Survive the Jive: All-feed


Kanal geosi va tili: Butun dunyo, Inglizcha


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Butun dunyo, Inglizcha
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Þórr siðr dan repost
My wife and I visited the Hof Ásatrúarfélagsins in Reykjavík today. The building is currently under construction and has been for some years. I thought it was interesting that the project was right next to university.

Behind me is the memorial to Sveinbjörn Beinteinsson, the first allsherjargoði of the Ásatrúarfélagið in Iceland. He was a sheep farmer by trade, but was interested in traditional poetry and wrote a number books about traditional poetry such as Bragfræði og háttatal. He recorded the album Edda in 1990, on which he sang the Eddic poetry in traditional form which I will link below. He was a leading figure in the resurgence of heathen tradition here in Iceland.


The Chad Pastoralist: History Memes and Content dan repost
Video oldindan ko‘rish uchun mavjud emas
Telegram'da ko‘rish
Those who know... 👁

Anglo-Saxon Chad by Finn Shawyer
Music: Danheim - Blotjarl


Survive the Jive: All-feed dan repost
Frankish belt plate, 7th century, copper, a zoomorphic fylfot comprised of raptor heads. Photo by Matt Bunker at the collection of the National Archaeological museum, France.


ᛉ Sagnamaðr Stark ᛉ dan repost
Another example of a bird-crested helmet pendant from Tissø, Denmark.


Survive the Jive: All-feed dan repost
Intimidating fashion statement from this man of the Khvalynsk related Ekaterinovka site. These people were like Yamnaya but with higher levels of EHG.


ᛉ Sagnamaðr Stark ᛉ dan repost
Something pagans hear a lot from Christians and other naysayers is that we have no direct line of succession to our ancestors (so we should just give up).
Kashmiri Shaivism was revived from its sacred texts multiple times, when all of their Gurus were killed in the many Muslim conquests of Kashmir. It can, and will, be done again. ᛉ


ᛉ Sagnamaðr Stark ᛉ dan repost
Interesting find from Hornsherred, Zealand, Denmark; an Iron Age pendant depicting a head with a bird’s head sprouting from it. This may depict a type of helmet we have yet to find an intact example of, like unto the boar-crested helmets.
Or perhaps…Odin as Arnhöfði. ᚨ


Do humans come from Africa? This lecture looks at the latest evidence and where we are in the process of reconstructing the story of human origins. At 14:16 Lahr talks about the non-sapiens "archaic admixture" in Africa:

"Around 300/400,000 years ago the stem..that accounts for most of our ancestry assimilated a % (they suggest here 20%) of something older. How old? In some models..more than a million years old."


https://youtu.be/-sYhahwfY-k?feature=shared


This chap appeared on Rogan making some claims about the swastika as a prehistoric pan-global symbol proving far reaching international connections in prehistory.

The reason the swastika is so widely dispersed and appears in such diverse cultural contexts is that it is one of the simplest shapes a human can draw. It is very easily invented independently.

It was formerly used as a means to trace migrations of people, such as the Aryans, but this does NOT work. For example both the pre-Aryan IVC culture of India, and the Central Asian Aryans of the Andronovo culture had the symbol before they met each other. The Proto-Indo-Europeans did not even use the symbol!

The symbol also has different meanings in different contexts. In Hindu contexts it is a good luck charm and represents the sun. In Ancient Greece it was a decoration. In Germanic cultures, it was a symbol of Odin.

Trying to make a theory of everything for the swastika is like making a theory of everything for the square or the circle.


The Bronze Age moorland of Devon. With a roundhouse, barrows and old menhirs worshipped


Video oldindan ko‘rish uchun mavjud emas
Telegram'da ko‘rish
Sending equine energy to my Indo-European brothers today!


Why do modern Christians sometimes accuse Heathens of atheism?

Historically the church accused Heathens of worshipping devils and demons. Whenever we Heathens worshipped wood or stone images of the gods and thereby encountered the numinous, the Christians said that these idols were actually possessed by demons who tricked us into calling them gods. When the images were made to speak in the way that Woden taught mankind, then the church said that this was due to the magic of wizards. When our necromancers went to barrows and caused the dead to rise and converse with the living, the Christians, whose religion does not allow for the Heathen to have the power to undo death, therefore said that this was the devil in the shape of a dead man. The Christians never denied that the gods appeared to speak through idols, they never denied that the dead appeared to rise and converse with Heathens, instead they made up explanations to cope with these realities and preserve their world view by saying we had been deceived by evil beings in the shape of the dead or the gods.

But the modern Christian, particularly the very online sort, doesn’t bother with traditional Catholic doctrine. They go against the teachings of the early bishops and Saints who made the above declarations. Instead they accuse the Heathens of only pretending to believe in the gods and ancestors. In defying the Saints they are probably guilty of heresy within their dogma, but it is pertinent to consider why these modern Christians take such a radically different attitude toward Heathenry compared to the Christians of Early Medieval Europe. I think it is because they do not believe such things are even possible. For the majority of Christian history the belief in ghosts was taken for granted. It is the Protestant reformation that opened the door to a modern view that such beliefs are superstitious. From this great cleavage with the ancient world, the cults of scientism and materialism emerged. These cults are so pervasive that they inform the views of all Christians, not only Protestants but Catholics too, especially hyper-online Catholic converts. This explains why they accuse Heathens of atheism - it is a form of projection. These people do not believe in a holy ghost, nor in the witch of Endor’s necromantic power, nor in the talking serpent of Eden, nor in Nephilim or millions of horses with the heads of lions or any of the other fantastical beings that their holy book requires them to believe in. THEY are atheists and they do not believe in the Christian religion as they are supposed to, they merely pretend to. They pick and choose what to believe from the Bible, and they focus only on a soteriological doctrine from a universal god who, in the most sentimental terms, they describe as “love” and who is his own son who brings the message of “love” to mankind. This common Christian view is not really the religion of the Bible. It is practically atheism, and in many cases I suspect the “converts” are cynical atheists who find the aesthetics and consoling continuity of Christianity appealing because it has been present in our culture for so long. They don’t really believe in it. These are the people who then say we are only interested in Heathenry because we like the “aesthetic” - which makes no sense because the aesthetics of Heathenry changed a lot from the Migration to the Viking era and the modern Heathen religion has no proscribed aesthetic. They are really speaking about themselves because they do not know what it is like to encounter the numinous, or to enter communion with one’s departed ancestors.

I should stress that I have hardly ever had any negative experiences with Christians in real life throughout the 15 years I have practised the True religion, but rather our most fervent opponents are limited to the online sphere. “The lady doth protest too much, methinks".


If any designer wants to make one like this for Britain or Ireland then get in touch with me


A simplified diagram explains very clearly the genetic history of Iberia


Sanmark (2010) application of a “shamanistic” cultural model of the soul to Germanic polytheism matches up well with with the hugr/fylgja/hamingja/hamr components


Left: Anglo-Saxon apotropaic charms on a body chain from Gilton, Kent c. 6th century.
Right: Similar body chain from Gepid context in Romania 5th century




Phylogenetic structure of West Eurasian lineages.


https://youtu.be/ZKE97l30B4Y?feature=shared

Aarvoll is a good teacher. If you are interested in learning about Neoplatonism then you should click my affiliate link and sign up for his course


This paper on Icelandic and Faroese haplogroups is disappointingly limited in scope. Just looking at haplogroups is a bit dated. They show Iceland and Faroes have separate founder lineages with little mixing between them after founding. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/genetics/articles/10.3389/fgene.2024.1462736/full

20 ta oxirgi post ko‘rsatilgan.