armor of Henry III of France, made around 1560.

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@EuropeanTribalism